HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Ned Lamont, a wealthy businessman who embodied voters’ frustration with the war in Iraq during his 2006 U.S. Senate run, is facing off against Joe Ganim, a big-city mayor who served seven years in prison for public corruption, in Connecticut’s Democratic gubernatorial primary on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, five Republican candidates are vying to be the one man who will try in November to regain control of the state’s top job after nearly eight years of Democratic rule.
The gubernatorial competitions are just two of the numerous primaries being held Tuesday, for everything from state treasurer to the state House of Representatives. The most crowded primary field in recent memory has been fueled by an unusually large number of open seats for top offices - notably Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is not seeking a third term - coupled with the availability of public financing for state races.
There are also Democratic and GOP battles in the state’s 5th Congressional District, where Democratic U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty is not seeking a fourth term.
Even though he wasn’t on the ballot, President Donald Trump also was on voters’ minds Tuesday.
Sharon Pope, 70, who grew up as a Republican in Indiana, is now a Democrat and voted for her party’s candidates at a polling place in Hartford, citing concerns about gun violence, Trump’s immigration policies and abortion rights. She said her 94-year-old mother in Indiana is voting for Democrats for the first time this year.
“She doesn’t like the politics of President Trump,” Pope said. “Mostly she doesn’t like how he behaves.”
Polls opened at 6 a.m. and will close at 8 p.m. There were no major problems - only minor malfunctions of paper ballot scanners in Hartford and New Britain, according to the Secretary of the State’s Office. No voter turnout figures were available Tuesday morning.
The battle for the GOP nomination for governor has already been testy in recent days, with outside groups spending tens of thousands of dollars on TV ads and candidates clashing with one another.
Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, who successfully had a noncancerous brain tumor removed last year, narrowly won the GOP endorsement at the party’s convention in May. But he faces another tough challenge from four fellow Republicans on Tuesday’s ballot. The list includes two wealthy businessmen, former Greenwich hedge fund manager David Stemerman and former General Electric executive Bob Stefanowski, who are mostly self-funding their campaigns. There’s also former Trumbull First Selectman Tim Herbst and Westport tech entrepreneur Steve Obsitnik, who, like Boughton, are both participating in the state’s public campaign financing program.
Martin Espejo, a 69-year-old retiree, said he voted for Obsitnik.
“I liked his plan and what he stood for,” said Espejo, who expressed concerns about taxes. “He sounds like a real standup guy.”
Whoever wins the most votes will secure the party’s nomination. Some candidates have estimated they need just 25,000 to 30,000 votes to win, considering past primary turnouts.
Former Gov. M. Jodi Rell is the last Republican to hold the office. She left office in January 2011.
On the Democratic side, Lamont is mostly self-funding his gubernatorial campaign while Ganim, the mayor of Bridgeport, has been raising contributions after being barred from participating in the public campaign funding system.
Lamont is best known for defeating U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman in the 2006 Democratic primary. Lieberman went on to win the general election as an independent candidate.
Jenna Banker, a 25-year-old residential manager at a group home for people with disabilities, said she voted for Lamont primarily because he received the endorsement from her union. She said Ganim’s criminal past wasn’t a significant factor.
“By running for governor, I assume he is trying to turn around and be a good person,” she said. “I don’t have anything personally against him.”
Malloy, who has been bashed by the Republican candidates for the state’s budget deficits and other issues, defended his record Tuesday after casting his ballot in Hartford, citing job growth and cuts to the state’s long-term debt. He declined to say for whom he voted.
“It’s a body of work that I am very proud of,” said Malloy, who has said his low public approval ratings did not play a role in his not seeking another term.
Joshua Foley, a spokesman for the State Elections Enforcement Commission, said his office has been gearing up for Tuesday’s primary. The agency will staff a primary day hotline at 866-SEEC-INFO (866-733-2463) for anyone who witnesses voting irregularities. Complaints sent to an email address, elections@ctgov, will also be monitored by SEEC and the Secretary of the State’s Office.
Only state’s roughly 1.2 million registered Democrats and Republicans can participate in the primary. They represent about 57 percent of the state’s electorate. Unaffiliated voters, the largest voting bloc, cannot participate in party primaries in Connecticut.
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Associated Press writer Dave Collins in Hartford contributed to this report.
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