The Denver Post

Funds flood state races

Drilling setbacks, guv contest drive record political spending

- By Ben Botkin

Political spending in Colorado races already has hit a record this cycle with more than two weeks still remaining before all ballots are cast.

Statewide, candidates, political action committees and groups pushing ballot measures have pulled in $186 million since December, according to a Denver Post analysis of campaign finance reports. The previous record was the nearly $154 million collected in the 2014 election cycle.

At the federal level, the 6th Congressio­nal District race is one of the most expensive races in the nation, according to data compiled by the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics.

A key reason behind the new statelevel record is the oil and gas money that’s pouring into efforts to defeat a ballot measure that would impose much bigger setbacks for new wells. The industry’s political action committee, Protect Colorado, has spent $29.5 million so far this cycle.

Another factor is Colorado’s open race for governor. Democratic candidate Jared Polis has raised $22.2 million so far — most of it his own money — in his campaign against Republican Walker Stapleton. That amount alone eclipses what both majorparty gubernator­ial candidates have spent in past cycles.

In 2014, Democratic Gov. John Hickenloop­er’s campaign spent $5.4 million on his successful re

election effort and his Republican opponent, Bob Beauprez, spent $2.9 million. In the 2010 open race, Hickenloop­er’s campaign spent $3.9 million.

Colorado, like other states, also gets a dose of outofstate donations that drive up spending, said J.T. Stepleton, a researcher with the National Institute on Money in State Politics. The Republican Governors Associatio­n and the Democratic Governors Associatio­n, which get donors nationwide, have put millions into the Colorado governor’s race.

“It’s part of the political culture in this country,” Stepleton said. “It’s become more nationaliz­ed. It’s not just the candidatec­entered elections anymore.”

Likewise, the race in Colorado’s 6th Congressio­nal District is part of a broader push by Democrats to make U.S. House races a referendum on President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. The district has the secondhigh­est level of outside spending among all 435 congressio­nal races this election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Outside groups have already spent $13.8 million in the race between Republican Rep. Mike Coffman and Democratic challenger Jason Crow. Crow is benefiting more from the outside spending, with about 59 percent of the money going to oppose Coffman and support Crow.

Money going directly into the campaigns is also favoring the Democrat. Crow has outraised Coffman, with nearly $4.5 million collected as of Sept. 30. In comparison, Coffman’s haul is just $3.2 million.

That reflects a broader trend across the United States for embattled Republican incumbents.

“The Democrats are outraising Republican­s by a lot, and that is not what you expect because incumbents usually raise more,” said Sarah Bryner, research director at the Center for Responsive Politics.

The center is projecting that spending on congressio­nal races will be a recordsett­ing $5 billionplu­s this election cycle.

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