President (To Win Colorado) See Full Big Line

(D) Kamala Harris

(R) Donald Trump

80%

20%

CO-01 (Denver) See Full Big Line

(D) Diana DeGette*

(R) V. Archuleta

98%

2%

CO-02 (Boulder-ish) See Full Big Line

(D) Joe Neguse*

(R) Marshall Dawson

95%

5%

CO-03 (West & Southern CO) See Full Big Line

(D) Adam Frisch

(R) Jeff Hurd

50%

50%

CO-04 (Northeast-ish Colorado) See Full Big Line

(R) Lauren Boebert

(D) Trisha Calvarese

90%

10%

CO-05 (Colorado Springs) See Full Big Line

(R) Jeff Crank

(D) River Gassen

80%

20%

CO-06 (Aurora) See Full Big Line

(D) Jason Crow*

(R) John Fabbricatore

90%

10%

CO-07 (Jefferson County) See Full Big Line

(D) B. Pettersen

(R) Sergei Matveyuk

90%

10%

CO-08 (Northern Colo.) See Full Big Line

(D) Yadira Caraveo

(R) Gabe Evans

70%↑

30%

State Senate Majority See Full Big Line

DEMOCRATS

REPUBLICANS

80%

20%

State House Majority See Full Big Line

DEMOCRATS

REPUBLICANS

95%

5%

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Jahn Shoots Self in Foot

Republican Gubernatorial candidate Josh Penry has been actively shooting himself in the foot lately, but he’s not the only Colorado politician with that same talent.

A Pols reader sent us this newsletter from Democrat Cheri Jahn, who is running for Senate in SD-20 (Moe Keller is term-limited), and, well, let’s just say it opens up a wound you might have thought Jahn would have preferred closed:

Washington just doesn’t get it!  An amendment was added to the Health Reform bill that would drastically increase the cost of medications for many Americans. I was outraged when I read the news. This amendment would extend brand-name prescription drug exclusivity from five years to twelve years, and in the process block affordable generics from being developed. Working families and our elderly would be hit especially hard with the increased costs of their medications if this amendment isn’t stripped from the House version of the Health Care Reform Bill.

Too many Coloradans can’t afford to pay the premium prices on brand name medication just to fatten the wallets of the big pharmaceutical corporation executives. We need to be working to make prescriptions MORE affordable – not less! In the Colorado State House I worked to do just that, and in the State Senate I’ll keep fighting to make sure that everybody can afford the medications they need to stay healthy. [Pols emphasis]

That’s all well and good, except that Jahn’s vote essentially killed a prescription drug reform bill when she was in the State House in 2006:

The state House on Tuesday rejected a key Democratic measure to lower the cost of prescription drugs for some uninsured Coloradans.

The 35-30 defeat of House Bill 1100 raises doubts about whether Democrats will be able to deliver on their promise to provide discounted drugs to the uninsured…

…Democrats had planned to send both Senate Bill 1 and House Bill 1100 to Owens with the hope that at least one would become law. But the leadership lost support for House Bill 1100 when pharmacies, HMOs and a business coalition joined lobbying forces against it.

Democratic Speaker Pro Tempore Cheri Jahn said she opposed the bill because not all the groups affected were involved in the negotiations.

Besides, she said, the bill offered discounts that are already available in the private market.

“I do not think it’s fair to ask one industry to pay for the bill – pharmacies,” she said. [Pols emphasis]

Whoops!

Jeffco or Slopco practices

Columbine Courier wrote:

 “A fund that Jefferson County taps to meet its matching requirement for Head Start preschool services apparently is not large enough to cover the county’s. County Commissioner Kathy Hartman said she’s “been aware of, and involved with this situation for some time.” She credits Johnson and her staff for finding the problem, which she calls a serious issue.

 I believe Jeffco was made aware of this from an audit that ended December of 2004.  Pages 69-71 http://www.co.jefferson.co.us/…

Johnson and her staff had nothing to do with this discovery. Can the TRUTH please stand up!!

Concerning the Head Start program, it reads “There were no effective controls in place over matching or earmarking. The 20% match requirement was not met and the County exceeded the 10% maximum for children over the income threshold for at least three months of 2004….This $48,945 shortfall in meeting the required match total indicates the expenditure of $244,725 that were NOT matched. Therefore $244,725 of the program expenses are questioned costs.”

 KPMG noted this and soon after they were replaced by another auditor. The county announced this in a news release.

Will Jeffco Human Services FINALLY be OPEN and  HONEST. When will it finally be said “OUR whole accounting system is a mess?”

The Food stamps and Medicaid programs had techs gone astray with how the programs work.  The county practices and procedures were not in line with State law or common sense.  

 T. Howard (CPA) said “It was like getting into a car and not knowing what to do with the keys”.

Jefferson County Human Service BLAMES economy for “problem” child

The problem child’s treatment plan:

Jefferson County Human Services has had problems with their Medicaid and food stamps office for at least 5 years. This office had files lost, “misplaced” and caseworkers not follow up. Technicians were basically doing their own thing. Programs and procedures were not being followed. Jefferson County Human Services has untrained people not utilizing programming that would catch any kind of error regarding eligibility,determination and case worker error. Even County Management AGREED with many of the findings in this audit.

From the December 31 2004 Audit:

The link to the audit report is now fixed

South Jeffco Resident Taking Run at Congress

From The Columbine Courier:

Republican Tom Tancredo represented South Jeffco in Congress for 10 years after first winning the seat in 1998. His successor, Aurora Republican Mike Coffman, has been in office for less than three months – and the potential challengers already are lining up.

One is John Flerlage, a South Jeffco Democrat who says he’s the only one who can go toe to toe against Coffman and win.

“I cede nothing on security or economics as a Democrat,” Flerlage said during an interview at a South Jeffco Starbucks on March 4.

If anyone can battle Coffman on national security issues, an ex-Marine with years of military experience, it might be Flerlage.

He, too, is an ex-Marine. Flerlage served 22 years in the Marine Corps (11 on active duty and 11 in the Reserves) before he retired as a lieutenant colonel in 2000. During his Marine years, he flew the F/A-18 Hornet and A-4 Skyhawk, and was eventually placed in leadership positions to train young pilots in world affairs, strategic commitments and other tactical aircraft at the Marine aviation advanced tactics school. In the 1990s, he flew support missions in support of NATO operations in Bosnia.

After he retired from the Marine Reserves in 2000, Flerlage went to work at Delta Airlines, where he is now a captain and flies long-haul international flights.

Flerlage has at least one hurdle to clear before he can even match toes with Coffman – Democrat David Canter has also announced plans to run in CD-6.

Coffman: Lack of Regulation a Problem

After spewing the traditional Republican talking points about all the bad things contained in the stimulus package signed into law today by President Barack Obama (in Denver, no less), Republican freshman congressman Mike Coffman actually decided to turn on his own brain and stray away from the “free market will save us all” rhetoric.

From The Columbine Courier:

In a break from traditional Republican ideology, Coffman said a lack of regulation led to the current economic morass.

“The demise of this economy was really a failure of government to properly regulate the economy,” Coffman said. “We had these subprime loans infecting a lot of balance sheets. I don’t see the appropriate oversight there, and it eventually brought the economy down.”

The lack of discipline wasn’t limited to profit-seeking banks, Coffman said.

“Essentially, the problem was spending beyond our means,” the congressman said. “Too much easy money, too much easy credit, and spending beyond our means as individuals and collectively as a nation. I don’t know how, again, spending and borrowing is going to be the cure here. It’s a real concern.”

Coffman, of course, doesn’t have an answer of his own for what should have been done – specifically – to fix the economy. But at least he shows that he may be willing to break the party line on the talking points that really make no sense at all. Like pretending a lack of regulation wasn’t the problem, for example. Because Republicans need leaders who can sound reasonable, for a change.

Should Municipal Election Be Partisan?

On Colorado Pols there is a diary about Pueblo County Dems getting more active in their City Council races.

This got me to thinking, would it be better for Denver if our municipal elections were partisan?

The reality is that every elected official in Denver except one (Councilwoman Jeanne Faatz) is at least nominally a Democrat. However, some are more actively so than others, but that D is at least on their voter registration.

If we did go to a partisan election, what changes would have to happen to the process to make that happen?

Should all of the offices be partisan or non-partisan or could there be a mixture?

There are many angles of this question ripe for discussion, so please have at it!

The Big Line 2024: Ballot Measures

The Big Line has been a staple on Colorado Pols since the site’s founding in 2004. Providing our assessment of political races has always been one of our most popular features. What we have NOT done before, however, is sketch out a “Big Line” for ballot measures. Until today. For now, we’re just starting with […]

Bluff Called: Colorado Concern and Advance Colorado Fold on Property Tax Threats

UPDATE: What in the hell is the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce doing? Take a look at this from CPR’s Andy Kenney: We weren’t aware that the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce was involved in the mess known as Initiatives 50 and 108…so why are they getting involved now?   —– Lawmakers today kicked off the […]

The Democratic National Convention and “The Economy Numbers”

This week on the Get More Smarter Podcast…at least one of us is coming to you live-ish from Chicago where Democrats are producing a convention full of joy, hope, optimism, and more than a few Colorado cameos to counter the GOP convention that was about…hell, who knows? We’ve got plenty of non-DNC stuff to discuss, […]

Gabe Evans Puts His Training at a Far-Right Christian College Into Action

(Worse than you thought — Promoted by Colorado Pols) By Jason Salzman and Erik Maulbetsch, Colorado Times Recorder On the campaign trail, congressional candidate Gabe Evans talks a lot about his experience in the military, police force, and Colorado Legislature. But what you don’t hear him discuss in any detail – and what’s completely absent […]

Login

Recent Comments


Posts about

Donald Trump
SEE MORE

Posts about

Rep. Lauren Boebert
SEE MORE

Posts about

Rep. Yadira Caraveo
SEE MORE

Posts about

Colorado House
SEE MORE

Posts about

Colorado Senate
SEE MORE

61 readers online now

Newsletter

Subscribe to our monthly newsletter to stay in the loop with regular updates!