No tough questions for embattled senator in Cornwall visit

CORNWALL — Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Congressman Chris Murphy (D-5) visited Cornwall April 25 to hear the concerns of Litchfield County residents.

Following an appearance in Torrington, Dodd was a half hour late for the 3 p.m. meeting in the gymnasium at Cornwall Consolidated School. About 150 people attended the event, which was sponsored by the eight-town Democratic Coalition of Northwest Connecticut  and the Democratic Town Committees of Cornwall and Goshen. The event was moderated by Cornwall resident Harriet Dorsen, who is a member of the coalition and her town’s Democratic committee.

Opening remarks began at 3:30, with Murphy and Dodd taking turns addressing the crowd and answering questions written on notecards and screened by organizers from the Democratic Coalition of Northwest Connecticut.

Murphy and Dodd expressed optimism following this year’s inauguration of President Barack Obama. “It was an amazing day,� Murphy said. “There was a strange concoction of unbridled hope and optimism but also a healthy feeling of fear and trepidation about the recession.�

Dodd said he is pleased to have a president “who cares about the Constitution� and is working to change the world image of the United States. “Closing Guantanamo Bay makes sense and restoring habeas corpus also makes sense,� he said.

Critics of Dodd have complained that he was instrumental in the American International Group (AIG) bonus controversy and that he has presided over the failure of other major financial institutions while serving as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. Last year, the senator took criticism in the media for an elite mortgage deal he received from Countrywide Financial. Recent polls have shown Republican challengers to Dodd could defeat him in the 2010 election.

The senator did not touch specifically on his political tribulations but noted that the economy in general is in bad shape. “These are the worst economic circumstances certainly that I’ve seen in my lifetime and we have to get confidence back. We have no other choice but to get it right.�

Murphy said his primary focus remains on health care reform, which he said must be attempted while Democrats have control of Congress and the White House. “With this opportunity comes a great burden,� he said. “If we can’t do it now, then when can we do it? This is why you run for office — to be there during the tough times.�

Outside, a couple of demonstrators picketed Dodd’s appearance. Al Huttig and Jerry Greenberg, both of Goshen, said they didn’t even want to hear what the senator had to say. “If I ask him a question, I’ll get a lie,� said Greenberg. Huttig held a sign reading “I need a sweetheart mortgage also so I can pay off my tax debt and be raped some more by crooked politicians.�

Dodd and Murphy answered a handful of the pre-screened questions, which dealt broadly with the economy and with health care, before wrapping up Saturday’s session at 4:45 p.m. The legislators spoke briefly with audience members as they made their way out of the school gymnasium.

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