The 2020 Obama Dinner: RELAUNCHED
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Join Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, Senator Elizabeth Warren, Senator Cory Booker, and more at:
The 3rd Annual Obama Event: Virtual Edition
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We are proud to announce that in lieu of a traditional gala dinner, on Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 5:00pm we will gather virtually to celebrate the 3rd Annual Obama Event to commemorate the accomplishments of the last twelve months and the honorees that helped make it happen. All ticket holders will receive a special palooza package. Check your email in the coming days to choose which package you'll receive!
We will welcome back Congressman Hakeem Jeffries as our special guest, and we are so pleased to announce that he'll be bringing a few friends with him! That's right -- the honorables Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker, and Stacey Abrams will be joining us! And we have re-invited Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and many others!
We plan to continue to roll out headliners between now and our June 20th event, and promise that our Obama Political Palooza will live up to the quality and excitement typical of our past Obama Dinners. We hope you will join us for what we know will be an evening of conversation, celebration and common purpose.
(As you remember, the Colorado Democratic Party was to hold our 3rd Annual Obama Dinner on Saturday, April 18, 2020 -- right after our state assembly and convention. This was postponed as a result of COVID-19.)
NOTE: If you purchased a ticket or table to the 3rd Annual Obama Dinner already, your purchase will be honored for the 3rd Annual Obama Event!
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The 2020 Obama Event Awardees
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You nominated, and you voted! We're so proud that with this new virtual format for the 2020 Obama Event, we will have the honor of celebrating these incredible Democrats from all across the state!
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Polis: Any Coloradan with COVID-19 symptoms can get a test
From KDVR
Gov. Jared Polis announced Monday that the state has increased its coronavirus testing capabilities, making it possible for anyone with COVID-19 symptoms to get a test.
The governor encouraged anyone with symptoms to get tested.
In late April, Polis said he wanted all symptomatic Coloradans to be able to get tested by mid-May.
“Getting tested is a crucial part of our response to this virus, and I’m proud to say that any Coloradan who is showing symptoms, can and should get tested,” said Polis. “This ensures that infected individuals get the care they need, and prevent spreading the virus to others. This is an all-hands on deck effort for Coloradans. Significant progress in expanding testing had been made through our partnership with cities, counties, hospitals, community health clinics, and retailers in every corner of the state.”
In addition to testing those with symptoms, the state also has the capability to test the following people:
- Health care workers
- Nursing home workers
- First responders
- Any essential workers who interacts directly with the public
According to Polis’ office, there are four ways to get tested in Colorado:
- Health care providers
- Local community-based testing sites
- Specialized testing sites
- Private sector partners
Coloradans can get tested for free.
Click here to read more.
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This Week In Making a Difference
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WEBINAR:
Can You Get Three of Your Friends to Vote?
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Join Us for a Vote Tripling Webinar!
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WHAT: In advance of phone banking to turn out the vote for this year's elections, join Statewide Field Director Tyler McDermott for a webinar focused on learning how to get voters to get their friends to vote, a tactic being piloted by Democrats around the country to boost voter turnout and win in 2020.
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WHEN: Friday, May 22, 2020 @ 6:00PM MST
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Join us for the first of our 2020 Win Stops -- in the digital world!
As you may remember, Team CDP has held similar statewide tours and trainings in the past as “Listening Stops”, “Action Stops”, and "Outreach Stops". Our goal is to stay in touch, learn from everyone and organize everywhere in the State of Colorado so Colorado is ready to go blue in 2020.
In a COVID-19 world, we're holding them again, only we're calling them "Win Stops" now so you can be part of ensuring Democrats WIN up and down the ticket in November! Each Win Stop will focus on a particular region in the state, and Democrats from those communities are highly encouraged to sign up!
Be on the lookout for your invite!
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SAVE THE DATE
Tuesday, June 2 at 5:00PM (Douglas, El Paso, Mesa, Weld)
Flipping Red Seats in Red Districts!
Thursday, June 4 at 6:00PM (Eagle, Summit, Pitkin)
Turning out Voters in Rural Counties
Sunday, June 7 at 11:00AM (Denver and Boulder)
Keeping Blue Counties Blue -- VERY Blue!
Tuesday, July 7 at 6:00PM (Jefferson, Arapahoe, Larimer, Adams, Pueblo)
Winning in Swing Districts!
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Work for the 2020 Wave Webinars
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SAVE THE DATE for our upcoming "Work for the Wave" webinars!
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Monday, June 1, 2020 @ 6:00PM MST
Digital Organizing (Hosted by Tyler McDermott and Karin Asensio)
We're in a world of social distancing and digital organizing -- so let's refine your skills! Join our staff for a training on how to engage, organize and win with your voters in the virtual world! (Keep an eye out for an invite!)
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Monday, June 15, 2020 @ 6:00PM MST
Voter Registration (Hosted by Tyler McDermott)
Growing the electorate is key to Democrats winning in 2020 -- so join in on the fun! Learn how you can register voters even when we're keeping socially distant!
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Monday, June 29, 2020 @ 6:00PM MST
Volunteer Recruitment (Hosted by Karin Asensio)
Volunteers are the lifeblood of any campaign. Learn from our volunteer coordinator how you can engage with volunteers to get the word out about getting Dems elected! (Keep an eye out for an invite!)
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Keep a GOP-Endorsed Abortion Ban Off The Ballot - Decline To Sign Initiative 120!
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We’ve seen other abortion bans attempted (and fail) in Colorado, but this is the first time we’ve seen an official statement from the Colorado GOP that they are endorsing it this early and urging their supporters to get Initiative 120 on the ballot. Supporters fell short in the initial signature submission, and once the stay at home order is lifted they will have a 15 day “cure” period to make up nearly 10,000 signatures and qualify for the ballot.
With Trump in office, abortion rights opponents have been emboldened around the country - other states have attempted abortion bans using coronavirus as an excuse, and a Supreme Court case that could gut or overturn Roe v Wade will be decided at the end of June.
Abortion opponents here in Colorado are getting sneakier. Initiative 120 would ban abortion after 22 weeks, well past the point many patients get a devastating diagnosis at their 20 week ultrasound that the baby will not survive to term. Proponents have admitted they picked 22 weeks because it polls well - there is no medical reason for it. Cutting off health care in the year of a pandemic is cruel, and it’s especially cruel when so many have seen access to abortion care delayed or denied because of state bans and other challenges.
So we need everyone’s help keeping Initiative 120 off the ballot. Coloradans have historically believed that abortion is a personal, private decision between a pregnant person and their doctor – the government and politicians should stay out. This is no different.
Decline to sign Initiative 120 and spread the word!
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Polis Announces Needed Federal Funding for Schools, Public Health
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Gov. Polis announces distribution of $1.6B in federal CARES Act aid, much to Colorado education
From the Denver Channel
Gov. Jared Polis and Democratic leadership on Monday night announced how the state will allocate $1.67 billion in federal CARES Act funding for the state’s response to COVID-19 and the economic crisis the outbreak has caused.
The executive order issued by Polis says that $48 million for FY2019-20 and $157 million will be put toward the state’s Disaster Emergency fund to address medical and public health needs in responding to the COVID-19 outbreak.
The order comes as the Joint Budget Committee worked Wednesday to continue making cuts to finalize the state budget for next year, with the state facing a forecast $3.3 billion revenue shortfall.
Another $70 million will be transferred into the state’s General Fund for eligible expenditures, according to the order, and $275 million of the money for this fiscal year and next will remain available for local governments that did not receive direct funding in the CARES Act, the order says. That money will be distributed at the recommendations of a consortium of local government officials and based on other states’ best practices.
“This immediate disbursement ensures that no Coloradan has to go without a hospital bed when they need one, that the state can continue to scale up testing and containment, and protect our most vulnerable,” Polis said in a statement. “It allows parents to return to work by ensuring that our schools have needed resources to adapt to our new reality and helps our frontline local governments in their coronavirus response.”
The order transfers a total of $8 million from the federal funding toward the Colorado Department of Corrections to help them comply with public health orders surrounding veterans living and other state-run congregate care facilities during the virus outbreak. And additional $2 million over this fiscal year and next will go toward the Department of Human Services (CDHS) for similar purposes, according to the order.
Click here to read more.
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Bennet, Crow, DeGette Call for National Health Force
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Guest Commentary: Create a national health force to put recent graduates to work
From the Denver Post
This month, millions of talented students will graduate during the nation’s biggest challenge since the Great Depression. In the last eight weeks, over 36 million Americans have lost their jobs through no fault of their own. At the same time, health care systems across the nation are struggling under a once-in-a-century pandemic that has claimed over 86,000 lives.
Like the generation of Americans who faced down the depression of the 1930s, we must propose ideas that match the scale of our challenges. That is why we have proposed a new “Health Force,” the most ambitious public health initiative in our history.
To safely reopen the country, experts tell us we need trained workers in every community to help test, conduct contact tracing, administer vaccines, and educate people about social distancing and self-isolation. At the same time, we must address the chronic underfunding of essential services that left our state and local public health departments short-staffed when we need them most. The Health Force would meet this urgent need by recruiting, training, and employing hundreds of thousands of Americans to surge our health care capacity on the front lines and help keep our economy open.
Here’s how it would work. The federal government would fund the Health Force at a cost of $55 billion a year for the first two years, with state, local, and tribal health agencies empowered to recruit, train, and manage the program with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The hundreds of thousands of newly-trained recruits would not only help us overcome this pandemic more quickly, they would also bolster our public health workforce for challenges to come.
Some view this as a massive effort. They are right; the Health Force would be the most ambitious public health campaign in American history. But consider this: each day we remain closed, the economy loses another $20 billion. If the Health Force lets us reopen just 10 days earlier than we otherwise would, the program would pay for itself — to say nothing of the long-term benefits of equipping hundreds of thousands of young people with the skills for lifelong careers in public health.
Click here to read more.
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Neguse Makes Great Additions to the Heroes Act
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Rep. Joe Neguse’s Ideas Help Shape ‘Heroes Act’
From CBS Denver
Rep. Joe Neguse, a Democrat who represents Colorado’s 2nd Congressional District, came up with provisions to help Colorado towns and counties. The provisions are part of the “Heroes Act,” another coronavirus relief bill worth $3 trillion.
The legislation passed out of the House of Representatives on Friday.
Neguse added $375B for direct aid to small ciites, a 15% increase to the SNAP program and hazard pay for front-line workers.
The 8 proposals from Neguse incorporated into the Heroes Act include:
$375 billion in direct aid for small cities and counties with no population limit;
$25 billion in emergency supplemental appropriations for the U.S. Postal Service;
$11.5 billion in homeless assistance Emergency Solution Grants;
a 15% increase in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP);
a federal prohibition on price gouging;
hazard pay for front line workers;
a provision to ensure COVID-19 medical debt cannot be reported on future credit checks; and
the removal of a 20% state grant matching requirement for election assistance funds authorized through the CARES Act.
The United States Senate is not expected to pass the bill.
Click here to read more.
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Perlmutter's CD7 Leads in Census Responses
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Rep. Ed Perlmutter's district leads census responders
From Colorado Politics
When it comes to being counted, U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter's constituents lead the pack in Colorado.
The U.S. Census Bureau is encouraging people to self-report how many people lived in their home on April 1 and a few other pertinent facts. Self-reporting saves time, money and face-to-face contact with a census taker later this summer.
Perlmutter's Congressional District 7 has the highest participation rate at 64.9%, followed closely by Rep. Jason Crow's 6th Congressional District with 64.7%.
The rest of the congressional representation is:
4th Congressional District: 58.9% (Rep. Ken Buck)
5th Congressional District: 58.6% (Rep. Doug Lamborn)
1st Congressional District: 58.5% (Rep. Diana DeGette)
2nd Congressional District: 54.2% (Rep. Joe Neguse)
3rd Congressional District: 44.8% (Rep. Scott Tipton)
Responding to the census matters because it helps draw boundaries for political districts, but it also guides government spending on programs and infrastructure in communities.
To date Colorado is outpacing the national average with 57.4% of households self-responding, compared to the national self-response rate is 53.4%.
Douglas County, in the 4th Congressional District, remains the highest reporting county at 69.4%.
The numbers will change, because not everyone has received an invitation to participate in the mail.
"For a small percentage of households, the U.S. Census Bureau plans to have census takers drop off invitations in person," said Laurie Cipriano, a Colorado spokeswoman for the census.
Less than 5% of Americans will get their invitation when a census taker drops it off in person later this year. The majority of those households may not receive mail at their home’s physical location.
Coloradans who use P.O. boxes (and do not have street addresses) should expect to receive a census invitation and paper questionnaire later this year as well.
Click here to read more.
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JBC Democrats: Feds Need to Support Colorado
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Guest Commentary: Colorado will only face devastating cuts if the feds fail to step up
From State Senators Dominick Moreno and Rachel Zenzinger. Both are members of the General Assembly's Joint Budget Committee.
Last week was the most difficult week we have ever faced as elected officials or members of the Joint Budget Committee. We had tearful discussions prior to gut-wrenching decisions as we addressed devastating health and economic issues in our state budget.
Before the virus hit, Colorado was looking at millions of dollars in budgetary surplus. It meant we had additional funds to invest in our schools, reduce the cost of health care, improve environmental protections, expand economic opportunity, and more.
The year held great promise. Then, with more than half of our legislative session remaining, COVID-19 tore rapidly through Colorado.
We decided to postpone our legislative work until the public could safely participate in their democracy. We hoped to be back within two weeks and that didn’t happen.
Now, after two months of shut-down, over 1,000 Coloradans have lost their lives, 420,000 people have filed for unemployment, and at least $3.3 billion in revenue has vanished from our state budget.
For these reasons, we call upon the U.S. Senate to pass the life-saving HEROES Act that recently came out of the House.
Our painful situation in Colorado is compounded by restraints connected to the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR), which has artificially constrained our budget since 1992. Even when the economy boomed in the last few years, some of the revenue could not be invested back in Colorado, resulting in cash-strapped schools and crumbling roads.
While Coloradans are experiencing hardship, we are looking at cutting critical programs and initiatives. No one becomes a public servant with the goal of dismantling years of hard-fought progress and growth. So it goes without saying, this process has been excruciating. But what makes everything more painful is that it doesn’t have to be this way.
Click here to read more.
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Colorado Dem State Rep. Steps Up to Help COVID-19 Patients in Chicago
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Trump, Gardner, & GOP Watch
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2017 GOP: Obamacare is the WORST!
2020 GOP: Thank Goodness for Obamacare!
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Trump’s GOP ‘party of health care’ has no coverage plan for millions amid pandemic
From the Washington Post
President Trump left no doubt what he wanted his GOP allies to focus on, diverting to the TV cameras before he entered a private huddle of Senate Republicans.
“Let me tell you exactly what my message is: The Republican Party will soon be known as the party of health care,” the president said. “You watch.”
Nearly 14 months later, reminded of that day, Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.) broke into a knowing laugh, fully aware that Trump’s “party of health care” declaration went nowhere. Within days, Republicans gave up on trying to draft a replacement for the Affordable Care Act, and after some hesitation this month, the Trump administration plowed ahead with its effort to get the Supreme Court to rule the 2010 law unconstitutional even as no substitute is being drafted on Capitol Hill.
Now faced with a viral pandemic that has driven more than 36 million workers to file unemployment claims in eight weeks, Republicans find themselves heading into an election season still lacking any health plan.
Cornyn summed up the short-term approach as just hoping that the money Congress has poured into the social safety net over the past two months would keep people from falling through the cracks of the health-care system, an approach they may have to keep doing throughout the year.
“When you have a full-employment economy and everybody is working, you know that’s one thing. But now we don’t have that,” Cornyn said Thursday in an interview. “Obviously, we hope to get back there, but there may be some other things we need to do, just like we’ve done on spending $3 trillion to deal with the emergency to get people get through this.”
A small but vocal GOP bloc views the administration strategy as bad policy and even worse politics.
“I think it does make it difficult for us to have credibility when that is still out there. To me, we shouldn’t worry about that; we should be focusing on reforming the health-care system itself and not paying attention to the ACA,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) said Thursday.
Elected in 2018, Braun previously ran a small auto-parts distribution company that offered insurance that protected those with preexisting conditions. That, along with trying to lower overall costs, should be the goal of Republicans, Braun says, not some constitutional argument against the foundation of a 10-year-old law that covers 22 million Americans
“I always thought that was an inherent contradiction, not only for the administration but most of my cohorts. I think that’s a waste of time,” he said.
That followed sharp criticism from Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) over the administration’s decision to push ahead with the legal fight after Attorney General William P. Barr tried to convince Trump’s inner circle against such a course. The foundation of the latest challenge to the law, already upheld twice by the Supreme Court, comes from the 2017 tax-cut legislation that removed a tax penalty against individuals who declined to get insurance.
“I thought the Justice Department’s argument was really flimsy,” Alexander said last weekend on NBC’s “Meet the Press. “What they are arguing was that when we voted to get rid of the individual mandate, we voted to get rid of Obamacare. I don’t know one single senator that thought that.”
Republicans were already on shaky political ground on the issue. In a December Quinnipiac University poll, 51 percent of voters said Democrats could do a better job on health care, while 38 percent favored Republicans, part of a steady double-digit margin for at least three years for Democrats.
Most Republicans acknowledge those numbers are now worse, with more than 87,000 dead Americans providing the backdrop for a looming Democratic campaign in which they go on offense on an issue with which they have struggled for years.
Cornyn found himself on the defensive after telling Texas media last weekend that the “good news” for those who lost jobs is that they might qualify for insurance through the ACA, despite his many votes and concerted effort to overturn the law.
On Thursday, he said he stands by his “pretty clear record” in opposing the law and was just stating fact for those Texans who lost jobs.
“If you’re qualified for Medicaid, you could get Medicaid. If you lose your job, you could qualify for the Affordable Care Act. And it’s simply a fact. I still wish we had more choices available to people at a price they could afford, rather than have younger people subsidize older people,” Cornyn said.
Republicans won back the Senate majority in 2014 with a full-frontal assault on the ACA, which had formally debuted in late 2013 amid a bungled bureaucratic rollout.
Senators in that class will soon face their first reelection, each after voting in July 2017 to repeal what they derided as Obamacare without having any law ready to replace it.
Most Republicans wanted to move on from the issue, but many GOP strategists blamed the loss of the House majority in the 2018 midterms on that failed repeal effort. In March 2019, that prompted Trump’s “party of health care” declaration, which most GOP senators promptly ignored.
Braun said he appreciated the White House push and there were some early ideas that could have provided a modest platform for fixing some key issues, but too many powerful Republicans did not want to confront the issue.
“It was mostly our party that was, you know, I think a little beholden to the health-care industry,” said Braun, who suggested too many Republicans were in “cahoots” with parts of the industry.
Republicans are heading into an election with almost every GOP candidate claiming to support guarantees of coverage for those with preexisting conditions, as the administration is trying to gut the entire ACA, including those same protections.
“It still put us in a clumsy position to be credible on health-care issues, because we weren’t really behind it,” Braun said. “Now, every Republican is for covering preexisting conditions, but we were late to the game and the discussion.”
Click here to read more.
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Gardner, Buck "Silent" on Inspector General Removal
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Gardner And Buck Remain Silent Over Trump’s Latest Firing Of An Inspector General
From CPR News
Colorado Republican lawmakers with oversight of the State Department have stayed silent over the Trump Administration’s Friday night firing of the department’s inspector general.
Republican Sen. Cory Gardner sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Republican Rep. Ken Buck is on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Neither have commented publicly on the decision.
CPR News has reached out to their offices for comment, but no response has been received.
Steve Linick is the fourth inspector general that has been removed by President Donald Trump since April. The president has fired the IGs of the Intelligence Community, the Defense Department and the Health and Human Services Department.
Press reports indicate that Linick was looking into Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s alleged use of an aide to run personal errands, such as walking his dog and picking up dry cleaning. Pompeo confirmed to The Washington Post that he recommended Trump remove Linick, but denied that it was political retaliation.
Linick was also reportedly looking into a controversial arms sale to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates last year which bypassed Congress. The Senate and the House had both passed resolutions to block the weapons sales. Seven Republicans in the Senate joined Democrats in opposing the sales, while the House vote was largely along party lines. Both Gardner and Buck voted in support of the sales.
Click here to read more.
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Susan Glass, Chair of the Jefferson County Democratic Party, is definitely a force to be reckoned with. She’s been politically active all her adult life, starting when she ditched high school to register to vote for the first time, as an eighteen-year-old. This makes sense for the first Latina Chair of the county’s party and for a woman whose roots lie deep in the well-known Latino political families of Colorado. Susan is proud of her activist heritage, which she carries on in her work as a full-time (a very full-time!) activist herself.
The key to Susan’s work is that she’s a free-styler: guided by her love of fairness above all, she says, “I look for whatever needs to be done” wherever she can find it, from picketing and protesting to organizing carloads of supplies and teddy bears for the children interned at the border, hosting fundraisers for local politicians, running phone banks, writing postcards,working on voter registration—especially for Colorado Latinos—and even being the area team leader for Barack Obama during both of his presidential campaigns. She’s also started a veterans’ initiative for Jeffco and has worked for Moms Demand Action, a cause near and dear to her heart. Her next project is to work with the Jefferson County Democratic Latino Initiative, when she can fit that into her already crammed-full schedule. But perhaps her most famous effort was the series of huge banners, painted by a cadre of volunteerswith latex paint on white bedsheets, that she organized and helped to display over the bridges spanning I-70 during ski season! People never noticed the one puny Republican billboard next to all those colorful banners, and Jeffco Democratic candidates won nearly every race in 2018.
But what Susan Glass especially enjoys is making noise about injustice and issues that bother her: “I know how to create a ruckus,” she says, and Cory Gardner knows the truth of that claim! She has made a special point of participating in whatever (rare) appearances he makes, asking the questions that he just hates to hear. In the photo above, taken by area photographer Dave Russell, Susan is hidden behind her homemade sign: “SO MANY QUESTIONS—SO FEW ANSWERS” standing next to Gardner as he steps into a meeting. This picture captures so well Gardner’s passive response to challenge that it’s been used even on the Rachel Maddow Show, which makes Susan very proud! She dogged Gardner’s footsteps and asked him tough questions until he finally had to acknowledge that she would never stop until she got some answers.
When it comes to volunteers for the Dems, Susan is adamant that she can “find a spot for anybody” who wants to pitch in. She loves putting people together to accomplish the goals of the Democratic Party. Her advice to would-be volunteers: think of what talents you have and see where you could fill in a gap in a campaign. She’s always looking for people who, as she says, “want change and have time to make change,” just as she has done herself so extraordinarily well with her superabundant energy for the Jeffco Dems. The ruckus she creates makes the powerful uncomfortable just as it advocates for those who have little power, so we think she’s a perfect Volunteer of the Week!
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Do you want to volunteer? Reach out to our volunteer coordinator Karin Asensio at [email protected], and see how YOU CAN GET INVOLVED!
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Join the Elbow Bumpers Club!
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What's the Elbow Bumpers Club (formerly known as the High Fivers Club), you ask? It started with a simple idea: There are nearly 1.2 million registered Democrats in Colorado -- what if every single one of them gave just $5 a month to the Colorado Democratic Party (CDP)?
Answer: The CDP would be the best-funded state party in the country -- with zero dollars from corporate PACs and plenty for flipping red seats to blue!
Here's the reality -- the Colorado Dems are working in overdrive to keep the wheels of democracy moving forward, and now is a time when we could really use your help! If you haven't joined the High Fivers Club (temporarily known as the Elbow Bumpers Club now) -- please consider a few reasons to give!
- The CDP is the central base that helps recruit volunteers, train candidates, and assist county parties win elections. While the Democratic National Committee provides some limited funds, the reality is it is up to us to raise our own money so we can support Democratic candidates running for office in Colorado.
- We knock on doors and meet with voters to talk about voting Democratic even before we know who our nominees are! As part of the High Fivers Club, you can help us get supplies for volunteers so we can knock on 50,000 more doors before we know our nominee.
- Once we have our nominee, we'll use what we've learned about voters to help them jump-start their Get Out the Voter efforts and stay toe-to-toe with Donald Trump and the Republicans.
Click the gif below to join the Elbow Bumpers Club!
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Editor's Note: Since we haven't been able to be on the road, we thought we would end today's edition of the Dispatch by showing some political cartoons!
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If you know someone interested in receiving our weekly newsletter, they can sign up here!
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Contributions or gifts to the Democratic Party of Colorado are not tax deductible
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