The Denver Post

House GOP leader Lynch to compete for Buck’s seat

- By Nick Coltrain ncoltrain@denverpost.com

Colorado House Minority Leader Mike Lynch on Wednesday will officially toss his cowboy hat into the ring for the congressio­nal seat being vacated by U.S. Rep. Ken Buck.

The second-term state representa­tive and former U.S. Army officer is one of the highestran­king elected Republican­s in Colorado. He joins a crowded field for a rare open seat in Congress — a fray also joined last week by U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert, a Republican who’s seeking to switch districts.

The 4th Congressio­nal District covers much of the Eastern Plains and curves around most of metro Denver, though it includes nearly all of Douglas County to the south. It’s the most staunchly Republican congressio­nal district in the state.

“An opportunit­y like this doesn’t come around in Colorado politics but once in a political lifetime,” said Lynch, who lives in Wellington north of Fort Collins, in an interview ahead of his formal announceme­nt. He called it an extension of public service that began when he joined the Army out of high school.

“I’ve had my eye on that seat for a long time,” he said. “That is, in essence, why I got involved in (politics) in the first place.”

Lynch’s candidacy has been widely speculated since Buck announced he would retire at the end of his current term. It adds another dose of intrigue to a race that so far includes state Rep. Richard Holtorf, who is Lynch’s No. 3 in the state House and a friend; former state Sens. Ted Harvey and Jerry Sonnenberg, now a Logan County commission­er; radio host Deborah Flora, who ran for the 2022 GOP nomination for U.S. Senate; and now Boebert, the candidate who undeniably has the most name recognitio­n.

In all, there are nine Republican­s and several candidates from other parties. The primary is in June.

Boebert’s entry is “unfortunat­e because of the political theater she brings to the race,” Lynch said. He said he was “shocked that anyone would have the hubris to make such a move. To assume that the state needs her so bad that she’d switch her constituen­t bases was shocking.”

Still, he added, he doesn’t see her entrance as reason to change his approach to the race.

Fentanyl and border security would be among his top priorities in Congress. Lynch draws on his advocacy in the state legislatur­e for policies to combat the fentanyl crisis.

And he frames border security not as an immigratio­n issue but as a smuggling issue, with a need to reduce the strain on an overwhelme­d border patrol by directing more resources to combat drugs and human traffickin­g.

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