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November 18, 2021 09:01 AM UTC

Gentle Lowering of GOP 2022 Expectations Goes On

  • 5 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

Although Republicans emerged from the 2021 off-year elections feeling energized in some other parts of the country, the mood in Colorado is decidedly lower-key with polls showing that Gov. Jared Polis and majority Democrats have survived the worst of the last year’s political uncertainty–and a now-concluded redistricting process that failed to give Republicans the “aggressive” advantage they sought in other states, setting the state up for a decade of Democratic majorities that more or less uphold the results of recent elections in Colorado in which Democrats have generally triumphed.

The sense of resignation about 2022 among Colorado Republicans has been compounded by the terrible campaign launch of the party’s favored candidate to oppose Polis in 2022, University of Colorado Regent Heidi Ganahl in September. Ganahl’s early performance on the campaign trail has been so bad that fellow Republicans openly criticized her failure to answer tough questions or articulate a platform beyond generic Tony Robbins-style motivational slogans.

With Ganahl failing to thrive at the top of the ticket and no viable replacement on the bench–keep in mind that Ganahl is Colorado’s only Republican statewide elected official–smart Republicans are starting to look down the ticket in 2022 for winnable races. Earlier this week, conservative pundit Mario Nicolais spelled out the hard truth in a Colorado Sun column calling for Republicans to switch focus to the Secretary of State’s race:

Previously a municipal clerk, the Jefferson County clerk and recorder and the former executive director for the Colorado County Clerk Association, Anderson has an unparalleled depth of experience and expertise. For more than a decade she has led the charge to provide safe, accessible ballots to Coloradans.

She is also likely the best hope for Republicans searching for a shred of relevance in state government. At the top of the ticket, party regulars understand their gubernatorial front-runner, Heidi Ganahl, has little chance to topple Gov. Jared Polis next November. [Pols emphasis]

But at least they have a candidate for that office. The GOP has yet to register a candidate for either the Attorney General or State Treasurer races…

Since Nicolais wrote this column, of course, perennial loser Lang Sias announced his run for State Treasurer–not exactly a fear-inspiring candidate for Democrats, and ending the pipe dream by Colorado GOP chairwoman Kristi Burton Brown of an all-woman GOP ticket in 2022. But the point remains the same: Heidi Ganahl is too weak of a candidate to win at the top of the statewide ticket, and Republicans down-ticket are on their own.

As for Pam Anderson, running as a Republican to supervise a blue state’s elections while sidestepping the issue of her own party’s campaign to undo American democracy after it didn’t go their way in 2020? At some point, the smart money is likely to write her off too. The contradiction asked of voters is simply too great.

That’s Republican life in a blue state, folks.

Comments

5 thoughts on “Gentle Lowering of GOP 2022 Expectations Goes On

  1. As a longtime Coloradan turned Virginian, I’d be careful about overconfidence: Sure Polis will win in a walk and Bennet will probably be fine, but Virginia has largely been on Colorado’s trajectory the last decade and we got wrecked by low Dem turnout and the salience of nonsense like lite-anti-CRT dog whistles. It would be really painful to see some of the “election integrity” or “parents should run schools” nonsense catch hold and hurt other statewide CO Dems. Colorado voters can be pretty flaky, after all (TABOR, turning against Mark Udall for no reason other than gullibility). People are pretty eager to blame Biden for not having a magic wand to fix all their problems in life.

      1. Sparky, for once, says stuff that makes sense. Low Dem turnout is just one thing.

        The new sound bite buzz-words like critical race theory, defund the police, not allowing parents any voice in curriculum, and Dems support socialism, have not drawn much responses from you Dems. And a big percentage of the nation’s voters still believe that the election was stolen from Trump.

        1. CHB, that would be a “big percentage of Republican voters”, not voters in general, believe the Big Lie.

          But Republican voters command an ever-shrinking slice of the voter pie – 26% in 2021 per this Gallup poll.  So 70% Big Lie believers of 26% Republicans is about 18% of the total population.

          Even if thd 44% of voters who are independent / unaffiliated break 50/50 on the Big Lie,  which I doubt, that would be another 22%  so about 40% of total voters. This CNN poll showed about 36% of all Americans  believing Trump won the 2020 election, so that seems about right. A much greater percentage (56%) believes that democracy is under attack.

          I grant you that 36% is a “big percentage” but far from  a majority of voters”Believe the election was stolen from Trump”. 

           

        2. Maybe the reason we don’t respond much to those things is that there’s not much point getting dragged into the mud and wasting time and energy on obvious lies and bad faith bullshit. But congratulations on finding a new boogeyman to hump endlessly just like “death panels,” I’m sure you all are cracking each other up about it in your Facebook groups.

          As for the percentage of Americans who believe the election was stolen, plenty of Americans also believe that the Earth is flat, the Holocaust never happened, and the moon landing was faked, but that doesn’t mean we should cater to them. I’d reckon that they’re the exact same people you’re talking about anyway.

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