For the past couple of months now, as our readers know and is slowly making its way into political news coverage, Republican CU Regent Heidi Ganahl has been waging a low-intensity public relations campaign centered around a “traveling podcast” to raise her name ID ahead of a run for higher statewide office in 2022. Ganahl, the only remaining Republican holding even a minor statewide elected office in Colorado after Cory Gardner’s ouster last November, is not so much what you’d call a “rising star” as the GOP’s last potential hope for a turnaround after years of defeat.
Unfortunately for Regent Ganahl and beleaguered Republicans hoping she could be their ticket out of the electoral abyss, the recent political tumult at CU–over the conservative Benson Center and professor John Eastman’s role in the January 6th insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, and more recently the departure of divisive CU President Mark Kennedy who Ganahl helped install just two years ago–has created serious obstacles to running on her record there.
Nonetheless, over the past few month it’s become very clear that Ganahl intends to run for something, especially since her statewide at-large seat on the CU Board of Regents may not even exist in 2022. The most common assumption is that she wants to run against Gov. Jared Polis, but as we noted earlier this week in our Big Line 2022 update, Ganahl may be considering a run for Treasurer instead in consideration of Gov. Polis high approval ratings.
And that’s where Ernest Luning of the Colorado Springs Gazette’s political blog picks up the story:
Until recently, pretty much every Republican operative and insider in the state has been describing Ganahl as the candidate most likely to challenge Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, the wealthy tech entrepreneur who served five terms in Congress before being elected governor in 2018 by 10 points.
After a brief scare last year when, as she put it in a recent speech, Ganahl “had to fight through a brain tumor”— which wasn’t cancerous but required surgery — she’s sounding again like she has her eye on higher office, though Republican sources say she’s told them in the last month that she’s considering a run for state treasurer or U.S. Senate instead of governor.
Ganahl wouldn’t be the first Republican to walk and talk like a candidate for office without actually filing to run for office, which obliges the candidate to then comply with campaign finance and reporting laws. In 2017, soon-to-be gubernatorial candidate Walker Stapleton was criticized for hosting fundraisers for the Colorado GOP’s independent expenditure committee and a SuperPAC to support Stapleton’s campaign as a candidate in all but formality. In Ganahl’s case, however, there appears to be a more basic problem: Heidi Ganahl doesn’t know if she can beat Jared Polis.
There’s little question, as Luning’s story continues, that at least up until recently Ganahl has been fully focused on running for governor:
[D]elivering the keynote at a recent meeting of Jefferson County’s Foothills Republicans in a talk titled “What’s the future for the Republican Party and Colorado?” she took aim at Polis throughout, not even mentioning any other state politicians…
After ticking off some of the restrictions imposed by Polis and local officials during the pandemic, Ganahl unveiled a rhetorical device meant to puncture Polis’ generally high approval ratings.
“Was he paranoid? No, it was worse than that. Paranoid people only limit themselves, but Polis limited all of us. That’s not paranoid, that’s Karen-oid,” she said. “Polis is the king of Karens.” [Pols emphasis]
So first of all, if Ganahl thinks anybody is going to miss her loudly blowing a homophobic dog whistle by emasculating Gov. Polis as “king of the Karens,” she’s mistaken. It’s completely contrary to the tolerant image Ganahl wants to project to swingable voters repelled by Republican culture war red meat. And with the public still solidly in support of Gov. Polis’ handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, this is just not a message that helps Ganahl outside the “deplorable” Republican base. There’s a lot more we could say about Ganahl’s “Karen” slur against Gov. Polis if we weren’t taking the high road, but we are.
What we will say is this: letting speculation grow about stepping down to a lesser race, as George Brauchler can tell you, is a terrible way to kick off a campaign. If Ganahl can’t beat Polis, she can’t beat Michael Bennet either–and choosing instead to run for a lesser office throws Ganahl’s motivations for that job into question.
What office you want to run for (and why) is definitely something you’re supposed to figure out before you launch your campaign, but for all the aforementioned reasons Ganahl doesn’t appear to have that luxury and the clock is ticking.
So like the gender reveal party you hope doesn’t start a wildfire, we’ll all find out together.
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Might I recommend a nice run for the state Senate? Holbert's term-limited, and an R can still win in that type of district, though his margin of victory narrowed between 2014 and 2018 plus we'll see what happens with redistricting. Of course, the money and prestige in the state House or Senate is much, much less than a statewide position, but some percentage of the zero she'll earn by losing that statewide race is maybe better than nothing.
I wish I could remember Heidi better from LPR. Her husband Jason makes some of the best BBQ you can get in Colorado.
Either way, you try to beat Jared in something (anything?) and you usually lose.
I think the CO GOP should stick to their guns and keep running with Trumpism, and do away with RINO's like Ganahl. Now is the worst time to back down. Boebert for Governor.
^^^this^^^
Ay-yup…👌
Boebert for Governor……… good thing I wasn't drinking anything when I read this. I'd have fluid going everywhere, inside and out, from laughing so hard.
It would be a great way to get rid of her sorry ass.
Because at some point Qbert would use the word faggot and not be referring to a stick of firewood.
It's actually a bundle of sticks Dave, but yes, she would go there.
Yeah, dave…think Led Zeppelin IV…
Interesting. I have a feeling that Heidi Ganahl's bid for higher office is likely to go over like a Le(a)d Zeppelin.
And Ganahl just voted for a resolution against vaccine requirements at the University of Colorado, even though there were serious COVID outbreaks and numerous cases at CU over the past year. She ran under the radar to win the Regent seat, but these sorts of votes will come up in opposition ads should she run statewide. While Polis might have been Karen too much about public health at times (really sorry for that), Ganahl seems OK with exposing students, faculty, and staff at an institution she represents to a potentially deadly virus or its variants, not to mention people in the nearby communities. Why reward her with higher office?
Polis was able to follow his own sense of the data, antagonizing those who wanted comprehensive regulation and those who wanted no regulation at the state level. I think EVERYONE disagreed with him at some point…
But that is a long way away from determining a vote.
Crikey…the Repubicans are in such bad shape that a no-name candidate that held a no-name office is the best they can do for a candidate for either Guv or Senate? Oy!
Yes, I know that at-large Regent is a state-wide office, but seriously. How about this test: there are 2 at-large Regents. Name the other.
Ganahl's only claim to fame is to be the last Republican standing. Reminds me of Chauncy Gardener.
AJB, You’re right. That’s the best the poor, beleaguered Republicans can do. It’s so sad. It makes me cry. I until the tears just roll down my cheeks.
That's what my party gets for becoming the party of the far right, like Trump, the Nevilles, RMGO, and the anti-women religious fanatics.
We really do miss Republicans like Rob Witwer, Bill Owens, Bev Bledsoe, Hank Brown, Wayne Allard, and Ben Nighthorse Campbell.
I suspect 2010 was the watershed year for the Colorado GOP — remember Maes vs. Tancredo?