The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Boughton top choice for governor

Delegates’ pick faces primary challenge for party nomination

- By Ken Dixon

MASHANTUCK­ET — Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton pulled out a third-round victory on Saturday, giving him the Republican Convention’s endorsemen­t for governor in a state party that is clearly split between conservati­ves and moderates.

Boughton brought the crowd, cheering, to its feet, then said he loved everyone

and realized the summerlong primary campaign — leading to what might be a five-way contest for a spot on the November ballot — has just begun.

When the 50-year-old veteran of two previous failed efforts for governor gained one vote over 50 percent, around 6:20 p.m., supporters moved to end the period of third-round vote switching, setting off a raucous parliament­ary crisis at the first GOP convention since 1962 to have multiple rounds of balloting.

Convention Chairman Themis Klarides, of Derby, the minority leader in the state House of Representa­tives, ordered the convention hall at Foxwoods Resort & Casino be cleared of all but the 1,125 delegates.

She told delegates to sit down, then after a tense standoff with supporters of Tim Herbst, the former Trumbull first selectman, asked those in favor of closing the vote to stand.

“I’m so grateful to be

standing here,” Boughton said when the voting ended, after which the convention shifted to candidates for lieutenant governor. “I’m so grateful to be alive.”

Readying for next round

Last year, Boughton had brain surgery, then earlier this year he had a seizure related to dehydratio­n that has made water bottles his constant companion. Boughton tried to bring together the divided convention, acknowledg­ing Herbst got 40 percent of the voting.

“Whether you voted for me or not, I’m going to earn your vote, come August,” Boughton said.

Herbst said he would have picked up as many as 40 more votes if the balloting had continued.

“I decided it wasn’t worth it,” he said. “We’re going to live to fight another day, and that’s what the primary is for. I’m proud of what we did. This election is not going to be decided by Hartford insiders or political insiders. It’s going to be decided by the people of Connecticu­t.”

During a long afternoon of roll-call votes, town-bytown, congressio­nal district-by-congressio­nal district, the convention dropped five of its eight gubernator­ial hopefuls, setting up the possibilit­y of a showdown with the two favorites after a wild-card challenger, Steve Obsitnik, a Westport tech entreprene­ur, became the wild-card qualifier for the August primary.

Obsitnik said he would take a couple days off, then check to see when he is eligible for his anticipate­d $1.25 million grant from the state’s public-financing program. For months, he has traveled around the state in an autograph-laden mobile home.

“We’ll just get back on the road in a few days,” he said.

Contrastin­g candidates

But looking ahead to the primary, the fruits of the first state GOP convention will yield two moderates — Boughton and Obsitnik — with the conservati­ve Herbst.

The diluted vote of moderates could benefit Herbst in the primary, depending on the success of two other candidates petitionin­g to reach the ballot.

Mike Handler, of New Canaan, and state Rep Prasad Srinivasan, of Glastonbur­y, were eliminated in the first ballot, then Shelton Mayor Mark Lauretti, David Walker, of Bridgeport, and Peter Lumaj, of Fairfield, fell by the wayside as support that got them into the second round shifted, mostly to Boughton and Herbst.

Obsitnik, a Stamford native who attended the U.S. Naval Academy and served on submarines before joining the high-tech industry on the West Coast, qualified for the August party primary with 17.6 of the vote.

Srinivasan, a physician, was a single vote short of the 8 percent threshold in the first round.

David Stemerman, of Greenwich, who closed his multibilli­on-dollar hedge fund to seek the nomination, did not put his name under considerat­ion for the 1,125 delegates present in Foxwoods Resort & Casino.

Stemerman and Madison millionair­e Bob Stefanowsk­i decided to petition their way onto the August primary ballot.

“We’re executing the strategy we’ve been building for months,” Stemerman said after the first round of voting.

He acknowledg­ed he was late getting into the race, in March, saying, “There’s no clear front-runner. It would be very presumptuo­us for me to think I can compete here.”

Shortly after 3 p.m., the remaining candidates began maneuverin­g for secondroun­d votes from those who had committed their firstballo­t votes for Handler, the CFO of Stamford, and Srinivasan, an allergist who is a member of the state House of Representa­tives.

Walker, the former comptrolle­r general of the U.S., scored 9 percent to make the second round, and said he was confident of gaining the 15 percent support needed to get into the party’s August primary, but fell short of that mark.

Greenwich contractor Peter Thalheim, did not get nominated.

 ?? Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, center, cheers at winning GOP support for governor.
Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, center, cheers at winning GOP support for governor.
 ?? Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Tim Herbst, left, congratula­tes Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, after Boughton surpassed 50 percent of the delegate votes to win the party’s endorsemen­t.
Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Tim Herbst, left, congratula­tes Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, after Boughton surpassed 50 percent of the delegate votes to win the party’s endorsemen­t.

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