Coming after his stunning upset of Joe Lieberman in the Connecticut Democratic primary, the general election was Ned Lamont's to lose. He lost it, in no small part by running a tepid middle game. In the futile hope that Lieberman would drop out if given room, Lamont went on vacation after the primary. Then the campaign wasted precious weeks trying to win voters on issues other than the war, papering the state with bland flyers and ads emphasizing not Joe's War but Lamont's social qualifications as a suburban family man and entrepreneur and making the dubious argument that a three-term senator wasn't bringing in federal dollars. That strategy never eroded Lieberman's lead among GOP voters, who know a Republican when they see one, and it failed to persuade a crucial minority of Democrats. In the campaign's final couple of weeks, Lamont focused once again almost excusively on the war, and the gap again narrowed--though never enough.
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Listening to Odetta
Bruce Shapiro: Her voice a force of nature and her theatrical sense undimmed, Odetta-made music of extraordinary compassion, intuition and grace.
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Studs Terkel: Vigilant Optimist
Bruce Shapiro: Studs Terkel always stood for the radical idea of the long memory. Telling the stories of our times, he remained to the end a vigilant optimist about civil rights and social progress.
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Christopher Dodd
Bruce Shapiro: Strongest on human rights and civil liberties.
Joe Lieberman's pals in the Democratic Leadership Council will undoubtedly claim his victory as a repudiation of antiwar progressives; Mayor Bloomberg, who lent his support to Lieberman, may think the Connecticut election heralds a new era of centrism. It was neither. It was Lamont, whatever his other failures, who with his primary victory stiffened the nerve of Democrats around the country, persuading them that they could run head-on against the war and win. In Connecticut's Congressional races, antiwar sentiment swept Democrat Chris Murphy to victory over Republican Nancy Johnson, a fixture in state politics for years, and at this writing two other Congressional campaigns are too close to call, with Iraq the prime engine driving each. The truth is that Joe Lieberman won an idiosyncratic victory. He holds his seat despite his relentless support for Iraq--rather than because of it.
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