Community Corner
Colorado GOP Candidates Appear As United Front During Election Season Press Conference
Head Colorado Republican Party touted party's slate of candidates as "problem solvers" committed to lowering cost of living, reducing crime.
August 9, 2022
The head of the Colorado Republican Party touted the partyβs slate of candidates as βproblem solversβ committed to lowering the cost of living and reducing crime, as the party prepares an election season push to snag offices currently held by Democrats.
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βUnfortunately, the Democrats have consistently refused to solve Coloradoβs worst problems, and they continue to make them worse,β GOP Chairwoman Kristi Burton Brown said at a Tuesday morning press conference outside the Mile High Station event venue in Denver.
She said Democrats shut down schools unnecessarily, βhiked taxes and fees,β and allowed violent crime to rise.
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βColorado voters are independent-minded people, people like us who want the right to make choices in our own lives. Unless weβre doing something that hurts someone else, we should have the freedom to make our own way. People across the state tell me that Democrats have stifled these choices,β Burton Brown said.
Republicans were marking one year since they unveiled their βCommitment to Coloradoβ legislative package of over 40 bills they said prioritized affordability, safety and expanded educational choice. Five of those bills passed the Legislature.
βAs we stand here today, we are in no better position on those issues than we were a year ago due to the partisanship we witnessed in the legislative session,β Senate Minority Leader John Cooke said. Cooke and House Minority Leader Hugh McKean said they are optimistic that voters will elect a Republican majority in the General Assembly that will enact a more conservative agenda.
Republicans did not roll out a new agenda on Tuesday but reaffirmed the partyβs pillar issues as affordability, education and crime reduction, once again calling out fentanyl.
Mostly, however, the press conference was an opportunity for Republican candidates to offer their stump speeches and present a unified front that toes the party line, following a bumpy summer that saw failed Republican candidates push false claims of primary election fraud.
"We need a secretary of state that will stand shoulder to shoulder in the field with all of our competent local election officials to increase transparency and combat disinformation robustly, and not just in an election year."
β Pam Anderson, Colorado Republican secretary of state candidate
βIβm proud to stand up and support every candidate here today as the professionals, entrepreneurs and problem solvers that will bring their background and experience to the table to address the most challenging issues that Colorado faces today,β secretary of state candidate Pam Anderson said.
Anderson defeated indicted election denier Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters in the primary and can now focus on differentiating herself from incumbent Democrat Jena Griswold instead of playing defense to the headline-grabbing Peters.
βThis office should be held by a fair referee that will remain above the partisan fray,β she said. βWe need a secretary of state that will stand shoulder to shoulder in the field with all of our competent local election officials to increase transparency and combat disinformation robustly, and not just in an election year.β
U.S. Senate candidate Joe OβDea used his time to criticize the major climate, health and tax bill Democrats in the Senate passed over the weekend. He called the legislation, which Vice President Kamala Harris cast the tie-breaking vote for, a tax that βgoes against everything we believe here in Colorado.β He did not mention the climate change and clean energy provisions in the bill.
βWorking Americans right now, in a recession, canβt afford a tax. Thatβs my main beef with it. We donβt need to be spending more money and collecting it from working Americans here in Colorado,β he said.
The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget determined that once fully phased in, the legislation would actually cut net taxes by about $2 billion per year due to expanded credits for climate and energy.
Gubernatorial candidate Heidi Ganahl, attorney general candidate John Kellner, treasurer candidate Lang Sias, 7th Congressional District candidate Erik Aadland, 8th Congressional District candidate Barbara Kirkmeyer, Board of Education candidate Dan Maloit and Advance Colorado president Michael Fields also spoke.
In a response to Tuesdayβs GOP press event, the Colorado Democratic Party asserted that Tuesdayβs event and rhetoric was an attempt to distract voters from the partyβs stance on things like abortion and climate change.
βThe Colorado GOP is out of touch with what Coloradans need, and is only offering a far-right, failed agenda: taking away the freedom from women to make their own decisions, denying climate change, and growing tax cuts that benefit the wealthy and make things tougher for working families,β Chair Morgan Carroll said in a statement.
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