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December 22, 2021 10:32 AM UTC

"Bizarro Blueprint"--Repackaging The Usual Suspects

  • 13 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols
Republicans and “nonpartisan” conservative activists all together in August.

The Colorado Sun’s Jesse Paul and Sandra Fish have a great story out today documenting the centralized “dark money” funding source known as Unite for Colorado powering a wide variety of conservative issue campaigns, “independent” expenditures, and political “accountability” operations against Democratic lawmakers–millions of dollars in apparently well-coordinated and targeted funds to help Republicans recover politically in Colorado after years of humiliating defeats:

A deep-pocketed conservative political nonprofit that doesn’t disclose its donors funded almost every major Republican political group and effort in Colorado last year, according to a tax document obtained by The Colorado Sun that for the first time reveals the breadth of the organization’s influence…

Unite for Colorado’s financial details were revealed in a Internal Revenue Service 990 form filed by the organization for the 2020 tax year. The document shows the group brought in $18.5 million last year, making it one of the most moneyed and prolific spenders in Colorado politics.

[Dick] Wadhams said Unite for Colorado represents Republicans’ latest effort to match “the blueprint” conceived by Democrats in 2004, when a group of well-heeled donors, including Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, banded together to target spending to fund political action organizations and win races. There have been similar pushes in the past, Wadhams said, but “this one has become particularly effective.”

“We Republicans are finally catching up to where the left has been for 20 years,” he said. [Pols emphasis]

Bizarro.

But if the braggadocio from Dick Wadhams who has watched and in some cases presided over the Colorado Republican Party’s fall from grace in recent years wasn’t your first clue, there’s something about this fresh new exciting conservative coalition that seems a bit stale:

The document also now ties Unite for Colorado to some of the state’s most well known and active conservative political consultants and operatives, including former state Sen. Greg Brophy; conservative political operative Alan Philp; Ready Colorado cofounder and Vice President Tyler Sandberg; former Deputy Colorado Secretary of State Suzanne Taheri; former 18th Judicial District Attorney George Brauchler; former House Speaker Frank McNulty; Advance Colorado Institute President Michael Fields; and Dustin Zvonek, a former Americans for Prosperity state director who led Unite.

In other words, it’s all the same people who have been helping Republicans lose elections for years! The Sun reports that Unite for Colorado spent almost $4 million this year on two failed conservative ballot measures pushed by Republican activist Michael Fields. Greg Brophy, Alan Philp, and Frank McNulty were all caught red-handed trying to inappropriately influence the state’s redistricting commissions, but in the end Colorado drew maps that will properly reflect the state’s Democratic majority. Suzanne Taheri led the campaign to throw everything but the kitchen sink at John Hickenlooper before the Ethics Commission, but Cory Gardner still lost by nine points.

And then there’s Dustin Zvonek, longtime Republican functionary who served as the director of Unite For Colorado and we’re obliged to note unlike most of these people actually did win an election recently:

Zvonek, the 2020 director for Unite for Colorado, said it’s unclear who will lead Unite, now Advance Colorado Action, going forward.

Zvonek was elected to Aurora City Council last month with outside spending help from at least one of the groups funded by Unite. [Pols emphasis]

Zvonek is in office making a bloody ass of himself, but the revelation that Unite for Colorado under Zvonek donated almost $200,000 to a group that played in his own election is a scandal that honestly should have repercussions. It’s pretty much the worst-case imaginable scenario for skirting campaign finance disclosure law. How is it possible that Dustin Zvonek was not “coordinating” with…Dustin Zvonek?

It’s true that for many years, Republicans in Colorado have been trying desperately to imitate the success of Democrats, who through a combination of smart messaging and demographic evolution of the state retook control of the state politically in 2004 and with only a few exceptions have never given it back–a strategy consigned to history as “The Blueprint” in a book from longtime local reporter Adam Schrager along with former GOP Rep. Rob Witwer. Several times since then, we’ve been subjected to a rush of breathless hype around the new Republican plan to “replicate the Blueprint.”

The essential mistake Republicans make, every time, is they think better packaging makes a better product.

“Unite For Colorado” is fresh paper over the same stinky fish.

Comments

13 thoughts on ““Bizarro Blueprint”–Repackaging The Usual Suspects

  1. Well, thus far, the Republicans are missing one of the first steps sketched out in The Blueprint.  Democrats agreed, with everyone on-board, to work at electing more Democrats without some sort of policy or ideological purity test. 

  2. Former Rep. Rob Witwer, mentioned at the end of the article, is a common sense conservative, and a man of high principles, who would not fit in with the majority of the leadership of today's Colorado Republican Party.

    1. I've been on the opposite side of things with Witwer, and wholeheartedly agree with your assessment, CHB.  If only we had more Witwers and fewer Boeberts

       

  3. It's evolution, baby! It's evolution!

    Democrats have been able to adapt to changed circumstances much better than the fossilized (pun intended) GOP.

    Take Citizens United. When that thing came down, it was supposed to be the end of the world. It wasn't. Democrats learned how to work the fundraising ….. some of them quite successfully (I'm looking at you, Barack Obama and you, Bernie Sanders).

    COVID-19 comes along and Trump is telling the USPS to slow down mail delivery. Yet Dems figured out how to get the mail-in ballots back in time, and how to get the folks to early vote. (Of course, now the GOP is trying to shut down much of what the Dems did.)

    The change started in CO earlier than nationally with the 2004 take over of the General Assembly, the US Senate seat, and CD #3. Yes, it took a lot of money but as Jesse Unruh, speaker of the California General Assembly in the late 60's, famously said, "Money is the mother's milk of politics."

     

  4. For a guy that hates gummit (at least when it’s controlled by liburals) he sure can’t extract himself the teat of the mothers milk of politics. He should go back to being a full-time watermelon farmer, something he’s really good at (sans the annual watermelon slaughter with the penis compensator crowd)

  5. ‘Tis the season! . . .

    . . . GOPer Holiday tip:  There’s nothing really wrong with “re-gifting” previous years’ fruitcakes — so long as you remember to slap a little bit of new ribbon on them!

    1. I thought you were going to say "splash a bit of new rum on them."

      And in the GQP of Colorado … seems like there are a large number of fruitcakes going around.

    2. You'll never have to re-gift a fruitcake from Gethsemani Farms in Kentucky, operated by the Trappist Monastery of the same name. Been a few years since I ordered. But you can't stop eating them, especially because they're soft, juicy, and flavored with Kentucky bourbon. 

      Once the holidays are past, I think I'll order one. 

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