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Mitch Bolinsky

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Mitch Bolinsky
Image of Mitch Bolinsky

Candidate, Connecticut House of Representatives District 106

Connecticut House of Representatives District 106
Tenure

2013 - Present

Term ends

2025

Years in position

11

Compensation

Base salary

$40,000/year

Per diem

$No per diem is paid.

Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 8, 2022

Next election

November 5, 2024

Education

Bachelor's

University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, 1980

Personal
Birthplace
New York, N.Y.
Religion
Jewish
Professional
Marketing consultant
Contact

Mitch Bolinsky (Republican Party) is a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives, representing District 106. He assumed office on January 9, 2013. His current term ends on January 8, 2025.

Bolinsky (Republican Party) is running for re-election to the Connecticut House of Representatives to represent District 106. He is on the ballot in the general election on November 5, 2024.[source] The Republican primary for this office on August 13, 2024, was canceled.

Biography

Bolinsky was born on September 17, 1958, in Queens, New York. He earned a bachelor's degree in marketing from the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater in 1980. Bolinsky’s career experience includes working as Principal of M-Vision Insights, a marketing and regulatory affairs consultancy. He has served as a Justice of the Peace in Newtown, and served on Newtown's Economic Development Commission for two terms. Bolinsky was elected to serve as the Representative for Connecticut House District 106.[1]

Committee assignments

2023-2024

Bolinsky was assigned to the following committees:

2021-2022

Bolinsky was assigned to the following committees:

2019-2020

Bolinsky was assigned to the following committees:

2017 legislative session

At the beginning of the 2017 legislative session, this legislator served on the following committees:

Connecticut committee assignments, 2017
Aging
Appropriations
Education

2015 legislative session

At the beginning of the 2015 legislative session, Bolinsky served on the following committees:

2013-2014

At the beginning of the 2013 legislative session, Bolinsky served on the following committees:

The following table lists bills this person sponsored as a legislator, according to BillTrack50 and sorted by action history. Bills are sorted by the date of their last action. The following list may not be comprehensive. To see all bills this legislator sponsored, click on the legislator's name in the title of the table.


Elections

2024

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2024

General election

General election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky and Michelle Embree Ku are running in the general election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 on November 5, 2024.

Candidate
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/MitchBolinsky.jpg
Mitch Bolinsky (R)
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Michelle Embree Ku (D / Independent Party)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

The Democratic primary election was canceled. Michelle Embree Ku advanced from the Democratic primary for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106.

Republican primary election

The Republican primary election was canceled. Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky advanced from the Republican primary for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106.

Endorsements

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2022

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2022

General election

General election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky won election in the general election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/MitchBolinsky.jpg
Mitch Bolinsky (R) Candidate Connection
 
100.0
 
7,632

Total votes: 7,632
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Republican primary election

The Republican primary election was canceled. Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky advanced from the Republican primary for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106.

2020

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2020

General election

General election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky defeated Rebekah Harriman-Stites in the general election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 on November 3, 2020.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/MitchBolinsky.jpg
Mitch Bolinsky (R) Candidate Connection
 
51.4
 
7,331
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rebekah_Harriman-Stites.jpg
Rebekah Harriman-Stites (D / Working Families Party)
 
48.6
 
6,944

Total votes: 14,275
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

The Democratic primary election was canceled. Rebekah Harriman-Stites advanced from the Democratic primary for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106.

Republican primary election

The Republican primary election was canceled. Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky advanced from the Republican primary for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106.

2018

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2018

General election

General election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky defeated Rebekah Harriman-Stites in the general election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/MitchBolinsky.jpg
Mitch Bolinsky (R)
 
50.5
 
5,697
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Rebekah_Harriman-Stites.jpg
Rebekah Harriman-Stites (D)
 
49.5
 
5,575

Total votes: 11,272
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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2016

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2016

Elections for the Connecticut House of Representatives took place in 2016. The primary election took place on August 9, 2016, and the general election was held on November 8, 2016. The candidate filing deadline was June 7, 2016.

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky defeated Eva Zimmerman in the Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 general election.[2]

Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.png Mitch Bolinsky Incumbent 57.44% 7,185
     Democratic Eva Zimmerman 42.56% 5,323
Total Votes 12,508
Source: Connecticut Secretary of the State


Eva Zimmerman ran unopposed in the Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 Democratic primary.

Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106 Democratic Primary, 2016
Party Candidate
    Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Eva Zimmerman  (unopposed)

Incumbent Mitch Bolinsky ran unopposed in the Connecticut House of Representatives District 106 Republican primary.

Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106 Republican Primary, 2016
Party Candidate
    Republican Green check mark transparent.png Mitch Bolinsky Incumbent (unopposed)

2014

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2014

Elections for the Connecticut House of Representatives consisted of a primary election on August 12, 2014, and a general election on November 4, 2014. The signature filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was June 10, 2014. Matt Cole was unopposed in the Democratic primary, while incumbent Mitch Bolinsky was unopposed in the Republican primary. Bolinsky defeated Cole in the general election.[3][4]

Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106 General Election, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngMitch Bolinsky Incumbent 55.4% 4,661
     Democratic Matt Cole 44.6% 3,753
Total Votes 8,414

2012

See also: Connecticut House of Representatives elections, 2012

Bolinsky ran in the 2012 election for Connecticut House of Representatives District 106. Bolinsky ran unopposed in the Republican primary on August 14, 2012. He defeated Lisa Romano (D) in the general election on November 6, 2012.[5][6][7]

Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106, General Election, 2012
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngMitch Bolinsky 50.1% 5,727
     Democratic Lisa Romano 49.9% 5,712
Total Votes 11,439

Campaign themes

2024

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

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2022

Candidate Connection

Mitch Bolinsky completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bolinsky's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

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State Rep Mitch Bolinsky is "all-in" for re-election and a sixth-term in the Connecticut General Assembly, proudly and passionately representing his hometown, Newtown, with integrity, common sense and reason.

He is an Assistant Republican Leader, serving on the legislature’s powerful Appropriations Committee, Education Committee and Aging Committee. He's a founding member of the legislature's I/DD (Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities) Caucus, CT Rare Disease Caucus, Animal's Rights Caucus, Firefighter / EMS Caucus & School Safety Caucus.

Representative Bolinsky is dedicated to providing caring constituent service to the children, families, seniors and businesses in town. His focus on economic development and job creation has made him a highly effective advocate for the people of the 106th District.

  • We must remake Connecticut to be more affordable and less woke. One point of view is not for all.
  • I'll defend the rights of parents in educational outcome and family values over the forces of Big Government and its mandates!
  • In his 5-terms, Mitch has never voted to raise your taxes or toll your cars. Never will. You're taxed too much already.

- Cost of living issues. We pay too much for mediocre state services. Taxes are our investment in CT and our ROI is not competitive with other states.
- Re-focus on core educational and life-readiness skill. Get woke politics out of classrooms so our kids thrive.
- A predictable, growing economy that is balanced & focused on good jobs & the pillars of innovation, growth & prosperity of small-to-medium businesses. .
- Sunsetting wasteful and obsolete government programs. Making all others more consumer-friendly.
- A stable, well-maintained system of roads and transit - without Waterbury-style bottlenecks and without tolls.
- Collaborating across the aisle on public health and safety issues, to save lives.

A Team of Rivals.
Abe Lincoln's cabinet consisted of the best minds for each job, regardless of political leanings. Always challenging to work in an environment where one can collaborate with others and keep the guttural stuff tucked away.

- Caring. If it does not come from the heart, find another line of work.
- Integrity. What you do when no-one's looking is very, very important.
- Desire to work with others for the benefit of all.
- The ability to shut up and spend time listening.
- Saying "Please", Thank you", I'm sorry", You're awesome, etc. - and meaning it.

Take care of people first. Lawmaking second.
Be fair.
Listen good, ask questions.
Act or find out who can help you get results and learn from them.

Fluid, with open doors and honest, respectful, adult idea and philosophical exchange..

- High cost of living, wasteful spending and excessive taxes.
- Getting our children back to normal. Lockdowns and remote learning took a toll on learning and mental health.
- Attracting innovative employers with tax credit incentives for workforce development and capital investment.
- A stable, predictable business climate to support sustainable growth.
- Outdated infrastructure restricts movement Need to stop allowing Governor to re-direct Special Trans. Fund dollars, elsewhere and neglecting required investment in keeping us moving!

It may work in Nebraska but, in Connecticut, being bicameral provides an extra level of checks & balances in a state where politics are a nasty, partisan contact sport.

Every individual is different. In my case, passion and a fundamental love of solving problems is far more powerful than the acceptance of a career politician who is rooted in all that is done because "this is how we've always done it" or, worse yet, inaction because of preconceived notions of "things they CAN'T do.

YES!!!

100% of my legislative success is attractable to the relationships I build and the way I treat my colleagues, on both sides of the aisle.

By the numbers, consolidating districts with as few municipalities as possible to concentrate efforts on the folks living in the places they live. Political gerrymandering is a form of cheating. Unfortunately, it, is what career politicians do best.

Their impact.
- Appropriations and the responsible use of taxpayer dollars. (or not:) :-(
- Education is the tools of preparing children to have a better life through fundamentals like work & social skills.
- Aging in a society that is living longer and growing older, we must protect our elders and focus on geriatric health.

Uncertain. Seems in CT, the wealthy are increasingly crowding-out the kind of legislators envisioned by our forefathers.

All are moving, from inflationary pressures to illness or shortcomings of insurance. Unemployment to putting food on the table. Loneliness, isolation and post=pandemic social concerns. There's a lot on everyone's minds...

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.



2020

Candidate Connection

Mitch Bolinsky completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2020. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Bolinsky's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

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State Rep Mitch Bolinsky is "all-in" for re-election to a 5th-term in the Connecticut General Assembly, proudly, passionately representing Newtown, with integrity, responsiveness and a bipartisan record of legislative results for his constituents.

He's an Assistant Republican Leader and serves on the powerful Appropriations Committee, Education Committee, and Aging Committee. He's a founding member of the I/DD (Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities) caucus and the Firefighter / EMS caucus and serves the Animal's Rights caucus and School Safety caucus.

Bolinsky is dedicated to providing caring constituent service to the children, families, seniors and businesses in town. His focus on economic development and job creation has made him a highly effective advocate for the 106th District.

Rep. Bolinsky believes that one of the keys to our future success will be a return to less burdensome, less-regulating government that does not presume does not presume to pick winners but instead rewards entrepreneurial spirit and helps remove barriers to growth and innovation.

He resides in Newtown with his wife of 35 years, Luisa. Their daughter, Rachel was married to Adam in 2019. She's a UConn grad with a Masters from the UHart and is a locally-practicing family therapist, licensed by the State. Their son, Matthew, is a PITT grad and a third-year law-student at GWU, in our nation's Capitol. Luisa and Mitch are incredibly proud of the fine people their children have grow

  • Unparalleled Constituent Service, Especially During the Pandemic
  • Has NEVER Voted to Raise Taxes and NEVER WILL
  • More Efficient, Responsive State Government, Balanced Budgets and Local Control of Schools & Zoning

- Education: Secures & Restores Newtown's "fair share" of ECS dollars. A leader in the fight for equity in Education, legislating and policy-making for Special Ed Families and early intervention for children with Autism & Dyslexia.

- Seniors: Champion for protection of our Seniors from physical abuse, financial exploitation and raised awareness for Rare Diseases. Recognized by AARP and ALZ.

- Freedom to live the American Dream without Overbearing Governmental Regulation and Burdensome Tax Policy.

A Team of Rivals by Doris Goodwin. Given to me as a gift from a business associate and friend, it's a story about Abraham Lincolns teambuilding genius by tapping into three former political adversaries and to round out his cabinet. Certainly not "yes men". Brilliant.

Empathy - understand and relate
Creativity - find solutions
Trust - your word is your promise. Never promise something you can't deliver but, try anyway.
Persistence - never take no for an answer when you can change the question.
Kindness - always leave things better than you found them, say please and thank you and mean it.
Conscience - never walk by something that troubles you without trying to fix it.

Constituent service
Constituent service
Constituent service
Lawmaking

At 16, I was a busboy at a beachfront wedding and large reception facility. I learned to take good care of people, especially those hardest to satisfy, to work hard, always smile and make eye contact. Promoted to waiter after my first season, I loved the white gloves, the tuxedo and making the night special for "my people". Many responded with generous gratuities. At 18, off to college we went but I returned two more years for breaks and summers, always having fun and taking care to make folks feel "special". It was a humbling job but showed me how well others could treat you if you care about them, treat them special and make them feel "understood".

By the way, between an academic scholarship and my tip money, my college and living expenses were paid in full with enough left over to make a nice down payment on my first new car, after graduation.

Life was so much simpler then but, what a shy kid learned about serving others and being engaged to the point of making them happy or turning problems into smilles lives on. Today, I call it "best in class constituent service".

Raise the Titanic - Introduced me to Clive Cussler and Dirk Pitt, his kids, Kurt Austin, the Fargo's, Isaac Bell, the Corporation and real life adventures. Over 80 book. I have owned love every one of them, cept Built for Adventure.

Caring for three aging parents over much of the last decade. Losing all three in just over a year. Doing the right thing is the right thing to do but, sometimes it leaves a mark.
Through this, I have thrown myself into my work, especially serving people left with needs as a result of COVID-19.

In CT, the two chambers are distinctive in the way legislation and policy are deliberated. In the Senate, with 36 members, oratory is long and verbally very expressive, often by every member. When the process works, there can be enough compromise to amend bills and consider them "consentable", thereby passing "good legislation" unanimously.

In the House, with 151 members and a bit more diversity of experiences and thought, the process never includes oratory by every member. Bills are deliberated through the chair and ranking members of the committee of cognisance raising the bill. Because of the size and diversity of the chamber, it is rare to find legislation and policy that can be unanimously supported. I believe that debate is more contentious in the House but still, if the committee process is working and leadership works well together, "good legislation" still does pass or can be amended to pass with "friendly amending" and strong bipartisan support.

Ultimately, I believe when either chamber agrees on the basic premise and need for a concept, all but the most contentious issues can produce good public policy. I further believe that bills that pass along strict party lines are those most likely to have unintended or intended consequences or inequities. These bills are also commonly held until the last minute to squelch debate. On matters of state, contentious issues deserve to be more considerately vetted and subject to more "Senate-like" deliberation.

No. Career politicians get locked-in to their beliefs and make too many friends outside of their constituencies. Term limits should cap an elected official's tenure in the same position to 8 to 12 years.

1. TAXES: They're way too high and CT passed the "tipping point" about 10-years ago. . That means, for every every single tax increase imposed since the "Great Recession", Connecticut has lost population, jobs and actually REDUCED revenue with each successive tax increase . For the first time in most of our lifetimes, people and companies are moving from CT to places like NY, and MA. How did we here from being a corporate and residential haven? We were more affordable that NY, NJ and MA! But, we have one of the highest per capita costs of government in the nation and spend carelessly. We don't benefit from higher taxes. W can actually increase revenues by lowering taxes. It worked for Scott Walker in Wisconsin. We can do it here. I have a plan that does it without a single layoff.

2. JOBS & PEOPLE TO FILL THEM: Pushing too much excessive cost of government onto taxpayers and businesses is an economy-killer. If we do not grow CT's business base by being more attractive to out-of-state companies and start-ups to locate here, we are unlikely to shake our current economic stagnation. Strategic tax incentives for investment and workforce development will create the good, well-paid jobs to sustain a growing Connecticut. It's all tied together, lower taxes create the growth to create jobs and greater state revenue for the essential services we need. Without growth, the only answer is taxes. FACT: That has had a diminishing effect for over 10-years. Time to try something new.

One of support and full engagement on both sides of the aisle. Open doors that actually are open to all.

It's the most important thing any legislator can do. I have a very productive record of passing legislation, despite being in the minority. It's no secret that I don't do not make a move without the collaboration of friends on both sides of the aisle. Respect and a reputation as a reasonable person who will never pull "a fast one" on a colleague goes hand-in-hand with sharing credit - generously. My effectiveness for Newtown is directly tied to having more than the ears of my colleagues but, having their trust.

Equal representation for every contiguous voter. The gerrymandering and strange configurations that result from either party moving lines to change a community's natural balance is inherently corrupt. One person, one vote. Don't divide neighbors for temporary gain.

Appropriations: Following the money has provided a great understanding of where we can improve as a state and serve more people's needs better by leveraging technology to be more efficient and nimble. As we evolve to efficiencies, eliminating duplication and waste serves the taxpayers better - for less per capita. Selfishly, because I'm among the first to see changes in appropriations, I have been able to prevent cuts to Newtown's municipal and educational funding on a half-dozen occasions. I also saved Newtown's historic Horse Guard from the budget axe three times under Governor Malloy.

Education: The future of Connecticut is in our schools today. I believe we must continue to strive for equity in education and invest in our Public Schools, on the classroom level, not by adding administrators, overhead and unaccountable bureaucracy. With the support of very good committee leadership, I have been successful in instituting policy change and task force study of how to bring equity to Special Ed, Autistic and Dyslexic students through early detection. Best practices are being developed and, an inspirational Newtown mom sits on the Dyslexia Task Force.

Aging: People over 60 are the fastest growing part of Connecticut's population and are the most underserved by traditional social service supports. I want that changed and support an aggressive conversion of institutional care (Nursing Homes) to home-based and community supports. It's called "Aging in Place" and it's a much more loving, caring, less stressful way for elders to live independently as long as they can. It also costs far less for this better care than warehousing seniors who don't need nursing home care in an institution. I understand this too well. My wife and I spent the last decade caring for three aging parents in their homes, our home and assisted living. I'm a Capitol Caregiver Award recip[ient from AARP CT and national and recognized by the Alzheimer's Assn.

Julia Wasserman. A wise, kind and very well respected legislator from Newtown.

The pandemic has brought me hundreds of stories of personal and financial struggles. I have heard hundreds and have applied creative solutions to as many as possible. Despite a "closed" Department of Labor, my Legislative Aide and I have secured or "unfrozen" pandemic benefits for hundreds of families. Our success rate has been 98% and, though it's frustrating work, it is gratifying to put food on a family's table.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.



Campaign finance summary


Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.


Mitch Bolinsky campaign contribution history
YearOfficeStatusContributionsExpenditures
2024* Connecticut House of Representatives District 106On the Ballot general$6,270 $191
2022Connecticut House of Representatives District 106Won general$5,312 $3,469
2020Connecticut House of Representatives District 106Won general$36,957 N/A**
2018Connecticut House of Representatives District 106Won general$34,695 N/A**
2016Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106Won $33,830 N/A**
2014Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106Won $33,695 N/A**
2012Connecticut House of Representatives, District 106Won $32,451 N/A**
** Data on expenditures is not available for this election cycle
Note: Totals above reflect only availabale data.

Scorecards

See also: State legislative scorecards and State legislative scorecards in Connecticut

A scorecard evaluates a legislator’s voting record. Its purpose is to inform voters about the legislator’s political positions. Because scorecards have varying purposes and methodologies, each report should be considered on its own merits. For example, an advocacy group’s scorecard may assess a legislator’s voting record on one issue while a state newspaper’s scorecard may evaluate the voting record in its entirety.

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2023


2022


2021


2020


2019


2018


2017


2016


2015


2014


2013


See also


External links

Footnotes

Political offices
Preceded by
-
Connecticut House of Representatives District 106
2013-Present
Succeeded by
-


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Minority Leader:Vincent Candelora
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