In a year where the insurgents-versus-establishment theme has
played out repeatedly in Republican primaries, Democrats have
their own insurgency in Colorado. Former state legislator Andrew
Romanoff has mounted a strong primary challenge to Sen.
Michael Bennet, who was hand-picked to fill the seat
vacated when Obama tapped Sen. Ken Salazar as his Secretary of
the Interior. The mostly mail-in primary concludes next Tuesday,
and a
recent poll showed Romanoff surging.
President Obama has already headlined one event in Denver for
Bennet, and last night
called into a “tele-town hall” conference call that
reportedly reached more than 20,000 Colorado Democrats:
White House officials altered the president`s schedule Tuesday
to include Obama`s participation, the first time the president
has done a virtual town hall with any Democratic
candidate.
Obama spoke for six minutes of the 54-minute call… .
Obama`s appearance was a recognition of the toll on Bennet
taken by a recent spurt of negative ads portraying him as a
corporate raider when he worked for Colorado billionaire Phil
Anschutz, a toll conceded Tuesday by White House senior adviser
David Axelrod.
But Axelrod said Bennet will “prevail in the end,” justifying
the strong backing the incumbent has received from the White
House almost since he was appointed in January 2009 —
including fundraising, an early endorsement by Obama and visits
to Colorado by several Cabinet members… .
And some analysts have suggested that Bennet is taking a risk
by associating himself too much with an unpopular president if
he makes it to the general election.
Meanwhile, in Colorado Republican Senate primary, polls show
establishment-backed Lt. Gov. Jane Norton is trailing former Weld
County prosecutor Ken Buck, a conservative who has strong support
within the Tea Party movement. Norton, sister-in-law of
GOP political consultant Charlie Black, has started
airing attack ads against Buck and is bringing
in John McCain to campaign for her.