DENVER — With immigration reform officially dead in the House, activists are itching to punish the GOP for their hard swerve to the right. The problem has been finding the right place to do it in a midterm election fought overwhelmingly in conservative-leaning states and Congressional districts with relatively few Latino and Asian voters.
Enter, Colorado, which may be reformers’ last chance to prove they can make the GOP pay a price for their intransigence before the next presidential election. There, activists are organizing to defeat three-term Republican Rep. Mike Coffman in his re-election bid and, more importantly, working to thwart GOP Rep. Cory Gardner in his campaign to unseat Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.
The race between Udall and Gardner is among the most competitive in the country and could be a bellwether for control of the Senate. A July NBC News/Marist poll gave Udall a 48-41 lead over Gardner while more recent surveys have put the race closer.
“The stakes are very high,” Patty Kupfer, the Denver-based managing director of pro-reform advocacy group America’s Voice, told msnbc. “This is the place Republicans will either get the message or not get the message. This is the litmus test for whether they can get away with it.”
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Last week, Kupfer joined leaders from the Colorado Immigration Rights Coalition Action Fund and Mi Familia Vota to announce a new “accountability project” with the goal of talking to 45,000 voters in immigrant communities about reform as part of a registration and turnout drive. The SEIU, whose offices hosted the event, has already run Spanish language ads targeting Gardner and Hoffman, as has the pro-reform Alliance For Citizenship.
“I will do everything in my power, my community will do anything in our power, to make sure [Gardner] is not elected,” Sonia Marquez, northern director for CIRC, told msnbc.
This wasn’t the role immigration groups hoped to play at the outset of the election cycle. In fact, activists originally saw Gardner and Coffman as promising candidates to help put reform over the top in the House.
Marquez personally spent more than a year trying to win Gardner’s support for immigration reform. Under her guidance, activists met with him personally, held rallies across his district, and organized roundtable discussions with supportive local businesses, all with the goal of making Gardner comfortable with legislation granting legal status to undocumented immigrants. Gardner offered them encouraging words throughout and his staff was friendly and accessible, but he never quite took the leap, always telling constituents that while he wanted the GOP to address immigration he opposed the Senate’s bipartisan plan. Instead, Gardner said he favored passing smaller bills to address border security, increase interior enforcement, and establish a new guest worker program first before he’d consider legalization.
“We have to have a potential legal solution [for the undocumented], that’s obviously going to be part of this answer,” Gardner told msnbc. “But I don’t know when the timing of that will be.”
Finally, Marquez gave Gardner an ultimatum: Either release your own plan for the undocumented or face the consequences. The deadline passed and Marquez and her fellow activists occupied Gardner’s office with a mariachi band to mark the point of no return.
“I told them this was not the route I wanted to take,” Marquez said. “I’d rather be able to sit at a table and try to figure this out.”
Gardner said he was disappointed with how things turned out as well. Despite reports to the contrary, he told msnbc he had tried to sell his colleagues on the House GOP’s ill-fated immigration principles and shared activists’ goals of passing significant legislation.
“It’s a shame, I thought we were working very well together,” he said of his relationship with pro-reform groups. “I would like to see them work with people opposed to immigration reform instead of trying to play politics with people who support immigration reform.”
This gets at a challenge for immigration advocates. It’s easy to rally their base against cartoonishly nativist Republicans like Iowa Congressman Steve King or Alabama Congressman Mo Brooks, but to win where it matters they have to demonstrate that members who claim to be reformers themselves are what’s holding legislation back.
There’s a reason Gardner is so careful about his positioning on the issue. Over the last decade, Democrats have dominated statewide races in Colorado thanks to strong performances with the growing Latino community and moderate suburban voters. They also enjoy a powerful political machine in the state led by wealthy progressives like Democratic Rep. Jared Polis to make sure their base turns out.
These advantages held up in Colorado even in 2010, an otherwise historic election year for the GOP. In Colorado, Ken Buck, the Republican Senate nominee and former prosecutor famous for leading raids against undocumented workers, went down in defeat, as did former GOP congressman and anti-immigration crusader Tom Tancredo, who ran for governor on a third party ticket. Both candidates lost more than 80% of the Latino vote.
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Between those two races and Obama’s comfortable 2012 victory, Colorado is emerging as a symbol of Democrats’ ascendant demographic coalition.
But there’s reason for Latino groups to worry whether their winning streak might be coming to an end at the worst possible time. Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper’s approval ratings have flagged over the last year along with Obama’s, and Republicans won two recall elections against state legislators who voted for a new gun control law. It’s possible that Democrats are due for backlash after controlling what’s still a relative swing state for so long.
“It’s a difficult year for incumbents in any party,” Hickenlooper told msnbc.
Just as importantly, Republicans in the state believe they have nominated far less divisive candidates at the top of ticket this time. They include Gardner, whose entrance in the race prompted Buck to drop out, and gubernatorial candidate Bob Beauprez, who narrowly defeated Tancredo in the Republican primary in June. Some Republicans believe they’re so well positioned this year that twin losses in November would mean Colorado has irretrievably turned blue.
“As Nixon famously said: ‘They don’t have me to kick around anymore,’” Tancredo told msnbc. “Everything that the Republican Party establishment wants they got in terms of candidates, money, and general overall political environment.”
Gardner’s take on immigration may be vague but it’s still miles away from Tancredo’s. While Gardner has only endorsed a path to legal status for young undocumented immigrants who join the military, he’s also one of only a handful of Republicans to vote against a recent House bill that would have ended the White House’s sweeping deferred action program for DREAMers — young immigrants brought to the U.S. as children.
Activists call this a flip flop: Gardner also voted for an amendment last year backed by Congressman Steve King, Tancredo’s border hawk heir in the House, that would defund the deferred action program. Gardner’s campaign claims the vote was meant as a message to the president about executive action, not a vote to deport people.
Coffman has gone even further than Gardner in embracing some aspects of immigration reform: He endorsed a path to citizenship for DREAMers as well as a path to legal status for law-abiding adults in 2013, a major reversal from the days when he aligned himself with Tancredo in campaign materials (a time when his district also contained far fewer Latino voters).









