Times-Call (Longmont)

Buck to step down

Polis sets special election on day of primary after Republican announces resignatio­n from House

- By Nick Coltrain ncoltrain@denverpost.com

U.S. Rep. Ken Buck will step down from Congress on March 22, he announced Tuesday, setting the stage for a special election in a year when his expected departure already had set off a race to succeed him.

In fact, voters will get a twofer — Gov. Jared Polis said Tuesday afternoon that he intends to call the special election on June 25, the same day as the Republican primary.

Voters in the Republican-leaning Eastern Plains’ 4th Congressio­nal District could select one candidate for the vacancy and another candidate, from the broader primary slate, as their pick to compete for a full term in Congress in the Nov. 5 general election. Or they could choose the same person for those slots.

Either way, Buck’s announceme­nt has complicate­d the race for the large field that includes U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert, a fellow Republican who is seeking to change from her current seat on Colorado’s Western Slope.

His departure also will narrow the already-slim Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

Buck, who lives in Windsor, had said in November that he would not seek reelection to the position but would serve through the end of this term. The rare open seat, in a deeply conservati­ve district, immediatel­y drew a frenzy of candidates.

But now, his unexpected resignatio­n triggers a special election under state law.

“It has been an honor to serve the people of Colorado’s 4th District in Congress for the past 9 years,” Buck said in a statement Tuesday that did not cite a reason for his decision to step down early. “I want to thank them for their support and encouragem­ent throughout the years.”

Dick Wadhams, a past Colorado GOP chair, said Buck’s resignatio­n was unpreceden­ted in recent state political history. The last time Colorado voters participat­ed in a special congressio­nal election, he said, was after the 1982 death of Jack Swigert, the Apollo astronaut who died shortly after winning election to Congress.

“This is extraordin­ary,” he said.

Boebert announced in December that she would change districts to vie for Buck’s seat as she

faced a potentiall­y uphill climb to win reelection in the 3rd Congressio­nal District. Campaign spokespers­on Drew Sexton said Tuesday that her advisers were still waiting for guidance on the new process from party officials and declined to comment further.

Former state Sen. Jerry Sonnenberg and state Reps. Mike Lynch and Richard Holtorf are among roughly nine Republican­s who are running for the

seat. Some candidates and campaigns did not immediatel­y return requests for comment Tuesday about the shifting dynamics, but Holtorf in a statement called the resignatio­n “another selfish move by Congressma­n Buck,” one that will “throw this race into confusion.”

In an interview, Holtorf noted that Buck, who formerly led the state Republican Party, would understand how his early departure would cause disarray through compressed timelines, competing caucus processes and voters navigating multiple elections

for the same seat.

He said it was unpreceden­ted in modern times to have a vacancy committee nomination and election run near-parallel to the normal election process. He was still determinin­g his own path forward.

“We have to define the pathway this is going to be now,” he said.

The 4th Congressio­nal District stretches across eastern Colorado, from the Wyoming border south to the Oklahoma panhandle, and includes Douglas County in metro Denver. The district is the most Republican-leaning in the state, giving the winner of the June primary — whether or not that person wins the special election — a huge advantage in November.

In the 4th District, several Democrats also are running, and their primary also is on June 25.

For the special election race, the Democratic and Republican parties will convene vacancy committees in the coming weeks to nominate candidates to replace Buck for the remainder of his term.

That could put

each

nomination in the hands of a few dozen party faithful. Unaffiliat­ed candidates would be able to petition onto the ballot.

Voters in the district would then choose Buck’s short-term replacemen­t in a separate ballot question from the party primary races. If Boebert were to win the special election, she’d have to step down from her 3rd District seat early.

Polis said in a statement that he chose to hold the elections on the same day to minimize taxpayer costs, though the timing of Buck’s selected resignatio­n date sets up a narrow window around the June primary in which the special election could be scheduled under state law, according to the governor’s office. Polis also thanked Buck for his service.

Buck is serving his fifth term in Congress. Earlier, when he announced he would not seek reelection, he cited “self-serving lies” about the 2020 presidenti­al election from within his own party as a major reason for his decision.

“I look forward to staying involved in our political

process, as well as spending more time in Colorado and with my family,” Buck said in his announceme­nt Tuesday.

In a CNN interview shortly after his announceme­nt, Buck said the current session of Congress “is the worst year of the nine years and three months that I’ve been in Congress.” He also said he wouldn’t meddle in picking his successor. But he indicated, without offering specifics, that he hopes to play a role more broadly in improving electoral politics in the U.S.

“Instead of having decorum, instead of operating in a profession­al manner, this place has just devolved into bickering and nonsense and not really doing the job for the American people,” Buck said.

Prior to Congress, Buck served for about a decade as the Weld County district attorney. He ran unsuccessf­ully for the U.S. Senate in 2010 against Sen. Michael Bennet. In 2014, he won his first election to Congress.

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