PoliticsPolitics

Actions

Democrat Andrew Romanoff jumps into race against Sen. Cory Gardner

Posted
and last updated

DENVER (AP) — Former Colorado House Speaker Andrew Romanoff on Thursday said he would challenge Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, presaging a possible crowded primary field in the effort to oust the freshman senator.

Romanoff helped engineer the Democratic Party's takeover of the state Legislature 13 years ago and lost in a Democratic Senate primary in 2010, when he failed to oust Sen. Michael Bennet. He also lost a race against Republican Rep. Mike Coffman in 2014.

Romanoff has stepped down as president of Mental Health Colorado to run for the Senate in 2020.

In a release, Romanoff struck a populist message, pledging to back Medicare for All and the Green New Deal, the Democrats' unfunded bid to eliminate carbon emissions by 2030.

"We've seen our planet plundered by an industry that puts its profits ahead of our survival," Romanoff said. "And just as troubling, we've seen politicians do the bidding of billionaires, catering to their corporate benefactors while sticking the rest of us with the bill."

Romanoff, 52, will face former state Sen. Mike Johnston, who announced his candidacy last week. Former House Speaker Crisanta Duran may also enter the primary.

The winner will face Gardner, 44, a seasoned politician and expert fundraiser who is considered the most vulnerable GOP senator in the country. That's because Colorado has shifted firmly to the left since Gardner was elected in 2014.

Hillary Clinton won the state in 2016 and Democrats won every statewide election in 2018.

Sunset over the State Capitol.jpeg

U.S Capitol CNN 061419

White House