Michael Bennet

Senator from Colorado
Jump to  stances on the issues
Michael Bennet dropped out of the presidential race on February 11, 2020. This page is no longer being updated.
Bennet has pitched himself as a pragmatic lawmaker with a progressive voting record. He was first appointed to the US Senate in 2009 and subsequently elected in 2010 and 2016.
Wesleyan University, B.A., 1987; Yale Law School, 1993
November 28, 1964
Susan Daggett
Unaffiliated
Halina, Anne and Caroline
Superintendent of Denver Public Schools, 2005-2009;
Chief of staff to Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper, 2003;
Managing director, Anschutz Investment Company, 1997-2003;
Special assistant to the US attorney for Connecticut, 1997;
Counsel to the US deputy attorney general, 1995-1997

BENNET IN THE NEWS

7 takeaways from the Colorado Senate debate
Updated 11:59 PM ET, Fri Oct 28, 2022
In a year when they are hoping for a red wave, Republicans have set their sights on defeating Colorado Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet in their quest to gain control of the Senate chamber. On Friday night, Bennet engaged in a fast-paced and testy final debate with moderate GOP rival Joe O'Dea, who has distanced himself from former president Donald Trump as he has blamed Democrats for inflation and an energy policy that "straps working Americans." Bennet, a Democrat who unsuccessfully ran for the White House in 2020, is facing a tougher than expected challenge from O'Dea, a construction company CEO and first-time candidate. Inside Elections currently rates the race as "Likely Democratic." In a year when many Republican candidates clinched their primaries by showing their fealty to Trump, O'Dea is the rare GOP contender who has been eager to flex his independence from the former president. Things got heated during the Friday night matchup at Colorado State University in Fort Collins as both Bennet and O'Dea sought to win over undecided independent voters in their state, which President Joe Biden won by 13 percentage points. At one point, Bennet repeatedly blasted O'Dea for what said were inaccuracies about the number of bills he has passed: "You're a liar Joe," he said. "You're a liar." He also sought to cast O'Dea as an opportunist who would make policy decisions to curry favor with wealthy Americans. But O'Dea said in his closing argument that the election "is a referendum on Joe Biden and his economy." Here are seven takeaways from their matchup: Bennet seeks distance from Biden Biden's approval ratings have been a drag on many Democratic candidates and Bennet came prepared with examples of areas where he would distance himself from the president. Bennet, for example, said he disagreed with Biden's approach to student loan debt forgiveness, saying the president should have been more targeted with effort to forgive up to $20,000 in student loans for those earning less than $125,000 per year. "I don't think he should've done it the way he did it," Bennet said. "It wasn't nearly what I thought they should do, which is do it for the people that need it the most -- the poorest people in our country that have that debt. ... I just think it's wrong for them to do it that way," Bennet said. Bennet repeatedly tried to tie O'Dea to Trump Even though O'Dea has distanced himself from Trump, Bennet repeatedly sought to remind the audience that O'Dea voted for the former president. As he touted his own record pushing for a bipartisan compromise to address the country's immigration issues as part of the "Gang of 8," he pivoted to an attack on O'Dea for voting for Trump in 2016 and 2020. "I didn't vote for a president who made it impossible for us to get anything done on immigration," Bennet said. "Joe O'Dea voted for that president twice." O'Dea rebuffed that jab: "A lot of talking. We are hearing a lot of talking. You have been talking for 13 years and you haven't got it done. Michael Bennet doesn't deliver results. What he does is vote with Joe Biden 98% of the time," O'Dea said. "And the result is an economy that's trash." The moderator, at one point, asked O'Dea -- who recently told CNN's Dana Bash that he would "actively" oppose the former president if he ran for the White House in 2024 -- whether he stood by his previous statements that he'd still vote for Trump if he's the 2024 Republican nominee. "I said what I said," O'Dea replied. "I'm a contractor, not a politician." Bennet didn't let that opportunity slip away. He noted that O'Dea voted for Trump "after children were separated from their parents at the border" and after the former president said there were "good people" on both sides after violence erupted at a gathering of White supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia. "What changed?" Bennet directly asked O'Dea, that would lead him to say that he would still support Trump in 2024 after all his criticism of the former president. "Well, I started thinking about Joe Biden serving another four years and you serving another six years and I gotta tell you, it's terrifying," O'Dea said. "Working Americans here, need a voice. I'll be the voice of reason that says, 'You know what, we need to be disciplined. We need to do what's right for Colorado instead of just hanging with my party 98% of the time.'" Bennet breaks down Democrats' efforts to lower costs for Americans Democrats have struggled to articulate a message that both addresses the economic pain that Americans are feeling while simultaneously touting their own legislative accomplishment, including the health care, tax and climate bill they passed this year known as the "Inflation Reduction Act." One of the debate moderators noted that despite the name of the act, it "will not, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, reduce inflation in any meaningful way." Did Democrats, the moderator asked Bennet, mislead Americans by calling it that? Bennet disputed the notion that the American people were misled and tried to break down that legislation into clear, digestible bites, including the savings that Colorado voters might expect from it. "Unlike the Trump tax cuts -- this bill was actually paid for and it would cap drug prices for seniors at $2,000 in Colorado," he said. "It would require Medicare for the first time in American history to negotiate drug prices on behalf of the American people. And it caps insulin at $35 a month. Joe O'Dea says there's nothing to like in that bill. I think there are a lot of Coloradans, especially seniors, that are going to find a lot to like in this bill." Key differences on abortion A common attack line from Republicans after the Supreme Court overturned the Roe v. Wade decision is that it is Democrats who are too extreme on abortion -- because some progressive candidates have not defined what limits, if any, they would place on the procedure. Bennet defended his support of legislation that would not put restrictions on abortion in Friday night's debate. "Only 1% of the abortions in our state in this country are late term abortions. And they're the worst circumstances a mother could have," Bennet said. "These are circumstances where she's carried the baby to term. She's picked out a room for the child. She's named the child. She's expecting the child to be there and for medically horrific reasons. She's having to have an abortion. That's 1%. And I don't think Joe O'Dea should be in that hospital room with her when she's got to make that decision. I don't think any politician should." O'Dea, for his part, said he supports "a woman's right to choose" up to five months. After that time period, the Republican said he supports exceptions for rape, incest and medical emergencies including risk to the life of the mother. "I can't vote for late term abortion. I believe women's health rights are paramount," O'Dea said. "I would support a woman's right to choose up to and including five months. ... Michael Bennet on the other hand, he has voted for abortion up to, and including the moment of birth, and he wants to use taxpayer funding to pay for it. To me that's extreme." Common ground on guns Bennet and O'Dea found some common ground when moderators asked about gun control measures. Both said they support universal background checks, and both said they opposed mandatory 10-day waiting periods to purchase firearms. But they split on whether to increase the legal age to purchase assault rifles from 18 to 21. Bennet said he would support such a measure; O'Dea said he wants "no more laws" on guns. "We've got plenty of laws on the books," O'Dea said. "We need to enforce the laws that are on the books now. And I will not be lectured by Democrats that say we need to change this gun law, change that gun law, when they fail to enforce the laws that we already have on the books." O'Dea also said he opposes a ban on the sale of assault rifles, which Bennet supports. "I think we've made enough of these weapons of war in this country," Bennet said. A split on immigration O'Dea said he would not support legislation to create a path to citizenship for those who benefited from the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program if the legislation did not include other provisions like funding for border security. The program was intended to help undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children (many of whom are now adults). "No, we need a comprehensive bill. We need one that safes up and secures the border, which includes putting up a barrier to give working sheriffs, Border Patrol, a break down there. That's what they are asking us to do," O'Dea said. "In that same bill, I would support legislation that would include DACA recipients getting their citizenship." Bennet, by contrast, was eager to show his commitment to stand-alone legislation that would address the legal limbo that DACA recipients have faced. "Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes," Bennet said. "That puts me in a totally different place from where Joe O'Dea is, who just said he wouldn't vote for a standalone bill for DACA." "Unfortunately, the president that Joe O'Dea voted for twice after he called Mexicans 'rapists' on the first day of his campaign, made it impossible for the national Republican party to move forward on immigration," Bennet added. A lively debate on Space Command O'Dea said Bennet should have drawn greater inspiration during his time in Washington from a Democratic thorn in his own party's side: West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin. O'Dea's comments came as the two discussed the planned move of US Space Command from Colorado Springs, Colorado, to Huntsville, Alabama -- a decision made while Trump was in office. Bennet said he has pressed the case to the White House and the Pentagon for keeping Space Command in Colorado. But O'Dea said Bennet should have exercised the same sort of power that Manchin has to extract concessions in a Senate evenly divided 50-50, where Vice President Kamala Harris casts the tie-breaking vote and Democrats cannot afford to lose a single vote on their priorities. "I'm going to use my seat like Joe Manchin has used his seat to get good things for West Virginia," O'Dea said. "All Michael Bennet had to do was say, 'You know what, I'm going to hold up this appointment. I'm going to hold up this bill. I'm going to hold up that bill.'" "Fifty is what the count is, and they needed every vote. And I would use my seat to make sure that we keep Space Command here in Colorado. It's that important," O'Dea said. "If you would have held up one just of those votes -- one of those votes -- we would have Space Command here," O'Dea added. Bennet shot back that O'Dea didn't rescind his support for Trump at the time the Space Command move was announced, but rather waited until just before the Senate election to break with the former
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STANCES ON THE ISSUES

climate crisis
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Bennet has said he doesn’t support the Green New Deal, the broad plan to address renewable-energy infrastructure and climate change proposed by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. Instead, he has released his own five-principle plan, which would significantly increase the protection of public lands. “I think it is great that we have a bunch of bold proposals out there,” Bennet said in May 2019. “We are going to have a competition of ideas.” Bennet has set a target of 100% net-zero emissions by no later than 2050, although he has not detailed how he would reach this goal. He also said he would create a $1 trillion “climate bank” to invest in infrastructure and, he hopes, spur private investment in green energy innovation. Bennet says the plan would create 10 million jobs over a decade related to what he calls the “zero-emission economy.”Bennet has said he would keep the US in the Paris climate agreement, a landmark 2015 deal on global warming targets that Trump has pledged to abandon. More on Bennet’s climate crisis policy
economy
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Bennet has not signed on with congressional Democratic efforts to pass a $15 minimum wage. According to his campaign, he favors an increase to $12 per hour. He’s also introduced legislation to expand the Earned Income Tax Credit and overhaul and expand the child tax credit, which currently provides families with a credit of up to $2,000 for each dependent under 17. Under Bennet’s plan, families would get a $300 monthly credit for each child under 6 and $250 a month for each child under 17. He has actively opposed some of Trump’s trade actions. With Sen. Patty Murray of Washington state, Bennet filed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act to reverse the President’s tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, and he has opposed Trump’s trade war with China, specifically because of the negative impact on American farmers. But he has also said Trump “was right to call China out.” More on Bennet’s economic policy
education
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Bennet unveiled a plan in September 2019 pledging that by 2028, “every child born in this country, regardless of circumstance, will be at the center of a community that offers them a real chance to flourish personally and prosper financially,” according to his campaign. The plan calls for a federal-state partnership to establish free nationwide preschool, support for school districts that establish longer school days and school years, free community college for all Americans, increases to teacher pay and more funding for schools in rural areas and “high-poverty and otherwise underserved schools.” As Denver schools superintendent, Bennet was deeply involved in shaping merit-pay plans for teachers. As a presidential candidate he has called for taking steps to raise teacher pay. “We have to pay teachers as the professionals that they are. And that’s not just a little bit more. That is a lot more,” he said at a CNN town hall. More on Bennet’s education policy
gun violence
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Bennet has voted to ban high-capacity magazines and supports universal background checks. While he did not co-sponsor the Assault Weapons Ban of 2019, Bennet says he would support banning so-called assault weapons. He did not endorse the recent legislation because it “was overly drawn and allowed the manufacturers to avoid the ban,” he told CNN in May 2019.
healthcare
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Bennet is not in favor of plans that would eliminate private insurance. He co-sponsored a plan known as “Medicare-X” that would let individuals and small businesses buy government-backed insurance policies, known as a public option, on the Affordable Care Act exchanges. The plan would also allow the government to negotiate prescription drug prices. Bennet says Americans should still have choice when it comes to health insurance. “We need to get to universal health care,” he said during the first Democratic debate. “I believe the way to do that is by finishing the work we started with Obamacare and creating a public option.” In July 2019, he introduced a rural health care plan that would harness technology to provide medical services in rural communities, including allowing doctors to see patients via video chat and remotely monitor patients. The plan would provide up to $10,000 a year in loan forgiveness and repayment support for doctors, nurses and other health care professionals who choose to work in rural areas. And it would invest $60 billion to combat substance abuse, including building more treatment centers. More on Bennet’s health care policy
immigration
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Bennet has compared Trump’s separation of families at the border to his Jewish mother’s experience being separated from her own parents as a child in Poland during the Holocaust. “When I see these kids at the border, I see my mom,” Bennet said during the first Democratic debate. He has called for overhauling the asylum process and restoring aid to El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras to reduce the flow of migrants north. He’s a co-sponsor to a Senate bill called the Stop Cruelty to Migrant Children Act. Bennet has said he still stands by the last major bipartisan immigration package, negotiated in 2013, which included a pathway to citizenship for some undocumented immigrants. He also co-sponsored the DREAM Act of 2009, some of which was eventually put into effect through Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program protecting from deportation some undocumented immigrants who arrived in the US as minors.

LATEST POLITICAL NEWS

Biden speaks at Morehouse College commencement
Updated 12:27 PM ET, Sun May 19, 2024
President Joe Biden spent much of his commencement address focusing on the theme of democracy, while touting his administration's work for Black Americans. As a handful of student turned their chairs in a silent protest of Biden, the president listed some virtues of a healthy democracy. "In a democracy, we debate and dissent about America's role in the world," Biden said. He added: "I want to say this very clearly -- I support peaceful, nonviolent protest. Your voices should be heard. I promise you, I hear them." Biden said he was determined to make his "administration look like America" when he became president. "I have more African Americans in high places, including on the court, than any president in American history. Because I need the input," he said. Biden then shifted to the Middle East, calling the situation in Gaza a "humanitarian crisis" while saying his administration is working toward a ceasefire with the release of hostages. President Joe Biden subtly teased his hopes for the political future of his vice president and running mate while delivering the Morehouse commencement on Sunday. Saying he was "proud to put in the first Black woman on the United States Supreme Court," Biden added that he had "no doubt one day a Morehouse man will be on that court as well." He then added he had "no doubt a Morehouse man will be president one day - just after an AKA from Howard." Harris was a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, a historically Black sorority, during her time as a student at Howard University. President Joe Biden said he's called for an "immediate ceasefire" in Gaza while delivering his commencement address at Morehouse College. “What’s happening in Gaza and Israel is heartbreaking," he said. He continued: "It's a humanitarian crisis in Gaza," the president said. "That's why I've called for an immediate ceasefire - an immediate ceasefire to stop the fighting and bring the hostages home." It was a forceful call for a ceasefire and an urgent call for a political solution in Gaza. Biden has previously said his administration is working towards a temporary ceasefire to secure the release of hostages still being held in Gaza. The president continued: “What happens in Gaza, what rights do the Palestinian people have? I'm working to make sure we finally get a two-state solution -- the only solution where two people live in peace, security, and dignity,” he said. As Biden began speaking, a student in the audience unfurled a Palestinian flag and held it up. Some students in the audience have turned their chairs so they are facing away from the president as he delivers his commencement address. President Joe Biden took the podium at Morehouse College at 10:29 a.m. ET. He started his remarks by recognizing the relatives of graduating seniors. "A lot of you, like my family, had to make significant sacrifices to get your kids to school," the president said. Morehouse College has conferred an honorary degree to President Joe Biden. Biden is the third US President to receive the honorific from Morehouse. President Barack Obama received an honorary degree when he delivered a commencement address at the college in 2013. Jimmy Carter received one in 1975, before he became president. Morehouse faculty approved Biden's honorary degree in a vote earlier this week. Morehouse valedictorian DeAngelo Fletcher called for a ceasefire in Gaza while speaking ahead of President Joe Biden's commencement address. "The Israel-Gaza conflict has plagued the people of its region for generations," Fletcher said while Biden looked on behind him. "It is important to recognize that both sides have suffered heavy casualties in the wake of October 7. From the comfort of our homes, we watched an unprecedented number of civilians mourn the loss of men, women and children. Fletcher called for the release of all hostages. He then continued: "For the first time in our lives, we've heard the global community sing one harmonious song that transcends language and culture." "It is my stance as a Morehouse man - nay, as a human being - to call for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in the Gaza Strip," he said. President Joe Biden has taken the stage at Morehouse College's commencement ceremony. He was met with applause and chants of "four more years" from the section reserved for graduates' families. Ahead of Sunday's commencement address, President Joe Biden consulted with prominent Black public figures for weeks and White House officials traveled to Morehouse College's campus to hold forth with students and faculty and attempt to quell their concerns. During a meeting in early May, roughly half of the two-hour conversation focused on the conflict in Gaza, one source said. Stephen Benjamin, the director of the White House office of public engagement, said he and the students had a wide-ranging conversation, which again included the conflict in the Middle East. Students are also concerned that their achievements will be overshadowed by a stump speech, according to people familiar with the discussions. They have expressed frustration that the format of the event and the level of security required for such a high-profile visit resulted in limited tickets for family members, many of whom must watch from an overflow room. Biden's scheduled appearance at Morehouse is a shift in strategy as the president has largely shied away from addressing large crowds of young people on college campuses, a change that came shortly after his January remarks on abortion rights at Virginia’s George Mason University were interrupted more than a dozen times by protesters outraged at his continued support for Israel in its war in Gaza. The Middle East conflict spurred more than 1,360 student demonstrations on campuses across the country from October 7 to May 3, according to data compiled by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.  “I understand people have strong feelings of deep convictions,” Biden said during brief remarks from the White House on campus protests earlier this month. “In America, we respect the right and protect the right for them to express that. But it doesn’t mean anything goes.” The program for Morehouse College's commencement began before 9 a.m. ET. President Joe Biden has arrived at the college and will speak later in the program. President Joe Biden has departed for Morehouse College, where he will deliver a commencement address later this morning. Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said Thursday he would shut down commencement ceremonies “on the spot” rather than allow police to remove student protesters in zip ties during President Joe Biden’s graduation speech. Biden’s scheduled commencement speech Sunday at one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges comes as school officials around the country have called in law enforcement to clear pro-Palestinian encampments and quell demonstrations in recent weeks. “What we won’t allow is disruptive behavior that prevents the ceremony or services from proceeding in a manner that those in attendance can partake and enjoy,” Thomas told CNN. “So, for example, prolonged shouting down of the president as he speaks. I have also made a decision that we will also not ask police to take individuals out of commencement in zip ties. If faced with the choice, I will cease the ceremonies on the spot, if we were to reach that position.” Biden’s presence on the Atlanta campus also comes as he seeks to persuade young voters to send him to the White House for another term, even as many have expressed frustration for his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. Thomas said the college will not allow “hate speech,” meaning any “calls for violence against another group or individual.” He said Morehouse is a place that “can hold the tensions” that have come to a boil at campuses across the nation. Ahead of President Joe Biden's commencement address at Morehouse College on Sunday, the school is bracing for enhanced security measures and potential pro-Palestinian protests amid the president’s stalwart support for Israel’s campaign against Hamas.  There have been mixed reactions within the Morehouse community to Biden’s presence on campus. Morehouse extended the invitation to Biden to speak in September, a month before the Israel-Hamas war started, but since the announcement that Biden would deliver the commencement speech, several student-led protests have taken place on and off the Morehouse campus.  Noah Collier, a senior, told CNN that his school needs to rescind Biden’s invitation because, he says, if the president speaks on his campus this weekend, it “shows our institution’s complicity in all of the injustices created by Biden’s Cabinet and the US government.” Meanwhile, Calvin Bell, another senior, told CNN that he is "looking forward to Biden coming on campus in order to hear what his speech truly has to say." “As someone who has felt very weird at this portion in time and history, with the tension in Gaza, I think it’s important for Biden to come with the intention of wrestling with the issues at hand, and reassuring students such as myself, as well as our family members, who are a part of the Black community," Bell said. The Morehouse address is under the microscope as a potential litmus test for the president’s strength with young voters of color in the fall. The president’s advisers say he’s intent on keeping the focus on the graduates even as the prospect of protests lingers over the event. Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said it wouldn’t be in Biden’s interest to “give a campaign stump speech.” He called on the president to discuss what the school represents, lay out his vision for “a more inclusive economy” and address the Israel-Hamas war.
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