Democratic incumbents outraise, outspend GOP opponents in Colorado for statewide offices

Griswold, Polis and Weiser lead competitors in fundraising
Mesa County Clerk and Recorder Tina Peters, left, and Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold. (Colorado Newsline file)

Democratic Secretary of State Jena Griswold had a record-breaking fundraising haul during the first four months of the year, as she prepares to potentially take on a controversial challenger in the general election.

Griswold reported raising about $875,000 during the most recent reporting period, which was between the start of the year and April 27. That is a recent record for a down-ballot candidate, her campaign said.

Candidates for statewide office filed their first finance reports with the secretary of state’s office this week.

Griswold’s largest expenditures were nearly $1.8 million with the Denver-based BlueWest Media for pre-election advertising buys. She currently has about $300,000 in cash on hand.

Her large war chest benefits from the lack of a primary opponent and can be focused on competing against a Republican opponent in the November general election.

Controversial Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, who landed on the Republican secretary of state primary ballot through the assembly process, reported raising about $157,000. She filed her finance report with the secretary of state’s office one day after the May 2 deadline.

Her campaign reported an average $77 donation among about 2,000 contributors.

She spent about $54,000 during the reporting period and has about $102,000 in cash on hand.

Peters, one of the most high-profile and contentious Republicans in Colorado, reported a $1,320 expenditure to MyPillow Inc. for “airline airfare” on April 18. MyPillow is owned by Mike Lindell, a prominent election denier who assisted Peters after federal and state authorities began investigating her involvement in an election equipment security breach. Peters has since been indicated by a grand jury for crimes involving that breach.

Peters is outraising her Republican opponents.

Republican Pam Anderson, a former Jefferson County clerk, raised about $50,000 during the reporting period. Some of that came from current elected officials, including a $2,500 donation from Mesa County Commissioner Cody Davis, $1,000 from Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman, $150 from Mesa County Commissioner Scott McInnis and $125 from Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers.

Anderson paid Blitz Canvassing about $70,000 for petition circulation and signature gathering to get on the primary ballot. She has about $6,000 in cash on hand, significantly less than either of her opponents.

The third Republican in the race for the party’s nomination, Mike O’Donnell, reported raising about $3,000. He injected about $6,000 of his own cash to his campaign this reporting period, bringing his aggregate self-funding to about $53,000. He has about $38,000 in the bank.

Polis continues to self-fund

Incumbent Gov. Jared Polis reported about $5.4 million in contributions during the first four months of the year, $5.1 million of which he gave himself.

So far, Polis has given about $5.9 million of his own money for his re-election bid. While he gives chunks of his wealth over to this campaign, others cannot, as he limited his contributions to $100 per year per donor.

He spent about $600,000 during the reporting period, including $50,000 to a Washington, D.C.-based firm for data acquisition. Polis, who does not have a primary opponent, has about $5 million in the bank.

Heidi Ganahl, a University of Colorado regent seeking the Republican nomination to face Polis, reported a haul of about $377,000. She put $150,000 of her own money into the campaign this reporting period. Since the start of her campaign, she has contributed about $400,000 of her own cash.

Her campaign paid Blitz Canvassing about $212,000, likely for petition signature gathering. In addition to that petition, Ganahl also got on the primary ballot via assembly. Her campaign spent about $521,000 during the reporting period and has about $200,000 in the bank.

The other Republican on the primary ballot, Greg Lopez, raised a comparatively small $36,000. He spent about $40,000 during the reporting period and has about $16,000 in cash on hand.

Danielle Neuschwanger, a former Republican contender who switched to the American Constitution Party for a guaranteed spot on the general election ballot, raised about $73,000. She has about $15,000 in the bank to build her third-party candidacy.

Democratic Attorney General Phil Weiser raised about $512,000 in the first four months of the year and has a staggering $1.6 million in cash on hand. His opponent, Republican John Kellner, raised about $106,000 and has about $84,000 in the bank.

In the treasurer’s race, incumbent Democrat Dave Young raised about $100,000 and reported about $94,000 in cash on hand. His Republican opponent Lang Sias raised about $51,000 and has about $59,000 in cash on hand.

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