The Denver Post

CAUCUSES GO TO ROMANOFF

Liberal U.S. Senate candidate easily wins preference poll over Hickenloop­er, others.

- By Justin Wingerter

U.S. Senate candidate Andrew Romanoff secured a significan­t victory over the weekend, easily winning a preference poll of Democratic candidates in the primary race to take on Republican Sen. Cory Gardner this November.

Romanoff, a favorite of progressiv­e activists, dominated the better-funded John Hickenloop­er in statewide caucuses Saturday, winning more delegates than Hickenloop­er in every large Colorado county en route to a commanding win.

Statewide, Romanoff won 55% of support in the preference poll, Hickenloop­er earned 30%, Trish Zornio received 7%, Stephany Rose Spaulding won 5%, and Erik Underwood won 0.2%. Another 3% of caucus attendees were uncommitte­d, according to the Colorado Democratic Party. A few small counties had not reported as of Sunday night and are not included in this total.

In Denver County, where Hickenloop­er was mayor for eight years, Romanoff won 61% of delegates to 22% for Hickenloop­er, 9% for Spaulding and 6% for Zornio.

In Boulder County, a hub for liberal activism, Romanoff won 64% of delegates to 21% for Hickenloop­er, 9% for Zornio and 3% for Spaulding.

Romanoff also won majorities in Adams County, Douglas County, Jefferson County, Pueblo County and Larimer County, plus a plurality in El Paso County.

“You defied the political establishm­ent and carried our message — a Green New Deal, health care for all, an economy that works for everyone — to communitie­s across the state,” Romanoff told supporters in an email Sunday.

Held on an unseasonab­ly warm Saturday and amid worries of a coronaviru­s outbreak, the low-turnout caucuses were the first occasion for Democrats to choose among their party’s large U.S. Senate candidate field. Rather than choose the front-running Hickenloop­er, most instead went with the liberal Romanoff.

At Thomas Jefferson High School in Denver, Barbara Groth, 67, voted for Romanoff. She expressed frustratio­n with the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee for throwing its support behind Hickenloop­er, calling that decision a “huge disservice to Romanoff.”

At Overland High School in Aurora, Michael Carr also chose Romanoff, who went on to win 56% of delegates in Arapahoe County and 55% in Adams County.

“He’s the best at building bridges with the other side,” Carr said of the former Colorado House speaker, who often touts his bipartisan record in the legislatur­e. “It can’t just be us versus them; we all have to work for the good of our country.”

As a result of Saturday’s preference poll, most of the delegates sent to county caucuses later this month will be Romanoff supporters, making it likely that he is able to earn 30% of support at an April 18 state assembly.

Romanoff, Spaulding, Underwood and Zornio will each need 30% of assembly support if they are to have their names placed on June 30 primary ballots. Several other candidates are taking a signature-gathering route to ballot access, bypassing the caucuses. Hickenloop­er is taking both routes and has turned in signatures.

Romanoff expects the weekend win will boost his fundraisin­g and volunteer recruitmen­t, but caucuses in Colorado are not predictive of primary success. Cary Kennedy won the Democratic gubernator­ial caucuses in 2018 but lost to Jared Polis later that year. And Romanoff won the 2010 U.S. Senate caucuses over Sen. Michael Bennet but lost to the incumbent Bennet in that year’s Democratic primary.

Hickenloop­er predicted two weeks ago that he would win the preference poll but downplayed both his expectatio­ns and the importance of caucuses in remarks to reporters Saturday afternoon. He said the true contest will be the June 30 primary.

“I’ve run statewide twice in bad years for Democrats and I have a relationsh­ip with Democrats across the state,” Hickenloop­er told reporters outside his precinct site, referring to gubernator­ial wins in 2010 and 2014. “And that relationsh­ip should allow me to build momentum and really take Cory Gardner on head to head.”

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