Colorado Democrats are openly questioning Jared Polis’ political future after Senator Michael Bennet suggested the governor’s decision to commute Tina Peters’ prison sentence may have effectively ended any path to higher office.
In a CNN news clip being discussed in an online Colorado forum, Bennet stopped short of directly attacking Polis, but made clear he viewed the commutation as politically devastating. Bennet said he believed Polis understood the move was “disqualifying” when it came to future political ambitions, adding that he would not appoint him to the Senate.
That framing instantly fueled online backlash, with many Colorado locals arguing that the governor had torched years of political capital for no clear gain. The discussion over on the Denver subreddit lit up, focused on local politics, with commenters repeatedly describing the decision as a betrayal by a governor many once viewed as one of the Democratic Party’s rising stars.
“The dude was genuinely well-liked just two years ago,” one Denver-area user wrote. “Now he’s just made literally everyone dislike him.” Another went so far as to say“Polis… what a pathetic legacy.”
Much of the outrage centered on the fact that Peters, the former Mesa County clerk convicted for her role in a voting system breach tied to election denial efforts, was already expected to receive a resentencing hearing after an appeals ruling.
To many commenters, that made Polis’ intervention feel unnecessary and politically reckless.
“She warranted no commutation,” one user wrote. Another added: “The courts were already in the process of reviewing the case. I think that makes Polis’s decision worse, not better.”
“What Else Can He Say?”
While Bennet’s remarks drew attention, the Reddit conversation largely became a referendum on Polis himself rather than the Colorado senator.
Several commenters argued that Bennet was acknowledging political reality. Others framed the governor’s decision as the final straw after years of simmering frustration over his policies and leadership style.
“He’s been nothing but a disappointment,” one commenter wrote, while another said: “Those of us who voted for him all did so for different reasons. But sadly, he’s basically burned us all.”
The backlash also spread to social media, where users claimed Polis deleted and reposted announcements related to the commutation after receiving overwhelming criticism in the replies.
Even commenters skeptical of Bennet’s motives appeared to agree on one point: the Tina Peters decision may have permanently altered how Polis is viewed by many Democratic voters in Colorado.
Whether that anger lasts beyond the current news cycle remains unclear, but the online reaction suggests Bennet’s comments tapped into a growing sense among local Colorado voters that Polis’ once-promising national reputation has taken a major hit.







