The Denver Post

Council taking a turn to right

Progressiv­e calls results a “gut punch” as Coffman’s urban camping ban likely to re-emerge and pass

- By John Aguilar

After two election cycles that moved the Aurora City Council increasing­ly to the left, voters last week decidedly turned the political dial back in the opposite direction in Colorado’s third-largest city.

Voters on Tuesday put into office conservati­ve or moderate candidates in four open seats, delivering what Juan Marcano, one of the more outspoken progressiv­e members on Aurora’s 11member council, called a “gut punch” to those hoping city leadership was on an inexorable leftward tack.

Gone — at least for the next two years — are any meaningful police reform efforts, legal defense measures for immigrants or ordinances allowing on-site consumptio­n of marijuana, he said. In their place, Marcano said, Mayor Mike Coffman’s proposal to ban urban camping will likely reemerge and prevail in 2022.

“Our middle class is disappeari­ng, housing is unattainab­le for far too many people, and wages haven’t kept up with the cost of living,” said Marcano, who was swept into office in 2019 amid social justice and immigrant rights protests at city hall. “I know a majority of our residents want to see a change, and our progressiv­e candidates had the will to enact that change, but unfortunat­ely the minority that showed up to vote elected a majority body of the same mindset that created those problems to begin with.

“Aurora has been dominated by conservati­ves for at least a halfcentur­y and unfortunat­ely, that will continue for at least another two years.”

Councilman Curtis Gardner, who was not on the ballot this year, said the reason for the electorate’s mood change was more straightfo­rward.

“I think the message from voters on Tuesday was that they want City Council to stick to municipal issues — land use, roads, public safety, things like that,” he said. “In the last few years, we’ve spent more time on national issues and I think our residents want us to focus on what impacts them every day.”

And at the top of the list of concerns for residents is Aurora’s spiking crime numbers over the last two years, especially when it comes to gun violence, Gardner

said. More people were injured in shootings in the first half of this year than in all of 2019, Aurora police data show.

The crime surge has come at a time during which Aurora found itself at the forefront of social justice demonstrat­ions nationally, with protests over the police’s treatment of Elijah Mcclain — a Black man who died after police apprehende­d him and paramedics injected him with a sedative — erupting into violence and a shooting that injured a man.

“Public safety is a core function of government at all levels so I’m not surprised to see voters elect candidates that placed a high emphasis on public safety,” Gardner said.

The two victorious at-large candidates on Tuesday — Air Force vet Danielle Jurinsky and business owner Dustin Zvonek — both highlighte­d in their campaigns the importance of public safety, while featuring endorsemen­ts from the city’s police and fire department unions on their websites and in their mailers.

“They had a very clear message about public safety,” said Juliemarie Shepherd Macklin, a political science instructor at the University of Colorado at Boulder and a lifelong Aurora resident who keeps a close eye on city politics. “I think Tuesday night was a vote saying we want to get back to issues that are important to us in our everyday lives.”

But the election results weren’t just about voters strategica­lly attempting to re-set the political complexion of the council, Shepherd Macklin said. There were larger historical trends in play too, as was evident in the poor showing by Democrats nationwide last week.

“An off-year election, after a presidenti­al election, tends to favor the out party,” she said.

All was not lost for the progressiv­e wing of Aurora’s council — no liberal council member actually lost a race on Tuesday. That includes Crystal Murillo, the daughter of Mexican immigrants who was re-elected to her Ward I seat after voters first put her on the council with two other progressiv­e candidates in 2017.

Murillo told The Denver Post she was still processing Tuesday’s election results and wasn’t prepared to talk about her next term. Shepherd Macklin said Murillo was likely helped by her incumbency, especially in an election with such low voter turnout.

“These are relatively low informatio­n races — name identifica­tion goes a long way,” she said.

So what comes next for the Aurora City Council as the new council members prepare to take their seats?

For the mayor, whose term expires in 2023, Tuesday’s results were a “repudiatio­n of the ‘defund the police’ mentality” that swept through the country following the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer last year.

“The election result means that I will be able to put forward an agenda that will continue the necessary reforms for our police department while supporting a law enforcemen­t strategy that addresses our rising crime rate,” Coffman said.

The mayor also plans to tackle Aurora’s transporta­tion challenges and resurrect a proposal to “provide safe alternativ­e locations for those living in encampment­s that are away from our schools, neighborho­ods and our businesses.” The council in August turned down a measure to ban urban camping via the slimmest of margins — a 5-5 tie.

But Marcano, who calls Coffman’s camping ban idea “ill-conceived,” hasn’t given up hope that the City Council has moved past its decades-long conservati­ve makeup to eventually give Aurora the “progressiv­e majority it deserves.” In Colorado’s most ethnically diverse city where one in five residents is foreign born, the “days are numbered” for those unwilling to recognize the profound shifts happening in the city, Marcano said.

“I believe that tipping point will be upon us soon as the inequity in our city continues to grow as a result of a continuati­on of their policies,” he said.

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