Daily Camera (Boulder)

Republican­s lining up for an open congressio­nal seat

Multiple candidates are vying to replace U.S. Rep. Ken Buck in 4th CD

- By Seth Klamann sklamann@denverpost.com

U.S. Rep. Ken Buck, R-colo., arrives as House Republican­s hold a closed-door meeting to vote by secret ballot on their candidate for speaker of the House in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 11, 2023. He announced weeks later that he would not run for reelection in 2024.

U.S. Rep. Ken Buck’s decision last month not to seek reelection to Congress opened a tantalizin­gly rare window for Republican­s in eastern Colorado: a red seat in one of the state’s few remaining conservati­ve stronghold­s that, once won, would be tough to ever lose.

“If somebody wants to be a congressma­n who lives in the 4th District, this opportunit­y rarely comes along — an open seat,” said Dick Wadhams, a Republican political operative and former chair of the Colorado Republican Party. “It basically forces the hand of people who have that ambition.”

Colorado’s 4th Congressio­nal District spans much of the eastern part of the state, from the Wyoming state line to the Oklahoma Panhandle, taking in farming communitie­s as well as more urban enclaves, including Loveland and Douglas County, as it wraps around most of metro Denver. It’s the most reliably Republican district in a state that’s turned deeper shades of blue for nearly a decade.

Buck, a former Weld County district attorney who linked his decision not to run again to Republican election denialism and the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot, comfortabl­y held the seat after winning an initial election in 2014.

The seat is so safe, Republican­s said, that it can serve as a springboar­d into U.S. House leadership. The opening provides a chance for Republican­s here to break out of the minority in the state legislatur­e or to ditch what’s become, for now, the GOP’S routine second-place finishes in statewide races.

A half-dozen candidates already have thrown their names in for 2024, including:

• State Rep. Richard Holtorf, an Akron legislator, rancher and the House’s minority whip, who criticized Buck for not fighting for former President Donald Trump’s agenda

• Deborah Flora, a conservati­ve filmmaker and radio host who’s embraced recent conservati­ve criticism of the public education system

• Jerry Sonnenberg, a Logan County commission­er, rancher and former state senator who pledged to defend America’s “energy dominance”

• Ted Harvey, another ex-legislator who’s led protrump super PACS

• Trent Leisy, a veteran and small business owner

• Justin Schreiber, a fellow veteran who told KRDO last month that he’s been charged with falsely reporting a break-in to police last year

Some potential contenders already have decided against a run. Kristi Burton Brown, another former state Republican party chair, said she had planned to jump into the race but decided against it, given the young age of her family.

Other prominent Republican­s she’d expected to vie for the seat — including former district attorney George Brauchler, former 2022 Republican gubernator­ial candidate Heidi Ganahl and Weld County Sheriff Steve Reams — all have decided to stay out, too, she said.

Meanwhile, others are still weighing their options.

Rep. Mike Lynch, a Wellington Republican and the Colorado House’s minority leader, told The Denver

Post this week that he was still considerin­g whether to join the scrum. Abe Laydon, the chair of the Douglas County commission­ers, said in a text that he’s “continuing to actively explore how I may serve my country in Congress.”

One of his fellow commission­ers, Lora Thomas, also is said to be considerin­g a run. Thomas did not return a message seeking comment Thursday.

The primary is still more than six months away, but Wadhams and Burton Brown expect more Republican­s to declare their candidacie­s in the coming weeks.

Anyone who isn’t in the race by early January “isn’t serious,” Wadhams said. There’s a reason to wait until the new year: Jan. 1 marks the start of a new fundraisin­g period, meaning candidates may wait until then and start fresh, rather than posting a limited fundraisin­g total right out of the gate.

But any candidate who waits too long risks falling behind in a crowded race in which fundraisin­g will be key.

The district is a Republican stronghold, meaning whoever wins the June 25 primary will be in pole position to coast to Washington, D.C. But Wadhams and Burton Brown said none of the current or potential candidates has universal name recognitio­n in the district — so whoever wins the primary will need an ample war chest to break through.

The district also has changed since the seat was last open in 2014. It now includes more suburban areas, and much of its population lives in Douglas County. Candidates will have to find a way to consolidat­e their own home turf — whether that’s the Eastern Plains or the suburbs — while expanding their reach beyond it.

“If you can’t raise half a million dollars — if not more — in the primary, you’re going to have a tough time telling your story and distinguis­hing yourself between the other candidates,” Burton Brown said.

Money aside, it remains to be seen how the candidates will make themselves stand out in a crowded, ideologica­lly similar field.

Because the district is so safely Republican, the question of general electabili­ty is almost moot. Whoever wins the primary will almost certainly win the seat, observers say, though a couple of Democrats — including Ike Mccorkle, whom Buck defeated in both 2020 and 2022 — have filed to challenge for the seat.

Burton Brown said she didn’t expect the Republican race to be too acrimoniou­s. Candidates will instead have to position themselves as eastern Colorado’s best fighter and voice in Washington, while embracing specific policy issues — immigratio­n, crime, the economy — and hoping that issue resonates.

“Because none of the people running have ever been elected statewide, they would probably all benefit from a campaign that shows voters who they are and pushes their record and their story to voters,” she said. “Because CD4 is the most heavily Republican district in the state, basically what you have to do to win CD4 is pitch yourself as the most conservati­ve champion for the seat, and who can go take the rural-suburban mix of the district.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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