(Promoted by Colorado Pols)
KNUS' Steve Kelley put some good questions to GOP Rep. Kathleen Conti Friday:
Steve Kelley: What's the state of affairs of the Republican Party of Colorado?
Kathleen Conti: Well, the Republican Party is—you know, we have just a strong chasm. You know, there’s those on the far right. And there’s those on the not-so-far right. And it seems to me sometimes that our chasm is a little bit wider than those on the Democratic side….
Kelley: Is the Republican Party [as Peter Boyles says] an ugly baby right now in Colorado?
Conti: I certainly hope not….
Conti raises a good question, and Kelley should get into it with her on a future show. Which party in Colorado has a wider chasm?
Conti is the Republicans' Minority Caucus Chair in the State House, so she knows what she's talking about. Her party consists of a sharply divided "far right" and "not-so-far right." Those in the center and left-leaning are so scant as to be irrelevant.
Democrats, as Conti points out, are different, aren't they? They're mostly in the center with a straggler on the not-so-far-left.
The Dems are centrists on immigration (ASSET, driver's licenses), abortion (pro-choice), renewable energy (efficiency and moderate mandates), gun safety (common-sense background checks), gay rights (civil unions, marriage), sex ed (yes), voter registration (convenience with secure voting), taxation (when necessary), etc., etc., etc. (Here's a nice visual representation of some of these.)
The Colorado GOP comes down just as Conti said, on the far-right and not-so-far-right, with a wide and vocal chasm running down the middle.
A hatchet might be a better word for what separates the two right wings of the GOP but, like I said, Conti is in leadership, so she knows her caucus. So let it be "chasm."
In any event, you can't make much of a list of issues where the Democrats are on the far left and not-so-far-left. and Republicans are in the middle.
As someone who wants the Dems to move left, I wish you could. But face it, you can't. It's a centrist/right party.
And "hatchet" doesn't come to mind when you think of most of the Democrats' disagreements.
Kelley (who's now on KNUS 710 AM from 1 to 4 p.m.) should ask Conti to tell us her thinking on the "chasm" (and the hatchet) in more detail, including an explanation of where she stands on the chasm scale.
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