By CHRIS POWELL
Twenty years ago Ned Lamont accomplished what may have been the neatest trick in Connecticut political history. He won the primary for the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator, defeating the incumbent, Joe Lieberman, and lost the election on the same night.
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How did it happen?
While being a good liberal Democrat in most respects, Lieberman was in trouble with many Democrats for supporting the war in Iraq that was being waged by the administration of President George W. Bush, a Republican, in pursuit of imaginary “weapons of mass destruction.” Lamont mobilized anti-war Democrats and narrowly won the primary, 52-48%.
But as he claimed victory on live television, Lamont was standing next to his supporter from New York, Al Sharpton, who back then was known less for being a “civil rights leader” than a race hustler, a perpetrator of the Tawana Brawley rape hoax, an income tax evader, a violator of federal campaign finance law, a defaulter on a libel judgment arising from the hoax, and an all-around grifter. In a general election Sharpton was the kiss of political death and so, standing next to him that night, Lamont kissed the moderate vote goodbye. Running as an independent Lieberman easily defeated Lamont and a token Republican nominee, drawing both Democratic and Republican votes.
Now governor and seeking re-election to a third term, Lamont is somewhat in the position Lieberman was in 20 years ago: He is the moderate or somewhat less liberal candidate in what likely will be a Democratic primary with far-left Hamden state Rep. Josh Elliott. So the other day Lamont seemed to see political benefit in paling around with Sharpton in the governor’s office at the state Capitol. Sharpton and civil rights lawyer Ben Crump had just spoken at the funeral of a mentally ill Black man who had been fatally shot by police during a psychotic episode in Hartford. They were there to racialize the incident.
For as Lenin and other totalitarians are supposed to have said: If you label something well enough, you don’t have to argue with it. No matter how unsubstantiated, accusations of racism still put people on the defensive in Connecticut.
The governor may have been confident he wouldn’t have to worry about being tarnished by Sharpton’s misconduct, since most of it happened long ago and Connecticut’s politically correct journalists would never bring it up even if they knew about it.
Instead the journalists reported that the governor and Sharpton agreed that police need more training in handling mentally ill people who are threatening others. The journalists did not report that while Hartford two years ago created a special squad of social workers to respond to such troubled people, city government lately has much reduced the squad’s funding and has been relying more on intervention by the police to handle the dozens of psychotic episodes that occur in the city every week.
Sharpton didn’t bring that up either. Of course he probably didn’t know about it, nor about the $70 million deficit being run by Hartford’s school system, nor about the system’s incompetence in the face of the enduring poverty and neglect at home of its heavily minority student population.
But then why bother? Everyone was having such a good time in Lamont’s office, with Sharpton sitting in the governor’s chair and remarking, “He’s one of the best governors in the country.”
Polls suggest that Connecticut well may concur in November, since most people have concluded that nothing can be done about the poverty of the cities except to increase their residents’ dependence on welfare and keep raising city government salaries.
Indeed, poverty is big business for many people now, including Sharpton himself, whose non-profit “civil rights organization,” the National Action Network, pays him annual salaries of between $600,000 and $1 million, money drawn in part from donations made by corporations afraid of being targeted by boycotts staged by the group. Such extortion may be what the group means by its slogan: “No justice, no peace.”
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)