The Denver Post

Tancredo foresees nastiness

- By John Frank John Frank: 303- 954- 2409, jfrank@ denverpost. com or @ JFrankDPos­t

The disarray in the Republican contest for Colorado governor continued as the newcomer in the race anointed himself as the front- runner and a top contender’s campaign suffered amajor jolt.

Tom Tancredo, the former congressma­n and twotime losing candidate for governor, said his nomination as theRepubli­can nominee is “a done deal, almost” even as hewarned of a nasty race ahead.

“I will tell you right now, this will be the ugliest campaign you’ll see,” he said in Denver, “because the other side has only one chance of beating me. … And that is to turn me into the biggest devil who ever lived, a racist, a white supremacis­t, all that junk.”

Tancredo made his remarks Wednesday on a three- stop tour to launch his campaign, a day after announcing his bid. He began to explore a run after being outraged that Republican­s didn’t speak out against the cancellati­on of a conference hosted by a white nationalis­t organizati­on, the VDARE Foundation, where he was scheduled to speak.

Tancredo, an immigratio­n hardliner, sat on the VDARE board of directors until recently, when he started to look at a bid for governor, he told The Denver Post in an interview.

The Southern Poverty LawCenter says the organizati­on is anti- immigratio­n and promoteswh­ite nationalis­m — but Tancredo and the Colorado Republican Party suggest the center is a left- wing activist organizati­on.

Later in the day, the campaign manager for Republican rival George Brauchler announced he departed after six months. The move will leave Brauchler, the 18th Judicial District attorney, without a campaign leader for the foreseeabl­e future and comes after weak fundraisin­g spurred questions aboutwheth­er he can mount a successful campaign.

Ryan Lynch left the campaign Monday as anticipati­on mounted about Tancredo’s entry into the race. Both candidates are trying to court conservati­ve activists, but Tancredo’s prominence in the party gives him the edge against Brauchler, the prosecutor of the Aurora theater shooting case who ismaking his first statewide bid.

Lynch issued a statement that celebrated the campaign’swork to date. He declined to comment further because he signed a nondisclos­ure agreement with the Brauchler campaign. Brauchler did not return a message seeking comment.

Brauchler is mentioned as a possible candidate for attorney general, too, but he repeatedly has said he wants to run only for governor. Attorney General Cynthia Coffman is a potential Republican candidate for governor, too, and may make a decision about whether to enter the race soon.

If she exits her current post, it will complicate the GOPpicture further, as U. S. Rep. Ken Buck may seek the attorney general’s office and his wife, state Rep. Perry Buck, and other candidates may look at a run for his 4th Congressio­nal District seat.

A handful of other candidates are seeking the Republican nomination in a race that is drawing national attention. State Treasurer Walker Stapleton, a Bush family relative, and investment banker Doug Robinson, a nephew ofMitt Romney, are seeking the party’s nod.

Anti- establishm­ent forces are taking an interest, too. Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon talked to Tancredo at a three- hour meeting earlier in the weeks before he announced the campaign, but it’s unclear how involved he will be in the race.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States