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June 15, 2013 01:56 PM UTC

Abortion will likely take center stage in Coffman-Romanoff race

  • 5 Comments
  • by: Jason Salzman

(Promoted by Colorado Pols)

This article originally appeared in RhRealityCheck, a national blog focusing on "reproductive & sexual health and justice."

After last year’s election, the communications director of the anti-abortion group Personhood USA held up U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman (R-CO) as a candidate who “maintained his 100% pro-life position (without compromising or denying the personhood of children) and won.”

Now, political observers agree that Coffman is fighting for his political life against staunchly pro-choice Democrat Andrew Romanoff, the former speaker of the Colorado state house.

Abortion issues have played a key role in recent campaigns at all levels in Colorado, on the campaign trail and in political advertising, and they are likely to take center stage in this race, as the two candidates fight for the critical votes of women in Colorado’s Sixth Congressional District, which was re-drawn after the 2010 Census.

Coffman’s views on abortion aligned more closely with the makeup of his old district, which used to include large swaths of ultra-right counties near Colorado Springs, home of Focus on the Family. The seat was previously held by immigration extremist Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO).

So Coffman’s decision in 2008 and 2010 to endorse “personhood” ballot initiatives, which would have banned all abortion in the state, even in the case of rape and incest, as well as common forms of birth control, made some political sense. 

So did thumping his chest about them. Once, after he apparently stated on a conservative radio show that he favored giving rape victims the option of having an abortion, Coffman wrote a personal letter to the radio host, clarifying that he was opposed to all abortion, even in the case of rape.

Similarly, Coffman’s vote to re-define rape, restricting it to the “legitimate” kind under federal law, undoubtedly played well in his old district.

But after winning his 2012 race in his re-drawn district by just two percentage points to a Democratic challenger, widely seen as weak, Coffman went from being considered plain-old vulnerable to a downright sitting duck by Democrats. Opponents are calling him an endangered species.

His Democratic challenger, Romanoff, is considered an expert fundraiser and campaigner—with wide appeal. Some Democrats were critical of Romanoff during his unsuccessful primary race against Michael Bennett, who went on to win Colorado’s U.S. Senate seat against Tea Party upstart Ken Buck. But bad blood seems to have subsided, as the Democratic primary field has cleared for Romanoff.

Coffman has proven himself to be a tough and savvy campaigner as well, with deep fundraising connections, cultivated during his tenure not only in Congress, but also as Colorado Secretary of State. His military background, including service in Iraq, connects with some voters in the heart of his district, near Aurora. Coffman opposed ending the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy and he joined Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO) in calling for the military to ban same-sex marriage ceremonies on military property.

At a Greenwood Village Chamber of Commerce speech last month, Coffman talked at length about his family’s history of military service and his efforts to reform military spending.

He didn’t go out of his way, like he did years before, to talk about abortion. In fact, the topic never came up.

This will surely change as the campaign heats up in the coming months. And if Coffman doesn’t bring it up, or ducks questions, as he did during the last election, Democrats are unlikely to let the silence last long.

Comments

5 thoughts on “Abortion will likely take center stage in Coffman-Romanoff race

  1. I am ever amazed at the number of people who are willing to base their political POV on moral issues like abortion, gay rights, the "War on Christmas", etc., ad nausem..while voting for legislators who hand the keys to the Treasury over to people who will take your water (O&G), pick your pocket (Wall Street), poison your food (Big Ag), and sell you drugs that can kill you (Big Pharma).

    If we could get the Bible, the Talmud, and the Quran, out of American government, I think it would benefit us all.

    One thing for sure about this contest…the voters have a clear choice.

  2. Agreed, his anti-choice, "War on Women" positions will require a lot of 'splaining.  Btw, how many times has he voted to repeal Obamacare?  37 times so far?

  3. Which is nothing but pure theater, like all of the other legislation they know will go nowhere, putting him solidly in the camp that would rather make statements about how much they hate everything Dem and Obama rather than do their jobs as legislators.

    Jobs, jobs, jobs my ass. Small government my ass.  The extent of today's House Rs' refusal to do anything but throw a collective hissy fit is unprecedented.

  4. Well, Mike.  The chickens have finally come home to roost.  You made a "strategic" decision to change your position on abortion.  That was your call.  Now you have to sleep with it.  Because at least I won't let you get away with it.  I've aired your history before and I'll air it again.  Don't try to back up.  As former Colorado NARAL  chair and former chair of the Republican Party in Jefferson County, I have some authority on this issue, and what I know isn't even second hand.  You might as well just stick to your position, even though it's inconvenient now.

    As for Romanoff, the pro-choice ads that last year's Democratic candidate ran were awful and overkill and the wrong message to resonate with the few unaffiliates and Republicans left who are pro-choice.  He ended any chance he had to push the issue by over-pushing and pushing in the wrong way.  Figure it out.  Ask a Republican or a former Republican who knows how to argue this from the other side of the fence.

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