Everybody Beats Dodd In Latest Q-Poll


The latest Q poll is out, and despite his seemingly endless repetition of the worn out “all I can do is my job” line and his protestations that he intends to run again, Chris Dodd and Democratic party leaders have some serious thinking to do.

The poll, released this morning, shows Dodd getting crushed in a match-up against Rob Simmons, 34/50, and losing to Sam Caligiuri 37/41 and to Tom Foley 35/43. Pretty incredible since 88 and 80 percent of voters don’t even know enough about Caligiuri and Foley to have a favorable/unfavorable opinion. Had the pollsters asked, they probably would have found that the only Republican Dodd could beat was George W. Bush.

It will be interesting to see what part of these results is AIG-induced hysteria and fades away by the next poll, and how much is just voters realizing what they are stuck with for a senator.

Coverage of the results was everywhere and largely harsh. Here’s what I got:

And from the left (I wade through the muck so you don’t have to!):

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.


Off The Wire: Dodd Low On Dem Support And Lower On Cash


Politico reports on the substantial dissent that is growing amongst those in the Democratic party here in Connecticut.

Bloomberg has an article on Dodd’s cash shortage.

ABC talks to Rob Simmons about Dodd and the 2010 race.

And via Gateway Pundit, the collected scandals of Chris Dodd:

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Another Felon For Dodd To Get Pardoned?


As reported by the Washington Times yesterday and covered in this post (thanks to Moe at RedState for promoting it to the front page), AIG chief exec Joseph Cassano is an FOD (Friend of Dodd). He raised some $160k in a few months for Dodd by pressuring his peers and subordinates to pony up.

Well, it looks as though he may have more trouble than just getting caught trying to buy his way into Dodd’s pocket. ABC reports that the feds are “closing in” on him for fraud. Perhaps part of the payback for Cassano for Dodd’s fundraising will be a Presidential pardon at the senator’s request on Obama’s way out, like Dodd did with felon and BFF Edward Downe when Clinton was heading home.

This Hot Air post by Ed Morrissey also raises questions about whether the AIG employees were used as strawmen to funnel cash to Dodd. At this point, I don’t think anything would surprise me.

Ed also links to an NRO post describing the first time Dodd created massive, taxpayer funded windfall legislation with the primary beneficiary being AIG.

The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act privatizes profit and socializes risk. Though he voted for the Homeland Security Act, even conservative Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) voted against the insurance measure, dubbing it “a windfall.”One of the big winners will be American International Group (AIG), the world’s second-largest financial conglomerate and largest U.S. underwriter of commercial and industrial insurance. CEO Maurice “Hank” Greenberg was instrumental in persuading leaders of both parties to give insurance companies a handout in the event of losses ascribed to terrorism…

The federal program, which will pay out insurance company claims for losses up to $100 billion, will be triggered once the insurance industry sustains only $5 million in terror losses…

The lead sponsor of the original Senate version was Democrat Chris Dodd, who represents the insurance capital, Connecticut.

Like our new lefty leaders love to believe, a crisis is a terrible thing to waste, whether it is an economic downturn or a terrorist attack.

H/T to Karl at Patterico’s Pontifications.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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You’d Be Foolish Not To Contribute To Chris Dodd’s Campaign


Promoted from diaries. – Moe Lane.

In today’s Washington Times there is a report about how a bunch of AIG Financial Services executives were “asked” by their CEO to donate to Chris Dodd’s campaign, and to encourage their subordinates to do the same. Read AIG chief executive Joseph Cassano’s email for yourself.

Was this more than just a suggestion? Well, the boss said he wanted copies of the checks they sent. And it seems pretty clear that the recipients of the email got the gist: in less than two months, Dodd received over $160,000 in donations from AIG employees and their spouses.

Did Chris Dodd have any part in this request? We may never know. And it’s not illegal. So what’s the big deal? Well, the email pretty explicitly calls for the donations with the understanding that they will have very real and practical effects in their favor:

Read More →

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Kos Poll Shows Dodd/Simmons Still Tight


Research 2000′s poll for Daily Kos shows Dodd up 45-40 on Simmons, with a 4% MOE. While a bit better for Dodd than the last Q poll, it is difficult to compare two different polls with different samples, different questions and different methodologies. In any event, these are still pretty poor numbers for a three decade incumbent. Dodd’s favorable/unfavorable is +7 (13 no opinion), while Simmons’ is +23 (41 no opinion).

Kos’ analysis:

Dodd is the most endangered incumbent in the Senate at the moment. He has certain things going for him: he’s got a famous name, formidable fundraising ability, and Connecticut is a Democratic-leaning state. On the other hand, he hasn’t been battle-tested by a series of tough races, as Simmons has.

This will be the toughest race of Dodd’s long career, and he’d better be up for the challenge. He’s still slightly favored, but if he doesn’t watch out be [sic] could end up like Elizabeth Dole.

Caligiuri appears to be a nearly-complete unknown; 82% have no fav/unfav opinion. Even so, Dodd barely breaks 50% against him, 51-30. That means there are a lot of people simply voting against Dodd, and not for his opponent, regardless of who it is. Good for the R’s, not so much for Dodd.

Also, Rell retains an approval rating of over 70% and polls pretty well in hypothetical 2012 matchups against Lieberman and either Lamont or Blumenthal.

Coverage can be found at My Left Nutmeg, TPMDC, Hedgehog Report, Swing State Project (who downgraded the race to “Leans Dem”), and The Hill.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.


Evening Inspiration


Watch this video and then get to work on figuring out a way to have him traded to the U.S. Senate for Chris Dodd (or anyone else, for that matter).

I know this is not my usual subject matter, but I was inspired. And he didn’t even need a teleprompter!

H/T The Corner at NRO.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.


Off The Wire: Kudlow, Foley, Dodd and Jackie


As noted late last night, Larry Kudlow has announced he has no intention of campaigning for Dodd’s seat in 2010. While some are disappointed, I think he would have had a harder time beating Dodd than Simmons would. Now, we’ll never know. Coverage at Newsbusters, the Courant’s Capitol Watch, the New York Times, and Huffington Post (with video).

With Kudlow out, Connecticut Local Politics points to a Stamford Advocate article that indicates that former U.S. Ambassador to Ireland is still considering a run. He acknowledges his name recognition isn’t much better than mine, but seems to think it is a hurdle that could be overcome without too much trouble. While I concede it wouldn’t be insurmountable, starting that far behind Simmons, whose last district covered almost half the state, is a very substantial disadvantage in a primary. Granted, he’s got sixteen months before the primary, but Simmons has a running start on him.

Speaking of Ireland, Brian Faughnan at RedState has a post on Dodd’s Irish cottage:

Here’s the quick-and-dirty: find a convicted felon and get him to put up two-thirds of the purchase price, then 8 years later – when the value of comparable real estate has quadrupled – buy him out at around the same amount he bought in for.

Voila! Before you know it, you own an Irish ‘cottage’ worth about a million dollars, but whose value you claim on ethics forms is as little as $100,000!

To be fair, Dodd bought the DC townhouse with the felon, and the Irish cottage with the felon’s friend. I know, it is hard to keep them all straight…

Faughnan also chimed in on the 2010 races in the Northeast that the GOP is optimistic about, as well as Jackie’s history with AIG. HuffPo covers Dodd’s indignant response to the questions raised about his wife’s AIG ties, but I think with all of his ethical lapses, he has lost any right he once had to get upset about anyone questioning anything about him (or his wife, if there are potentialproblems ). As I said before, I don’t think this is actually a big deal, but he has lied and stonewalled about his other problems, so you’d be an idiot to take his word for anything at this point.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Kudlow Won’t Challenge Dodd


Newsbusters (www.newsbusters.org) has a report on Larry Kudlow’s announcement that he will not challenge for Chris Dodd’s Connecticut seat in 2010. No direct link due to iPhone 1.0′s inability to copy/paste. Sorry. Additional info tomorrow.

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Dodd’s Wife Recevied Tens Of Thousands Of Dollars For Serving As Director For AIG-Controlled Company


Do you remember the “analogies” section of the SAT? A is to B as X is to Y? Well, after the lady Huskies dismantled Vermont 104-65 in Sunday’s first round match-up, I think the following analogy is apropos.

Kevin Rennie : Chris Dodd :: UConn women’s basketball team : University of Vermont

Rennie has been ripping the scabs off of Dodd’s festering wounds for some time now, but today, writing for RealClearPolitics, he sticks the knife somewhere new, taking aim at Jackie Clegg Dodd’s connections to AIG. Just as things started to die down on the bonus front, a new motivation for Chris Dodd to interfere on behalf of the AIG execs emerges. It’s amazing how Rennie, in his free time, has turned up more info than the rest of the Courant reporters put together, isn’t it?

Not only is Dodd the largest all-time recipient of campaign donations from the bailed-out insurance giant, but apparently his wife has received tens of thousands of dollars from an AIG-controlled company out of Bermuda, as well.

Clegg was compensated for her duties to the company, which was managed by a subsidiary of AIG. In 2003, according to a proxy statement, Clegg received $12,000 per year and an additional $1,000 for each Director’s and committee meeting she attended.

Of course there is nothing blatantly illegal or unethical about this, but it certainly adds fuel to the fire already burning against Dodd for his deception about, and questionable motivations for, writing/allowing the exemption to the stimulus bill.

There is also an interesting, interactive map of interpersonal connections of Mrs. Dodd (and the Senator) at Muckety.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Dodd Crushed By Local Media Over Weekend


I think it would be fair to say that Chris Dodd has never had a three or four day period with this much negative press from his local mainstream media. You might have to go back to John Rowland to find anyone in Connecticut who has. These jumped out at me, but I am fairly confident that this is not an exhaustive list.

From the Hartford Courant:

From the Connecticut Post:

From the New Haven Register:

From the Waterbury Republican-American:

I think each of Dodd’s numerous scandals got at least a mention, from his ill-timed move to Iowa for his disaster of a Presidential capaign, to his accepting sweetheart mortgage deals from his friend at Countrywide, to the Washington condo, to the  mysterious, non-appreciating Irish cottage, to Dodd’s stimulus amendment that ended up giving millions to AIG execs who made Dodd their most-contributed-to politician and Dodd’ subsequent lying and blame-shifting.

Not bad for a weekend!

Cross-posted The Artful Doddger.

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RNC Vid On AIG Flap, Cameos By Gibbs, Dodd, Obama


Check out this planned Web video from the RNC on the whole AIG fiasco, via MSNBC. I can’t believe Gibbs gets paid to speak in public.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Rough Day For Dodd


Chris Dodd has had a few days he’d rather forget over the last few months, but I don’t know that any have been as bad as today. It cannot be comfortable when virtually everyone, on both sides, is pointing the finger at you for something as unpopular as the Dodd Amendment has quickly become.

When it comes to Dodd, I am much more bothered by the fact that he lied about his role in the whole thing than what the amendment said or who wrote it. There is no longer any reason to believe anything he says, from his claim he didn’t know he was getting a VIP loan from his buddy, to his questionable real estate dealings with a convicted felon he got a pardon for, to the real story behind the drafting of the legislative in question now.

Anyway, here is some of what Dodd was reading today:

US Conservative Politics
:

As chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Dodd’s made some highly suspicious decisions. He’s a walking ethics nightmare. I’m guessing that if he thought about it at all, he never imagined his behind-the-back maneuver (the one where he slipped the bonus loophole into the stimulus package) would come back to haunt him, but with all the attention being paid to these gigantic corporations, how could he not? Dodd is that rare breed of politician who is either too greedy to serve the people or too dumb to swindle them. Either way, he shouldn’t be in office.

Washington Post:

It seems that there’s one Democrat who really should be afraid. If you listened closely yesterday in the Capitol, it’s possible you heard the sound of Chris Dodd’s career coming to an end. Too harsh an assessment? Perhaps, but it’s hard to overstate how badly the Connecticut senator stepped in it when he admitted that he had put language in the stimulus bill ensuring that contractual bonuses were paid out at companies receiving bailout money, a day after saying he didn’t know how the language got it.

Rob Simmons in the Hartford Courant:

I can’t believe the chairman of a committee can take a bill to the floor and speak in favor of it and vote on it without knowing what’s in it. The issue of executive compensation is obviously an important issue…you would think someone’s reading the language of the bill.

Gawker:

Dodd’s apparent strategy is contrition: He apologized to Blitzer over any “confusion” he may have caused with his lie. And he also announced his intention to return all donations from AIG executives. It may work, but because of his own mendacity, this episode has strengthened a growing reputation as a well-rewarded shill for the banks and mortgage lenders that ruined the country. He was regarded as a “special customer” of Countrywide Financial by CEO Angelo Mozilo, and received a sweetheart interest rate on his home mortgage. Dodd says he was unaware that he got special treatment, but how do you know whether to believe him?

The Nation:

“We are outraged to learn that Sen. Dodd, at the behest of the Obama administration, inserted a last-minute loophole into the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act that allowed AIG employees to receive exorbitant bonuses at the American taxpayers’ expense, and the vast majority of elected officials, not to mention the American public, missed the amendment because they only had 13 hours to read the bill!” the Sunlight Foundation commented today.

Associated Content:

Senator Chris Dodd revealed yesterday he was the one who removed the language preventing things like the AIG bonuses from happening, and he should resign. These are the kind of politicians we don’t need representing us. Dodd heads the Senate Banking Committee, a position too important for this career politician. While I may enjoy his comments and personality, this is about principle. President Obama talked about changing the way Washington works, and what Dodd did is exactly what’s wrong with Congress. To be in Washington for 34 years and to make this blunder is unforgivable. I’ve had it with the incompetence. Dodd will be lucky to win re-election in Connecticut in 2010.

Real Clear Politics:

Stepping back for a second, Chris Dodd is already in a bit of trouble in his reelection bid, based on recent polling. Obviously, this further complicates matters. Dodd is now directly associated with two of the most distasteful aspects of the current financial meltdown: getting a sweetheart mortgage from the CEO of a company that was a major player in the subprime mess, and now authoring the loophole that allowed AIG to pay $165 million in bonuses after already taking scores of billions of bailout dollars, all at taxpayers expense.

Even Stan Simpson and Helen Ubinas at the Courant think Dodd is done!

Not a good day.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Chris Dodd Needs A Credibility Bailout


Lie: noun; 1. a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive; an intentional untruth; a falsehood. 2. something intended or serving to convey a false impression; imposture. 3. an inaccurate or false statement.

As I posted earlier, yesterday Chris Dodd claimed that he had nothing to do with the exemption in his executive compensation amendment to the stimulus bill for bonuses distributed pursuant to contracts entered into prior to February 11. From Fox Business:

Dodd’s original amendment did not include that exemption, and the Connecticut Senator denied inserting the provision.

I can’t point a finger at someone who was responsible for putting those dates in,” Dodd told FOX. “I can tell you this much, when my language left the senate, it did not include it. When it came back, it did.” [emphasis added]

After Obama decided Dodd was the next to go under the bus, Dodd decided to come clean today. From CNN (video here):

On Tuesday, Dodd denied to CNN that he had anything to do with adding the language, which has been used by officials at bailed-out insurance giant AIG to justify paying millions of dollars in bonuses to executives after receiving federal money.

He said Wednesday that the “grandfather clause” language “seemed like innocent modifications” at the time.

“I agreed reluctantly,” Dodd said. “I was changing the amendment because others were insistent.”
Dodd said he did not speak to high-ranking administration officials and the change came after his staff spoke with staffers from Treasury.

Yesterday he didn’t know where the language mysteriously materialized from, and today he said it was his. At least one of the statements is a lie; I can think of no reasonable alternative. He didn’t want to take the blame for allowing these bonuses to be paid in the face of the violent public reaction, so he said something that he knew was not true to mislead his constituents.

Lies vary in their significance and severity, but every intentional telling of an untruth chips away at the liar’s credibility.

Some lies are insignificant, like telling you daughter there is a fairy that comes into her room at night and exchanges the tooth she lost in her Granny Smith apple for cash (what’s the going rate for a seven year old incisor, anyway?); but when she inevitably finds you were leading her on, she will feel a sense of betrayal and somewhere in her psyche you lose some level of credibility.

Other lies are bigger, or more significant. You know it when you tell a big lie; you can feel it in your gut. Your body has certain involuntary physiological reactions, some which are obvious and others which are not. You look away, you blush, your pulse quickens, your blood pressure rises. Think Scott Peterson telling Diane Sawyer he didn’t kill his wife. More significant lie, less credibility remaining afterwards.

I would also posit that the severity of a lie can be scientifically categorized as either “bad” or “not-so-bad.” Telling the SS soldier at the door in Nazi Germany that there are no Jews in the house when in fact there is a family hiding in your closet would qualify as a not-so-bad lie. Telling your wife you have to work late when you are actually going to a motel to meet your girlfriend is a bad lie. The difference are largely in the motivations of the liar.

Accusing someone of lying is a serious charge. After all, lying made the all-time top ten list of bad things to do (see Exodus 20:16). In the end, when all the superficial stuff is stripped away, one’s integrity is all they really have, and to accuse someone of lying is to take a shot at their integrity. It is not something I do lightly.

That being said, it certainly appears as though Chris Dodd lied. His lie is both significant and severe, and another huge chunk of Dodd’s credibility has been flushed down the toilet.

The worst part is that he actually had a reasonable explanation. If he had said from the beginning that he added the language at the behest of Treasury or the Administration to save the amendment, many people would have accepted that. Instead, when placed under pressure, he lied, leaving Connecticut voters no reason to believe anything he says in the future.

I question whether Senator Dodd has enough credibility remaining to allow him to effectively serve as Connecticut’s senator.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Dodd’s Most Recent Kick To The Groin: AIG


Just when you find yourself wondering if things could get any worse for Chris Dodd, insurance giant AIG, which he recently helped bail out, gives away $160 million of taxpayer money in bonuses to their executives. He must be sitting on his couch right now, rubbing his temples, and just wondering when it is going to let up.

In the New York Times we find an anonymous source from Obama’s Treasury Department throwing Dodd under the bus for enabling AIG to get away with this:

The second group of bonuses covers some 208 retention payments from contracts entered into before government involvement in A.I.G. Indeed, in his letter to Mr.Geithner, Mr. Liddy wrote that he had shown the details of the $450 million bonus pool to outside lawyers and been told that A.I.G. had no choice but to follow through with the payment schedule.

The administration official said the Treasury Department did its own legal analysis and concluded that those contracts could not be broken. The official noted that even a provision recently pushed through Congress by Senator Christopher J. Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, had an exemption for such bonus agreements already in place. [emphasis added]

The administration blames this all on what they are calling the “Dodd Amendment,” the executive compensation amendment to the stimulus bill that included the loophole allowing bonus payments that had already been agreed to prior to February 11.Dodd denies he was the author of that aspect of the provision , but he won’t pin it on anyone else, either.

Dodd’s original amendment did not include that exemption, and the Connecticut Senator denied inserting the provision.

“I can’t point a finger at someone who was responsible for putting those dates in,” Dodd told Fox. “I can tell you this much, when my language left the senate, it did not include it. When it came back, it did.”

This post from FDL does a decent job of demonstrating the blame lies squarely on Obama and Treasury rather than Dodd. But the fact of the matter is that it doesn’t matter who is to blame for that particular clause. It is all the rage these days to be outraged about how the bailed-out companies are spending taxpayer money. From the Senator’s press release:

This is another outrageous example of executives – including those whose decisions were responsible for the problems that causedAIG’s collapse – enriching themselves at the expense of taxpayers. A car mechanic or teacher in Connecticut shouldn’t have to subsidize the bad decisions of these executives.

Seriously, how hypocritical can our politicians be? We are talking about $160 million here. I know that used to be a lot of money, but our new President has spent like 10,000 times that much in the past two months. Literally. These bonuses are only a few years of playing third base for the Yankees. As John at Powerline pointed out, the earmarks in the recent stimulus bill accounted for $8 billion, and to run our government costs about $11 billion A DAY.

So I agree with the Senator that the taxpayers should have nothing to do with this. What’s Dodd’s plan to rectify this injustice? Raise taxes.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) on Monday night floated the idea of taxing American International Group bonus recipients so the government could recoup some or all of the $450 million the company is paying to employees in its financial products unit. Within hours, the idea spread to both houses of Congress, with lawmakers proposing anAIG bonus tax.

This is a classic. Let’s spend almost a trillion dollars of taxpayer money, give it to failing companies, then take as much of it as we can back in taxes when they pay it to their employees. Of course, once the government does get it back, it is not as if they are going to send it back to you and me. They’ll spend it on saving mice or buying prophylactics to limit the number of consumers draining our economy.

If only our legal system had developed a way for companies that were in financial trouble to restructure themselves and get out of contracts that require payments of millions of dollars of bonuses to the people who crashed the company without raping the American taxpayer. Like this.

As all of this mess were not bad enough for Dodd, the world has yet another reason to be reminded that he was the top recipient of campaign contributions from AIG, closely followed by President Obama.

Looking back at the past year, it is difficult to comprehend how Chris Dodd has managed to survive in politics over the past three decades. It is time for him to go.

UPDATE: I swear to you I am not making this up… Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has demanded that AIG pay back the $160 million in bonuses with taxpayer money that the government will give them in the near future. Unreal.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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NRSC’s First Shot At Dodd A Dud


I get the St. Patrick’s Day connection and all, but this ad is pretty weak. It looks like a high school student put it together when they should have been paying attention in class. The Irish accent is atrocious and I think Dodd has involved himself in too many scandals to cram them all into one commercial. It is dizzying!

I hope Simmons and company have more creative talent on their side than the NRSC showed here. The good thing is I can’t imagine it cost very much!

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Off The Wire: Rob Simmons Edition


Rob Simmons got a fair share of press today, despite the late-night, email-only announcement of his candidacy. Coverage from today of Simmons’ announcement can be found at:

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Dragging Dodd Downe?


On Face the State Sunday, Chris Dodd talked with host Dennis House (who returned to Dodd’s ethical problems repeatedly throughout the interview) about his relationship with his good friend Edward Downe, Jr. As you may recall, Downe was Dodd’s real estate partner on a DC condo in the mid-80′s, and he helped facilitate the partnership that resulted in his purchase eight years later of the now-infamous cottage in Ireland.

Oh yeah, he was also a felon, convicted of making millions by illegally trading stocks based on insider information. After pleading guilty, he paid a fine, was placed on probation and did some 3,000 hours of community service in the early nineties.

“I’m a great believer: You deplore the sin, embrace the sinner…I didn’t walk away from my friend at a dark moment for him,” Dodd said about Downe, seemingly expecting someone to come from off camera and present him with a plaque from Mr. Trophy recognizing him as Best Friend of the Year, 1993. Look, I get that they were friends, and I don’t think that most people have too much of an issue with Dodd not abandoning the guy. But if you are a smart politician, or even just a smart person in general, it should occur to you that while you can still be his friend, it might not be wise to have him involved in your financial dealings, accept campaign contributions from him, or try to use your official position to benefit him.

But not Dodd. Not only did he stand by his man, he also got involved in a real estate deal with William Kessinger, someone Downe introduced him to. They had Downe sign some of the paperwork, and he continued taking Downe’s campaign contributions. Then Dodd used his position as a U.S. Senator to pressure outgoing-President Clinton into giving Downe a pardon, apparently because he was sorry and was fortunate enough to be friends with a senator. The controversial pardon was granted on Clinton’s last day in office.

Soon after getting the pardon, Dodd buys up Kessinger’s share of the Irish cottage for barely more than it was worth when they purchased it nearly a decade earlier, despite the rapidly rising real estate market across most of the country. Did he really think doing something like that wouldn’t raise eyebrows, despite the “independent appraisal” he is relying on?

Well, it has raised eyebrows, and it does not appear to be going away. Kevin Rennie has been all over it for some time now, and this week even the Courant’s news reporters thought it might be worth an article. The Wall Street Journal has noticed, as well, and they’re not buying it across the pond, either.

Rob Simmons has already given indications that shady real estate deals and sweetheart mortgages will be issues during his campaign against Dodd, and there is little doubt that we will be hearing about them from anyone who throws their hat in the ring. And we should.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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It’s Official: Rob Simmons To Challenge Dodd


As reported by the Hartford Courant, Rob Simmons has officially announced his intention to challenge Chris Dodd for his senate seat in 2010. Via an email to the AP, Simmons said that after meeting with family and friends today, he received unanimous support and made the decision.

I have said Simmons is probably in the best position to challenge Dodd of those whose names have been mentioned, and the recent Q-poll certainly supports that assertion. I think it was wise to make the decision early, allowing him to start hitting Dodd while the he is still vulnerable on his many issues, rather than waiting until the fall when Dodd has had more of a chance to rehabilitate himself. Such a strong candidate getting in early may also keep one or two other potential Republican challengers, like Schiff or Kudlow, from deciding to run.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Simmons And Dodd On Sunday Morning Talk Shows


Set your Tivos for tomorrow morning for info on Connecticut’s senate seat up for grabs in 2010.

  • The Real Story, Fox 61 at 8:30 am: Host Shelly Sindland will have Dodd-challenger and former-Congressman Rob Simmons. Perhaps he will announce his run? He had said earlier he thought he’d decide by the Ides of March.
  • Face the State, WFSB 3 at 11:00 am: Host Dennis House will have Senator Dodd, where he will likely continue to ignore his flailing in the polls and the questions about his numerous ethical lapses and just talk about how he must plug along and do his job. Of course, had he been doing just that over the last few years, perhaps he wouldn’t be where he is.

H/T The Laurel.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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Off The Wire: Kevin Rennie On Dodd, The Q-Poll, Joe And Chris Friends Again And More


Unfortunately for me, I am back in the United States, though I haven’t made it back to Connecticut yet. I picked a less-than-optimal time to be away, and feel like I missed a lot. I have done my best in the short time I have had to put together some links that may be of interest from the past week.

There are a lot of links and some of it is slightly old news. If you are prioritizing, I would check out the links marked “**” first.

- Kevin Rennie, the Hartford Courant opinion-columnist-turned-investigative-reporter continues his crusade** to hold Chris Dodd accountable for his ethically questionable real estate dealings with William Kessinger and convicted felon Edward Downe. Rennie is doing a fine job of digging through details the mainstream media has thus-far neglected to do, and has gotten plenty of much-deserved attention. Be sure to read Rennie’s article, and if you want more, check out:

- Quinnipiac released it’s latest poll on March 10, and the news is not good for Dodd, regardless of how his folks want to spin it. The poll itself can be found here, with news coverage and analysis at the following:

When I get home I will put together a more complete look at the poll results.

- Joe Lieberman’s transition back to being mostly Democrat continued with his announcement of support for Dodd in 2010 despite Dodd’ backing Lamont a few short years ago. Coverage at:

- Dodd’s current plight warranted a substantial article in Time. Connecticut Local Politics has a post on the article, and on Dodd/Lieberman as well..

- Dennis House of WFSB and Face the State has a post worth reading about his role as a journalist in covering someone he likes.

- Ennuipundit on the irony that is Chris Dodd.

Cross-posted at The Artful Doddger.

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