Advertisement

Rival's error boosts chances for Connecticut ex-con mayoral hopeful

By Richard Weizel BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (Reuters) - A former mayor of Connecticut's largest city who spent seven years in prison on a corruption conviction received a boost in his quest to win back the office when his chief rival missed a key paperwork deadline. Joseph Ganim, mayor of Bridgeport from 1991 to 2003, narrowly won the Democratic primary on Sept. 16 over two-term incumbent Bill Finch, who later vowed to stay on the November ballot as a third-party candidate. But Finch, considered Ganim's biggest obstacle to regaining the job, failed to properly register as a third-party candidate by a Sept. 2 deadline, Av Harris, a spokesman for the Connecticut Secretary of State's office said on Tuesday. "We never received a letter of endorsement for Finch from the Job Creation party," Harris said. "Now, it's too late." Harris said Finch could still file paperwork by Oct. 20 to run as a write-in candidate. Finch’s campaign manager, Maryli Secrest, said in a statement that the mayor will challenge that decision in court, adding, "this election is too important for Bridgeport and its future to be decided by red tape." Ganim remains popular in Bridgeport despite his criminal conviction. He was arrested in 2003 and charged with running a "pay to play" operation with real estate developers in the southern Connecticut city. Ganim was convicted on 16 federal corruption counts including racketeering, extortion, bribery and fraud. Ganim said on Tuesday he is "glad the Secretary of State's Office came to the proper conclusion." He won the Democratic nomination this month by a slim margin of a few hundred votes. Democratic candidates have historically won Bridgeport's mayoral races, as registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by about 41,000 to 4,000. Enrique Torres is the Republican nominee for mayor and Charles Coviello is the New Movement party's nominee. In order to have met his paperwork deadline with the Job Creation Party, Finch would have had to file before the Democratic primary, an awkward timeline resulting from Connecticut's rules governing minor political parties. At the time of his arrest, Ganim was a rising political star in the Democratic Party, and was being considered as a potential candidate for governor or Congress. (Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Will Dunham and Doina Chiacu)