Littwin: Drawing Republicans to the square state that slipped away

 
[dropcap]A[/dropcap]S you’ve probably heard, Denver has made the Final Four in the 2016 GOP convention playoffs, along with Dallas, Kansas City and, yes, Cleveland.

I’ve heard it, too. I just can’t figure out why.

It’s not that I’m surprised someone would want to bring a convention here. In fact, in most cases, it would make perfect sense.

Just not this convention.

Colorado is the poster state for every troubling electoral issue facing the Republican Party. Bringing the convention here would only remind the few stalwarts who still watch conventions that libertarian-leaning, business-friendly, oil-and-gas-rich Colorado has taken the long, winding road from purplish-red state to purplish-blue.

[pullquote]Colorado is the poster state for every troubling electoral issue facing the Republican Party. Bringing the convention here would only remind the few stalwarts who still watch conventions that libertarian-leaning, business-friendly, oil-and-gas-rich Colorado has taken the long winding road from purplish-red state to purplish-blue.[/pullquote]

If, as expected, John Hickenlooper is re-elected, he would be the Democratic governor of a thriving, photogenically-friendly state here to greet the Republican conventioneers. If Mark Udall beats Cory Gardner — the race is considered a toss-up — it would be the second time in a row that Colorado had chosen a Democratic senator in what is expected to be a Republican wave year.

How would the Republicans begin to explain any of that away? Well, that’s where the problem lies. The explanation is so easy.

Look for a Republican vulnerability and you’ll find it here.

Start with young people. Particularly young college-educated people. Particularly young college-educated people with advanced degrees. We’ve got plenty of all of them, and all the polling says they think of Republicans as old people with old ideas who still watch cable TV. It’s that whole demographic problem, which leads directly to Colorado’s growing Latino population. We all know the story about how Republicans keep saying they need to reach out to Latinos and how, instead, they keep knocking down any chance at passing immigration reform. And then there are the Colorado Republicans who insist on making matters worse by constantly throwing Tom “They’re Coming to Kill Your Grandchildren” Tancredo into the mix.

And then there’s this: The conventional wisdom is that all close elections in Colorado are decided by women in Jefferson County. In recent years, many of those same women have apparently been turned off by the anti-abortion, anti-gay-marriage, pro-personhood Republican message.

I just went to a Republican governor’s debate — in Jefferson County, no less — called “Women and Colorado’s Future.” It should have been called “Without More Women Voters, Republicans Have No Future.” The debate was a bust. In a debate supposedly about women’s issues, women’s issues never came up. There was, as everyone has heard by now, the “Dating Game” theme music playing as the all-female panel of questioners met up with the all-male panel of candidates. If only Ken Buck had been there, someone could have played “Hi-Heel Sneakers.”

There was nothing about abortion or personhood or pay equity or the difference between forcible rape and the other kinds. Nothing to assure women that birth control wouldn’t be an issue. (Now that I think about it, maybe it will be.) One person on the panel did think to ask about fracking, which she said was a women’s issue because, well, women want jobs in the oil industry, too. I was surprised she didn’t ask a follow-up on, say, roofing.

It was a 90-minute, radio-broadcast missed opportunity. But that wasn’t an accident. The candidates all figured that saying nothing about women’s issues was less dangerous than saying anything.

Now, you could make the argument that since Republicans have to make gains with at least some of these groups if they hope to win the presidency in 2016, it makes sense to bring the convention where those voters are.

Except you know better. Conventions are for the faithful, not for those who need converting. You may remember the 2008 Democratic convention, which was widely mocked in Republican circles for the Greek columns. Or the 1992 Republican convention, in which Pat Buchanan gave his widely mocked (in Democratic circles) “culture war” speech, which the late, great Molly Ivins wrote “probably sounded better in the original German.”

It’s easy to understand why Denver wants the convention. Hosting national political conventions eight years apart — one for each party — would solidify our place as a must-stop-and-not-just-for-the-airport-experience city. It would also be another opportunity to show how the pot capital of the world looks exactly like it looked when it was just another get-to-know-your-dealer town.

And you can see how Republicans would be tempted, whatever might happen this November or whatever did happen in all those recent Novembers. Bellwether state. Craft beers. A chance to meet Bronco great John Elway. Even better, a chance to visit Bob Beauprez’ ranch and get your picture taken with the horse.

There would be the all-but-irresistible opportunity to make the case that this is where the Obama years essentially began and that this is where they could essentially end.

Or, of course, they could pick Cleveland.

4 COMMENTS

  1. The Photo of Bob with his horse is confusing…I can’t tell which is the horse’s ass and which one is BOB…

  2. Once again I offer congratulations to Mr. Littwin. This column was re-published by RealClearPolitics.com allowing his views a much wider audience than they receive on the Colorado Independent website.

    And that audience generated a much larger number of comments (104) which were far richer and more diverse in content and belief than those normally produced.

    And diversity is good. Right?

    Here’s the link: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2014/05/23/colorado_the_poster_state_for_gops_problems_122732-comments.html#disqus_thread

    Enjoy!

    Memorial Day – May 26, 2014

    Memorial Day is a US federal holiday wherein the men and women who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces are remembered.- Wikipedia

    A hero is someone who has given his or her life to something bigger than oneself.
    Joseph Campbell

    With the tears a Land hath shed
    Their graves should ever be green.
    ~Thomas Bailey Aldrich

    Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language? Are they dead that yet act? Are they dead that yet move upon society and inspire the people with nobler motives and more heroic patriotism?
    ~Henry Ward Beecher

  3. May I suggest the republicans hold their cornfab in Irwinville Georgia home of the Jefferson Davis State Historical Site or Turkey Texas and the local Texas Teabag Patriot Klavern.

    Regardless of where they show up, not Denver hopefully, there’s bound to be a following of extremist clods howling about the government “keeping their hands off my medicare”.

    Send in the “Benghazi” House clowns.

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