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Colorado GOP Senate contender nicknamed ‘The Boss’ spotlights conservative credentials

FIRST ON FOX: Joe O’Dea wants us-regions voters to know that he’s “not a politician.”

O’Dea, a first-time candidate and the owner of Concrete Express, a Denver-based construction company that employs more than 300 people, is one of two elections who will face off for their party’s senate” target=”_blank”>Senate<

“Joe O’Dea. He’s a conservative running for U.S. Senate. He’s not a politician. People call him the boss. He’s a construction CEO and a Colorado leader. He built his construction company from the ground up, employing hundreds of Coloradans,” the narrator says in the spot, which was shared first with Fox News on Friday.

“He’s running for the Senate to cut the debt, stop inflation, support the police and military, take on rampant crime. Endorsed by conservatives. Endorsed by police. Joe O’Dea. The boss, not a politician,” the narrator continues.

O’Dea’s campaign tells Fox News they will spend a quarter of a million dollars to run the ad statewide for three weeks, in order to boost their candidate’s name recognition with Colorado primary voters.

SENATE GOP REELECTION ARM SETS FUNDRAISING RECORD IN 2021

O’Dea will face off in the June primary against Republican state Rep. Ron Hanks, who won the top line designation in the Republican primary ballot earlier this month at the GOP’s state assembly in Colorado Springs. Five other Senate candidates who were running for the nomination were eliminated at the party gathering. 

Republican Senate candidate Joe O'Dea of Colorado hands out donuts to voters outside the state GOP assembly, on April 9, 2022 in Colorado Springs, Colorado

Republican Senate candidate Joe O’Dea of Colorado hands out donuts to voters outside the state GOP assembly, on April 9, 2022 in Colorado Springs, Colorado
(Joe O’Dea Senate campaign)

O’Dea landed his name on the primary ballot by getting at least 1,500 valid signatures from each of Colorado’s eight congressional districts.

Hanks, who’s base is Freemont County, southwest of Colorado Springs, is a strong supporter of former President Donald Trump’s claims that his 2020 election loss to now-President Biden was due to massive voter fraud.

“I fully expected Donald Trump to win in 2020, and he did,” Hanks said to loud cheers by the GOP delegates gathered at the Republican state assembly.

O’Dea has said he doesn’t agree with Trump’s claims regarding the 2020 election.

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While Hanks may have an edge over his rival in name recognition, O’Dea has a massive lead in the fundraising fight. O’Dea brought in $410,000 during the January-Mach 2022 first quarter of fundraising — including $107,000 of his own money — compared to just $29,000 raised by Hanks. And O’Dea had $609,000 in his campaign coffers as of the end of March, compared to just $16,000 for Hanks.

Republicans need a net gain of just one seat in November’s midterms to win back the Senate majority they lost when they were swept in Georgia’s twin runoff elections in January 2021. The Republicans top four targets this year are four first term Democratic senators in key battleground states — Sens. Mark Kelly of Arizona, Raphael Warnock of Georgia, Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire. 

Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado speaks to voters at a house party in Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., December 8, 2019, during his unsucessful run for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. Picture taken December 8, 2019.

Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado speaks to voters at a house party in Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., December 8, 2019, during his unsucessful run for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. Picture taken December 8, 2019.
(REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz)

Topping their second-tier targets is Bennet. 

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But ousting Bennet, who’s won two previous Senate elections, won’t be easy in a state Biden carried by 13 points in the 2020 election. And Bennet hauled in $2.5 million in fundraising the past three months, bringing his cash on hand to $6.1 million.

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