Baltimore Sun

Boebert backers urge her to soften ‘nasty rhetoric’

Lawmaker’s brash style rubs some in Colo. wrong way

- By Jesse Bedayn

RIFLE, Colo. — Debbie Hartman voted for Lauren Boebert for Congress in 2020 and again in 2022, delighted by Boebert’s unequivoca­l defense of cultural issues that animate the Republican Party’s far right flank. But as Hartman shopped recently at a supermarke­t in this Rocky Mountain ranching outpost, she had one piece of advice for the Colorado lawmaker.

“Tone down the nasty rhetoric on occasion and just stick with the point at hand,” said Hartman, 65, a veterinary tech assistant.

That sentiment reflects Boebert’s challenge as she begins her second term in the House. In her relatively short time in Washington, she has built a national profile with a combative style embracing everything from gun ownership to apocalypti­c religious rhetoric.

Constituen­ts such as Hartman in the Republican-leaning

3rd Congressio­nal District laud Boebert for defending their rights, but cringe at her provocatio­ns, contributi­ng to an unexpected­ly tight race last year that she won by 546 votes out of more than 300,000 cast.

“She tapped into what Trump was doing, and she maybe took it too far in some instances,” said Alex Mason, 27, adding that Boebert, whom he supports, is still more tactful than former President Donald Trump.

In an interview, Boebert said “this slim victory, it opened my eyes to another chance to do everything that I’ve been promising to do.”

To the congresswo­man, that means being “more focused on delivering the policies I ran on than owning the left,” adding she hoped “to bring the temperatur­e down, to bring unity.”

For much of last week, however, the temperatur­e on Capitol Hill only rose.

Boebert was a leading voice among a group of lawmakers who refused to support Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s bid to become House speaker, a historic revolt against a party leader. McCarthy won the gavel early Saturday. She voted “present.”

Some of Boebert’s toughest words are increasing­ly aimed at fellow Republican­s, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, another controvers­ial Trump acolyte who was one of McCarthy’s most prominent conservati­ve supporters.

“I have been asked to explain MTG’s beliefs on Jewish space lasers, on why she showed up to a white supremacis­t conference . ... I’m just not going to go there,” Boebert said over the phone as she rode in a car winding through the high canyons near her hometown of Silt before the speakershi­p vote. “She wants to say all these things and seem unhinged on Twitter, so be it.”

Boebert, 36, insisted that while she may try to pick fewer fights with the left, she’s not going to become a different person even after barely beating an opponent, Democrat Adam Frisch, who had targeted what he called Boebert’s “angertainm­ent.”

“A lot of those on the left have said: ‘Look at your election, are you going to tone it down, little girl?’ ”she said. “I’m still going to be me.”

“In the minority, all I had was my voice, the only thing I could do was be loud about the things I’m passionate about,” she said. Now, “We have to lead right now, we have to show Americans that we deserve to be in the majority.”

People in Boebert’s district, which runs from the ruddy red mesas in Grand Junction that stand sentry over rugged, high-desert

terrain to the coal mining hamlets nestled in the Rockies, say the landscape promotes a kind of frontier libertaria­nism.

But even if they’ve grown wary of her excesses, many of Boebert’s supporters say she’s amplified their concerns nationally and served as an antidote to progressiv­e Democrats such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.

Raleigh Snyder, a retired aircraft mechanic in Grand Junction, said Boebert was America’s only chance against “endemic corruption”

in Washington. Still, he said “she’s probably going to have to learn to temper her approach, but don’t change her goals.”

Outside Rifle’s City Market, Maryann Tonder said she doesn’t want Boebert “even to feel that she has to compromise principles to get stuff done.” But, she added, “you can do it in a way that is not over the top.”

Another Boebert supporter in Rifle, Julie Ottman, who was pushing a cart out of City Market, said, “sometimes you got to give a little bit in order to get.”

 ?? JESSE BEDAYN/AP ?? Larry Clark voices his opinion about Rep. Lauren Boebert outside a supply store in Grand Junction, Colo. Boebert won the district by 546 votes in November.
JESSE BEDAYN/AP Larry Clark voices his opinion about Rep. Lauren Boebert outside a supply store in Grand Junction, Colo. Boebert won the district by 546 votes in November.
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