Colorado Republicans on Saturday elected Brita Horn, a former county treasurer and longtime party activist, to a two-year term as state GOP chair at the party's biennial reorganization meeting in Colorado Springs. The 62-year-old volunteer fire department chief from Routt County told members of the state central committee that she wants Republicans to move past the internal fights that have consumed the party, giving Democrats free reign to consolidate near total control of state government. "We have so much division, we have so much distraction.
We have all these things going on, debating about the past," Horn said. "We can't do that anymore. We have to stop the infighting and start fighting for the party.
" Horn defeated former Weld County Commissioner and former state Rep. Lori Saine 232-203 in the second round of balloting after an initial seven-candidate field had narrowed to a two-way race. Horn takes over a state party riven by disputes following a tumultuous two years under the outgoing state chair Dave Williams, who spent most of last year fending off attempts to force him from the position.
Williams, a former state lawmaker and two-time congressional candidate from Colorado Springs, announced in late February that he wouldn't seek a second term running the party. Last month, Williams and the state party sued Horn and five other Republicans , accusing them of staging a failed "coup" that cost the party more than $100,000 in legal fees while diverting resources from campaigns in the months leading up to the November election. In the lawsuit, Williams and his fellow plaintiffs alleged that Horn and other Williams critics engaged in "a series of unethical, dishonorable, and fraudulent actions designed to cling to power.
" When it was filed, Horn dismissed the lawsuit as "yet another of (Williams') frivolous attacks on his political opponents," telling Colorado Politics that the legal threat wouldn't deter her from bringing the party together to win elections rather than "using the organization to attack fellow members." She sounded the same theme in her speech at the reorganization meeting Saturday. "We don't need any more distractions.
We don't need any more divisions. We just need results," Horn said in her nominating speech. "We have to unite the party.
It's about all of us. So if we can stop blaming each other, stop pointing fingers ..
. because if we keep doing that, I say we're going to keep losing." The other candidates who ran for chair were former state Rep.
Richard Holtorf, R-Akron; state party staffer Darcy Schoening; and party activists Ryan Everett, Jeremy Goodall and Mark Morris. All five withdrew after the first round of voting, with Holtorf, Everett and Morris asking their supporters to back Horn, and Goodall asking his to vote for Saine. The Colorado GOP’s central committee — numbering around 500 party officers, elected officials and activists — convened for a hybrid reorganization meeting, with about 100 members participating remotely via Zoom and the rest packed into Radiant Church in Colorado Springs.
Shad Murib, Horn's Democratic counterpart, who won reelection to a second term as his state party's chair earlier this month, told Colorado Politics that Horn's experience as Routt County treasurer makes her a "perfect fit" for the Trump era. "It’s no surprise that the Colorado GOP elected Brita Horn — best known for using her government job to extract political favors and cost Routt County millions of dollars through her failed job as treasurer — to their top leadership spot," Murib said in a text message. "She’s a perfect fit for the new age of corruption that Trump requires of his puppets.
” Editor's note: This developing story will be updated..
Politics
Colorado Republicans elect former county treasurer Brita Horn as state party chair

Colorado Republicans on Saturday elected Brita Horn, a former county treasurer and longtime party activist, to a two-year term as state GOP chair at the party's biennial reorganization meeting in Colorado Springs.