Sonnenberg should lick the city-slickers, carpetbaggers, and schemers in the CD4 race

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For northern and eastern Colorado, there are many candidates for Congress on the primary ballot this June. Having lived in Logan County for the past 22 years and both of us having grown up in Congressional District 4, Cheyenne Wells in Kit Carson County (Byron) and Sterling in Logan County (Celeste), we would like to share our concerns surrounding some of the candidates and explain why we are voting for former state Sen. Jerry Sonnenberg.

Rep. Mike Lynch is a good legislator, and we don’t disagree with him on a lot of issues. What is concerning is that Lynch has been noticeably absent from the rural counties in CD4. CD4 includes over 20 counties and portions of a few others, but Lynch tends to stick to the largely populated counties for campaign purposes. While he has increased stops throughout CD4 over the last week, we find ourselves wondering if a stop to the rural counties isn’t important enough during campaign season, will he spend time on rural issues if elected?

Deb Flora is concerning as a candidate because we don’t feel we can trust her. Her campaign literature is misleading, implying that she has been elected and served on the state school board and in the state House when neither is true. She said she stood behind and agreed to go through the caucus process, and then backed out last minute. Additionally, her debate answers have changed from night to night depending on the location and audience.

With so many candidates in the CD4 race, it was important for the candidates that live in CD4 to unite behind one candidate to run against Congresswoman Lauren Boebert. Boebert is the candidate who fled to our district when the Congressional District 3 race where she lived became difficult. The CD4 candidates, minus Boebert, agreed that the winner of a straw poll would be the candidate that remained on the ballot and all others would drop out of the race. At the 11th hour, Flora backed out of the straw poll, effectively nullifying its purpose and goal. We suppose that’s what you decide to do when you are only convinced you can win one heavily populated county.

Rep. Richard Holtorf lost all our support when he abandoned agriculture during the March election to select a Republican nominee without experience in farming to fill Congressman Ken Buck’s vacant seat.

There will be two elections this June. A primary with all the candidates discussed in this column, and an election to select someone who will serve for six months to finish out Buck’s term.

During the process to select a nominee, Holtorf and Lynch had been eliminated and the final vote was between Jerry Sonnenberg and Greg Lopez. Holtorf endorsed and encouraged his supporters to vote for Lopez. He didn’t support the fellow farmer and rancher from Logan County. Holtorf threw all his support behind a businessman from Parker, who had to ask what a center pivot sprinkler was on a campaign stop to eastern Colorado.

Colorado is one of the top agricultural states in the country. Colorado makes approximately $47 billion annually and every one of the top 10 agriculture-producing counties in Colorado can be found in CD4. The winner of the election to fill Buck’s vacant seat will work on the U.S. farm bill. The farm bill is legislation that is passed approximately every five years. This legislation significantly affects farmers, ranchers, and producers. It affects farming practices, what foods are grown, and essentially everything from farm to table.

Making sure Jerry Sonnenberg didn’t have a leg up as the incumbent was more important to Holtorf, than making sure we had someone in office who knows and understands agriculture for this critical legislation.

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