Dodd has little support in Connecticut

The Federal Election Commission’s fundraising reports for the first quarter of 2009 are out and there’s some disquieting news for Chris Dodd. You can count his Connecticut donors on the fingers of one hand. Literally.

Only five of Dodd’s donors are Connecticut residents, and they contributed all of $4,250. He received 10 times as much from pawnbrokers and other members of the high-interest, payday loan industry, but then, they’re fighting a 36-percent cap on interest rates now before Dodd’s Banking Committee. He hasn’t said how he’s voting, according to The Hartford Courant.

Dodd had a good first quarter raising funds for his 2010 re-election campaign, picking up more than a million dollars. Nearly four hundred of Dodd’s contributions, $604,000, came from individuals, people like you and me. The rest came from the usual suspects: political action committees from the financial sector, the real estate and medical industries and labor.

But unlike you and me, only five of those individual donors live in Connecticut and can vote for Dodd next year. It would be difficult for the most impartial observer to consider this a vote of confidence from the people of the senator’s home state.

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It took a couple of days for this rather remarkable news to be reported by the incredibly shrinking Connecticut media. First day stories stressed the embattled senator’s continued ability to raise funds, as he jumped to a huge money lead over his potential 2010 opponents by raising just over $1 million to their just over practically nothing.

Then, the Connecticut Post’s Peter Urban discovered the addresses of all but five of Dodd’s contributors were out of state. “The five-term incumbent reported raising just $4,250 from five Connecticut residents during the first three months of the year while raking in $604,745 from nearly 400 individuals living outside the state.â€

The FEC quarterly report found individuals in 18 other states gave more to Dodd than the home folks. He received $90,795 from voters in Massachusetts, $81,500 from Texas, $56,150 from Maryland and $53,400 from New York, to name the top four.

The Center for Responsive Politics, which keeps track of such things, reports Dodd has always done extremely well with out-of-state, individual donors. During his more than three decades in the Senate, he has received $11.8 million from donors in the New York, Washington, Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco areas while getting $6.7 million from individuals who could vote for him in the Hartford, Bridgeport and New Haven metro areas.

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 Dodd campaign manager Jay Howser said the senator was “extremely grateful for the support he has received from the hundreds of individuals who donated to the campaign,†without mentioning that only five of “the hundreds†would be eligible to not only give money, but also to vote for him next year. Howser did link Dodd with one non-resident whose support will be crucial, saying the senator “spends each and every day championing the interests of Connecticut families and working hand-in-hand with President Obama to get our economy back on track.â€

It took an out-of-state daily, The Boston Globe, to seek out the president for his take on Dodd’s re-election campaign and the president responded with a strong endorsement, which could come back to haunt him.

“I can’t say it any clearer: I will be helping Chris Dodd because he deserves the help,†he told the Globe by phone from Air Force One.

“Chris is going through a rough patch,†the president observed, in a notable understatement. “He just has an extraordinary record of accomplishment and I think the people of Connecticut will come to recognize that.†Obama presumably didn’t know that only five of the people of Connecticut have recognized that “extraordinary record†with campaign contributions.

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The two Republicans who have announced their intention to seek their party’s nomination for the Senate next year, former Second District Congressman Rob Simmons and Waterbury state Sen. Sam Caliguiri, are far behind Dodd in fundraising, but they have only been campaigning for a short time. Caliguiri reports a war chest, if that’s the proper term for so puny a treasury, of less than $50,000 and a Simmons spokesman said the candidate had nothing to report but if Simmons or Caliguiri is the candidate against Dodd, he can expect plenty of help.

Despite their anemic campaign accounts, both Caliguiri and Simmons have shown remarkable strength in polling against Dodd, with the most recent Quinnipiac Poll reporting 54 percent of state voters do not consider their senior senator trustworthy. The same poll had Caliguiri four points ahead of Dodd and Simmons up by 16 percentage points.

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

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