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February 25, 2015 11:38 AM UTC

Did Ryan Call abandon two GOP candidates who could have won close races?

  • 8 Comments
  • by: Jason Salzman

(Promoted by Colorado Pols)

Ryan Call, Steve House.
Ryan Call, Steve House.

It's not easy to fact check some of the allegations flying around in the contest between Ryan Call and challenger Steve House to become chair of the Colorado Republican Party. But it's worth a try, especially when the salvos appear in the media.

On public television Friday, for example, the Independence Institute’s Dave Kopel reported an “allegation” that Call could have put two state legislative candidates “over the top” if he’d helped them pay for advertising during the “last couple weeks” of their campaigns, as they were "fighting hard" for a victory. But Call refused, and they lost.

Kopel (Watch at @1:30 here): House’s particular claim against Call is that Call refused to provide the support for two candidates who ended up losing very close state legislative races, Tony Sanchez, who was almost elected to the state senate, and Susan Kochevar, who almost won a house race, and her win would have put the House in Republican hands. So the argument is that they were close. They were fighting hard, and Ryan Call wouldn’t do a mailer for them in the last couple weeks that could have put them over the top. I don’t know the details of that. But that would be the allegation. Certainly, any chair of major party has to be able to work with all the groups of the party, the sincere moderates, the squishy moderates, the hard-core ideological people—and then have strategies to help them all get elected. [BigMedia emphasis]

Yes, you’d want a major party chair to work with all sides, but is the allegation true? Did Call screw his own party up?

Kopel, a Democrat who made the statement on Channel 12's Colorado Inside Out, told me via email that he was “just summarizing House's campaign speech” and does not know “know what went on” in the Kochevar and Sanchez races.

Asked about Kopel’s statement, Sanchez did not respond, but Kochevar emailed me a Feb. Facebook post in which she wrote that she lost by 1,500 votes, and she “did not receive any money from the state party.” Kochevar was selected by a vacancy committee in July, after Robert Ramirez dropped at the last minute.

Sanchez lost to Sen. Andy Kerr by about 1,000 votes.

“Shortly after Dec. 31 [after the election], I received a phone call from Ryan Call informing me that if I did not fire my campaign finance company, the Republican Party would not have campaign funds for a future campaign.  I perceived this as a threat. I find it reprehensible that a party chairman would threaten a viable candidate,” Kochevar wrote on Facebook. “My campaign finance reporting was handled by Campaign Integrity Watchdog, which is owned by Matt Arnold. Steve House will not let personal grudges interfere with party success. He understands limited govt and will unify all factions within the party.”

Call did not return an email seeking comment, but his backers say the GOP state chair invested strategically, with limited funds, in the most promising races statewide. The decisions were tough, but in the end the GOP did better than it’s done in a decade or more, they say. In Jeffco itself, the thinking goes, Larry Queen had a better shot than Sanchez and Kochevar, who were both expected to receive big-time support from RMGO. And both Sanchez and Kochevar were seen, with no grudges involved, as weaker candidates.  I’m not saying I agree with this logic, but I’m offering it in the absence of a statement by Call himself.

In any case, it appears that the allegation, repeated by Kopel, that Call did not do invest in the Sanchez and Kochevar campaigns, even as the races appeared to be close, is true, at least in Kochevar's case. What role personality clashes played or whether more cash or support would have made a difference in the races is not known.

Republicans vote March 14 on whether to retain Call for a third two-year term.

Comments

8 thoughts on “Did Ryan Call abandon two GOP candidates who could have won close races?

  1. "Kopel, a democrat . . . "

    That's the only, and most appropriate, description you could come up with, JS?"

    ROFL

    Journalists should ask, "WTF"?!? . . . 

  2. Nothing new, but math is not Dave Kopel's strong suit (not sure what is):
     

    If Susan Kochevar had won, the Republicans would still not have achieved control of the House.  It is currently 34-32.  They would have to have picked up another seat. 

    Even the Republicans won several of the seats by the slimest of margins:

    Jenise May (D) lost by 106 votes, whereas Susan Kocevar lost by 1579 votes.

    Mike McLachlan (D) lost to Paul Brown by just 170 votes.

     

     

     

  3. If Republicans buy this total BS, then they're dumber than I thought and I thought they were really dumb before.  Republicans were never, never going to win those races, the seats are just too Democratic.  They came close only because it was a wave year for Republicans.  If anyone thinks one more mailer in the Kerr race would have done any good, then they weren't watching.  There were literally hundreds of mailers in this race.  One more would have been just more re-cycle in the re-cycle bin.  At the end, in these races, no one was paying any attention.  PS David, you can't count either.  One more seat in the House would not have put it in Republican's hands.  When all is said and done, this is just another lie by a Republican (great to see them being used in an intra-party battle) in an insider's game.  Remember Republican Rule No. 1, Lie, lie, lie.  Or, more nicely put, facts don't matter.

  4. Craig, sadly you apparently have been drinking way too much koolaid…mailers aren't the only way a state party supports candidates, but one from the state party might have significantly helped GOTV in SD22. Your being a D, I doubt your interest in admitting that or more precisely your interest in getting R voters out then or in the future…and those races were being watched, but not seriously supported by the state party. And we will get Kerr out and end your party's support for big govt policies from SD22.

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