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Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Conn. gov's departure gives Dems hope to take seat
By STEPHANIE REITZ
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Will the Democrats have the time to read their own health care bill before voting on it?


Connecticut Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell's decision not to seek re-election could create big political drama in a small state, where Democrats hope to reclaim the governor's mansion for the first time in nearly two decades while keeping embattled Sen. Christopher Dodd in office.

The Democratic Governors Association says it is making Connecticut one of its top priorities in the 2010 elections, hoping to pickup a gubernatorial seat there after losing New Jersey and Virginia earlier this month. Connecticut hasn't had a Democratic governor since William O'Neill left office in 1991.

But Democrats will be challenged to run a strong race for governor as they also focus on Dodd's re-election, said Scott McLean, a political science professor at Quinnipiac University in Hamden.

The party already lost one of its U.S. Senate seats in the state when Joe Lieberman, a 2000 vice-presidential candidate, won re-election in 2006 as an independent. Although Lieberman caucuses with the Democrats, he has shown no inclination to rejoin their ranks.

Dodd, who has been under fire for a mortgage controversy, says he is running again in 2010 and has President Barack Obama's support. But his potential challengers, including former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons, are keeping up the drumbeat of criticism over his financial dealings.

Losing the governor's race would be painful, especially since Democrats hold the legislative majority, McLean said _ but losing the party's grip on its remaining Senate seat in the state would be a blow on the national level.

"If the stakes are high enough, the Senate race could end up really overshadowing the governor's race," McLean said.

Rell has not publicly endorsed a Republican successor. She said Tuesday that her focus for the rest of her term will be to resolve Connecticut's budget problems, and dismissed suggestions she may be viewed as a lame duck.

"I am still the governor and we have a lot of work to do," she said after emerging from a New Britain church, where she conducted the swearing-in ceremony for fellow Republican and Mayor Timothy Stewart.

A Quinnipiac poll released Tuesday showed Rell beating all Democratic challengers in the 2010 election. Rell said she is grateful for that result, but it does not change her mind about her decision not to run.

Christopher Healy, Connecticut's Republican Party chairman, said he thinks gubernatorial and Senate races both will focus on the dollars-and-cents issues that worry everyday residents.

"I think the overarching message for Republicans, which I believe has new currency, is based on the fact that people are unhappy with the parts of government that control the purse: taxes, spending, regulation and so forth," he said.

Nancy DiNardo, the state's Democratic Party chairwoman, said the open field for governor is "good news for our party, and the people of this state." Continued...

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Connecticut: A Good State to be FROM
I grew up in Connecticut but now live in California. Although CA is far worse, CT is a smaller, more visible fiscal roadmap of spend and tax. Fiscal conservatives have about the same voice -- none -- there as here, too. I just think that the crisis here may just curtail some of the spending. If somebody can hope that Obama will pay their mortgage and gas bills, I can hope the crisis will force some spending cuts. Reality tells me I probably have the smaller chance of realizing my hope.
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