Brown faces new bid

Barbara McLachlan seeks his House seat

DENVER – Retired Durango teacher Barbara McLachlan will try to take House District 59 back for Democrats after her husband lost the seat last year.

McLachlan filed paperwork Friday in an effort to unseat Republican Rep. J. Paul Brown of Ignacio. The Democrat announced her campaign on Wednesday.

The dynamics are interesting, given that her husband, Mike McLachlan, lost the seat to Brown less than a year ago. The race was plagued by nasty attacks from both sides, with a focus on Mike McLachlan’s support for a package of gun-control measures backed by Democrats in 2013.

Barbara McLachlan, 60, believes she can rise above the noise from her husband’s failed bid, pointing to her award-winning career as a longtime educator.

“For some people, it’s going to be good for some people, it’s going to be bad. And I think people need to just judge me on my own merits,” McLachlan said of the family connection. “I’m very qualified, and if I changed my name, I would be the same person.”

The district is considered one of the toughest in the state, with elections swinging back and forth. Democrats hope to win it back to extend their slim House majority of 34-31. Brown held the seat from 2010 to 2012 before losing it to Mike McLachlan, who then lost the district to Brown.

The latest voter-registration numbers for active and inactive voters indicate that the district is 36 percent unaffiliated, 34 percent Republican and 28 percent Democrat. McLachlan lost the race last year by 170 votes.

While the election offers a chance to place the seat back under a McLachlan name, Barbara McLachlan said her run has nothing to do with redemption.

“Michael gave me a good introduction into what the process looks like,” she said. “I’m a teacher, and I’m a mother. I’m a listener. I have great energy. I’ve been a volunteer. I’m a third-generation Coloradan and I’ve lived in the area for 33 years.”

She already has the support of Durango Mayor Dean Brookie, a Democrat and longtime friend of 25 years.

“I’ve been in a number of occasions with both Michael and Barbara, and I can guarantee that she speaks her own mind. I’m not really concerned about it,” Brookie said. “I think she’ll take the best of Michael and apply her own thinking.”

The race is certain to focus on Brown’s record, which Democrats say has leaned far to the right. But Brown steered away from controversial issues during the past session, surprising Democrats and Republicans.

Brown supported funding for a program that provides intrauterine birth-control devices to low-income women, despite his stanch pro-life platform.

He also was one of only five Republicans to join Democrats in blocking a procedural move by a fellow House Republican that tried to force a vote to overturn the state’s ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines.