TOP DOCTORS

Click here for our 2009 list, with 283 Denver doctors in 83 medical specialties. It's our biggest, most comprehensive Top Docs feature yet.

NEWSLETTERS

Sign up for 5280's weekly e-newsletters. Want the latest restaurant scoop? The latest happenings around town? Access to exclusive events and deals just for 5280 readers? Sign up today for our great 5280 email newsletters and you'll be in the know all week long.

TALK TO 5280

Tell us about it. Give us your restaurant feedback or submit your event for our online and printed calendar.

JOBS

Find out more.

Can Ken Buck Really Put Immigration Back on the GOP Radar?

ken_buckWith Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck likely to enter the 2010 U.S. Senate race, could illegal immigration really resurface as a hot issue during next year’s campaign?

As district attorney for Weld County, where clashes over immigration have won national attention, Buck received a lot of publicity for his strong opposing stance, including from The New York Times and PBS.

He most recently made headlines as a defendant in a class-action lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado, which alleges that Buck and Weld County Sheriff John Cooke violated privacy laws in searching and keeping thousands of people’s tax records in an effort to arrest undocumented immigrants for identity theft.

Such a hard stance against illegal immigration would likely help Buck among voters in a Republican primary. But many Republicans are wary about how it would play in the general election–especially among Latino voters, who have been a primary, but elusive, target of Republican wooing.

There are conflicting reports about whether Buck has decided to run or not. The local newspaper in the small northeast Colorado town of Holyoke reported last week that Buck declared himself a U.S. Senate candidate at the Phillips County Republicans’ Lincoln Day soup, salad, and pie social. And several Republicans say Buck’s candidacy is a sure thing.

Buck would only tell me that he’sout listening right now” and will make a decision sometime in April.

Though he’s long been talked about as a potential candidate for Betsy Markey’s Fourth Congressional District seat in 2010 and (more recently) attorney general, word that Ken Buck’s looking to the U.S. Senate came as a surprise even to many party regulars.

If he runs, Buck has a lot of work to do. His name recognition is about nil outside of Weld County. He would have to start a statewide fundraising campaign, and he likely wouldn’t be able to attract a lot of out-of-state campaign cash.

And at a time when Republicans are aching for a big GOP win following years of political defeat, some Republicans worry about Buck’s chances against Democratic incumbent Michael Bennet (or possibly Andrew Romanoff?).

But people shouldn’t count out Buck simply because there’s been no Republican heavyweight who seems ready to run for Senate.

The current list of potential GOP Senate candidates is composed of unknowns and the politically wounded: The most-talked about candidates, besides Buck, are Aurora City Councilman Ryan Frazier, radio talk show host Dan Caplis, and Bob Beauprez, who’s still recovering from his failed gubernatorial campaign in 2006.

Colorado GOP chair Dick Wadhams says the only person who could capture the Republican U.S. Senate nomination without a fight is former Colorado Governor Bill Owens–who, Wadhams notes, isn’t interested in running.

“This thing is wide open to anybody who wants to get in and work hard and win the nomination,” Wadhams says.

So who would be a Ken Buck voter? He’ll get Republican support from Weld County. Plus, his visible stance against illegal immigration would likely appeal to GOP voters in Tom Tancredo Country: south Denver and Douglas County.

Last year, Tancredo himself talked about possibly running for U.S. Senate. But Tancredo’s been mum for the past few months, and many Republicans cringe at the prospect of a Tancredo campaign, which would alienate large swaths of Latino voters.

Share or Bookmark This Post:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • TwitThis

Posted 3/9/2009 at 12:30 pm by Jeremy Pelzer
Immigration, Politics :: Permalink :: Comments

Leave a Reply

ADVERTISING


Copyright 2005 5280 Publishing, Inc. | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Subscriber Care | Download Flash | Sitemap | Search | Linode 40992