Hickenlooper: “It’s going to be a battle”
Plus: Clean car sales dip in Colorado, Trump targeting education for 11,000 Colorado kids, tap fee bill heads to Polis and more


Good morning, Sunriser readers!
The weekend forecast calls for a nice, heavy shake of snow in the Denver area, which I’m reading as museum weather.
If you’re near the metro, the Denver Art Museum is opening its new Kent Monkman exhibition, “History is Painted by the Victors,” on Sunday. I was lucky to preview the show earlier this week and, oof, it’s a force.
Monkman spent 12 years as an abstract painter trying to figure out how to make his mark, so to speak, but felt hindered by the inability to paint a clear message. So he turned to the greats and learned the Western canon by recreating it himself, developing his version of the Hudson River School, with a twist. The massive paintings on display at the DAM — some nearly 10 feet tall — integrate Native histories into the classically styled pieces. The paintings are funny at times, disturbing at others, most often they’re both.
There are artsy Easter eggs throughout — a Picasso nod here, a Rothko reference there, some classical Greek and Roman sculpture in the corner. The biggest Easter egg, if you can call her that, hiding in such plain sight, is Monkman’s narrative guide through the exhibition: a stiletto heeled, Two Spirit shapeshifter that he calls Miss Chief.
A warning: The content can be violent at times, and nudity abounds (but hey, we’re talking 19th-century art here, good luck finding a gallery without a little violence and nudity).
The exhibition pairs incredibly well with a visit to the seventh floor of the Martin building, where the DAM’s display of Western art lives, including some original Catlans, Bierstadts and other painters referenced in the Monkman rooms. (It’s also one of my favorite places in the city).
But before you go exploring deep Western history, let’s take a look at its first draft. On to the news.
THE NEWS
POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT
John Hickenlooper’s Western Slope tour reveals growing frustration over Trump’s public lands policy

Colorado’s junior senator is getting an earful. Jason Blevins followed along as Sen. John Hickenlooper toured Eagle County, hearing the boiled-over frustrations in a region that sits in the crosshairs of some of the Trump administration’s most aggressive moves to reshape the government.
TRANSPORTATION
A dip in Colorado electric vehicle sales doesn’t have car dealers panicking — yet

Between a wave of anti-Tesla sentiment and the timing of a scheduled cut in the state’s generous electric vehicle subsidy, car dealers were bracing for a drop. But as Michael Booth reports, a pre-tariff rush kept sales of clean vehicles afloat — for now.
EDUCATION
If Trump ends Head Start, 11,000 of Colorado’s most vulnerable kids could lose vital early learning

For six decades and counting, the Head Start program has been providing vital early education for vulnerable kids — often creating a lifeline of child care and community that allows parents stability for their jobs. But as Erica Breunlin reports, President Trump’s proposal to strike the program from the federal budget would cause disruptions that go far beyond the classroom.
WATER
Colorado lawmakers send Jared Polis bill aimed at reining in water connection fees for new construction

A bill calling on water districts to reduce tap fees — the fee paid to connect a new building to an existing water system — when conservation efforts are included in new developments is headed to the governor’s desk. Shannon Mullane reports on why water districts pushed back and what’s next if the bill becomes law.
MORE NEWS
THE COLORADO REPORT
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THE OPINION PAGE
COMMUNITY
CARTOONS

Drew Litton illustrates fans’ sentiments around the inspiring return from severe injury of Colorado Avalanche captain Gabe Landeskog.
In “What’d I Miss?” Ossie and Myra explore the growth of hypocrisy as consequences disappear — with particularly egregious instances around elections.
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Happy Easter weekend, everyone! See you back here next week.
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