As the battle for control of the Senate becomes much closer, the issue over who Joe Lieberman, if he wins, will caucus with after the election looms much larger. This is an extremely murky matter with several possible scenarios, and the more you look into it, the more complicated it becomes.
Lieberman claims to have been promised seniority after the election if he wins. However, seniority is determined by a closed-door, straight majority vote of the entire caucus. Given that over two-thirds of the current Democratic caucus is supporting Lamont, and simply given what I have heard from high-ranking Senate staffers, it is far from clear whether a victorious Lieberman would have enough votes to keep his seniority.
Further, since
current polling shows a senate with 49 Democrats, 49 Republicans, Bernie Sanders and Joe Lieberman, Joe Lieberman would also potentially have the ability to flip control of the Senate if he chooses to caucus with Republicans. Back in 2001, the Democratic caucus gladly gave seniority to Jim Jeffords when he left the Republican caucus in order to gain control of the chamber. That was the price to pay for control, and after six years in the minority, the Democratic caucus was more than happy to make that compromise. It isn't hard to imagine that if Republicans find themselves one seat in the minority after the elections next month that they will also gladly grant Lieberman seniority in order to retake control of the chamber.
With these two factors in mind, we are left with several possible scenarios if Lieberman wins. Will Lieberman stay with a caucus that strips him of his seniority, even if it means flipping control of the Senate to Republicans? Will Lieberman stay with a caucus that ends up in the minority? Will the Democratic caucus kowtow to Lieberman simply in order to stay in the majority? Of all the possibilities, the most important scenario is if Democrats take majority control of the Senate by a single seat, but Lieberman is stripped of his seniority for running against Democratic nominee Ned Lamont. Will Lieberman caucus with Republicans who promise to give him seniority? I think the Lieberman campaign needs to answer this question.
What will Lieberman do if he loses seniority but Democrats control the Senate by one seat? Will the Democratic caucus cave on important matter pertaining to Iraq and oversight of the executive branch simply in order to maintain a one-seat majority? Is it worth caving into Lieberman in order to maintain one-seat control? Is there any way we could conduct a whip count online to determine how many Democrats in the 110th Senate will vote to give or strip Lieberman of his seniority if he wins?
As control of the Senate increasingly is thrown up in the air, these are all questions that need speedy answers. Most importantly, Lieberman needs to say what he will do if Democrats win control of the Senate by one seat by he is stripped of seniority. Of course, the easiest way to solve this problem would be for Ned Lamont to win in Connecticut. Please,
get involved in Lamont's campaign in any way you can.