The Denver Post

Dems turn up the heat

Clinton and Sanders will address the state party’s fundraiser.

- By John Frank

The Democratic presidenti­al race arrives in Colorado this week with a once- confident Hillary Clinton campaign tempering expectatio­ns in a state where Bernie Sanders is poised to make a big showing in the March 1 caucus.

The two rivals will address the state Democratic Party’s annual fundraiser Saturday evening in back- to- back speeches, just as the contest hits full speed ahead of Super Tuesday.

Clinton and Sanders launched TV ad blitzes in Colorado this week and the campaigns plan to hold public events before the party’s minimum $ 150- a- plate dinner in downtown Denver.

The Sanders team is expecting thousands to attend a 3 p. m. rally at the Colorado Convention Center, while Clinton supporters Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly will host a smaller 1 p. m. roundtable on gun violence at Manual High School.

“It should be a good fight,” said Floyd Ciruli, a Denverbase­d political analyst in a recent blog post about the state’s caucus. “Clinton has an organizati­on and a supportive Hispanic community, if they can be motivated. Of course, Sanders has liberal and young voters.”

The prime time attention builds on months of behindthes­cenes work in the state to organize the thousands of volunteers needed to navigate the state’s caucus process and win the state’s 79 delegates.

Clinton is looking to tap into her family’s deep network in the state, appealing to women and courting Latinos, as she seeks to avenge her 2- to- 1 loss here to President Barack Obama in 2008. The former secretary of state made two trips to Colorado, the most recent in late November, and sent former President Bill Clinton to encourage supporters at a private event in January.

The campaign began investing in Colorado in the spring, when it located its

first staffer in the state, and put down a permanent flag in September when it hired Gov. John Hickenloop­er’s former campaign manager, Brad Komar, to run the operation. The campaign also recently hired a Latino outreach director.

Clinton’s team touts endorsemen­ts from 70 top Colorado officials — including Hickenloop­er— as well as 1,000- plus volunteers­working from10 offices across the state.

Still, given the energy behind the Sanders camp and the close finish in the Iowa caucus, the Clinton team is acknowledg­ing the political landscape.

“It’s a tough race in Colorado,” said Marlon Marshall, the Clinton campaign’s director of state operations. “The turf favors Sen. Sanders. But we knew it was going to be close and we will fight for every vote.”

The Sanders campaign is relying on supporter- organized networks that preceded the campaign’s entrance to the state in December, when it hired former Conservati­on Colorado organizer, Dulce Saenz to lead the effort. Sanders drew huge crowds to two college campus events, including an estimated 9,000 in Boulder in October.

Since then, the campaign opened four offices in the state and counted more than 2,000 volunteers, officials said.

“We are seeing a ton of newpeople to the process,” Saenz said, adding: “We are here to win.”

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