U.S. Senate See Full Big Line

(D) J. Hickenlooper*

(D) Julie Gonzales

(R) Janak Joshi

80%

40%

20%

(D) Michael Bennet

(D) Phil Weiser
55%

50%↑
Att. General See Full Big Line

(D) Jena Griswold

(D) M. Dougherty

(D) Hetal Doshi

50%

40%↓

30%

Sec. of State See Full Big Line
(D) J. Danielson

(D) A. Gonzalez
50%↑

20%↓
State Treasurer See Full Big Line

(D) Jeff Bridges

(D) Brianna Titone

(R) Kevin Grantham

50%↑

40%↓

30%

CO-01 (Denver) See Full Big Line

(D) Diana DeGette*

(D) Wanda James

(D) Milat Kiros

80%

20%

10%↓

CO-02 (Boulder-ish) See Full Big Line

(D) Joe Neguse*

(R) Somebody

90%

2%

CO-03 (West & Southern CO) See Full Big Line

(R) Jeff Hurd*

(D) Alex Kelloff

(R) H. Scheppelman

60%↓

40%↓

30%↑

CO-04 (Northeast-ish Colorado) See Full Big Line

(R) Lauren Boebert*

(D) E. Laubacher

(D) Trisha Calvarese

90%

30%↑

20%

CO-05 (Colorado Springs) See Full Big Line

(R) Jeff Crank*

(D) Jessica Killin

55%↓

45%↑

CO-06 (Aurora) See Full Big Line

(D) Jason Crow*

(R) Somebody

90%

2%

CO-07 (Jefferson County) See Full Big Line

(D) B. Pettersen*

(R) Somebody

90%

2%

CO-08 (Northern Colo.) See Full Big Line

(R) Gabe Evans*

(D) Shannon Bird

(D) Manny Rutinel

45%↓

30%

30%

State Senate Majority See Full Big Line

DEMOCRATS

REPUBLICANS

80%

20%

State House Majority See Full Big Line

DEMOCRATS

REPUBLICANS

95%

5%

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Get More Smarter on Wednesday (Nov. 18)

Lean into the wind! It’s time to Get More Smarter with Colorado Pols. If you think we missed something important, please include the link in the comments below (here’s a good example). TOP OF MIND TODAY… ► Debate over the admission of refugees from Syria to the United States, especially Colorado, continues to dominate political discussion […]

A Colorado governor who fought bigotry–and won in the end

(Past is prologue – Promoted by Colorado Pols) During WWII, the U.S. government forced Japanese Americans  from their homes on the West Coast and moved them to interior states. Kansas Gov. Payne Ratner, reflected the opinions of many governors when she responded at the time with, “Japs are not wanted and not welcome in Kansas.” With […]

Get More Smarter on Tuesday (Nov. 17)

If you squint your eyes really hard, you can have a snow day, too. It’s time to Get More Smarter with Colorado Pols. If you think we missed something important, please include the link in the comments below (here’s a good example). TOP OF MIND TODAY… ► Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper is refusing to play the politics of reactionary […]

Profiles In Courage: Hickenlooper Welcomes Syrian Refugees

As the Colorado Independent’s Corey Hutchins reports: So far more than a dozen governors, most of them Republicans, have said they want to close their state borders to refugees from Syria. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf and Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe both, Democrats, however, have said their states will continue accepting refugees. Colorado Republican U.S. Rep. […]

How The Hell Can You Oppose This Bill?

The Colorado Independent’s Nat Stein reports on legislation co-sponsored by Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, along with Reps. Ed Perlmutter and Jared Polis in the House: Sen. Michael Bennet joined 21 other senators to introduce a bill on Monday that would reinstate honor for the estimated 100,000 military service members discharged since World War II for […]

Gun misinformation and hyperbole should be called out

(Like we said – Promoted by Colorado Pols)  ColoradoPols did us a favor yesterday by trotting out some of the ridiculous misinformation delivered in 2013 by opponents of gun safety laws. And Pols pleaded with local reporters to correct such falsehoods this year. As a example of what should be done, I direct your attention to a […]

Winners, Losers, and Lessons from Frackapalooza Deal

​News broke late yesterday that Gov. John Hickenlooper had reached a deal to avert dueling ballot measures related to fracking — and not a moment too soon. Yesterday was the final day to submit signatures to the Secretary of State's office for certification to make the November ballot. The deal has apparently met approval with […]

Michelle Malkin Endorses Tom Tancredo (Again)

As the Denver Post's Lynn Bartels reports, nationally syndicated conservative columnist and Colorado Springs resident Michelle Malkin is once again endorsing Tom Tancredo for Governor of Colorado. In 2010, Malkin endorsed Tancredo when he ran as the American Constitution Party candidate, garnering 36.4% of the statewide vote: “He’ll protect gun owners, entrepreneurs, and families from the […]

With Obama in town, will reporters please go the extra mile to correct GOP misinformation on guns?

(Please? – promoted by Colorado Pols) In an editorial Monday, titled "Sour Grapes in the Colorado Legislature," The Denver Post wondered whether the GOP's hard feelings over gun legislation was spilling over, tantrum-like, into opposition to funding the entire state governement. The Post spotlighted Sen. Kent Lambert's March 28 assertion that lawmakers had "effectively banned […]

Denver Post Spontaneously Rediscovers Fact Checking

On its face, it's tough to argue with the story in the Denver Post today from reporter Ryan Parker. The story responds to a defense offered by Sen. Evie Hudak, as you know now in the hot seat for telling a testifying rape victim that "the statistics are not in your favor" in terms of defending […]

Spread of Islamophobia Continues to Endanger American Lives

Update: I am dismayed to report that a member of this community responded to this post by sending me a PDF file in Arabic and English alleged to be the “Muslim Brotherhood strategy” circa 1991. Whether or not this is an authentic document–I’m in no way enough of an expert to opine on that–the use […]

The Political Life of Dr. Seuss (long)

Today is Dr. Seuss’s 108th birthday. Children everywhere honor it by wearing red-and-white-striped top hats, eating green eggs and ham, and reading Hop On Pop. Most people do not realize that the “King of Children’s Books” was teaching liberal values at a time when intelligent political dialogue was squashed in the public arena. I tweaked […]

Always Renew Your Domain Names: Jeanne Labuda Edition

If you’re a candidate for any public office, one of your first steps should be registering a domain name that consists of your first name and last name – nothing more, and nothing less.

The reasoning is simple: when voters first get their ballots and they see an unfamiliar name, they’ll turn to Google before they try to remember what they saw on the mail piece they threw out three weeks ago. If you’re a candidate or any sort of public figure, then, it’s important that the information you’ve crafted be the first info they see on the web and equally important that those supporting your opponent can’t use your own name against you.

HD-1 Rep. Jeanne Labuda has a fairly unique name and as a result her campaign website, jeannelabuda.com, has dominated the Google search for her name. That’s a pretty good URL for Labuda to have: it’s literally as easy to remember as her name, and it’s not so long or obscure – think of something to the tune of Labuda4HD1Rep.com –  that it would look out of place on mail or yard signs.

The problem with jeannelabuda.com, however, is that Jeanne Labuda no longer owns it. She used to own it, as evidenced by her campaign filings with the Secretary of State’s Office. Sometime between now and last October, however, Labuda (or whoever was managing Labuda’s website) forgot to renew their domain registration. Now, jeannelabuda.com is a headache-inducing blend of green, red, and white hocking LASIK eye surgery in Japanese. The first thing voters will click on when the Google search Jeanne Labuda, then, is a spammy-landing page that has nothing to do with their representative.

All things considered, this isn’t the end of the world for Labuda. She’s re-located her campaign website to jeannelabudaco.com – it’s not nearly as good as her original URL, but at least her name is still in there somewhere.

Still, this is one of those things that Labuda should never have let happen. Any yard signs or campaign literature that had her old domain on it are now useless, not to mention that Labuda’s website is nowhere near the first (or tenth) page of a Google search for her name. Juxtapose that with primary opponent Corrie Houck, who controls the first page of a search for her name, and it’s clear that Labuda should’ve just paid the 10 or 15 bucks to keep her url. Having a workable, searchable domain name is one of those things that doesn’t give your campaign any perceivable edge but really hurts when you neglect it.

Of course, it’s a simple, easily avoidable mistake like this that really showcases why Houck is challenging Labuda in the first place. If Labuda can’t even organize her campaign such that her domain name doesn’t lapse, the argument goes, she may be equally likely to make similar mistakes throughout 2012. The difference is that those mistakes matter; if Labuda hasn’t crafted a campaign organization now, who’s to say she’ll have one by the time she actually needs to defend her seat?  

At what point does “reasonably well” become “horribly catastrophic?”

(As long as nobody’s actually glowing… – promoted by Colorado Pols) Rep. Scott Tipton said in a radio interview last week that Japan’s Fukushima nuclear reactors “held up reasonably well” after being struck by an earthquake and Tsunami. So they could have been flattened, yes. But did they really hold up reasonably well? It’s widely […]

Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay More

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) The Ruby pipeline–which will bring gas from Wyoming and Colorado to the West Coast–is set to come online soon, the Sentinel is reporting: The Ruby Pipeline, scheduled to go online in March, is set to begin carrying natural gas from the Rocky Mountains west to Oregon in July, officials […]

I Don’t Trust The Source

Colorado Dept of Public Health and Environment put this out earlier today.  I got it from the County Sheriff’s dept.  I’d have been more inclined to trust the CDPHE Are there really a significant number of Coloradans panicking about the potential for radiation exposure? http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/e… March 16, 2011 FAQs: Japanese Nuclear Power Plant Concerns Q. […]

Dear Japan –

Dear Japan – First, my sincere condolences for your loss and present disaster.  I wish I could help , and if anyone needs a bed and wants to come to Denver, Colorado, USA, I’m glad to put you up. I have been accused of being rude and classless in a way that could offend you. […]

Uh, Please Turn Off CNN While I Explain…

You’ve got to have some sympathy for a guy who has to sell a nuclear power plant to a local community glued to the news from Japan–as the Pueblo Chieftain’s Loretta Sword reports: A nuclear power expert who’s involved with trying to build a plant east of Pueblo said Monday that chances are nil that […]

The Dave Report

Since a number of these aren’t political, I’m create an off-topic diary for them Coal Ash Is More Radioactive than Nuclear Waste the waste produced by coal plants is actually more radioactive than that generated by their nuclear counterparts. In fact, the fly ash emitted by a power plant-a by-product from burning coal for electricity-carries […]

Still a Bad Idea

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) News has hit that Senator Mark Udall is cosponsoring the resurrected constitutional balanced budget amendment. The paper which shall not be named has a gushing editorial about it. Needless to say, the base is rattled, and I think the Senator would do well to make the progressive case for […]

Revising–And Plagiarizing–Colorado History With Frank McNulty

New Speaker of the House Frank McNulty thought he was waxing statesmanlike today, invoking the memory of former three-term Democratic Governor and U.S. Senator Edwin C. Johnson of eastbound I-70 tunnel fame. From McNulty’s speech: [A]s the Dust Bowl ravaged the Eastern Plains of Colorado, our Governor at the time, Edwin “Big Ed” Johnson, a […]

An interview with 9News’ Adam Schrager

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) You’ve probably heard by now that political reporter Adam Schrager is leaving 9News Feb. 9 to take a job at Wisconsin Public Television, as first reported on ColoradoPols. Schrager came to 9News in 1999, after working for CBS News in London and three TV stations in Wisconsin. He attended […]

Crowdsourceable: Do You Know Your Kanji from Katakana?

What follows is a letter that appeared recently in the HD-23 race, between incumbent Max Tyler and Republican challenger Edgar Johansson. Naturally, like all such unsourced mailings filling up mailboxes all over the state, we can’t vouch for any particular claim it makes. What’s interesting about this one is it appears to be from somebody […]

Bigotry in the CO Tea Party movement

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) The 9-11 tragedy had nothing to do with religion, and everything to do with criminal mass murderers. But today, on the anniversary of 9-11, you wonder how many of us understand that, as anti-Islamic hatred connected to 9-11 appears to be growing and polls show outright bigotry toward Muslims […]

It will never happen. Then it did.

. 2 days ago, in the Diary on Hiroshima, I said the Japanese would NEVER apologize for Nanking, or how they treated Koreans.   http://www.washingtonpost.com/… The Japanese PM just apologized to Korea.   Maybe it wasn’t enough, but it was far more than the Japanese had ever before conceded. Is this the “Obama Effect ?” […]

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