Colorado Politics
So how have the state's Democrats responded to victory? This weekend, they ousted their party chairman, who had championed the idea of the party nominating electable candidates in the GOP-leaning state. Senator Salazar, in the Dem primary, defeated an anti-war teacher with no statewide campaign experience, Mike Miles; many Miles delegates were angered that the state party apparatus favored the more electable Salazar. Many Miles delegates were also prominent supporters of Dennis Kucinich for president, which gives a sense of where they stood on the political spectrum.
The Miles backers were always stronger with party activists than with the public at large; in 2004, the Colorado state Dem convention, responsive mostly to the party base, actually endorsed Miles over Salazar (Salazar won the primary by nearly 40 points). In the race for party chair, the Miles forces mobilized behind a little-known environmental activist, Pat Waak, who appears to have been elected by three votes. Waak has promised to do her best not to use the party apparatus to discourage the primary candidacies of far-left underdogs.
I'm sure Karl Rove is getting a good chuckle.