Colorado Republican Ken Buck made a crack about Senate primary opponent Jane Norton's shoes at a campaign event this week. Analysts ask whether enough women voters will take offense to tip the balance of a close race.
Washington
Note to guys: Never go after a woman about her footwear.
Colorado Senate candidate Ken Buck stepped in it this week at a campaign event when he was asked why people should vote for him over Lt. Gov. Jane Norton in the Republican primary. “Because I do not wear high heels,” he replied to laughter. Then, for good measure, he pointed to his cowboy boots and proudly stated he had real, local bull excrement on them, “not Washington, DC, bull****.” (Video below.)
But forget about the scatology. It was the high heels comment, caught on video, that made it a YouTube moment and gave Lt. Gov. Norton all the ammo she needed for a new campaign ad, posted on her website Thursday and launched on TV Friday.
Mr. Buck, district attorney of Weld County and a “tea party” favorite, had been surging in the polls against the establishment-backed Norton. But now, with mail-in ballots going out this week for the Aug. 10 primary, Norton is getting another look – and could get a boost from the crucial female vote.
There’s no doubt the footwear flap is “very distracting at a minimum and it could make a difference,” says Floyd Ciruli, a Denver-based nonpartisan pollster.
Buck says Norton started it. She had gone after him previously for attack ads paid for by outside groups, saying he wasn’t “man enough” to go after her himself.
“She has questioned my manhood; I think it’s fair to respond,” Buck told the crowd at the Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms picnic sponsored by the conservative Independence Institute.