Still waiting on word from Rell on whether or not she will be running – presumably she is having trouble forming an opinion on whether or not to run without Dautrich first poll testing the ideas – but, via Paul Bass, it looks like Lamont is getting ready to run for Governor:
Ned Lamont, who took on U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman three years ago, has formed an “exploratory committee” for a challenge to Gov. M. Jodi Rell in 2010. He plans to talk about Moody’s, not Moody.
Lamont planned to start informing past supporters of his move Wednesday morning, a day after the polls closed on the 2009 municipal elections and attention officially turns to the already crowded 2010 campaigns for governor and U.S. Senate.
h/t to TPMDC for the full press release from Ned Lamont:
NED LAMONT ANNOUNCES FORMATION OF EXPLORATORY COMMITTEE
Norwalk, CT – Ned Lamont, successful businessman, co-founder of the state policy center at Central Connecticut State University, and Democratic nominee for US Senate in 2006, announced that he will be filing papers today with the State Elections Enforcement Commission establishing an Exploratory Committee for statewide office:
"As I have continued to meet with citizens across our state over the last three years, as co-chairman of President Obama’s Connecticut campaign and on behalf of health care reform, I have been constantly reminded that Connecticut is not living up to its potential and that too many of our families are being left behind," said Lamont.
"Like businesses, states thrive with strong executive leadership, and they fall behind with weak leadership. As measured by the loss of jobs, young people leaving our state, and the never-ending budget crisis, Connecticut’s Chief Executive is simply not getting the job done."
Since the 2006 campaign, Lamont has continued to serve as Chairman of the Board of Campus Televideo, a Connecticut company he founded twenty-five years ago. He is also a distinguished professor of political science at Central Connecticut State University, where he co-founded a policy center which has brought together leading business, labor, and non-profit leaders to formulate a strategic plan for the state of Connecticut. In addition, he serves on the boards of Conservation Services Group, a leading provider of energy efficiency programs, Teach for America/CT, and Mercy Corps, an international non-profit organization that focuses on job training and small business start-ups around the world.
ctblogger at MLN says that Susan Bysiewicz is looking at the race, as well.



13 Comments







Go Ned!
Very exciting — can’t wait for Ned to run, win, and then summon the Junior Senator for a quiet meeting at the Statehouse!
Don’t brag on Ned, if He had won we wouldn’t have to worry about the Leiberweasel.
Ned beat the Lieberweasal fair and square in their party’s primary, but Lieberman was encouraged to continue by the GOP. His sore-loser candidacy, supported by Rove’s money-raising Rolodex, bitterly divided the Democratic party nationally.
But it is Ned’s clarion call against the Iraq War that allowed other Democrats to come out against it loud and clear, something then-DCCC head Rahm Emanuel had forbidden. Without Ned’s candidacy, Democrats may not have taken back the House at all in 2006 and certainly wouldn’t have squeaked by with Senate control.
So, yes — we’ll brag on Ned.
Indeed. I am happy to brag on Ned any time. He got stabbed in the back by the “incumbency protection wing” of the Dems. And, course, Bill Clinton really didn’t think the choice between Lamont and Lieberman really mattered, because, after all, they’re both Dems. Right.
Alright brag on Ned, But can we throw CT out of the Union. Any State that voted for the Leiberweasel isn’t worth having.
Your no-gray-areas world must be fun to inhabit (not). Connecticut has a stellar Congressional delegation and a wonderful senior Senator, Dodd, who championed civil liberties during the FISA fight despite his party’s own cave-in to Bush/Cheney.
I don’t want to throw Connecticut out of the union; far from it. I want to help them correct the error of their ways.
Who represents your state? Are they perfect all the time? Do you blame voters nearer by as broadly as you blame all of Connecticut for being misled by Joe in 2006? After all, he said he favored universal health care, wanted to bring the troops home from Iraq, and sought to elect a Democrat to the presidency.
Should voters be castigated when long-time public servants lie to them?
Yes.
Dear Mister Dodd was hugely part of the problems in the housing crisis.
If He’d been [edited] for His part in that we would have been better off.
You see by liking any one Senator You are part of the problem.
We will never save this Country by liking some of the problems.
[modnote: no violent references, please]
I am guessing that the interest from Lamont may mean that Rell is not running again. Full confirmation of that if Bluementhal throws his hat in there too. heh
I just got that info via email! Woot! I’d heard it was in the works from a CT friend who was at a Dem event a month ago(small party, nothing to do with Ned). But, she talked to Ned, mentioned how her friend came from far away to work for Ned due to FDL advocacy, and asked him, so what are your plans? He told her he was considering running for governor. This is great news.
http://www.nedlamont.com/
Paul Begala published a remark about two weeks ago that I find instructive and interesting. He was reacting to Lieberman’s threats to vote against cloture after Senate debate on Health Care…and suggested that what Connecticut needed was a “Big D” who might run in 2012 against Lieberman. So I started sorting the small stack of punch cards for someone in CT who Begala would call a “Big D.”
My guess is Ted Kennedy Jr. who lives in New Haven. That would be the Big D who would get Begala’s juices flowing, but who indeed probably could cream Lieberman in CT, who could raise the money, would be perhaps the most dependable Liberal/Progressive Senate floor vote you could get, and who would be able to garner support in the working class/minority communities where Lamont was not particularly effective in 2006. (It is about 20% of the Democratic vote in the state, and mostly stuck with Lieberman.) The question we should always be asking is who can, in a state wide election, generate the cross-over support between the better educated professional class Democrats, and the less affluent groups that are traditional Democrats. I would suggest that Ted Kennedy Jr. fits that bill very well.
As to Dodd — I suspect he can win next year by perhaps a narrower margin than in the past, largely because he has the same kind of cross-over appeal that a Kennedy might have between the two parts of the CT Democratic Party. Admittedly, he has work to do, but he has a year to fix up his image. Dodd’s roots are so deep in CT — one needs to remember some of the history of his father, Tom Dodd to understand the appeal.
The only Dem that did not stab Lamont in the back during the Primary was Ted Kennedy.
All the others supported LIEberman during the Primary and then switched to Lamont during the three way election.
Had the pleasure of Meeting Senator Kennedy at a fundraiser near the end of the Primary.