Politics

Local businesses share voting guide with employees, prompting ethical concerns

DENVER – The issue of corporate personhood is being brought up in regards to Colorado’s ballot initiatives and a mailer sent out by a Denver business nonprofit that ended up in the inbox of thousands of its subsidiary employees.

A Reddit user on Wednesday morning posted a business ballot guide from the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce that was allegedly passed on to 13,000 employees of HealthONE that outlines the stance of the chamber on several state and local ballot initiatives.

Some users took issue with the mailer being sent to employees, calling it “propaganda” and “completely inappropriate.” Some wondered it if violated electioneering or voter intimidation laws.

But when looking at state and federal electioneering and voter intimidation laws, it does not appear any have been violated by either organization.

NONPROFITS ALLOWED TO SUPPORT BALLOT INITIATIVES

The Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce is a 501(c)(6) nonprofit organization that is an exempt organization under IRS code. The chamber’s website says its membership includes 3,000 businesses and 300,000 employees in the metro area.

To qualify as a 501(c)(6), the chamber has to “promote the common economic interests of all the commercial enterprises in a given trade community,” according to the IRS.

Under Colorado campaign finance laws, 501(c)(6) organizations are allowed to support ballot initiatives and do advocacy work in the Legislature, meaning the ballot guide is completely in line with state law.

Laura Giocomo, a spokeswoman for the chamber, said the organization hands out the guide at meetings and events, and noted the guide is also posted to the chamber’s website.

“Our goal is to put more Coloradans to work, so if policy or ballot issues tie back to [the Denver area’s] economic development or business environment…we take a look every year at every issue and make recommendations,” Giocomo said.

She said the chamber takes all the initiatives to its board, which votes on what measures to oppose or support.

On the ballot guide, the chamber urges its surrogates and their employees to follow its lead in opposing amendments 69 (ColoradoCare) and 70 (minimum wage increase); to support amendments 71 (constitutional amendment changes), 107 (restore primary elections) and 108 (allow unaffiliated voters to vote in primaries); to support SCFD Ballot Issue 4B (2018 reauthorization of 0.1 percent sales tax for arts and cultural organization funding); and to support DPS Bond 3B ($572 million in bond money) and Mill Levy 3A (property tax mill levy adding $56.6 million for school programming).

Under each initiative the chamber supports or opposes, it lists the reasons why.

The guide says the chamber opposes Amendment 69 “because of the staggering cost,” for instance.

Giocomo said the chamber opposes 69 over concerns it would affect the business community’s “ability to attract and retain the best people” and companies to the state because of what it says will be higher tax rates and undetermined costs.

“Of course we make that information available for members. They can do with it what they like,” Giocomo said. “These are tools to help educate them.”

As for HealthONE, the company is a limited liability corporation, according to state records, and is allowed to promote initiatives as well.

The company sent Denver7 a statement on the forwarding of the ballot guide Wednesday afternoon:

“On Tuesday we sent an email to all employees regarding upcoming ballot items. Our intent with the email, which included the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce’s views on these topics, was to provide information.  We often receive questions from employees about the issues, therefore we thought we would share information provided to us by the Chamber.  We regret any confusion or miscommunication this caused. We encourage employees to educate themselves on the issues.”

HealthONE

CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS BY COMPANIES

Both nonprofits and corporations are allowed to contribute to ballot initiative measures, though there are rules barring them from contributing directly to individual candidates or stemming the amounts they are allowed to give.

And Colorado campaign finance records show both the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce and HealthONE has provided financial support to political action committees whose support or opposition of certain initiatives are the same as the chamber’s.

The chamber has so far given Coloradans for Coloradans, the chief PAC opposing Amendment 69, $100,000 this year — $50,000 in January and $50,000 in July.

Coloradans for Coloradans has out-raised a pro-69 PAC by 5-to-1 so far this season. It has received the largest contributions from health care and health insurance companies opposed to Amendment 69, though many other people and organizations have also contributed to the PAC.

It has contributed a total of $200,247.50 to a PAC called Let Colorado Vote, which supports amendments 107 and 108. The chamber’s most recent campaign contribution was to the PAC, when it sent $100,000 over on Sept. 19.

And the chamber has given a total of $50,247.50 to two PACs supporting Amendment 71: it gave Protecting Colorado’s Environment, Economy, and Energy Independence $25,000 in June, then gave Raise the Bar – Protect Our Constitution, a total of $25,247.50 in July.

In total, the chamber has contributed $355,495 to various political action committees in 2016.

HealthONE has also been among the top contributors to Coloradans for Coloradans; it has contributed a total of $250,000 to the anti-Amendment 69 PAC through its various companies, including HealthONE System Support.

HealthONE also contributed $5,000 to Raise the Bar – Protect Our Constitution, which is a pro-Amendment 71 PAC, in September, but that contribution was returned two days later.

HISTORY OF COMPANY VOTING DIRECTIVES AFTER CITIZENS UNITED

The argument over whether or not employers should be allowed to direct their employees on how to vote is relatively new – such directives had not been allowed until the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission.

Until that decision, U.S. law forbid companies from using their money in political contributions and barred them from influencing their employees.

But several major companies, including Koch Industries and Westgate, have lobbied their employees – specifically in 2012 directives to not vote for Barack Obama for a second presidential term.

Others have focused specifically on issues that may be bad for a company’s business.

Legal experts say that while such directives are allowed under the First Amendment, they come on a slippery slope, as failing to follow the directives cannot be terms for an employee to be fired as that would fall into the boundaries of coercion.

A report from the University of Denver said that Citizens United and other decisions have “reshaped the rules of campaign finance and the roles of various actors in the electoral process.”

It should also be noted that several studies released in the past decade show employees often respect the political positions of their employers.

A 2011-12 report from BIPAC Market Research found people trust their employer as a source of information up to three times more than they trust political parties, news organizations or themselves.

And a 2012 report in the Harvard Business Review showed 52 percent of people thought their employer “should be active in promoting public policies favorable to their industries” in 2010. That same year, 46 percent of people surveyed said they wanted their employer to let them know about political issues that could affect their job or industry.

Anyone with questions or possible improprieties dealing with electioneering, coercion or possible voter intimidation is asked to report such conduct to the Colorado Secretary of State.

The full ballot guide can be seen below.

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Trump calls for term limits for members of Congress, rails against press at Colorado Springs rally

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Donald Trump served up a proposal to offer a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on members of Congress in the first of two campaign stops planned in Colorado Tuesday.

He offered no details in Colorado Springs on his plans to institute term limits should he become president, and also said he’d put in place five-year bans on lobbying by members of Congress and their staff, among other bans he suggested dealing with the lobbying of and by both domestic and foreign governments. Continue reading

WATCH: Donald Trump campaigning in Colorado Springs, Grand Junction Tuesday

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – As the presidential campaign reaches fever pitch in its final three weeks, Donald Trump is again campaigning in Colorado Tuesday.

Trump’s speeches will begin at 1 p.m. in Colorado Springs at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. in Grand Junction.

WATCH | See Trump’s speeches in the live player below, or click here to stream. 

His campaign has dumped resources into Colorado in recent weeks despite the most recent polls showing him way behind opponent Hillary Clinton in both two-way and four-way races.

Donald Trump Jr. campaigned in Boulder and Centennial Monday, and the elder Trump’s two stops Tuesday will make five total so far just this month.

The Clinton campaign has also been back to Colorado in recent weeks, as Clinton visited Pueblo last Wednesday and her vice presidential pick, Tim Kaine, campaigned with musician Dave Matthews in Aurora two days earlier.

Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, two of the progressives campaigning

Trump will speak at the Norris Penrose Event Center in Colorado Springs at 1 p.m. Doors to the event open at 10 a.m. The Grand Junction rally will be held at West Star Aviation at 3 p.m. Doors to that event open at noon.

The Quinnipiac Poll released Monday showed Trump down 8 percentage points in a four-way race and down 11 to Clinton in a two-way race.

IFrame

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Data, report show the rarity of voter fraud in U.S. elections

DENVER – As Donald Trump continues to push unfounded claims of election rigging and voter fraud during the upcoming election, it’s important to note that a miniscule amount of confirmed voter fraud has occurred in the U.S. over the past several general elections.

In 2014, the Washington Post and Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt looked into every general election from 2000 to 2014 and found only 31 possible incidents of in-person voter fraud that affected around 241 ballots. Continue reading

Denver Dept. of Health lifts ban on kratom in city, but adds extra labeling and manufacturing req’s

DENVER – The Denver Department of Health will lift the ban of sales of kratom in the city as the Drug Enforcement Agency reconsiders its decision to classify the herb as a Schedule-I controlled substance.

The DEA announced last week it wanted to investigate the southeastern Asian herb more before deciding to classify it, which it originally announced it would ban last month.

It has cited several supposed deaths linked to the product as reason for calling it an “imminent public health hazard” and scheduling it for classification.

Denver business were ordered to discontinue kratom’s sale, but lifted that order Friday. However, it is telling businesses it must be in line with the following guidelines should it wish to sell the herb:

  • A consumer advisory is on all applicable menus for kratom products served for on-site consumption in Denver stores;
  • A consumer advisory is affixed to all kratom products intended for offsite consumption that are sold in Denver stores;
  • Labeling is affixed to products intended for offsite consumption to identify the product (e.g. ground kratom leaf) as well as the packager/ manufacturer;
  • Kratom products must be handled in a manner to prevent contamination from poor personal hygiene, unclean equipment, toxic chemicals such as cleaners, and other sources of contamination.

Kratom is used by many people for a variety of reasons, but it is used most often by opioid addicts hoping to detox.

At the end of September, Denver7 spoke with a Denver woman who said kratom was the only supplement she had used that could help her kick her opioid addiction.

Jennifer Mahaney, who sells the herb at her store, Headed West, says as many as 600 people visit her store each day for the herb.

“These people are fully functioning. They’re engaged in their children’s life. I can tell you story after story where it has been impactful for them and they’re just taking it away,” Mahaney said.

The DEA has warned kratom causes hallucinations, psychosis and even death, though advocates of the herb say many deaths linked to kratom involved other drugs as well.

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Quinnipiac Poll shows Clinton made major inroads with independents in last month, has large CO lead

DENVER – New poll numbers released Monday show Hillary Clinton has jumped out ahead of Republican challenger Donald Trump in Colorado three weeks before Election Day.

The latest Quinnipiac Poll, which was conducted Oct. 10-16 and sampled 685 likely voters (with a 3.7 margin of error), shows Clinton leading Trump 45-37 in a four-way race. Libertarian Gary Johnson drew 10 percent in the poll, and Green Party candidate Jill Stein drew 3 percent.

In comparison, the previous Quinnipiac Poll, conducted Sept. 13-21, had Clinton leading with 44 percent. Trump (42 percent) was close behind, followed by Johnson (10 percent) and Stein (2 percent).

But when one looks at the two-way race numbers, Clinton’s lead widens.

She leads Trump by 11 percent in the newest Quinnipiac two-way poll, 51-40 percent; the two were tied at 47 percent in the Sept. 13-21 Quinnipiac two-way.

Clinton’s camp appears to also have made extensive headway with independent voters in the past month, as the poll shows 38 percent of independents are likely to vote for her, compared to 34 percent who say they’re likely to vote for Trump.

The Sept. 13-21 poll showed Trump leading likely independent voters with 42 percent, compared to Clinton’s 33 percent.

Though Trump and his surrogates have campaigned extensively in Colorado over the past month, polls, which Trump and others have often discredited based on what they say, have continued to point in favor of Clinton winning the state.

The last poll that had Trump ahead in a two-way race was the Sept. 22-23 Gravis poll, which had Trump +4 among 799 likely voters. The same poll had Trump +4 in a four-way race as well.

But others polls have had Clinton up by as much as 11 percent over the past month, and a Real Clear Politics average of each Colorado poll taken since last November has Clinton up 9 percent in a two-way race and 8 percent in a four-way race.

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Colorado secretary of state, spokeswoman lambaste Trump’s ‘rigged election’ comments

DENVER – The spokeswoman for Colorado’s Republican secretary of state offered a strong rebuttal to Donald Trump’s claims that there is voter fraud occurring in what Trump has called a “rigged” election.

“Donald Trump has been tweeting about elections being rigged, but he offers no evidence of such,” Secretary of State Communications Director Lynn Bartels said in a statement to Denver7. “I can say on Twitter I’m a super model, but that doesn’t make it so.” Continue reading

Hickenlooper denounces Trump’s comments; Trump says new claims are lies, blames woman’s looks

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Colorado’s Democratic governor, John Hickenlooper, decided Friday it was time to denounce Donald Trump’s comments about being able to sexually assault women because of his fame – a week after the comments were made.

Hickenlooper held a news conference in Colorado Springs Friday afternoon to make the announcement at a Hillary Clinton campaign office. Continue reading

Judge asks for more time in deciding if charges to move forward against former El Paso Co. sheriff

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – It will be another couple weeks before a judge rules whether there is probable cause to move forward on charges against the former El Paso County sheriff and two other high-ranking officers in the office.

Former El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa and former Undersheriff Paula Presley were indicted on nine charges that include kidnapping, extortion and tampering with evidence.

Former EPCSO Commander Juan San Agustin faces kidnapping and false imprisonment charges.

Maketa and Presley are accused of pressuring a deputy’s girlfriend to change her story regarding an alleged domestic violence incident that left the girlfriend with bruising.

But after going through the sheriff’s office, she was ultimately arrested for domestic violence, driving under the influence and harassment charges. However, no sobriety test was ever performed.

The indictments of the three say they all worked together to push the case against the woman forward despite there being little to no evidence the investigation should continue.

Marketa and Presley are also accused of threatening to end a contract with a correctional facility health care company whose employee declined to run Presley’s campaign for sheriff.

Denver7’s news partners at KRDO report another hearing is scheduled in the case for Dec. 19. Defense attorneys want some of the charges dropped altogether.

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Donald Trump scheduled to campaign in Grand Junction, Colorado Springs next Tuesday

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. – Donald Trump will again be back in Colorado next week when he makes campaign stops in Colorado Springs and Grand Junction.

Trump’s rally in Colorado Springs will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Norris-Penrose Event Center.

Doors for the event open at 10 a.m. Anyone wanting to RSVP for tickets can do so here.

The Grand Junction rally will be held at West Star Aviation at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 18. Tickets to the event can be found here. Doors open at noon.

Trump and his surrogates have visited Colorado several times this year and have doubled down on the state in the past month.

Trump has made several stops in Colorado Springs this year and has also visited Pueblo, Loveland, Denver and others this year.

Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, his son, Donald Jr., and running mate Mike Pence have all visited the state in the past month. Donald Trump Jr. stopped in Grand Junction on that trip as well.

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