Friday, September 20, 2024
HomeOpinionPueblo's mayor let lobbyist write guest column that ran under her name

Pueblo’s mayor let lobbyist write guest column that ran under her name

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Last month, The Denver Post published a guest commentary from the mayor of Pueblo imploring lawmakers to kill two bills working their way through the Colorado General Assembly. She said they were “threatening to the future” of Pueblo and Southern Colorado.

Regrettably, Mayor Heather Graham did not write those words, or any of the words in the opinion column, although she told reporters that she read the writing and agreed to put her name on the work.

I want to take this opportunity toclarify that The Denver Post expects the byline on anything we publish, whether that is a news story or a column, to reflect who actually wrote the piece.  Certainly, there is room for collaboration on opinion columns – including dual bylines and seeking input from colleagues and media relations experts.

Reporters for the Colorado Times Recorder and the Pueblo Chieftain discovered that Graham had not written the column after using the state’s open records law to request emails from the mayor about the column, which also was published in the Chieftain.

Emails between Graham and a lobbyist working for EVRAZ, an international company that owns the steel mill in Pueblo, showed that a lobbyist, Sean Duffy, wrote the piece and presented it to Graham for her to put her name on.

The column opposed two air-quality bills and made a point to say the bills were written by special interest groups rather than lawmakers. That is ironic because Graham’s op-ed was written by a special interest group — owners of a steel mill that could be regulated — rather than by a mayor concerned for the jobs of her constituents.

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The column included compelling phrases like: “I, like other small business owners, don’t need to read the news to know when plants reduce shifts, or are forced into layoffs. In our case, we count the empty seats, and we, along with our workers, feel the reduced income.”

Graham responded to the email draft saying, “This is fantastic, sounds just like me.”

Duffy, who I have worked with for years as both a reporter and now as an opinion editor, submitted the column to me. I selected the piece for many reasons, including that it expressed a strong opinion on Colorado issues that would be of interest to our readers. I knew, Duffy, who works with Shamrock Strategies, had worked with Graham on the op-ed and I knew he likely solicited the op-ed as part of his work as a lobbyist opposed to the legislation.

I did not specifically ask Duffy who wrote the piece submitted under Graham’s name. Next time a lobbyist or intermediary offers us a column, I will.

Graham told a reporter for the Chieftain that this is common practice – nothing to see here.



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