The Denver Post

Is there even room left in Colorado’s GOP for sane Republican­s?

- Krista L. Kafer is a weekly Denver Post columnist. Follow her on Twitter: @ kristakafe­r.

After the Colorado

GOP chose former state representa­tive Dave Williams, many sane Republican­s wonder if there is a place for them within the Colorado Republican Party. By sane, I mean rational, evidenceba­sed thinkers who get, at a minimum, that Trump lost the 2020 election, vaccines save lives, and Trump’s repellent, mendacious style has hurt Republican­s’ standing in a once purple state.

Williams, an election denier and conspiracy theorist, believes Trump won in 2020 sans evidence. He alleged without proof that 5,600 dead people voted in the 2020 Colorado election. Despite 300 years of vaccine science and millions of saved lives, Williams is a proud anti- vaxxer. Upon beating out six contenders for chair ( all but one of the conspiracy theorists or tinfoil hatlite variety), Williams stated, “Our party doesn’t have a brand problem. Our party has a problem with feckless leaders who are ashamed of you,” implying that GOP leaders lost because they were insufficie­ntly Trumpist, an assertion belied by evidence that such candidates fared worse in Colorado and around the country.

Speaking of feckless, Williams tried and failed to have the tacky phrase “Let’s Go Brandon” added to his name on the ballot for the 2022 primary against Rep. Doug Lamborn.

Williams has vowed to be a “wartime leader” leaving many of us to wonder if mainstream Republican­s are a battlefiel­d target. Former Minority Leader of the Colorado House of Representa­tives Mark Waller queried Williams via social media about the future, “I have been called a RINO and told I no longer belong in our Party. I don’t believe the election was stolen, and I believe the events of January 6th were a disgrace to our Country and our Party. I am also a proud Republican who believes in our foundation­al principles. Please let me know if I have a place in our fractured Party.”

Some Republican­s have determined that there is no place for the sane, and they do not want to be associated with the lunatic fringe. Popular center- right KOA radio host Mandy Connell and the former Republican University of Colorado Regent Sue Sharkey are no longer affiliated with the party. They are two of the more than 133 Republican­s who changed their voter registrati­on since Williams won, according to an analysis by 9 News reporter Marshall Zelinger.

As I noted in a previous column, Republican­s have been lagging behind unaffiliat­ed voters since 2014 and behind Democrats since 2017. Today, Republican­s account for 24% of Colorado registered voters. If sane Republican­s leave the party, the con artist- crackpot contingent will gain more influence and visibility, prompting the flight of other mainstream Republican­s. Unmitigate­d, this could trap the Colorado GOP in a death spiral just when the party should be rebounding as Trump sinks into ignominiou­s insignific­ance.

Colorado isn’t alone. In Michigan, the state GOP picked Kristina Karamo for party chair. A rabid conspirato­rialist, she has yet to concede her loss in the Michigan secretary of state race. The Kansas and Idaho GOP chose election deniers to chair their state parties. In Arizona, former chief operating officer for Trump’s campaigns, Jeff DeWit, beat out other contenders with the endorsemen­t of uberBig Lie proponents like failed gubernator­ial candidate Kari Lake, state Sen. Wendy Rogers, and the former president. Fortunatel­y, the contagion has not spread to other states.

There are a couple of reasons for staying despite the new leadership. While Democrats look sane next to Dave ‘ Let’s go Brandon’ Williams and other raging MAGA troglodyte­s, Democrat ideas are, in fact, insane. They contribute to higher crime, vagrancy, inflation, taxation, and debt.

Secondly, good people like state Sen. Barb Kirkmeyer, Colorado Springs mayoral candidate and former Secretary of State, Wayne Williams, Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman, and the rising stars on the Aurora city council, GOP officials on the CU Board of Regents, state School Board, and elected officials serving in the General Assembly and Congress need the support of other good people.

While madcaps like Dave Williams and Tina Peters get a lot of press, mainstream Republican officials work quietly on behalf of Coloradans and the Republican ideals of freedom and free enterprise, personal responsibi­lity, limited government, and stewardshi­p of public resources.

They carry on the commendabl­e work of great Colorado elected leaders Wayne Allard, Hank Brown, Cory Gardner, Hugh Mckean, Gale Norton, Bill Owens, and Bob Schaffer and the legacy of national leaders like presidents Lincoln, Eisenhower, and Reagan. Williams’ two- year term, damaging as it may be, is a passing satellite in a sky of stars.

 ?? Krista Kafer ??
Krista Kafer

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