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Newsletter — Issue 14 — May 27, 2026 | Part 2 of 2 on the Colorado Democratic Primary for Governor
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This newsletter has been published by Engage Colorado.
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The Affirmative Case for Michael Bennet for Colorado Governor
This Engage Colorado Newsletter was written by Dan Caruso with the support of the Caruso Ventures team. The Ensuring Colorado's Innovation Future Coalition did not review and has not endorsed this Engage Colorado Newsletter.
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Most endorsement letters start with what is best about the candidate. I want to start with a clear, honest statement of who Michael Bennet actually is, ideologically — so that Coloradans who read this letter understand my view of Bennet as our next Governor.
Michael Bennet is far left of center. Though he sometimes positions himself as a moderate, his policy record and his campaign rhetoric are far more consistent with the far left wing of the Democratic Party than with the left center. Whether Bennet is more left, or less left, than Phil Weiser is, frankly, unclear to me. Coloradans who are hoping for a clear centrist option in the June 30 Democratic primary will not find one between these two candidates.
I personally would prefer the next Governor of Colorado to be more centrist than either Bennet or Weiser. That is not the choice in front of us. The next Governor is almost certainly going to be one of these two people. And on that question — which of the two — I strongly favor Michael Bennet.
I also believe Bennet is a fantastic human being who is intelligent, compassionate, and effective. For what it's worth, Phil Weiser is also someone I respect. He has been a friend for many years, and my endorsement of Bennet is not a personal judgment of Phil — it is about who I believe will be the better Governor for Colorado.
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My Case for Bennet
Voters who want a far-left governor will be comfortable with Bennet. Voters who want a more centrist governor should be realistic about what they will get. I do not endorse Bennet as a centrist. I endorse him as a far-left-of-center candidate who will, in my view, be the better Governor for Colorado than Phil Weiser.
The reason Bennet will be a better Governor has little to do with ideology and almost everything to do with two structural facts: his real-world executive experience, and his career-stage.
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Real-World Executive Experience
Bennet has run a complex organization. As Superintendent of Denver Public Schools from 2005 to 2009, he led one of the most challenging urban school districts in America at one of its most contested moments. Under his leadership, DPS implemented the ProComp teacher pay reform — one of the first performance-linked compensation systems in any major American district — reversed years of enrollment decline, and improved graduation rates. Before DPS, he spent most of his career at the Anschutz Investment Company doing corporate workouts and restructurings. Phil Weiser, by contrast, has spent his entire career in law: clerkships, federal-government legal positions, law professor at CU, and Colorado Attorney General. As I wrote in Part 1: because his career has been spent entirely in legal and policy work, his answer to every problem tends to be the lawyer's answer — a new law, a new regulation, a lawsuit, or a fine. The challenges Colorado faces in 2026 — declining competitiveness, talent retention, economic vitality, housing affordability, education outcomes — require a Governor whose experience is more than just law and politics.
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Career-Stage
Bennet is at the end of his Washington career. The Colorado Governorship would be the culmination of his public career, not a stepping stone. Weiser is at the middle stage of a longer political arc. If he becomes Governor, his administration will be shaped by Weiser's national political ambitions.
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Those two structural facts lead me to three behavioral predictions. First, I believe Bennet is more likely to work constructively with Colorado's tech and innovation ecosystem — including with leaders whose political views differ from his own — because his focus will be on getting results for the people of Colorado, not on burnishing credentials for a future federal run. Second, I believe Bennet is more likely to be a unifier across all Coloradans — across the political spectrum, across geography, across industry — because his administration will not be auditioning before the national left for what comes next. Third, I believe Bennet is less likely to reach for the divisive, polarizing rhetoric, politically-driven lawsuits, and policy positions that prioritize activist-base approval over what is best for the state and residents of Colorado.
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I Am Voting for the Hope of a Colorado Renaissance
For these reasons, I believe Bennet will play a leadership role in helping Colorado re-establish itself as the number-one ecosystem for innovation, regain our economic momentum, and do so in a way that benefits everyone in our state. With Bennet as Governor, the possibility opens for a kind of renaissance — where our schools, our health care, our housing supply, our safety and security, and our culture of innovation and entrepreneurship all take a meaningful turn for the positive, anchored by a true partnership between the Governor and the full spectrum of Colorado's tech, business, and community leaders. We could, once again, all be rowing in the same direction on reestablishing Colorado as a special place to pursue lives of harmony, creativity, and fulfillment.
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I Am Voting Against the Continuation of Colorado's Negative Trajectory
My fear with Weiser is the opposite. I fear his Governorship will continue Colorado on a negative trajectory where our political leadership is more focused on divisive political rhetoric, politically-inspired lawsuits, and policies that stifle tech and innovation — harming the entire state in the process. Put it this way: if Florida and Texas voters could cast ballots in Colorado's election, I suspect most of them would vote for Weiser. Those states are benefiting most from Colorado's recent loss of momentum, and they'd be thrilled to see us continue our destructive anti-business, anti-innovation policies and political rhetoric.
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I Ask You to Vote for Bennet on June 30
On June 30, I urge Democratic and unaffiliated voters to cast their primary ballots for Michael Bennet. The choice we make this June will shape Colorado for the next twenty years.
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— Dan Caruso, Engage Colorado
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