Democrats Going After This Colorado Rep With A Vengeance

Redistricting:  Dems Attempt to Defeat Boebert

by Renee Parsons

The Colorado Independent Redistricting Commissions, the first independent Commissions of its kind in the country, were approved by Colorado voters as Amendments Y and Z in 2018.  They are now in the process of redrawing Colorado’s Congressional and Legislative Districts for the 2022 election.

The twelve member Commission recently held a public hearing in Durango to take comments on their ‘preliminary’ district maps for the Third Congressional District, currently held by Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Co) and two state legislative districts.

With Boebert on the ballot in 2022, it would not take long for a visitor to SW Colorado to acknowledge that there is more than the usual partisan opposition to Boebert based on a similar pathology to the irrational animosity that local Democrats continue to express for former President Donald Trump.

Opposition from her ‘progressive’ constituents began with Boebert daring to wear a glock semi automatic on her hip, even within the hallowed halls of Congress.  As if that were not enough to arouse vehement constituent passions, Boebert has accrued what Democrats believe to be an equally controversial voting record.

Currently, Boebert has been photographed on the House floor, on the steps of the Capitol and participating in other Congressional responsibilities without her Glock nearby.  That has not, however, softened the opinion of her constituents to use the op ed page of the Durango Herald as an almost constant revolving door of malicious attacks.

Given the reality that the Third Congressional District in Colorado is generally considered a ‘safe leaning’ Republican seat, the Dems have come up with an admittedly creative response to Boebert’s front runner status as the Dems tacitly admit they cannot beat her on the issues.  Since this is a year to reapportion and reconfigure Congressional district lines based on the 2020 census results, their scheme is to alter the geographic configuration of the Third to better suit the potential for a Democrat victory.

So rather than spend millions on a sure-loser, the Dems have constructed their own Competitive Map, courtesy of former (twice defeated) Congressional candidate Diane Mitsch Bush and James Iacino (another Congressionally defeated Democrat)  to convince the Commission to redesign their ‘preliminary’ map.

As the hearing got underway, there was nothing spontaneous as one Democratic witness after another stepped up to oppose the Commission’s ‘preliminary’ map citing its non-competitive nature, its lack of aligning ‘communities of interest’ and suggesting that the Commission had “failed in its mission.’

Fourteen opponents (out of 45 speakers) introduced their partisan version of the Third District map throughout the day without revealing their special interest as Democrats or giving Mitsch-Bush and Iacino any credit for its creation.  Without specifically explaining the geographic differences, the rationale for the Competitive map focused on the merits of consolidating all Federal lands in western Colorado into one Congressional District.

If the alternative is approved by the Commission, the competitive map would include five National Parks, five National Monuments, four National Recreation Areas, six National Forests and fourteen Wilderness Areas as well as merging all seventeen snow/ski and sport areas from Montezuma County in the southwest to Larimer County in the north and everywhere in-between.   The Democrats failed to consider that the Commission’s ‘preliminary’ map had already incorporated a significant number of Federal lands.

Concealing their true intention in creating a new Third Congressional District was the glaring omission that the ‘competitive’ map dramatically increased its Democratic votes and like-wise decreased its Republican votes that resulted in the geographic switcher-oo to favor a Dem candidate.

For instance, the competitive map suggested eliminating Teller, Fremont and Park Counties from the Commission’s ‘preliminary’ map that would result in the elimination of 26,503 Republicans, 9,937 Democratic and 26,335 independent votes (per Colorado Secretary of State voter party enrollment stats, July 2021).

At the same time, the Democratic sponsored competitive map would add large swaths from heavily Democratic Larimer and Boulder Counties, a piece of west Jefferson County and all of Gilpin County.   In addition, the Dem map included the addition of Alamosa, Conejos, Costilla, Mineral, Rio Grande and Saguache Counties adding 10,841 Democrats, 8,900 Republicans and 7,427 Independents.

There can be no doubt that the sum of all these topographical machinations were drawn up with the thinly veiled political objective to geographically defeat Boebert before election day.

With a domineering “my way or the highway” approach and aggressive in their ideology, the Dems have revealed themselves to live in a different dimension of reality, one that supports unfairness, censorship and repression.  They are Out to Get Boebert and yet, unless the Commission flips the maps, they will be forced to abide by what was once a tried and true democratic election process where the highest vote is declared the winner.


Renee Parsons served on the ACLU’s Florida State Board of Directors and as president of the ACLU Treasure Coast Chapter. She has been an elected public official in Colorado, staff in the Office of the Colorado State Public Defender, an environmental lobbyist for Friends of the Earth and a staff member of the US House of Representatives in Washington DC. She can be found at reneedove3@yahoo.com.

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