A quick roundup of a flurry of endorsements as the Democratic caucus in Colorado rapidly approaches–yesterday, a group of Colorado gun violence survivors announced their endorsement of Hillary Clinton, citing her steady support for stronger gun safety laws:
Four Coloradans who lost loved ones in mass shootings in Aurora, Columbine, and Sandy Hook today endorsed Hillary Clinton for President. The following family members released a joint endorsement statement: Jane Dougherty, whose sister Mary Sherlach was a school psychologist killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School on December 14, 2012; Tom Mauser, whose son Daniel was killed at Columbine High School on April 20, 1999; Coni Sanders, whose father Dave Sanders was a teacher killed at Columbine High School on April 20, 1999; and Tom Sullivan, whose son Alex was killed on his 27th birthday at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora on July 20, 2012:
“For us, this is personal. We know all too well the chaos, suffering, and pain that gun violence has sown on our community. We have received that frantic phone call no family member ever wants to receive; we have had to bury loved ones. That’s why today we are officially endorsing Hillary Clinton for President. Hillary Clinton is the only candidate with a proven track record of standing up to the gun lobby, the only one with the ability and the plan to enact common-sense measures to keep guns out of the wrong hands. With Hillary as president, we believe we have the best chance at putting an end to this senseless gun violence once and for all, and ensuring no more American families have to endure the heartache and tragedy that we have.”
In a separate release today, African American civic leaders endorse Hillary:
Wellington Webb, the first African American mayor of Denver, said:
“I endorse Hillary Clinton because I have worked with her for three decades and looked her in the eye when she’s talked about her commitment to black Americans. I know she is the right candidate for the job because for 40 years the issues that concern the African-American community concern her, too. She will protect the legacy of the country’s first black president while building her own as the country’s first female president.”Landri Taylor, former Urban League President and former Denver Public Schools board member, said:
“Hillary’s commitment to the issues that matter most to us – raising wages, closing the achievement gap, reforming our criminal justice system – is unrivaled. More than any other candidate, she understands the African-American community and is determined to build upon President Obama’s progress. Her fights are our fights.”Rhonda Fields, Colorado State Representative, said:
“Our communities are being torn apart by a broken criminal justice system and senseless and rampant gun violence. We need stronger measures to prevent gun violence and comprehensive criminal justice reform. Hillary is the only one who can tackle these challenges and deliver real results.”
Meanwhile, a group of current and former Colorado legislators including former House Speaker Terrance Carroll and Rep. Jonathan Singer held a rally at the Colorado Capitol yesterday to announce their support for Clinton’s opponent Bernie Sanders–adding to the endorsement earlier in the week from Rep. Joe Salazar:
And as a counterpoint to African-American political leaders endorsing Clinton, the Colorado Independent reports on black clergy on the stump for Bernie:
A group of black pastors are working with representatives from the Sanders campaign to schedule a luncheon toward the end of this week and a rally before the Super Tuesday caucuses on March 1, he says. He’s working with his brother, Rev. Patrick Demmer of Graham Memorial Community Church.
Jerry Demmer says he worries many in Colorado’s black community might not know much about the U.S. Senator who hails from the very white Northeastern state of Vermont.
“He’s always tried to fight for Civil Rights,” Demmer says of Sanders. “He was raised in Brooklyn, he was raised around a lot of African-Americans [and] understands African-American plight. So I think it’s super sincere. I don’t think it’s just about getting elected and trying to get a vote. He was involved in African-American politics and African-American rights before he was ever running for president. This has been going on a long time in Bernie’s life.”
With caucuses now only days away, both campaigns have dramatically increased their television ad presence. The Sanders campaign has reportedly purchased somewhere around $1 million in ads through next Tuesday. Clinton’s campaign was a little slower on the uptake but has reportedly made a large media buy in the last day or so to catch up.
Colorado is certainly getting our share of presidential campaign love ahead of Super Tuesday, at least on the Democratic side after Republicans cancelled their presidential preference polls before Donald Trump could win them.
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No surprise that the gun violence survivors endorsed Hillary. She owns the issue compared to Bernie.
Socialist or crook? That's the choice before Democrats today.
Carnival barker, veracity-challenged religious nut, or Marco Roboto. That's the GOP choice today.
Don't forget the one who brags about having tried to kill his mother until he found the Lord. Jesus could still rerun at the head of an Army of 10,000 angels and force the Republican convention to nominate him.
Fascist demagogue, theocrat, or uncharismatic robot? Those are the choices of the Republican’ts today.
Hmmmm …
Assclown, assclown, assclown, assclown, assclown, or assclown …
… when you've got no choice, choosing is a GOPers delight, huh?!?
Bitch, please. Go look in a mirror. There, you'll find the biggest loser in Denver.
Good op-ed column in today's Denver Post: "Sanders makes promises no one could possible keep."
It's all about the economics that are lacking in Bernie's, free-stuff-for-everybody, proposals. I vaguely recall that George McGovern "promised the world" back in 1972 and we all know how that turned out. The common sense Dem endorsers are going with HRC.
CHB, you're going to be glad you read my reply; I hope you catch it.
Not necessarily because I'll show you how "free stuff for everybody" is just plain wrong — it's all getting paid for — but I promise, nay guarantee you'll LOVE (not just like) at least one of the places the money to pay for Sanders' proposals comes from.![yes yes](https://cdn.ckeditor.com/4.5.5/full-all/plugins/smiley/images/thumbs_up.png)
Robb, I did catch your reply. My question back is how will Bernie, if elected, get all these massive tax increases through a Republican controlled House of Representatives (I think there is a good chance for the Senate to go back to Dem control)? But even a Dem controlled Senate may not support all Bernie’s schemes, given that there is an off-year election in 2018. That's the real world, not "pie in the sky."
Virtually every economist who has weighed in, including some who served in the Clinton and Obama administrations, have opined that Bernie's plans are not workable. As an example, in his plan to pay for health care, he comes up over $3 trillion short over 10 years.
So you envision President H.R.Clinton getting anything done there??
Are you saying she is Republican lite enough to change the hearts of these assclowns…or able somehow to outsmart them? Not being snarky here..genuinely want to know what magic she has that will enable her to do something Obama hasn't accomplished in 8 years.
We Don't think Hillary will get massive tax increases through, Duke. I do think she is a better Schmoozer than Obama and can pay attention to things like justice reform, which the house of Koch agrees actually saves money. And for God's sake, raise gas taxes a nickel a year for the next 10 years to fund Infrastructure, which the business community supports. Defend and improve Obamacare, adding a public option. Support.women"srights and LGBT rights, which make a more productive ecomy. No, it isn't a revolution. But it is progress.
Just a question CHB, …
If your biggest objection to a BS Presidency is that he won't be able to pay for those programs he won't be able to get passed through Congress, what's the economic concern?
The US presidency is the most powerful position in the world. As President, Sanders would have many opportunities to issue executive orders. But, if I was a betting person; which I'm not (I sometimes drive on I-25 during the day and that's gambling enough for me); I'd wager that the chances of a Sanders presidency happening are slim and none. We'll know more after Super Tuesday.
Share your 1-25 aversion. Taking it to C Springs to visit my dad was always harrowing. Besides the endless construction back then if you leave a safe following distance someone fills it while you’re getting tailed within a couple of feet from behind and it seems like we always got stuck in a gawkers block slowly passing a horrible accident. Taking it north is almost as stessful.
Also agree Bernie's chances of becoming President or even nominee are slim but the areas in which executive orders can be issued wouldn't allow him to carry out his economic plans that way in any case.
BS! is right, HRC owns the issue. When she was in Boulder in November she promised the crowd there that she would make gun violence prevention an issue in this campaign and she has.
Great Nome de Blog, Les!