top of page

Another Enters the Race in 4th District

Writer: Media Logic RadioMedia Logic Radio

CPR News -

One of the Colorado Capitol’s highest-ranking Republicans is running for Congress. House Minority Leader Mike Lynch announced Wednesday he’s joining the crowded Republican primary field for the 4th Congressional District.


The issues Lynch hopes to focus on, if he makes it to Washington, include tackling the fentanyl epidemic, as well as seeking a seat on committees that are important to the district, like Agriculture or Energy and Commerce, or ones that draw from his past experience, such as Armed Services. Lynch’s entry into the race wasn’t a surprise — he said he was considering it shortly after the current representative, Ken Buck, announced his retirement — but, notably, it comes just a week after GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert declared she was abandoning a run for her current seat in the 3rd Congressional District to try for the safe Republican 4th district instead. Her announcement didn’t discourage Lynch from entering the race, but he said he worries that it will turn the race in the 4th into “political theater [rather] than us focusing on the issues.”


While it encompasses the Eastern Plains, the majority of the district’s population resides along the Front Range, in Douglas, Weld, and Larimer counties. Whoever wins the GOP primary is expected to have an easy glide path to the U.S. Capitol. Lynch, who resides in Wellington, is an Army veteran who graduated from West Point and served for 11 years. After leaving the military, he bought Western Heritage Company, a Loveland-based manufacturer of custom belt buckles, from his father and still serves as the company’s president. He ran for Colorado’s House of Representatives in 2020 and was reelected in 2022, becoming Minority Leader in 2023.


With the new session starting next week, Lynch said he will continue to serve in that position as he runs for Congress. Aside from Boebert, seven other Republicans are running for the nomination in a rare open congressional election, including one of Lynch’s colleagues, state Rep. Richard Holtorf. Other GOP candidates include former radio host and Senate candidate Deborah Flora, former state Rep. Ted Harvey, and Logan County Commissioner and former state Sen. Jerry Sonnenberg.

bottom of page