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Colorado primary election voters shake things up | Cronin and Loevy

Every election has its surprises, but Tuesday’s Colorado primary results gave us several unexpected outcomes. 

Michael Bennett lost his bid to switch from the U.S. Senate and become Colorado’s next governor.  

Meanwhile, progressive Democratic congresswoman Diana DeGette from Denver, who had served 30 years in the U.S. House of Representatives, was defeated by a 29-year-old Democratic Socialist who has never held elective office.  

The new Democratic nominee in Denver, Melat Kiros, called for generational change and an end to military aid to Israel. She won using the Bernie Sanders — Zoran Mandani — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez playbook, and it worked in Colorado’s bluest congressional district. 

DeGette and Bennet had plenty of money and name recognition, but they were long-term members of what the public considers a “do-nothing Congress.” That proved to be a liability for each. Both underestimated that anti-Washington mood. 

Voters were saying that they don’t like President Donald Trump, they don’t like Congress and they believe the country is going in the wrong direction. 

U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper won renomination against a left-leaning state legislator, but Hickenlooper’s 8-to-1 fundraising advantage yielded only a modest victory margin, whereas he was expected to crush his opponent. 

No one in Colorado knew what would happen in the race for the Republican nomination for governor. We did know that two MAGA-embracing conservative candidates were pitted against a veteran state legislator, who had the almost unanimous backing of the Colorado Republican establishment. 

Victor Marx, founder of All Things Possible Ministries in Colorado Springs, ran and was in the lead for the Republican nomination that still was not decided as of Friday by running on conservative MAGA issues and casting himself as a maverick outsider who is needed to shake things up, put limits on government and enhance public safety. Marx, a former Marine, is an author and public speaker. His Republican opponents indicated that they could not support him if he won the nomination. 

This will be intriguing to follow.  Marx has a colorful and complex personal history, which will doubtlessly be probed soon. 

Here again, holding office and being a Republican Party insider probably hurt the centrist Republican state Sen. Barbara Kirkmeyer. 

What explains these surprising results from Tuesday’s election? And what does it mean for Colorado politics going forward? 

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser will be the Democratic Party nominee for governor in the November general election. He was a decided underdog in the gubernatorial primary, but he and his campaign team ran a disciplined and high-energy campaign. 

Weiser cleverly positioned himself as more anti-Trump and slightly more to the left than Bennet. 

Bennet’s negative attacks on Weiser failed for two reasons. They were way too negative, and they were wholly out of character for the mild-mannered and mainstream Bennet. 

Bennet hurt himself with this unnecessary mudslinging. It was true that Weiser also ran some negative ads against Bennett, and they were also unbecoming to Weiser. But Bennet had much more money to spend on negative ads.  

Kiros’ defeat of congresswoman DeGette was the biggest surprise. The upset received extensive coverage in the national media.  

DeGette had a respected voting record and had held a variety of leadership responsibilities for the Democratic Party in the U.S. House.  

But any member of Congress who has been there for 30 years becomes vulnerable. DeGette undoubtedly understood that, yet also probably underestimated her chances of losing to an Ethiopian-born newcomer. 

Kiros benefited from an endorsement from U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has always played well in metropolitan Denver in his various presidential races. 

Left-leaning Democrats are having their best time in years in many places across the country, from Maine to Seattle and in Los Angeles and New York City. 

Kiros came to Denver as a young girl and was raised in the Denver area. She attended Washington College, a small liberal arts college on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. She then earned a law degree from Notre Dame. 

She worked briefly as a corporate lawyer in New York before returning to Denver just a few years ago. She is “young, energetic, savvy and whip smart,” according to those who know her. 

She is an example of the new “Mamdani model” in American politics that is having an extended honeymoon with left-leaning voters. 

Republicans in Colorado consider Kiros’ victory in the Denver House district to be a political gift to them. 

Republicans will try to paint leading Democrats such as Weiser and Hickenlooper, and others, as far left-leaning Democrats like Kiros is and try to use that to win crucial unaffiliated voters over to the Republican side. 

Similarly, Marx’s nomination for governor will be seen as a gift to the Democratic candidates in Colorado this year. 

Democrats will try to portray Republican candidates up and down the ballot as being like Marx and as too extreme on a number of issues.   

The 2026 elections are occurring in the “sixth year” of Donald Trump’s presidency. Traditionally, elections in the sixth year of a presidency go poorly for the president’s political party – in this case, the Republicans. 

Sixth-year elections tend to produce unexpected upsets and see unknown newcomers elected to office. That likely will happen this year. We have already seen incumbents in both parties defeated, including in the Colorado state legislature. 

Weiser and Hickenlooper are expected to win on Nov. 3. A few other statewide races, such as attorney general, are likely to be more contested. Kiros should win in Denver, but her primary victory is unlikely to become a model for the rest of Colorado. If you drop Denver off the Colorado geographical map, Colorado becomes a purple state — as it was several years ago. 

Colorado’s overall primary election results suggest a Democratic Party  moving leftward, especially in Denver, and a Republican Party fractured with potentially a controversial candidate for governor and a largely unknown candidate for the U.S. Senate, State Sen. Mark Baisley.   

But Nov. 3 is a long way away — and both major political parties will have a challenge trying to be unified. 

Tom Cronin and Bob Loevy are news commentators who write about Colorado and national politics. 



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