Hickenlooper wins Democratic primary for key U.S. Senate seat in
Colorado
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[July 01, 2020]
By John Whitesides
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Colorado
Governor John Hickenlooper shrugged off a series of campaign stumbles to
win the state's Democratic U.S. Senate nomination on Tuesday, beating a
progressive challenger in a race vital to the party's hopes of regaining
Senate control in November.
Hickenlooper's victory sets up a high-profile Nov. 3 showdown with
conservative Republican U.S. Senator Cory Gardner, considered one of the
country's most vulnerable incumbents and a top target for Democrats.
With more than three-quarters of precincts reporting, Hickenlooper led
by nearly 20 percentage points over Andrew Romanoff, a former Colorado
House speaker who had touted progressive priorities such as Medicare for
All that were opposed by the more moderate Hickenlooper.
After his win, Hickenlooper made it clear in a video address to
supporters that he would tie Gardner, who has been closely aligned with
Republican President Donald Trump, directly to what he said were Trump's
failed policies.
"I've never lost an election in this state and I don't intend to lose
this one," Hickenlooper said.
Colorado was one of three states, along with Utah and Oklahoma, to hold
nominating contests on Tuesday. Colorado and Utah primarily vote by
mail, minimizing the problems with in-person voting that marred other
elections during the coronavirus outbreak.
Hickenlooper, recruited to run by national Democrats after his failed
presidential campaign last year, had been expected to coast to victory
in Colorado but he was beset down the stretch by ethical violations and
campaign gaffes, raising some doubts.
He acknowledged he misspoke in late May when he said during a discussion
of the "Black Lives Matter" movement that every life matters - a phrase
criticized for dismissing racism against Black people. He also
apologized after a six-year-old quip surfaced in which he compared a
politician's schedule to working on a slave ship.
Hickenlooper was fined $2,750 by the Colorado Independent Ethics
Commission on June 12 for violating state ethics laws by accepting free
travel when he was governor. He initially defied a subpoena from the
panel, testifying only after he was found in contempt.
Republicans said Hickenlooper's late stumbles showed he would be
vulnerable against Gardner.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate former Colorado Governor
John Hickenlooper speaks on the first night of the second 2020
Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Detroit, Michigan, July 30,
2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
"If watching him fall apart under pressure these last few weeks is
any indication, 'hot mess' Hickenlooper is in for a very bumpy
ride," said Joanna Rodriguez, a spokeswoman for the National
Republican Senatorial Committee.
Democrats also learned the winner on Tuesday in the race for the
U.S. Senate nomination in Kentucky, where the results were delayed a
week by the counting of mailed ballots. Establishment-backed Amy
McGrath held off a late surge by Black state lawmaker Charles Booker
for the right to challenge Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.
In Colorado, U.S. Representative Scott Tipton, who had been endorsed
by Trump, was upset in a Republican primary by gun rights activist
Lauren Boebert. She runs a gun-themed restaurant and has spoken
favorably about the pro-Trump conspiracy theory QAnon, which says
"deep-state" traitors are plotting against the president.
Republicans were choosing challengers to run against U.S.
Representatives Kendra Horn of Oklahoma and Ben McAdams of Utah, two
endangered Democrats who represent districts that Trump carried in
2016.
In Oklahoma, the winner will be determined in an Aug. 25 runoff as
no candidate managed 50% of the vote. In Utah, former National
Football League player Burgess Owens won the Republican primary to
take on McAdams.
A ballot measure in Oklahoma to expand Medicaid, the government
healthcare program for the poor and disabled, appeared to narrowly
win despite the Republican governor's arguments the state cannot
afford it. With all precincts reporting, the expansion led by about
1 percentage point.
(Reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Howard Goller, Simon
Cameron-Moore, Robert Birsel)
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