Ex-Colorado Gov. Hickenlooper says he’s running for Senate

0

DENVER (AP) — Former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper said Thursday that he will run for the U.S. Senate,
becoming the immediate front-runner in a crowded Democratic field vying for the right to challenge
Republican incumbent Cory Gardner.
He made his announcement via a video message in which he blasted Washington lawmakers over soaring
prescription drug prices, the failure to act on climate change and the use of public lands by
developers.
"I know changing Washington is hard, but I want to give it a shot," he says. "I’m not done
fighting for the people of Colorado."
Hickenlooper last year brushed off entreaties from Washington Democrats to challenge Gardner, widely seen
as the most vulnerable Republican senator in the country. Instead he mounted a longshot presidential
campaign that collapsed before it ended in mid-August. Many Colorado Democratic and Republican
strategists began to view a Hickenlooper entry into the Senate race as inevitable at that point.
Hickenlooper, an oil geologist turned brewpub owner who decided to run for Denver mayor in 2003 and won
two gubernatorial elections, has loomed over Colorado politics for two decades. But his moderate,
consensus-oriented approach may not be as good a fit in a state shifting to the left. Numerous Democrats
— all younger than the 67-year-old former governor — announced their challenges to Gardner after
Hickenlooper shifted his sights to the White House, and none has indicated he or she would step aside
now. Indeed, one, state Sen. Angela Williams, warned "this won’t be a coronation."
Some of the candidates raised almost as much campaign money as Hickenlooper did in his brief presidential
bid. But national Democrats have been nervous that a messy and expensive primary would lead to a damaged
challenger facing Gardner, widely acknowledged as a skilled politician and fundraiser. Though he will
have to fight for the nomination, Hickenlooper is widely viewed as the front-runner because of his high
name identification in the state and good standing among its Democrats.
Hickenlooper told The Associated Press on Thursday that he didn’t anticipate his presence in the Senate
primary would nudge any other Democrats out of the running, lauding the "tremendous amount of
talent in the field."
"Everyone’s going to make their own case to voters," he said, touting his own long record in
business and public office.
Though Hickenlooper initially strongly rejected the idea of running for the Senate, saying he wasn’t cut
out for the job, he reined in his denials as his presidential campaign stumbled. Hickenlooper kept
conversations open with the top Senate Democrat, Chuck Schumer, who continued to press him to run.
Democratic groups commissioned polls to convince him that he’d be the favorite, and a group that
advocates for scientific-minded members of Congress started a draft Hickenlooper campaign.
Asked about his previous disinterest in the Senate, where Democrats face long odds in their push to
reclaim the majority next year, Hickenlooper said that he asked himself whether to "sit back and
criticize Washington" or to "try to fix it."
"I spent a lot of time thinking about that and decided this was no time to walk away," he said.

Hickenlooper was not very involved in the details of legislative horse-trading during his eight years as
governor and is known to yearn for an executive role. But, given the record of his presidential run, the
Senate race seemed like his best path to Washington. Republicans hope that the governor damaged his
reputation with his presidential bid and that the Democratic Party’s generational struggles will wound
him further in the primary.
___
Associated Press writer Elana Schor contributed from Washington.

No posts to display