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May 05, 2016 12:29 PM UTC

Get More Smarter on Cinco de Mayo! (May 5)

  • 6 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

Cinco-Logo¡Viva Mexico, gueros! It’s time to Get More Smarter with Colorado Pols. If you think we missed something important, please include the link in the comments below (here’s a good example).

TOP OF MIND TODAY…

► Following the exit from the GOP presidential primary of Donald Trump’s last two standing rivals this week, Trump’s nomination went from denial-inducing to a fact of life for Colorado Republicans. As 9NEWS reported last night and our friend Jason Salzman notes today, that’s resulting in some…well, contradictions:

In a statement, Rep. Mike Coffman (R-Colorado) said he’s not sold on Trump yet, calling his party’s presumptive presidential nominee “divisive.”

“Trump has a long way to go to earn the support of many – me included,” Coffman wrote.

That statement contradicts what his campaign told the Colorado Statesman in February. The relevant portion of the article (which is behind a paywall) reads as follows:

“Will Mike Coffman support the Republican nominee over Bernie or Hillary?” said [Mike Coffman] campaign spokeswoman Kristin Strohm. “The answer is obviously yes. And he believes strongly it is going to be Marco Rubio.”

We’ll be watching to see how Coffman sorts this out–assuming a reporter gets close enough to ask. Meanwhile, Boulder County Republicans seem much more willing to jump on the Trump Train:

One of the 12 people who did show up for the breakfast was former Boulder County Republican chairman Joel Champion, who told the others there that “regardless of what your personal position is on Donald Trump,” this will still be “the most important election for Republicans” in the decades to come…

Because of that, Champion said if Trump becomes the GOP presidential standard-bearer at the party’s national convention in July, Republicans, “whether we like him or not,” should vote for him.

► In the Colorado Republican U.S. Senate primary, all hell is breaking loose. Read more here and here, and stay tuned for the next shoe to drop. We’ve heard it won’t be long.

Get even more smarter after the jump…

IN CASE YOU ARE STANDING NEAR A WATER COOLER…

► After facing only a couple of weird moments of opposition from Colorado House Republicans, Colorado’s new Lt. Gov. Donna Lynne was unanimously confirmed yesterday by the Colorado Senate. Swearing-in next week.

► There will be no stupid Obamacare-trolling referred ballot measure in Colorado this year. Sorry, Sen. Kevin Lundberg.

► There also won’t be any fixes to the state’s overloaded immigrant driver license program, after Senate Republicans decided they don’t really care if it’s a problem.

► The House passes a bill to expand civics class for Colorado high schoolers, but not before Rep. Joe Salazar accused Republicans of “doubling down” on Trump-style ignorance.

► As you know there are several measures headed to the ballot this year to better regulate oil and gas drilling operations in the state. The oil industry is piling up millions of dollars to fight them.

► And finally, Rep. J. Paul Brown makes a bloody ass of himself on climate change on the floor of the Colorado House, while constituents cringe.

OTHER LINKS YOU SHOULD CLICK

► Would Amendment 69, a.k.a. ColoradoCare, really be “bigger than McDonald’s?” Hypothetically yes, but that’s not the whole story.

► STOP THE PRESSES! We have a real live case of actual voter fraud, after a man admits to having voted in both Kansas and Colorado in the same election. Not the “thousands” Republicans claimed for years were doing this, but hey, it’s one.

ICYMI

► Your small-time chicken farm just got deregulated! Please don’t make Gov. John Hickenlooper regret it by spreading salmonella or anything.

Get More Smarter by liking Colorado Pols on Facebook!

Comments

6 thoughts on “Get More Smarter on Cinco de Mayo! (May 5)

  1. I saw a report that Mexico had invited Herr Drumpf to visit in the not-too-distant future. Wonder if the man with the big mouth has big enough cojones to accept the invitation…..

  2. Thomas Frank:

     

    Seven years have passed now since the last recession officially ended, and yet the country’s fury has scarcely cooled. To this day we remain angry at Wall Street; we rage against career politicians; and we are incandescent that the economic system seems to have been permanently “rigged” against working people. Median household income has still not recovered the levels of 2007. Wages are going nowhere. Elite bankers are probably never going to be held accountable for what they did. America is burning.

    Listening to the leading figures of the Democratic party establishment, however, you’d never know it. Cool contentment is the governing emotion in these circles. What they have in mind for 2016 is what we might call a campaign of militant complacency. They are dissociated from the mood of the nation, and they do not care.

    I mean this in ways both great and small. The party’s leadership is largely drawn from a satisfied cohort that has done quite well in the aftermath of the Great Recession. They’ve got a good thing going. Convinced that the country’s ongoing demographic shifts will bring Democratic victory for years to come, they seem to believe the party’s candidates need do nothing differently to harvest future electoral bumper crops.

     Frank goes a bit too far with the burning.

    His finale: 

    Trump is “…a bigot of such pungent vileness that the victory of the Democratic candidate this fall is virtually assured. Absent some terrorist attack … or some FBI action on the Clinton email scandal … or some outrageous act of reasonableness by Trump himself, the blowhard is going to lose.”

    This, in turn, frees the Democratic leadership to do whatever they want, to cast themselves in any role they choose. They do not need to move to ‘the center’ this time (We've gone way past center and just move further right each election.-Z).

    They do not need to come up with some ingenious way to get Wall Street off the hook. They do not need to beat up on working people’s organizations.”

    (Anyone remember "card check"? I do.-Z)

    That they [the Democratic status quo] seem to want to do all these things anyway tells us everything we need to know about who they really are: a party of the high-achieving professional class that is always looking for a way to dismiss the economic concerns of ordinary people.

    Dismissing "populism" as the standard, safe strategy is a bad move by Democrats, in my opinion. Dems' ickiness with the subject helped the Tea Party use it for their own gain, and has also led us to Trump the possible president.

    Franks goes a little bit too far again, but Democrats dismiss Bernie supporters and activists and donors –  and Issues! – at their own very real risk. You have to stand for something more than renegotiated student loan rates. Riding Hillary's coattails to another six years in office is pointless without principles.

    Oh, and quit trying to be bipartisan with a bunch of Obstructionist Sociopaths:

    If the Democratic Party has the brains god gave a duck, it will hang He, Trump around Kelly Ayotte's neck like a dead raccoon. It will do the same thing to Rob Portman in Ohio and Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania and Ron (Shreds of Freedom) Johnson in Wisconsin. (Ayotte's running pals, Lindsey Graham and John McCain, are studies in abject terror on the subject.) He, Trump is not only the Republican party's presumptive presidential nominee, he has won that distinction in an overwhelming fashion. He won the most votes. He won all over the country. He defeated 17 other candidates, some of them the most ballyhooed rising stars of the GOP. Beyond question, he is the person that the majority of Republican voters want to run for president.

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