Voter frustration gives GOP gubernatorial challengers hope in Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland They call it crushing the middle class or the big squeeze or just plain irresponsible.
Regardless of the description they use, Republican candidates for governor in some of the Democratic Partys most dependable strongholds are finding receptive audiences of voters fed up with too many taxes.
Incumbent Democratic governors in Connecticut and Illinois, which rank among the states with the heaviest tax burdens, find themselves trailing or tied in polls against Republican challengers a week before elections.
In Maryland, another deep-blue state with sky-high taxes, Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, a Democrat, had to vow no new taxes while struggling to convince voters he deserves a promotion to the governors mansion. His Republican opponent, businessman Larry Hogan, has made a top issue of the dizzying proliferation of taxes during Mr. Browns eight-year tenure with Gov. Martin OMalley.
Republican victories in governors races in liberal-leaning Maryland, Connecticut and Illinois would signal a strong anti-tax tide building against Democrats ahead of the 2016 presidential elections.
In TV ads, debates and on the stump, Mr. Hogan has hammered home that the OMalley-Brown administration has levied 40 consecutive tax increases that he says crushed the middle class.