Never mind the internecine Democratic politics of Connecticut and the
role that ethnic, labor and local sentiments will play in deciding the
primary contest between centrist Senator Joe Lieberman and liberal
challenger Ned Lamont. Never mind that the contest has made Connecticut
the front line in an increasingly bitter brawl involving MoveOn.org and
the liberal blogosphere on one side and the Democratic Leadership
Council and a substantial contingent of the party's Washington
elite on the other. Never mind that both sides spend inordinate amounts
of time debating whether George W. Bush thanked Lieberman for the
senator's unwavering support of the Iraq War with a slobbering kiss or
merely a peck on the cheek when the two embraced at a State of the Union
address.
When the votes are counted on August 8, the whole of the Connecticut
primary, and much of the national debate over the direction of the
Democratic Party, will be boiled down to a one-line pronouncement. It
will either be "Antiwar challenger trounces Lieberman" or "Lieberman
prevails over war foes." The reduction of this complex contest to a
headline may not be entirely fair, or entirely accurate. Yet it will be
understandable, because to the surprise of just about everyone, the man
Democrats nominated for Vice President in 2000 is in a fight for his
political life with a previously unknown candidate who decided a few
months ago to surf the wave of anger stirred by Lieberman's emergence as
the loudest Democratic defender of the occupation of Iraq.
Of course, if Lieberman prevails, antiwar liberals will claim that
Lamont took on an impossible task and did better than expected. But few
who have paid attention to the dynamics on the ground in
Connecticut--where a recent Quinnipiac poll found 73 percent of voters
disapprove of Bush's handling of the war--or the broader national debate
about how Democrats should address the occupation of Iraq will see it
that way. Lamont may have started as a "nobody"--albeit a very wealthy
and politically savvy "nobody"--but a smart, well-funded campaign,
generous media attention and the hard work of a very attractive
candidate and his energetic grassroots supporters will by election day
have made the challenger Lieberman's match. Indeed, a mid-July
Quinnipiac poll had Lamont ahead 51 to 47. As such, the Connecticut
primary will be a no-excuses test of whether Democratic voters--who tell
pollsters they desperately want a clean break with Bush and his war but
who have not always embraced candidates who propose to make it--are now
willing to hold prominent Democratic officials accountable for
facilitating the madness of King George. If Connecticut Democrats reject
Lieberman, Democrats in Washington, including 2008
presidential prospect Hillary Clinton, will have to take notice. If
Lieberman prevails on August 8, or if he loses in the primary but wins
as an independent candidate in November, then the DLC and its amen
corner will argue more aggressively than before that the Democratic
Party and its candidates must continue to eschew not just a tough
antiwar stance but the general opposition to all things Bush that
grassroots activists demand. "This is a fight for the soul of the
Democratic Party," argues the DLC's Marshall Wittmann.
That's what's riding on Connecticut.
That's what's riding on Ned Lamont.
So why is the challenger seemingly so at ease with just a few weeks to
go before the primary? Why is Ned Lamont smiling? "I love being in this
race," the candidate declares, without a hint of irony, to the crowd at
an Indian restaurant in downtown Stamford after a long evening of
answering questions he has answered a few hundred times before. That's
the secret of Ned Lamont. He is not merely the "cable TV millionaire"
reporters mention when seeking a shorthand description for the
52-year-old former newspaper editor, public radio host, local elected
official, telecommunications entrepreneur and Democratic donor who was
drawn into the race against Lieberman only after more prominent war foes
begged off. Rather, he is a self-admitted political junkie who, like a
rock critic who finally forms a band, has been waiting a very long time
for this chance in the spotlight. Maybe a lifetime. After all, it's in
his blood.
Lamont's great-grandfather Thomas Lamont, whose partnership with
J.P. Morgan created the family fortune that has provided a firm
financial base for Ned's business and political endeavors, was
one of Woodrow Wilson's negotiators on the Treaty of Versailles. Ned's
great-uncle Corliss was a leading figure in the American Civil Liberties
Union and a founder of the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee
who successfully sued the Central Intelligence Agency in a
groundbreaking challenge to domestic spying--and who would no doubt be
proud of the Senate candidate's support of Wisconsin Senator Russ
Feingold's proposal to censure Bush for authorizing warrantless
wiretaps. Lamont's father, Ted, an economist, helped administer the
Marshall Plan after World War II and served with George
Romney--Massachusetts Governor Mitt's liberal dad--in Richard Nixon's
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
"Our family always has believed in international cooperation, that the
way to achieve a safer and freer world is through hard-working diplomacy
and a good respect for the opinions of other countries in getting the
job done, rather than seizing the military option too soon," Ted Lamont
told a Connecticut reporter after his son announced the Senate
candidacy. For his part, Ned Lamont speaks about the broad
sweep of American foreign policy over the past century in the familiar
language of someone who sat down for family dinners with those who
shaped it. So when he talks about the war in Iraq, it is not as a shrill
critic but rather as an old-school liberal internationalist who cannot
believe that George Bush and Joe Lieberman have rejected
diplomacy and smart strategies like containment for cowboy adventurism
and neglect of fundamental realities in the Middle East. "This war is
way outside the historical norm," Lamont says, arguing that the
Administration has adopted "a go-it-alone strategy, a
sense that we don't need allies, we don't have to listen to the rest of
the world. That's contrary to the American tradition, and it's really
not in our self-interest."
When Lamont offers his critique of "George Bush and Joe Lieberman's"
foreign policies to the business owners who have gathered at the Indian
restaurant in Stamford, several of whom make favorable references to
"the House of Morgan," every head in the room nods. And when he quotes
former Connecticut Senator Abe Ribicoff's Vietnam-era suggestion that
America is strongest not when it brandishes arms but when it earns the
respect of the world, the nodding heads are smiling. "This makes sense
to me," says Pravin Banker, director of the Global Financial Network,
who had introduced Lamont earlier in the evening. "It's refreshing to
hear someone who knows about diplomacy, who recognizes that the US can
do a better job of working with the world."
This reaction to Lamont is one that Lieberman failed to anticipate when
he noticed that a "Greenwich millionaire," as his increasingly shrill
campaign ads label Lamont, was nipping at his heels. Shaken by the
seriousness of the challenge, Lieberman has tried to dismiss Lamont as a
"single issue" antiwar challenger backed by loony-left bloggers, while
his backers have taken to hysterical grumbling, like that of the DLC's
Wittmann and Steven Nider in a recent Hartford Courant column, about how
"far too many Democrats view George W. Bush as a greater threat to the
nation than Osama bin Laden."
"They keep talking about how 'Ned and the blogger left are attacking
bipartisan Joe,'" says Lamont. "That is so wrong. They've been so
over-the-top about this that people don't take them seriously. When I
meet people, when they hear me talk about these issues, they recognize
that I'm coming at them from a very mainstream place."
Lamont's a reasonably standard liberal who agrees with Russ Feingold and
Ted Kennedy on most social and economic issues. But he is not a populist
rebel in the mold of Paul Wellstone. His blood runs blue. Indeed, with
his summer suit and Kennedy-perfect haircut, he looks for all the
world like a Doonesbury extra. Maybe in some circles, that's an insult.
But not in Connecticut, where the cartoon was born and where voters have
sent their share of liberal patricians to Washington--including
Lieberman's predecessor, Lowell Weicker, now an enthusiastic Lamont
backer. Once upon a time, they ran and won, as Weicker did, on the
Republican line. And Lamont is not shy about the fact that "my family
were internationalist Republicans going back for generations." But as
the candidate's father says, "The Republican Party, frankly, no longer
[represents] my viewpoints. The so-called moderate Republicans
are rare and declining, especially in recent years." The
father says he stopped voting for Republicans in 1992; the son
has been a Democrat a lot longer--inspired in his youth, he
says, by Bobby Kennedy.
It is that Bobby Kennedy connection that may be the most useful
reference point for Lamont's candidacy. In 1968 two Democratic senators
challenged President Lyndon Johnson's ambitions for a second full term.
One was Minnesota's Eugene McCarthy, who ran a campaign primarily
defined by his opposition to the Vietnam War. The other was
Kennedy, who opposed the war but offered a far broader promise
of reform and renewal--for the Democratic Party and America. Kennedy's
1968 campaign, with its emphasis on fighting poverty and making real the
promise of the American dream for all Americans, argued that the
expensive war in Southeast Asia was robbing this country of the
resources and energy required to achieve progress at home. Lamont offers
an updated version of the Kennedy message. "Rather than spend $250
million a day in Iraq, we've got to start investing in education," says
Lamont, who has volunteered for years as a teacher in a Bridgeport high
school and whose best campaign commercials feature former students, all
of them African-Americans and Latinos, chanting: "Go for it, Mr.
Lamont!"
Lieberman finds himself forced into the Lyndon Johnson role, about right
from an ideological standpoint. He's more conservative than most
Democrats, but he's not Ann Coulter in drag--even if Coulter is backing
him. Lieberman has been the most vocal Democratic backer of Bush's
foreign policies, and he has also sided with Senate Republicans to block
attempts to filibuster Samuel Alito's Supreme Court nomination, to
explore Social Security privatization, to back free trade and corporate
bailouts, to intercede in the Terri Schiavo right-to-die case and, of
course, to engage in tiresome moralizing about Bill Clinton's
extramarital shenanigans. Yet, he's got a lifetime AFL-CIO "pro-labor"
voting record of 84 percent. Connecticut unions have split in this
contest, with the labor federation backing Lieberman and the state's
teachers unions backing Lamont. Lieberman's also got endorsements from
Planned Parenthood, the League of Conservation Voters and liberal
Democrats like California's Barbara Boxer and Connecticut's senior
senator, Chris Dodd, as well as Hillary and Bill Clinton--although,
notably, Feingold and Massachusetts Senator John Kerry have refused to
endorse the senator, as has Lieberman's 2000 running mate, Al Gore.
Even as he brandishes his endorsements, however, and declares, "I am
running based on my record as a progressive Democrat and...Ned is
running against me based on my stand on one issue: Iraq," Lieberman
seems compromised and desperate--the embodiment of a Democratic Party
that lacks fresh blood, ideas and energy. In the one televised debate
between the candidates, Lieberman borrowed Ronald Reagan's "there you go
again" presidential debate line, and he paraphrased Lloyd Bentsen's
"you're no Jack Kennedy" jab from the his vice presidential debate. The
senator interrupted Lamont constantly and attacked him with a venom that
never surfaced in his 2000 vice presidential debate with Dick Cheney.
"You get the idea that Lieberman has a sense of entitlement, that it's
his office and no one has a right to take it from him," says Connecticut
Democratic activist John Wirzbicki, who writes the Lamont-friendly blog
Connecticut Blue.
Lamont's counter to Lieberman in the debate was upbeat rather than
defensive. He let the senator take his shots, then talked about what
ought to distinguish Democrats from Republicans. It wasn't just the war.
It was much broader, a vision of engagement with the world and a search
for solutions to fundamental challenges at home. It's a liberal vision,
to be sure. But Lamont, descended from all those generations of
Republican internationalists and comfortable portraying himself as a
Washington outsider--he opens just about every speech with the line: "My
name is Ned Lamont, and I'm not a traditional politician. I started up a
business from scratch"--believes it is a vision that has appeal far
beyond the blogosphere and MoveOn meet-ups.
That's essential, because if Lieberman loses the primary, he promises to
mount a fall campaign for re-election on his own "Connecticut for
Lieberman" line. The initial spin was that Lieberman would win a
three-way race by isolating Democrat Lamont on the left and a Republican
on the right. But sentiments are shifting. After Lieberman announced his
sore-loser strategy, Hillary Clinton said she would back the party
nominee in November, and it's no secret that Senate minority leader
Harry Reid and other top Democrats have begun behind-the-scenes
conversations with Lamont. Whether the AFL-CIO and other national
interest groups stick with Lieberman will be a critical question, but
the best bet right now is that if Lamont wins the primary, he'll have a
reasonably united Democratic front behind him as he takes his campaign
to suburbs where independents and Republicans predominate. "Don't tell
me that being opposed to this war and saying that we could be spending
money that's going to Iraq more usefully at home is a liberal message,
or a Democratic message," he says. "There's nothing in that message that
a lot of Connecticut Republicans would disagree with."
Lamont's confidence about his ability to win more than just antiwar
protest votes is well founded. It's common on the Connecticut campaign
trail to run into Democratic voters like Harriet Scureman. "I used to be
against Joe, because of the war and a bunch of other issues," says
Scureman, a retired Xerox employee from Norwalk. "But as the campaign's
gone on, I've realized I'm for Ned Lamont. You can't meet him, listen to
him, and not come to the conclusion that he would be a great senator."
If a majority of Connecticut voters reach the same conclusion in August
and again in November, it will not merely be a defeat for a single
centrist senator who supports the war. It will also be a win for a new
Democratic mindset, one that displays the energy, enthusiasm and vision
that the party will need if it intends to lead the country out of the
wilderness of the Bush years.
John Nichols, The Nation's Washington correspondent, has covered progressive politics and activism in the United States and abroad for more than a decade. He is currently the editor of the editorial page of Madison, Wisconsin's Capital Times. Nichols is the author of two books: It's the Media, Stupid and Jews for Buchanan.
© 2006 The Nation
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