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CO-GOV: Ritter to Retire

Via The Fix:

Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter (D) will not seek a second term this fall, according to Democratic sources briefed on his decision.

Ritter, elected in a landslide in 2006, had seen his political fate dip considerably in the intervening years, and faced an extremely difficult re-election race against former Rep. Scott McInnis (R) in November.

“Bill Ritter was literally the weakest incumbent in nearly 50 years and his own party was unenthusiastic at best for his reelection,” said Colorado Republican party chairman Dick Wadhams. “Colorado has certainly changed from that heady day at Invesco Field.”

Democrats are likely to turn to either former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff or Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper to replace Ritter. Romanoff is currently challenging appointed Sen. Michael Bennet in a Democratic primary and if he could be convinced to switch races would solve two problems for the party.

Colorado is now the eleventh open seat Democrats must defend this year although the other ten seats are being vacated as a result of term limits. Republicans also have eleven open seats of their own to defend. There are 37 governors races on the ballot this fall.

Ritter was a weak choice, so his retirement actually improves Democrats chances of holding this seat because Democrats have a huge bench here to go up against former GOP Congressman Scott McInnis, the presumptive GOP nominee. Still, the GOP is favored.

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COMMENTS

  • http://conservativestateproject.blogspot.com/ SE-779

    Ignore this one. Did not see the other one. RS admins, since I can’t delete this, please find a way to delete this.

    • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

      And apparently everyone sees the two potentials the same. If Romanoff jumps to the Gov. race, it makes both races much more difficult for Republicans.

      • IJB

        The ‘contested primary helping the opposition in the general’ meme is vastly overstated – that only proves true if the primary gets especially *nasty*. If it doesn’t, I don’t think a contested primary makes any difference in the ultimate general election results. (Heck, even the nasty Obama-Clinton primary didn’t hurt him any in the general!)

        We should *want* to face Bennet for Senate – he’s much more beatable.

        I’d say the GOP chances in the CO Senate race just got much better with this development…

        • http://www.nighttwister.com NightTwister

          Money helps terrible candidates (see Obama, 2008).

          He’s still beatable, and the eventual Republican primary winner will likely be elected (if the current political climate stays the same or gets worse for them).

          Bennet has raised well over $3 million. Norton & Buck have raised about $500K each, and will use much of that against each other. Bennet having to use some cash to fight off Romanoff will reduce what he has. In any case, Bennet will win the Primary, with or without Romanoff in it.

  • redpens

    Ritter knows he’s done for. So like Dorgan and Dodd, he’s running for the door.

  • acat

    Colorado is purple, iirc – red where the real work happens, blue around the colleges and rich winter playgrounds.

    Ought to be possible, given the current climate, for a conservative to win this… provided there’s a candidate better than Crist available…

    Mew