No more presidential candidates here


It looks as if Connecticut has run out of presidential candidates.

After a really good start at the turn of the century, with Joe Lieberman nearly getting elected vice president in 2000, Connecticut began a downhill run in presidential politics that began with Lieberman's early elimination in 2004 and ended last week with Chris Dodd's sad experience in Iowa.

The brief presidential flirtations of Connecticut's senators were similar, and not only in their conclusions. Both were one-contest wonders. Lieberman chose to skip Iowa in 2004 to concentrate on the neighboring state of New Hampshire, but New Hampshire proved to be his Waterloo. He finished sixth there with 6.9 percent of the vote and ahead of only the perennial candidate Dennis Kucinich and Al Sharpton.

Dodd may now be thinking he should have skipped Iowa, too, where the top three contenders, Barack Obama, John Edwards and Hillary Clinton, attracted 97 percent of the vote, leaving the five also-rans to share in the residue of the remaining 3 percent. Like Lieberman in his one-state campaign, Dodd also finished sixth, but with an embarrassing 0.2 percent of the vote. He, too, was ahead of only the ever-faithful Kucinich and Mike Gravel.


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With Dodd and Lieberman eliminated from further presidential consideration and Ralph Nader no longer expected to indulge in his peculiar role as a booster of Republican fortunes, Connecticut can be considered retired from the presidential scene for now.

There is, of course, the chance of a Huckabee lurking in the shadows, a heretofore unknown champion rising from obscurity. But even Mike Huckabee had to rise from somewhere, in his case the ranks of former governors.

Now, Arkansas is blessed with five former governors among the living and only one of them has gone to jail. Connecticut, on the other hand, has only two, Lowell Weicker, who briefly ran for president decades ago and at 77, is even older than John McCain, and John Rowland, who is young enough, but is otherwise ineligible. We will not be finding another Huckabee among our former governors even when Jodi Rell is added to the roster.

With governors and senators eliminated, there's the House, but that's an unlikely source of presidential candidates. Connecticut is not going to see either its two new Democratic Congressmen or its two veterans suddenly rise to presidential status and its one Republican, Chris Shays, will be lucky to find himself back in Congress next year. And even if any of them showed promise, the House isn't exactly fertile presidential ground. It hasn't produced one since James Garfield.


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But do not despair, Connecticut. The vice presidency remains viable.

I can't see Obama looking to his Senate colleagues for a running mate and if he did, the herald of change wouldn't be choosing one of the old war horses like former opponents Dodd or Joe Biden. New Yorker Hillary Clinton wouldn't come looking in Connecticut for geographical diversity.

William Kristol, the neoconservative war lover whose misjudgments will soon be gracing the op-ed pages of The New York Times, thinks Lieberman would be a really swell running mate for most any Republican.

"McCain-Lieberman, Thompson-Lieberman, Romney-Lieberman, Huckabee-Lieberman, those sound like winning tickets to us," wrote Kristol after Lieberman announced he was endorsing McCain, but not, of course, leaving his beloved Democratic party.

Conspicuously absent from Kristol's tickets was Giuliani-Lieberman, but Kristol has his reasons for the omission. Giuliani, already running as a gun-control supporter with three first ladies on his resume, would not benefit from also having a pro-choice running mate, which Lieberman is at the present time, but Kristol sees a good job or two for the neocons' favorite Democrat.

"Rudy," Kristol writes, "you might try State or Defense" for good, old Joe.

With 9/11 Giuliani as president and Lieberman at defense, we'd be soon pining for the peace-loving pair of Bush and Rumsfeld.

 


Simsbury resident Dick Ahles is a retired journalist. E-mail him at dahles@hotmail.com.

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