Banking chief Dodd to leave US Senate

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Veteran Democratic Senator  Christopher Dodd said yesterday he will not seek re-election  in November in recognition that he faced an uphill battle and  underscoring upheaval facing President Barack Obama’s  Democrats.

Dodd, 65, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and  leader of a financial regulation overhaul in the Senate, has  been dogged by questions over his financial industry  connections and was trailing badly in polls in his home state  of Connecticut.

Dodd’s decision may well help Democrats hang on to his  seat. Republicans conceded that Democratic chances would  improve in the event that Connecticut’s attorney general,  Richard Blumenthal, runs for the seat, and he told CNBC that he  planned to do so.

Announcing his decision in East Haddam, Conn., Dodd said he  found himself in the “toughest political shape of my career”  but that he thought it was absurd to suggest there was no way  he could win in November.     However, he said, a number of challenges over the past year  — battling prostate cancer and the death of his sister — had  prompted him to take stock of his life. “I came to the conclusion that in the long sweep of  American history, there are moments for each elected public  official to step aside and let someone else step up. This is my  moment to step aside,” he said.