Get the USA TODAY app Flying spiders explained Start the day smarter ☀️ Honor all requests?
WASHINGTON

Profile: Connecticut Sen.-elect Chris Murphy

Gregory Korte, USA TODAY
Chris Murphy holds a news conference on Tuesday in New Britain, Conn.
  • Elected to Congress in 2006
  • Defeated former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon
  • Succeeds Sen. Joe Liebermann

The attack ads run against Rep. Chris Murphy painted him like a one-dimensional professional wrestling villain: The Politician.

The Connecticut congressman does have a rather conventional résumé for a 39-year-old senator-elect: He was class president at his high school three years. He interned for former senator Chris Dodd, D-Conn. He has a law degree from the University of Connecticut. He first ran for the state Legislature at age 25, and he spent four years in the Connecticut House and four years in the Connecticut Senate. He was elected to Congress in 2006, soundly defeating incumbent Republican Nancy Johnson, and is finishing his third term.

Murphy survived a superstorm of television ads by his opponent, former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon, a Republican who loaned her campaign nearly $50 million in her second bid for a Senate seat.

And he did so in part by courting the female vote, attacking McMahon's wrestling plotlines as demeaning to women and suggesting she would "deny women health care" as a senator. At times, polls showed a 20-point gender gap in the race.

Murphy told the Hartford Courant: "I am someone who is progressive on social issues but slightly to the right of the Democratic orthodoxy on fiscal issues. I think that's where the best Connecticut senators come from."

Murphy succeeds one of the most independent voices in the modern Senate: Joe Lieberman, who split with the Democratic Party after supporting President Bush in 2004.

But Murphy refused to walk away from his party — even after New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie came to Connecticut to stump for McMahon, linking Murphy to the former Democratic House speaker by calling him "Nancy Pelosi's butler."

The Murphy campaign even ran an ad starring President Obama, who said, "I need Chris Murphy as a partner in the United States Senate."

Murphy said his agenda for the Senate will be much like what he has done throughout his career: Supporting manufacturing through "Buy American" laws, promoting gay rights and focusing on children's issues.

Murphy and his wife, Catherine, have two sons.

Featured Weekly Ad