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(R) Lauren Boebert

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(D) B. Pettersen

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(D) Yadira Caraveo

(R) Gabe Evans

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What Frank McNulty and Bruce Ben$on Have In Common

We’ve been talking for some time–longer, we realize, than some of our better-placed readers would prefer–about the recent passage of legislation in the Colorado General Assembly implementing a 22% raise in the daily per diem compensation paid to legislators representing districts outside Denver. As we’ve reported, passage of this in-effect pay increase for 41 of […]

Shaffer, Senate Democrats Moderate Per Diem Pay Raise Fiasco

As the Durango Herald’s Joe Hanel reports: The Senate gave final approval to a bill that funds an increase in per diem pay for rural lawmakers Wednesday morning on a 21-13 vote… Three Republicans and 10 Democrats voted no on HB 1301, including Senate President Brandon Shaffer, D-Longmont, who had been a co-sponsor. “This does […]

Poll: Who Will Win in HD-23?

State Representative Max Tyler hasn’t had real opponent since he was first appointed to fill the HD-23 seat after Gwyn Green‘s 2009 resignation. His 2010 opponent, Edgar Johansson, was lambasted as a carpetbagger for moving into the district just days before the deadline to run for office.

Despite the fact that the district leans further to the left in 2012 than it did in 2010, Republican Rick Enstrom definitely has a better chance to take down Tyler than Johansson did. Enstrom, of the eponymous Enstrom Candies, will be able to both self-finance and tout his record as a small business owner by virtue of the toffee everybody likes to pick up at the mall.

Both candidates have their weaknesses. Tyler’s likening of disadvantaged children in the education system to “maggots” came up in 2010 and will likely find its way into the 2012 debate. For his part, Enstrom will catch some flack for giving misleading statements while testifying in front of the state legislature.

The 2012 campaign for HD-23, then, might be the most interesting race the district has seen since the volleys passed between Green and Ramey Johnson a few years ago. We wouldn’t necessarily say the race is anybody’s game, but it certainly will be competitive.

We want to know whether you think Tyler will return to the legislature in 2012 or if Enstrom can pull it off.  Remember, tell us who you think will actually win, not who you’d like to win.  

A poll follows.  

Deeply Personal Narrative Behind Hancock’s SB-2 Support

We wrote a few weeks ago about the political implications of Denver Mayor Michael Hancock’s unconditional support of State Senator Pat Steadman’s civil unions bill, SB-2.

Above the underlying political calculus, however, is a very poignant personal anecodte.

From HuffPo Denver:

As Colorado legislators debate the outcome of a civil unions bill, for many it may be easy to lose sight of the population it most affects (clearly excepting the legislature’s four openly gay members, one of whom sponsored the bill). For Denver’s Mayor Michael Hancock, the issue hits far closer to home.

Hancock grew up in northeast Denver with nine other brothers and sisters. One of his siblings, Robert, was gay. And at a recent LGBT meet and greet, he shared a very personal story: Robert died of AIDS in 1996.

In a video posted on Out Front Colorado, Hancock says, “I remember very clearly standing next to him… while he lay in the bed at the hospital, and talking to him. And my brother told me a couple things that I will never forget. One is, he says, Gay people are human … Treat me as a human being. And then he looked at me and he said, ‘Michael I know that you’re going to stay involved in politics. Do everything you can to continue to fight so that poor people don’t have to die of this disease, because they don’t have to’ … And two, he says, is never ever stop fighting. For us.”

The Mayor then explained in a stirring speech that even though his brother’s partner loved him, he was unable to make decisions on his behalf. “I couldn’t have loved my brother more than his partner did,” said Hancock. “And I’ll tell you something: that was my biological brother who I loved with my very being, but I could not have loved him more than that guy in the corner… and I thought it was a damn shame that he couldn’t make decisions on his behalf.”

Hancock concluded with a statement of support for Colorado passing a civil unions bill this session. “We are way overdue,” he said. “Government should not legislate who you love and who you commit your life to. And as my brother taught me, love does not recognize gender, race, or ethnicity. We can do better than that as a people.”

Denver’s first openly gay council member, Robin Kniech, told the Denver Post she appreciated the vulnerability of Hancock’s speech.

Part of what carried Michael Hancock to the Mayor’s office was his unique ability to pair his devotion to public service with an uplifting personal narrative. His recent comments on civil unions continue that tradition.

There’s a very pressing lesson behind all of this: it’s difficult to separate a lawmaker from the office that they hold. But politicians are people too. Behind most legislative decisions are stories not dissimilar to Hancock’s, stories that are sometimes lost in political chatter. Those stories matter, and in cases like Hancock’s, they often lead to public policy with personal purpose.

Some would argue that’s the very best kind.  

Hickenlooper Finally Invests Political Capital…In Per Diem Hike?

As the Pueblo Chieftain’s Patrick Malone reports today, and who originally broke the story of the “stealth passage” in the GOP-controlled Colorado House last week of a 22% increase in the daily per diem rate paid to legislators from outside the Denver metro area: Gov. John Hickenlooper said Thursday that he is sympathetic to lawmakers […]

“How Dare You Impugn My Obvious Motive?!”

The Pueblo Chieftain’s Patrick Malone reports today on the nasty debate in the Senate over Senate Bill 3, legislation to forbid the use of credit reports to screen many job applicants: “I am here to speak for the people of Colorado who are unemployed right now and due to no fault of their own are […]

McNulty Outsmarts Self Again, Shafts Rural Legislators

As the Durango Herald’s Joe Hanel reports: Southwest Colorado’s representatives voted to fund a $33 per day increase in pay for rural state legislators last week. The bill quietly passed the House on a 34-28 vote with no debate Wednesday, two days after it was introduced. The Pueblo Chieftain reported Saturday that the bill appropriates […]

Legislative Per Diem Hike Seems Likely To Boomerang

UPDATE: Tim Hoover of the Denver paper reports now that GOP House Speaker Frank McNulty is “clearly irritated” at the hubbub over raising legislative per diem pay. That said, McNulty’s not giving what you’d call good answers on how this looks after years of unrecovered cuts, or might appear to state employees who haven’t had […]

Don’t Hide, Frank McNulty, We Agree!

As the Pueblo Chieftain’s Patrick Malone reports today: The Colorado House of Representatives quietly and without debate passed a bill on Wednesday that would raise the daily pay of lawmakers who live outside of Denver by 22 percent. Pay for non-metro members of the Legislature would climb to $183 per day from $150 a day […]

Hancock Lends Support to SB-2

Denver Mayor Michael Hancock has been using his office (and communications shop) to comment on public affairs ranging from tuition equity to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

True to form, today Hancock announced his steadfast support for Senator Pat Steadman’s civil unions bill.

DENVER – Mayor Michael B. Hancock today encouraged the Colorado state legislature to approve Senate Bill 2, the 2012 Colorado Civil Unions Act, sponsored by Denver lawmakers Sen. Pat Steadman.

“We must always push to provide the same basic rights for every Coloradan, because residents deserve the same opportunities to take care of their loved ones, strengthen their families and enjoy critical legal protections.

“Adopting Senate Bill 2 will ensure committed couples are afforded long-overdue legal rights and are no longer excluded from the benefits and protections provided to their fellow citizens.

“It’s now time for Colorado to move beyond a culture of tolerance to a culture of inclusivity, fairness and respect. I am proud to join other mayors from across the country in support of civil unions. I strongly urge the state legislature to put civil rights ahead of politics and to pass this bill.”

If nothing else, Hancock’s regular releases on civic issues affecting the lives of those who don’t live in city limits demonstrates his understanding of the power of the Denver mayor’s office. As mayor of Colorado’s largest and most prominent city (in the media, anyway), Hancock is uniquely able to inject his office into debates where he would otherwise yield little power.

It’s a smart move. Hancock will be able to come out and say that he was a vocal proponent of tuition equity and civil unions without risking any political capital in the process of sausage-making. In doing exactly that, he works to build his statewide and national reputation on progressive niche issues and likely staves off criticism from the left.  

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