National GOP dollars are starting to flow into Colorado as Senate Republicans gear up to try and oust Michael Bennet

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She pointed to Bennet’s newest campaign ad which highlights his work across the aisle and record on Colorado’s public lands.

The $600,000 ad, which will air over the next two weeks in Denver and Colorado Springs, as well as run online, shows Bennet fly fishing with Chaffee County Commissioner Greg Felt, a river guide and unaffiliated voter. Felt touts Bennet’s work for Colorado.

“He’s leading the fight to defend our way of life, protecting our public lands, promoting forest and watershed health, and supporting businesses like mine.”

Bennet’s campaign is also wrapping up his first general election statewide campaign ad showing him in Colorado’s mountains. It also cost the campaign $600,000 and focused on his fight against special interests in Washington.

Colorado’s Senate race is shaping up to be costly

The Republican ad boost is beneficial for the O’Dea campaign. The Republican challenger goes into the general election with just over $840,000 cash on hand as of June 30. In comparison, Bennet had over $8 million cash on hand at that time.

According to the most recent campaign filings, the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) had over $28 million cash on hand. The committee has raised $173 million and has so far spent $159 million this election cycle. The NRSC typically doesn’t give money directly to candidates’ committees. Instead, it spends directly to support candidates in races where Republicans believe they will be competitive.

All this adds up to mean that Colorado’s Senate race could again be a costly one.

The biggest outside Democratic spending in the race so far came in the primary. A PAC aligned with Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer was the only source of funding for a Colorado super PAC that plowed $4 million on TV and digital ads in an unsuccessful attempt to convince voters to choose conservative state Rep. Ron Hanks, a 2020 election denier, over O’Dea. 

A number of prominent Democratic former elected officials from Colorado, including former Sen. Gary Hart, former Rep. Patricia Schroder, and former Gov. Roy Romer, signed on to a letter this week decrying Democratic attempts to elevate election deniers in primaries across the country in the hopes of an easier election come November.

Colorado’s 2020 Senate contest between Cory Gardner and John Hickenlooper cost more than $100 million, according to the Colorado Sun.

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