January 13, 2026 | Jayden Raj

Special Election in State House District 139 on Jan 13th

Democratic Nominee Larry Pemberton Jr. Source: Norwich Bulletin

Brief Overview

Welcome Back! It’s another special election on the docket today.

Governor Ned Lamont ordered a special election for today, January 13th, back in late November.

This district was vacant, due to sadly, the death of Incumbent State Rep. Kevin Ryan. Ryan passed away at the age of 73 in hospice on November 23rd. He was first elected to the 139th State House seat in 1992.

Democrat Eastern Pequot Tribe member Larry Pemberton Jr. faces Republican businessman Brandon Sabbag.

Mark Adams, the Republican nominee in the last two general elections for the district, is on the ballot as a write-in candidate.

Candidates Biographies and Priorities

Both Pemberton Jr. and Sabbag are first-time candidates.

Pemberton Jr. could be the first member of a state-recognized Connecticut tribe in the General Assembly. He is the treasurer of the tribal nation. Sabbag is a businessman who talks about his struggle with homelessness when he was younger.

Unlike the special election last week, there was some opposition at the nomination convention.  There are no primaries for special elections in Connecticut, so party delegates of the district pick the nominees.

At a candidate Q&A on January 5th, the three candidates talked about their views on some issues.

On affordability, Pemberton Jr. discussed finding additional energy sources to lower costs on energy bills. Sabbag said utility companies should get rid of their public benefits charges.

On mental health, some candidates were light on specific solutions to the mental health crisis. Pemberton talked about how he’ll find answers to it. Sabbag believed the answer is that students should pray on it. Adams said parents should be more educated on these issues to help them at home.

On education, Adams discussed how teachers are underpaid. On safety in schools, Pemberton said additional school monitors can help with safety. Sabbag supports having armed security guards in schools.

Generally, one of Pemberton’s priorities is on affordability. Some things he wants to accomplish is adding more housing in Montville, and covering children’s lunches with taxpayer funds.

Sabbag is also focusing on affordability. He says keeping the state’s budget as balanced is important.

Headline Annoyances for one, Major Controversies for another, and even more Drama!

For a special election to fill out the remaining ten months of the term, there is a lot of action happening in the district.

Pemberton has some minor issues that have given him annoying headlines. Sabbag has much larger issues about his past coming to light, in addition to some of his rhetoric. Adams has a lawsuit that could throw the entire race out.

Minor Headline Annoyances for Pemberton and the Nomination Fight

Pemberton Jr. was approved for the $27,375 grant allocated by the State Election Enforcement Commission (SEEC). However, they also voted to investigate $40 in small contributions. Pemberton said the eight contributions came from family members using the same card. It didn’t affect his grant and was a pretty minor issue, yet the SEEC still voted for the investigation. This investigation doesn’t look like much, but the headline ‘Candidate investigated by SEEC’ is definitely not a headline anyone wants.

Unlike the special election last week, Pemberton did face opposition in his nomination and it was also full of drama. Pemberton Jr. won his nomination by a 9-3 vote on December 3rd against Billy Caron, a Montville Town Council member and longtime friend of Former Rep. Ryan.

Pemberton has the backing of State Senator Cathy Osten, a longtime supporter of the Pequots and Mohegans. Caron has complained about what he feels was Osten’s interference, for someone who was not a registered Democrat. Something that the CT Mirror said wasn’t well-known during the nomination. Osten says, she was not responsible for delivering delegate support.

It’ll be interesting to see if Caron runs in a primary in the summer, but he hasn’t mentioned that yet.

Sabbag’s Arrests and Rhetoric Come to Light

Brandon Sabbag has multiple arrests in his criminal record. This includes convictions for misdemeanor assault and felony witness tampering in 2018. According to the New London-based publication The Day, both his charges resulted in him receiving prison time at his sentencing, but it was eventually suspended.

Under Connecticut law, Sabbag is allowed to run for office once his probation has been completed. His probation was completed in 2020.

The Day also found two more convictions, one from 2012 and another from 2017. It is unknown how the cases were resolved due to a pre-trial diversionary program that removes the charges from the defendant’s record.

Sabbag did not speak with a reporter when asked about his criminal history. He did comment on a text, that it happened when he and his partner faced “hard time” and “fought”.

Sabbag also faces some attention for his comments on trans issues, due to some of his social media posts, which many have called transphobic.

He was confronted about this during a town hall debate. He denied both claims to a resident, but when the resident said you really did. Sabbag replied, “ Transgenderism is demonic,” Sabbag replied, quoting from Genesis 1:26. He then continued, “It says that God made man and woman in His image. If you’re transgender, that’s okay. I support you having a right to be what you want to be, but I’ll tell you right now that is not how God created you. It is not who you are. The newspapers can post this. I don’t care, because I’m unapologetically me,” he said. 

Both his opponents, when given the opportunity to respond to the exchange, declined.

Adams Adding Some Drama

Mark Adams, the Republican nominee in 2022 and 2024, tried to get on the ballot under the Independent ballot line. He sued due to this exclusion and is campaigning as a write-in candidate.

A superior court judge declined to dismiss the lawsuit, which claims the Secretary of State’s office wrongly refused to accept his Independent Party nomination paper over a technicality, a missing signature.

There is a small chance that if Adams succeeds in this lawsuit, it could trigger a repeat special election, with Adams listed on the ballot as an Independent.

District Information

The 139th State House District has been represented by Kevin Ryan since 1992. It has long been located in Eastern Connecticut, though the district lines have moved between surrounding towns during Ryan’s tenure.

From 1992 to the early 2000s, the district contained parts of Bozrah, Franklin, Lebanon, and Montville. In 2012, during redistricting, the lines shifted and included parts of Bozrah and Montville, but added Norwich.

In 2022, in redistricting, the district kept the precincts in Norwich, switched one in Montville, but added another precinct in Bozrah. The 5 precincts, 1 in Ledyard, 2 in Montville, and 2 in Norwich make up the district.

The district has shifted a bit to the right in the last decade. After Ryan won his first term with 49% of the vote, he won comfortably, winning more than 57% of the vote in all of his elections until 2018. Since 2018, Ryan has won the seat by about 8-10 points every two years.

In the 2024 Presidential Election, Rep. Kevin Ryan won 55-45, slightly outperforming Kamala Harris, who won the district 53-45.

Expectations for the Special Election

Ballot for today’s special election in Ledyard District 3. Source: CT Secretary of State Website

Democrats are likely to win this district tonight. Though it will be a bit more competitive than the special election last week, due to the fact that it’s only a Harris +7.5 district.

However, the scandals and arrest record of Sabbag might drag him down, giving Pemberton Jr a good shot of winning the seat. In addition, some write-in votes for Adams, likely from Republicans, can increase Pemberton Jr’s margin.

As I said in the special election last week, according to The Downballot, Democrats have overperformed the 2024 Presidential Results in special elections by 13.8 points. With Democratic voters very motivated as we enter the second year of Trump’s presidency, we will see the level of overperformance!

Though in Connecticut, overperformances for the Democratic Party have not been very high. Last week, the overperformance was only about two points. And last year had two special elections where Republicans overperform.

Though this is a district that Democrats might see a better performance. The one significant Democratic overperformance last year, a 16-point Democratic overperformance in CT-HD-40. Only about ten miles away from this district, Eastern Connecticut is the one part of the state where overperformances in specials might be more likely than other parts of the state.

Votes tonight will likely come town by town. Here are the reference numbers for each town.

Ledyard (1 Precinct) – Harris 55.1-42.8 (About 18% of the 2024 District Vote Here)

Montville (2 Precincts) – Trump 50.6-47.7 (About 33% of the 2024 District Vote Here)

Norwich (2 precincts) – Harris 55.6-42.8 (About 49% of the 2024 District Vote Here)

We will update on Twitter/X as results come in after polls close at 8:00 pm.

Thanks for Reading!

Share: Facebook Twitter Linkedin
January 6, 2026 | Jayden Raj

Special Election in State House District 25 on Jan 6th

Iris Noemi Sanchez, Democratic nominee (on the right), and Jamie Vaughan, Republican nominee (on the left), are the candidates for today’s special election. Source: CT Examiner

Brief Overview

Gov Ned Lamont ordered a special election for today, Jan 6th, on November 21st. The seat became vacant after former State Rep. Bobby Sanchez resigned from his seat on November 12th, following his election win to become the mayor of New Britain. Sanchez successfully changed party control of the mayorship of New Britain from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party.

Both parties’ nominated candidates, as there are no primaries for special elections in Connecticut. Neither candidate faced any opposition at their respective nomination. New Britain Democratic Alderperson Iris Noemi Sanchez faces off against New Britain Republican Constable Jamie Vaughan.

25th State House Democratic Nominee

Iris Noemi Sanchez, Alderperson in Ward 3 of New Britain’s town council, is the Democratic Nominee. She was born in Puerto Rico and has lived in New Britain since 1994, after moving with her family after graduating high school. She is the single mother of two adult children and has worked previously as a medical office assistant and caregiver. Sanchez has been elected to the council five times, first winning a seat in 2017.

Sanchez has the support of New Britain Mayor Bobby Sanchez (not related), who held this seat for 14 years prior. She also has the support of State Rep. Hilda Santiago, a Puerto Rican-born state legislator from Meriden.

Sanchez lists her priorities on housing, public safety, education, and the needs of working families.

25th State House Republican Nominee

Jamie Vaughan, a member of the New Britain Constable, is the Republican nominee. Vaughan was the Republican nominee for this district in 2024, where he lost to Bobby Sanchez 30-70. He is also a U.S Marine Corps Veteran serving as a 3531 motor vehicle operator and served on New Britain’s Veterans Commission. He is married with two adult daughters living in New Britain, nearly all his life.

Vaughan has the support of former New Britain Mayor Erin Stewart, who is running for the Republican nomination for governor.

Vaughan listed his priorities as reducing property taxes, tackling high electric bills, and making policy decisions to help the business community create jobs. In a YouTube video on his campaign website, Vaughan calls out Democrats for causing such a high cost of living in the state. He also talked about supporting no tax on tips, and no taxes on seniors’ social security.

He also talks about fighting one-party rule in Connecticut by making advances on the Republican side, in an Instagram reel on the Connecticut Young Republicans page, and on his campaign website.

25th State House Seat District Information

The 25th State House seat has long centered around parts of New Britain from 1972 to 1980, and since 2002. From 1982 to 2000, the district contained parts of New Britain and Newington. The district changed slightly in the 2022 redistricting, dropping and adding a few precincts, but it remained mostly the same.

A map of the district marked in pink: Source: New Britain Progressive

The following voting precincts are in the district

  • Voting District 6: Chamberlain School (120 Newington Ave.)
  • Voting District 7: School Apartments (50 Bassett St.)
  • Voting District 8: Graham Apartments (107 Martin Luther King Dr.)
  • Voting District 9: New Britain Senior Center (55 Pearl St.)
  • Voting District 10: Generale Ameglio Society Hall (13 Beaver St.)
  • Voting District 11: International Church (40 Acorn St.)

In all of Bobby Sanchez’s election wins since 2010, he has never received less than 70% of the vote, remaining a Democratic stronghold.

Sanchez overperformed Kamala Harris in this district. Kamala Harris won here by a smaller but still large 64-34 spread.

According to the Hartford Business Journal, the 25th State House District is 56% Latino. Republican nominee Jamie Vaughan says Democrats outnumber Republicans by about 5 to 1 in this district. Larger than the 3 to 1 margin in New Britain as a whole.

Both candidates relied on public financing for their campaigns. Both qualified for a grant of just above $27,000.

What to Expect in Today’s Special Election

Today’s Ballot. Source: Secretary of State Website

Democrats are widely expected to win this Harris+30 seat. This is a safe Democratic seat. In terms of expected overperformance, that is harder to predict. Turnout for this special election is expected to be low. In addition, today is Three Kings Day, a notable occasion of importance in Puerto Rican communities.

According to the Downballot, Democrats have overperformed the 2024 Presidential Results in special elections by 13.8 points. With Democratic voters very motivated as we enter the second year of Trump’s presidency, we will see the level of overperformance! It is important to note that special election overperformances have not been as high in Connecticut last year. Though two of the three elections took place around Shelton, where Republicans tend to overperform on the local level. There was a 16-point Democratic overperformance in CT-HD-40, in the southeast part of the state. There was a 7-point Republican overperformance in CT-SD-21 and another 5-point overperformance in CT-HD-113. So it will be curious to see where this election ends up.

Early voting was light in the district. Early Voting took place on December 31st, Jan 2nd to Jan 4th. The Hartford Business had the early turnout as follows.

“72 Democrats, 26 Republicans, 20 unaffiliated voters, and three registered Independents had cast in-person, early-voting ballots. Another 22 Democrats, six Republicans and seven unaffiliated had cast absentee ballots.”

Either way, Democrats will likely win the seat! We will update on Twitter/X as results come in after polls close at 8:00 pm.

Join us next week as well, for another special election on the 13th!

Thanks for Reading!

Share: Facebook Twitter Linkedin