The Denver Post

Suburban Denver fuels Biden’s win

GOP pollster: “In Colorado, ( the Trump factor) is not a winner”

- By Jon Murray

Suburban voters’ swing toward Democrats in the age of Donald Trump was substantia­lly offset by fierce turnout among Trump’s base in some states on Election Day. But not in Colorado — where metro Denver’s suburban counties helped power former Vice President Joe Biden to a statewide victory that more than doubled Hillary Clinton’s 5- percentage- point margin over now- President Trump in 2016.

Biden led Trump statewide 55% to 42% on Friday afternoon, a 13- point margin, though outstandin­g ballots could change it slightly. In Arapahoe, Adams, Broomfield, Jefferson and Douglas counties, an average margin for Clinton of 5 percentage points four years ago — on par with the statewide margin — grew to an eyepopping 15.6 percentage points for Biden that outpaced the rest of Colorado, according to a Denver Post analysis of election results.

Take out Douglas, a more right- leaning county that supported Trump by more than 6 percentage points, and the other four counties broke for Biden by nearly 21 points, led by Broomfield at 27 points.

Biden defeated Trump to become the 46th president of the United States on Saturday after crossing the winning threshold of 270 Electoral College votes with a win in Pennsylvan­ia.

Some of the shift in Colorado is due to

this year’s lack of high- profile third- party candidates, who ate into Clinton’s margin in 2016. The former secretary of state also was a more polarizing Democratic nominee than Biden would end up being.

But the leftward march of Denver’s suburbs, while predating Trump, has only accelerate­d in the last four years. The suburban counties are growing fast, they’re diversifyi­ng, and they’re full of the kind of white- collar workers who have turned sharply against the president.

The 2018 midterm election, in which unaffiliat­ed voters delivered a blowout for Colorado Democrats, had prompted a warning by local Republican pollster David Flaherty: More pain was coming for the state GOP in 2020, when Trump would actually be on the ballot.

What he couldn’t have predicted then was a pandemic in an election year that deepened divides even more.

“In Colorado, ( the Trump factor) is not a winner — we’re not a Midwestern state,” where bluecollar voters provide a countercur­rent for the president, said Flaherty, the founder of Louisville­based Magellan Strategies, on Thursday. “There’s simply very little Republican­s could have done this cycle because of the sheer math of the turnout.”

Indeed, a new poll of 900 voters who cast ballots in Colorado’s election shows several dynamics drove support for Biden, including some that are key to the suburbs. Biden led Trump by 25 percentage points among unaffiliat­ed voters, by 23 points among voters younger than 44, by 51 points among Latino voters and by 24 points among white collegeedu­cated voters.

The poll included a sample representa­tive of Colorado’s voter turnout and was conducted Oct. 31 to Nov. 4 by Democratic polling firm Global Strategy Group for ProgressNo­w Colorado, a liberal advocacy group, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Republican­s lose local offices

Colorado’s rejection of Trump had big down- ballot consequenc­es. U. S. Sen. Cory Gardner lost Tuesday to Democratic former Gov. John Hickenloop­er, trailing by 8.8 percentage points in the latest returns.

In Arapahoe and Jefferson counties, both former swing counties, a handful of Republican state legislator­s managed to survive close races — but the party’s loss of local elected offices continued.

“When I came to the commission in 2015, there was one elected Democrat in the county government,” recalled Jefferson County Commission­er Libby Szabo. “When I leave in January 2021, there will be one elected Republican, and that will be the sheriff.”

Szabo lost her bid for reelection on Tuesday to Democrat Tracy Kraft- Tharp, a term- limited state representa­tive, by 8 percentage points. She takes solace in the fact that she outperform­ed Trump, who lost to Biden in Jeffco by nearly 19 percentage points. But now all three county commission­ers will be Democrats.

In Arapahoe County, voters flipped the county commission from a 3- 2 Republican majority to a 3- 2 Democratic edge — which would grow to 4- 1 in the event of a loss by another Republican incumbent who’s on the ropes. But that commission­er led his Democratic challenger by 162 votes as of Friday afternoon.

In the 18th Judicial District attorney’s race, which includes Arapahoe and Douglas counties, another partisan flip had looked possible for a Republican- held office. After Democratic candidate Amy Padden initially led by a slim margin, however, she trailed Republican John Kellner by 1,551 votes Friday. A winner had not been declared.

The Republican brand has suffered under Trump, unaffiliat­ed voter Tom Skarbowski suggested, but he puts the blame on the general direction of the party in recent years. He lives in a subdivisio­n in unincorpor­ated Arapahoe County and has voted for candidates from both parties, including Gardner in 2014 — though he later protested outside Gardner’s office.

“( Trump) set the tone and everybody else has followed,” said Skarbowski, 66. “It’s the old saying, ‘ The buck stops here.’ He’s taken over the whole GOP.”

Even if Trump ceases to dominate the party, he said, “I think it would take several cycles before they would get the confidence back again.”

Other dynamics boosted Biden

The Post’s analysis found that Biden’s outperform­ance of Clinton’s 2016 margin by 8 percentage points was driven by shifts toward the Democratic presidenti­al candidate in 50 of the state’s 64 counties. But the Denver area’s suburban counties stand out, since four of them ranked among the state’s top six for number of ballots returned.

The largest gain was in tiny San Juan County, where Biden improved on Clinton’s margin by 15 percentage points.

Besides the suburban counties, Biden stocked up on votes in other types of counties:

• Large liberal powerhouse­s, including Denver, where the Democratic presidenti­al margin increased by about 10 percentage points, and Boulder, where it increased by 9.

• Tourism- heavy mountain counties, including Summit ( 12.1point gain), Gunnison ( 11.5- point gain) and San Miguel ( 10.7- point gain).

• Reliably red counties won by Trump, but by narrower margins this time. The Democratic deficit shrank by 11.5 percentage points in El Paso, by 10.9 in Douglas, by 8.9 in Mesa and by 4.2 in Weld.

• Three counties that swung from Trump in 2016 to the Democrat this time — Chaffee ( 11.3 points), Garfield ( 9.2) and Pueblo ( 2.3). In Latino- and blue- collarheav­y Pueblo County, Trump won by 0.5 percentage points in 2016, but Biden led Friday by 1.8 points.

A permanent realignmen­t?

In releasing the Global Strategy Group’s new poll, called The Rocky Mountainee­r, the pollsters characteri­zed the suburban counties’ significan­t Democratic shifts as likely enduring.

“These white- collar suburbs are no longer swing areas as they actually went about as strongly for Biden as El Paso and Douglas counties did for ( Republican nominee Mitt) Romney in 2012,” wrote Andrew Baumann and Stephen Riggs.

Arapahoe County Democratic Party Chair Kristin Mallory hopes that’s true.

She gives Trump credit for mobilizing Democrats and unaffiliat­ed voters in opposition to him, but she says the area’s demographi­c changes and growth have changed the political makeup even more. She said the local party also has developed a more coordinate­d approach to campaignin­g.

“For all intents and purposes, Arapahoe County is pretty dang blue,” Mallory said.

Szabo, the defeated Jeffco commission­er, also isn’t convinced Trump is the only factor in the growing Democratic margins on her side of the metro area.

But Flaherty predicts that Republican­s’ prospects may improve in Colorado, including in the suburbs, when Trump is out of the national picture.

Without Trump’s presence, coming state legislativ­e sessions dominated by Democrats and a redistrict­ing process set to play out next year could alter some of Colorado’s political dynamics, Flaherty said.

“All those things do point to a brighter day for Republican­s to pick themselves up and dust themselves off and make a case for why their solutions are perhaps better for Coloradans than 100% Democratic management,” he said. “They won’t have to cringe from a tweet or a statement from Donald Trump.”

 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? Anna Von Hoene, right, 18, from Highlands Ranch, shows her support for former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday in the middle of a gathering of President Donald Trump supporters at the intersecti­on of Highlands Ranch Parkway and University Boulevard.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post Anna Von Hoene, right, 18, from Highlands Ranch, shows her support for former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday in the middle of a gathering of President Donald Trump supporters at the intersecti­on of Highlands Ranch Parkway and University Boulevard.
 ?? Rachel Ellis, The Denver Post ?? Tom Skarbowski, 67, fishes with his grandson Anderson Gray, 2, on Thursday. The unaffiliat­ed Arapahoe County voter said “( Trump) set the tone and everybody else has followed. It’s the old saying, ‘ The buck stops here.’ He’s taken over the whole GOP.”
Rachel Ellis, The Denver Post Tom Skarbowski, 67, fishes with his grandson Anderson Gray, 2, on Thursday. The unaffiliat­ed Arapahoe County voter said “( Trump) set the tone and everybody else has followed. It’s the old saying, ‘ The buck stops here.’ He’s taken over the whole GOP.”
 ?? AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post ?? Cecilia Espenoza and Michael Sheehan enjoy a picnic and cheer during an Oct. 7 virtual watch party for the vice presidenti­al debate between U. S. Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence at Denver South High School.
AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post Cecilia Espenoza and Michael Sheehan enjoy a picnic and cheer during an Oct. 7 virtual watch party for the vice presidenti­al debate between U. S. Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence at Denver South High School.

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