Colorado elections: Conservatives won while Liberal
Republicans lost
Though the media isn't reporting
this November’s election this way, the simple fact is that pro-gun conservatives
are about the only candidates who survived the Democrat landslide of 2006.
Even a cursory look at the winners
from this year’s General Election show that the Republican elected officials are
getting more pro-gun -- and Republican compromisers can't win.
Consider this:

Congressional District 4: Marilyn
Musgrave (who ran an amendment this year to get rid of the federal trigger locks
compromise cut by the NRA) survived a tough and extremely expensive challenge.
With more than $4 million spent against her, Marilyn Musgrave defeated anti-gun
Democrat Angie Paccione, who had regularly voted against gun rights while in the
state legislature.

Congressional District 5: Finally,
after 20 years of do-nothing Joel Hefley occupying a seat, Colorado Springs now
has a hardcore pro-gun conservative in Doug Lamborn. Lamborn defeated a number
of weak, moderate candidates, including Jeff Crank, who El Paso County insiders
say was being privately advised by arch gun-blamer GOP consultant Steve Durham.
Lamborn been nothing short of a hero while serving 12 years in the state
legislature, and we expect even better while he is in Congress.
State Legislature: Mike Kopp
handily won a State Senate seat after narrowly defeating a liberal incumbent in
the primary.
Gun-hater Tom Mauser worked
tirelessly -- and in vain -- to defeat Kopp, who represents the Columbine area.
Kopp had defeated moderate incumbent Senator Kiki Traylor in the primary by a
slim margin, only to watch liberal Republicans jump ship and work for the
Democrat. When Mauser and company started attacking 82nd Airborne
Sgt. Kopp for his pro-gun stances, liberal Republicans (again, the name Steve
Durham surfaces) advised the Republican party to jump ship and assume all was
lost. RMGO’s Political Action Committee dove in heavily with mail, phones and
grassroots support to help Kopp win the general election handily.
In Weld County Scott Renfroe was a
dark horse from the day he decided to run for Senate District 13, which was
being vacated by State Sen. Dave Owen. The Republican muckety-mucks had already
picked State Rep. Dale Hall (R-Greeley) as the replacement, despite his liberal
positions virtually every issue important to voters in that conservative
district.
Gov. Bill Owens, and almost every
high –ranking official in the GOP, endorsed Dale Hall, including the NRA. In
the end it was Hall’s anti-gun voting record that defeated him: Hall had voted
for the statewide database of concealed carry permit holders, and had even
sponsored a bill in 2006 to give the BATFE more power in Colorado. Renfroe, an
RMGO member, defeated Hall in the primary and a Ward Churchhill clone in the
general.
To top off the Senate, Vermont law
proponent Sen. Greg Brophy won an easy race in Northeastern Colorado, and State
Rep. Dave Schultheis cruised to victory in El Paso county to secure Lamborn’s
open State Senate seat. State Rep. Ted Harvey of Highlands Ranch beat a
millionaire in the primary and easily won his Douglas County Senate seat in
November. This core of constitutionalists form a solid base in the Senate, even
if the Democrats retain control.
On the State House side, Kent
Lambert joins with conservatives Cory Gardner (who carried our Make My Day
expansion law last year) and David Balmer, among others. As of the writing of
this article the fate of State Rep. Bill Crane (R-Arvada) is still unknown.
Some will remember that Crane has carried legislation to get rid of the
statewide database of concealed carry permit holders.
All of these candidates stood
firmly for our gun rights in primaries and general elections, and they were
rewarded with a seat.
Many of these candidates were
told, as they were considering whether to run for office, that their pro-gun
views would make them vulnerable should they win a primary and face a Democrat
in November. All of these predictions were proven false.
There are also some lessons
learned by defeat, though you won't read this in the papers either:
Bob Beauprez followed the same
old, failed strategy as so many high-level GOP statewide candidates have: act
like a conservative when you face a primary, but move sharply to the middle
afterward.
And while the NRA and CSSA spent
much of their time explaining why Bill Ritter is bad on guns (he is terrible, no
doubt), they failed to mention that Bob Beauprez actually signed the 2000 SAFE
ballot initiative to close the so-called "gun show loophole." That alone should
give gun owners reason for pause, and it did.
What Beauprez, and other
establishment types in the GOP, don't get is that though gun owners often vote
on the lesser of two evils in cases like this, they don't put their heart and
soul into races where there is no clear hero. That means less volunteers, less
coffee shop enthusiasm and less money. Yes, we usually vote Republican, but we
aren't force multipliers the way we are when we are excited about a solidly
pro-gun candidate.
The people who run Trailhead and
those in their orbit (mostly Gov. Owens' people, like Katie Atkinson) are also
big losers in this election. For the second election in a row, they proved they
don't know how to win elections. During the primary they attempted to scare
conservatives away from running primaries. Not only did their more liberal
candidates lose the primary, but their predictions also did not come true (that
conservatives winning primaries means they'll lose the general election). If
that's the case, why did Bob Beauprez trail the down-ticket conservatives within
a given district?
The lesson of the GOP defeats: the
establishment (which often tells good guys to "moderate" their stance on guns)
is a lead anchor, and their ideas are failing the GOP. “Moderation” excites no
one, and only serves to further the ambitions of weak-kneed politicians, rather
than rewarding heroes who fight for our issues.
A one-line synopsis of last
night's results are: Moderate/liberal Republicans lost, while conservative,
pro-gun Republicans won.
Now it's time to get ready to
endure the Democrat party in full power in Colorado. Their consultants have been
telling them for a number of years that gun control is a loser for their party,
and should be left alone. We'll see if Democrats heed that advice.
E-mail us at RMGO.org