Fresh off an avalanche of bad press for absurdly denying having backed legislation to shore up the state’s public employee retirement system when questioned about it on right-wing talk radio, Colorado Treasurer Walker “Bush” Stapleton is heading out on a “listening tour” of all 64 counties in Colorado–including the counties with basically no people in them. From Stapleton’s press release:
Today, Colorado Treasurer Walker Stapleton announced the kick off of a 64-county tour across Colorado. The goal of this summer-long road trip is to update civic and community leaders on what is happening at the State Capitol, and to hold meetings with county elected officials to get a better understanding of the issues impacting local communities…
“As I begin my second term, it is important to step out of the office, hit the road and continue to listen to the needs of people across our state,” said Treasurer Stapleton. “When I was in the private sector, I found it immensely useful to go out and talk to customers and co-workers. That’s where the good ideas come from, the people, not the boardroom. But you have to be willing to put in the legwork.”
The Denver Post’s Lynn Bartels reports that Stapleton claims the trip has been “in the works” since March–apparently he’s more willing to talk to Bartels about this trip than her colleague John Frank about the recent controversy over the Public Employees Retirement Association bill. We don’t doubt that Stapleton was planning this tour for longer than he has been in hot water over his backpedaled support for legislation to reduce the unfunded liability owed by PERA, but we can’t see how this helps him either.
Setting aside the PERA gaffe, Stapleton’s aspirations for higher office are very well known, and this “fact-finding tour” to every county in the state can easily be portrayed as an improper campaign (or at least pre-campaign) activity paid for with taxpayer dollars. It’s one thing when the Governor tours the state for “fact-finding”…but the Treasurer? Coming from a politician everybody knows is angling for a run for higher office in three years, this kind of self-serving junket is just too easy to criticize.
Enough that it’s likely to cost Stapleton–politically, since you’re the one paying–more than it was worth.
You must be logged in to post a comment.
BY: QuBase
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: 2Jung2Die
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: notaskinnycook
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: The realist
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: kwtree
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: JohnNorthofDenver
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: JohnInDenver
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: 2Jung2Die
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: SSG_Dan
IN: Weekend Open Thread
BY: JohnInDenver
IN: Weekend Open Thread
Subscribe to our monthly newsletter to stay in the loop with regular updates!
Oh come on, Pols, this attack on Stapleton is so unfair! Even the uber fair Wayne Laugesen says so:
http://gazette.com/editorial-attack-on-stapleton-unfair/article/1552461
It worked for Roy Romer and Bill Owens, didn't it?
Romer and Owens made taxpayer funded "tours" of all 64 counties (63 back then IIRC) as treasurer? Doubt it. And if they did it would get called out today too.
Of course they did it. Of course it was occasionally called on them. It didn't matter. They were able to make the rounds and raise their name ID, which was the object of the exercise.
Why else would somebody run for state treasurer?
Sorry, but instead of assumptions, I'd like to see proof they did it, and proof they were called on it. I personally don't believe the press was as attentive to these things in the 90s as they are now. Prove me wrong? I'll gladly admit I am wrong.
Sorry, I'm not doing your research for you from library clips across the state from the days before the state's papers were on the interwebz. I was here. I followed it.
Stapleton is not reinventing the wheel here.