Colorado
District 5
Rep. Doug Lamborn (R)
Colorado 5th District
Rep. Doug Lamborn (R)
In 1893, Katherine Lee Bates took the cog railway up from Colorado Springs to the top of 14,110-foot Pikes Peak, and looking out at the purple mountain’s majesty above amber waves of grain, she wrote the lines of “America the Beautiful.” Pike’s Peak, espied by Zebulon Pike in 1806, and Colorado Springs, with the Garden of the Gods and the Broadmoor Hotel, have been tourist attractions for more than 100 years. In the second half of the 20th century, Colorado Springs, safe in the vastness of North America, also became a great American military fortress. During the height of the Cold War in the 1960s, the Pentagon constructed the North American Aerospace Defense Command more than 1,000 feet below Cheyenne Mountain, a fortified bunker theoretically able to survive a nuclear strike from a Soviet missile. The Pentagon, in part because of local traffic congestion, moved NORAD’s surveillance operations to nearby Peterson Air Force Base, site of space-based defense research, with the option of a rapid return to secure Cheyenne Mountain in an emergency. Other military installations dominate the landscape as well: rapidly growing Fort Carson, site of the Air Force Academy, and Schriever Air Force Base, named in 1998 for Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, a pioneer in the development of ballistic-missile programs.
2008 Presidential Vote |
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| McCain | 189,498 | (59%) |
| Obama | 129,095 | (40%) |
| Cook Partisan Voting Index R+14 | ||
Colorado Springs has built a high-tech, innovative economy. And with the arrival of Dr. James Dobson’s Focus on the Family in 1994 and other Christian organizations, it has been a center of conservative Christianity, the home of Colorado’s young conservatism and the counterpoint to Denver’s aging liberalism. This was the birthplace of Colorado’s anti-tax initiatives and of Amendment 2, which in 1992 repealed the city’s gay-rights ordinances only to be later overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court. It is one of America’s most Republican metropolitan areas. In 2004 Colorado Springs’s El Paso County cast more votes than Denver County, and its 83,000-vote margin for George W. Bush almost balanced out Denver’s 96,000-vote margin for John Kerry. The Democrats regained the advantage in 2008, as Barack Obama made gains among white evangelicals. John McCain won El Paso County by only 59% with 51,000 votes, while Obama took Denver by 135,000 votes.
The 5th Congressional District consists of Colorado Springs and El Paso County, plus all or most of four mountain counties to the west. One of them, Lake County, includes the old mining town of Leadville and usually votes Democratic. But 87% of the district’s population is in El Paso County, and in effect, this is the Colorado Springs congressional district. The 5th District is the most Republican district in Colorado and one of the most Republican in the nation.
Colorado District 5
Rep. Doug Lamborn (R)
Elected: 2006, 2nd term.
Born: May 24, 1954, Leavenworth, KS .
Home: Colorado Springs.
Education: U. of KS, B.S. 1978, J.D. 1986.
Religion: Christian.
Family: Married (Jeanie); 5 children.
Elected office: CO House of Reps., 1994-98; CO Senate, 1998-2006.
Professional Career: Practicing atty., 1987-2007.
The congressman from the 5th District is Doug Lamborn, a Republican elected in 2006. The son of a prison guard, Lamborn was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, and studied journalism at the University of Kansas. He said he voted in 1976 for Jimmy Carter, which he calls a mistake, but was then drawn to Republican politics by Ronald Reagan. Lamborn ran unsuccessfully in 1982 as the Republican candidate for a heavily Democratic seat in the Kansas Legislature, then went back to school for a law degree. In 1987, Lamborn moved his family to Colorado Springs, where he practiced business and real estate law and became an avid mountain climber. In 1994, he won the first of two terms in the Colorado House and in 1998, was appointed to a vacant state Senate seat. Lamborn ran unopposed in the next election and later served as state Senate president pro tem. During 12 years in the legislature, Lamborn compiled a reliably conservative record on social and fiscal issues. He opposed abortion rights, sponsoring bills to limit late-term abortions, and advocated tax cuts, including a reduction in state income taxes. He backed legislation that would have ended some benefits to illegal immigrants and increased penalties for illegal-immigrant smugglers.
| Election Results: | ||||
| 2008 General | ||||
| Doug Lamborn (R) | 183,178 | (60%) | ($593,491) | |
| Hal Bidlack (D) | 113,025 | (37%) | ($240,798) | |
| Brian Scott (CNP) | 8,894 | (3%) | ||
| 2008 Primary | ||||
| Doug Lamborn (R) | 24,995 | (44%) | ||
| Jeff Crank (R) | 16,794 | (30%) | ||
| Bentley Rayburn (R) | 14,986 | (26%) | ||
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Prior Winning Percentages: 2006 (60%) |
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He ran for the House when Republican Rep. Joel Hefley retired. In the primary, Hefley endorsed Jeff Crank, his former aide. Lamborn had the backing of the anti-tax Club for Growth and the Colorado Christian Coalition. At the May GOP party convention, Crank won the delegate vote 46%-40%, but Lamborn had more than the minimum 30% needed to secure a place on the primary ballot. Lamborn emphasized his conservative voting record and vowed never to raise taxes. The state Christian Coalition sent a mailer suggesting Crank backed the “radical homosexual lobby.” In the August primary, Crank won five of the district’s six counties and appeared headed to victory. But once absentee ballots were counted, the results flipped and Lamborn won by 892 votes, defeating Crank 27%-25%.
In the general election, Lamborn faced Democrat Jay Fawcett, an Air Force Academy graduate who won a Bronze star during the Gulf War. In most years, the Democratic nominee would not have drawn a second look, because no Democrat had won the seat since it was created in 1972. But the bruising Republican primary and a tough national election environment for Republicans made for an unusually competitive general election. Hefley accused Lamborn of running a “sleazy” primary campaign and refused to endorse him. Fawcett sought to take advantage of the Republican discord, purchasing a newspaper ad featuring the names and photos of three dozen prominent local Republicans who also declined to endorse Lamborn. He tried to appeal to Republicans and unaffiliated voters by emphasizing his military experience, a strong selling point in a military-oriented district. In October, polls showed a dead heat, an alarming result for a district that national Republicans were unaccustomed to worrying about. But on Election Day, voters overcame lingering animosity toward Lamborn and gave him a 60%-40% victory. Asked after the election about Republican defectors, Lamborn said, “Those people represented some whiners and some of the most liberal Republicans.”
In the House, Lamborn established a solidly conservative voting record. He tried, but lost overwhelmingly, to pass amendments to eliminate funding for the National Endowment for the Arts and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, two government-sponsored entities that conservatives consider far too liberal. He also sponsored a bill to prohibit federal funding from going to schools that provide access to emergency contraception services. In October 2007, he got a seat on the Armed Services Committee, a critical committee for his district.
Back home, lingering resentment over the 2006 primary led to a rematch with Crank in 2008. The challenger attacked Lamborn’s job performance. This time, Lamborn took all of the counties except Lake, and won the district overall with 44% to 30% for Crank. He won easily in November against token Democratic opposition.


