Today's Digital Newspaper

The Gazette

Weather Block Here



Who are the frontrunners in Denver mayor’s money race?

Roughly a dozen candidates have begun to separate themselves from the crowded pack in the race for Denver mayor — at least based on money raised.

While not the sole measure of a serious candidacy, robust fundraising points to a person’s viability as a candidate since it shows concrete support — in this case, money — for the individual’s political ambitions.       

At the front sits Andy Rougeot, who has so far raised roughly $533,000, according to the latest campaign finance report. Rougeot, an Army veteran and small business owner, loaned his campaign $250,000 in December. He also loaned his campaign $250,000 in July.  

Close behind is Kelly Brough, who hauled in $497,000, while Rep. Leslie Herod came in third at $370,000, according to Denver’s Office of the Clerk and Recorder’s campaign finance website.

Brough served as president and CEO of the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce for more than a decade. 

Not counting help from expenditure groups, Mike Johnston, a former state senator, and Deborah Ortega, an at-large councilmember, collected roughly the same amount — $186,000 for Johnston and $184,000 for Ortega.

Ortega benefited from an additional $10,000 in support from an outside group called Protect Denver’s Future.

The fundraising numbers cited in this story do not yet include fourth quarter disbursements from Denver’s public financing system. The city’s election official is still verifying eligible donations. 

Candidates who voluntarily agreed to collect funding in lower amounts and accept contributions only from individuals and small-donor committees can qualify to receive matching money for contributions of $50 or less.  

Denver voters will pick a new mayor in April, as Mayor Michael Hancock reaches the end of his third, four-year term in office. 

The new mayor faces gargantuan challenges magnified by Denver’s unique characteristics, notably a homelessness crisis that is spiraling out of control, a housing affordability challenge that is pricing low-income and often longtime residents out and a sense of resignation that soaring crime is here to stay — all happening amidst a population explosion that caught Colorado flatfooted.

The new mayor will also need to resolve lingering problems, including the city’s ability to pick up trash on time, as well relatively new ones, notably Denver’s snow plow issues. 

Denver’s campaign finance system won’t reflect money raised by candidates who only recently filed to run for mayor. Here’s the Top 12 list:

  • Andre Rougeot — $532,527
  • Kelly Brough — $497,250
  • Leslie Herod — $370,255
  • Mike Johnston — $185,657
  • Deborah Ortega — $184,305
  • Thomas Wolf — $107,695
  • Ean Tafoya — $105,519
  • Chris Hansen — $87,411
  • Terrance Roberts — $71,646
  • Alex Valdez — $47,246
  • Trinidad Rodriguez — $40,812
  • Lisa Calderon — $26,360

Valdez withdrew his candidacy a few days ago, saying he would focus his legislative work.

Denver’s general election is scheduled for April 4 — following a voter-approved move from its traditional date in early May — with a runoff scheduled for June 6 in races if no candidate gets more than 50% of the vote. In addition to mayor, Denver voters will elect an auditor, clerk and recorder and city council members to four-year terms.

e359cfd8-9b44-11ed-8c02-b34320573c00

View Original Article | Split View

PREV

PREVIOUS

The Colorado Republican Party needs an exorcism | Vince Bzdek

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save Now that Democrats have tightened their blue-knuckled grip on state offices more tightly than ever before, and the expected national red wave turned out to be more of a pink ripple, where does the Republican Party go from here in Colorado? How can this setback […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

Colorado in the national gerrymandering picture | Cronin and Loevy

Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save Gerrymandering is the political crafting of safe election districts for one’s own political party and less safe or competitive election districts for your partisan opponents. It is among the oldest dirty tricks in American politics, and perhaps the only legalized form of vote stealing left […]