Some Denver elected officials and laid-off staff are accusing Mayor Mike Johnston of weaponizing budget cuts to punish critics of his administration. The big picture: Their reproach reflects growing resentment at City Hall toward Johnston, whose governing style has frustrated many city policymakers. What they're saying: City Clerk and Recorder Paul López yesterday suggested this week's layoffs were retaliatory, calling them "part of a deliberate, hand-selected purge of those in the ranks who've … maintained responsibility and transparency in an administration that is neither." - López also blamed job cuts on Johnston's "mishandling" of the city's budget.
Councilmember Stacie Gilmore, a frequent challenger of the mayor, said on the council dais Monday that her husband, parks department executive Scott Gilmore, had been let go "because of his sassy, loudmouthed wife." - Both Gilmore and her husband called his termination targeted. Scott Gilmore told Denverite it stemmed from his wife's calls for transparency.
Zoom in: Among the 171 people laid off this week was Jessica Calderon, a longtime employee locked in a discrimination lawsuit against the city. - "We can see a pattern of people who [the Johnston administration] didn't want around anymore," she told Axios Denver.
- Calderon claims the city's layoff procedures are neither fair nor transparent — but characteristic of the Johnston administration, something Gilmore and López alluded to in their public statements.
The other side: Johnston's office did not immediately respond to Axios Denver's request for comment. - The mayor has framed his decision to trim jobs as necessary to balance the city's coffers.
The bottom line: The full fallout from this week's decision has yet to unfold, but Johnston now faces the challenge of repairing strained relationships within City Hall. Share this story
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