Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Lamont reluctant to cancel primary

- By Christine Stuart CT NEWSJUNKIE

HARTFORD — When U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders suspended his presidenti­al campaign earlier this week, Connecticu­t Secretary of the State Denise Merrill urged him to withdraw his name from the state’s ballot.

Sanders said he wasn’t going to do that. That means Connecticu­t will be forced to hold a presidenti­al primary unless Gov. Ned Lamont cancels it.

However, Lamont said Friday he’s not interested in doing that.

Lamont said he’s getting a lot of feedback on the issue, but he hopes he doesn’t have to cancel the June 2 primary. He said Connecticu­t could postpone the presidenti­al primary until July.

“I know a number of the other governors are considerin­g that, thinking the situation might be mitigated by then,” Lamont added. “Obviously, the Secretary of the State thinks this might be a good time for voting by mail. That’s got some controvers­y here in the building. So that’s the options we have, but I think canceling the primary is just not the right way to do it.”

Sanders’ announceme­nt Wednesday that he is suspending his campaign “effectivel­y ends the justificat­ion to hold a presidenti­al primary in Connecticu­t,” Merrill said. “The results are now predetermi­ned: there is only one active candidate remaining on the Democratic side, and one candidate has mathematic­ally clinched the nomination on the Republican side.”

She said it doesn’t make sense during a global pandemic to “put the health and safety of Connecticu­t’s voters and poll workers at risk, and I would hope that the remaining candidates would recognize that and act accordingl­y.”

Sen. Mae Flexer, who co-chairs the General Administra­tion

and Elections Committee, said she’s glad to hear that Lamont “is continuing to discuss this with other governors and may push back the June 2nd primary if protecting public health will not allow the primary to take place that day.”

Republican Party Chairman JR Romano, who has opposed holding a Republican presidenti­al primary, said, “This isn’t about democracy. This is about a party choosing a candidate to execute democracy.”

He said how a party chooses its candidates is different depending on the state and it’s very different from a November election.

Romano opposed holding the Republican presidenti­al primary because there was no path to victory for either of the two Republican­s challengin­g President Donald Trump. And it was going to force municipali­ties to spend money on what he called “political pettiness.”

Romano said if the state moves forward with a presidenti­al primary, “The bread is baked to force towns, in a time of crisis, to spend the money.”

If Lamont doesn’t sign an executive order to cancel the presidenti­al primary, the legislatur­e could meet to put an end to it (an unpopular idea in this day and age of social distancing) or the remaining challenger­s could remove their names from the ballot.

Romano has been asking Rocky De La Fuente to do just that.

Tulsi Gabbard, another Democratic candidate who qualified for Connecticu­t’s ballot, has also not withdrawn her name.

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont addresses the media at medical equipment manufactur­er Bio-Med Devices in Guilford on March 29.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont addresses the media at medical equipment manufactur­er Bio-Med Devices in Guilford on March 29.

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