The [tag]Connecticut[/tag] Democratic Party’s [tag]state convention[/tag] met last night, in part to help decide who’d qualify for the party’s primary ballot. All eyes were on [tag]Ned Lamont[/tag], who needed 15% of Connecticut delegates to be able to take on Sen. [tag]Joe Lieberman[/tag] in August. As it turned out, he did a little better than 15%. OK, more than a little.
Backers of Ned Lamont, a Greenwich businessman who has sharply criticized the moderate senator for his support of the war in Iraq, shouted with delight after learning their candidate will be the first to challenge Lieberman to a primary.
Lieberman won 1,004 of the 1,509 votes cast at the state convention, while Lamont won 505. Lamont captured 33 percent of the delegates, well more than the 15 percent he needed to force the primary.
Lieberman’s 66% may sound like a lot, but it’s a rather stunning embarrassment for the incumbent. The man has been the state’s leading Democrat for a couple of decades and was nearly the nation’s vice president just six years ago. He’s never faced a primary opponent and was supposed to cruise to an easy victory last night.
For a largely unknown businessman who has never held elective office, with support from the [tag]netroots[/tag], to come out of nowhere to grab a third of the state’s Democratic delegates suggests a) Lamont is very much for real; and b) the discontent over Lieberman is not a passing fad.
Stay tuned.