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According to a recent WalletHub report, Connecticut ranks 47th out of 50 states for starting a business. That is not a talking point — it is an alarm bell.
The findings were highlighted locally in a WFSB report and paint a bleak picture that every employer, entrepreneur, and worker in Connecticut already feels on the ground.
WalletHub evaluated all 50 states using real-world business conditions, not political slogans.
Among the factors that it evaluated that are dragging Connecticut down:
This is not just a cost problem. It is a workforce problem.
Availability of human capital should be Connecticut’s strength. We were the state that at one time that dominated the space race and excelled in national defense.
Instead, it is one of our biggest weaknesses.
We do not need an economy built around remote Zoom jobs for New Yorkers in 15 minute cities — effectively turning Connecticut into a sanctuary state for people escaping the consequences of policies they voted for in New York City and Albany.
We need:
Shockingly, Connecticut is now worse than New York when it comes to starting a business. That should be unthinkable but given a one-party system it is not a shock. Bad governance starts from our Congressional representatives and Governor and cascades all the way to the local level.
This November, affordability is on the ballot — and that includes business affordability.
For employers, affordability means:
Instead, Connecticut businesses are being crushed by:
These policies do not just hurt residents — they bleed employers dry.
Connecticut’s ranking is not accidental. It is the result of years of policy choices that prioritize ideology over outcomes.
It is also not surprising that 9 of the 10 best states for business have Republican Governors. A Republican Governor and A Republican Controlled State Government is Needed in Connecticut this November.

It is surprising that this Report ranked California in the top 10 which goes to show that as crazy as we think California is, Connecticut is worse.
You cannot tax, regulate, and energy-price your way into prosperity.
If Connecticut wants jobs, growth, and opportunity — not empty storefronts and outbound moving vans — then voters must recognize what is truly at stake.
This November, business is on the ballot.






