NewsMontana Politics

Actions

Mayor Wilmot Collins running for U.S. Senate

Posted
and last updated

Wilmot Collins says as Helena’s mayor, he’s seen the importance of listening to the people he represents. Now, he says he wants to bring that philosophy to Washington, D.C. as a United States senator.

“For far too long, and far too often, we have had politicians representing us in D.C., and not public servants,” Collins said.

On Monday, Collins officially launched a campaign for Senate, in an event at Performance Square, on Helena’s downtown Walking Mall. He is the first Democratic candidate to announce a challenge to incumbent Republican Sen. Steve Daines of Bozeman.

“Somebody needs to change the climate in Washington,” he said. “If nobody’s stepping up, Mayor Collins is.”

Collins is a child protection specialist with the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, and a former member of the U.S. Navy Reserve. He began his political career in 2017, when he challenged Helena’s four-term incumbent mayor Jim Smith. Collins won, becoming the first black mayor officially elected in Montana.

Collins’ victory drew national media attention because of his background. He came to the United States in 1994, as a refugee from the civil war in his native Liberia. He joined his wife and daughter in Helena.

Collins called the welcome his family received in Montana an “improbable gift.”

“You gave my family an amazing life, which is why I wake up every morning finding new ways to serve and exemplify my eternal gratitude for this great state and nation,” he said.

Collins said one of his top policy priorities will be reforming the country’s campaign finance system.

“We don’t need anybody’s dark money influencing the outcome of our elections,” he said. “We are perfectly capable of using our own voice to determine our own representation.”

He also called for expanding health care coverage, taking action to address climate change, and improving services for veterans.

Collins said he plans to campaign in every county in the state.

“Not only Helena, not only Billings, not only Missoula, not only Great Falls – Montana needs representation,” he said. “I’m going to go there, I’m going to visit with them, I’m going to listen to them, and I’m going to take their issues and make their issues my issues for Washington.”

A spokesperson for Daines’ campaign released a statement on Collins’ entry into the 2020 race.

“Sen. Daines looks forward to having thoughtful conversations during this campaign on how to best protect our Montana way of life and create good-paying Montana jobs,” they said.

Debra Lamm, chair of the Montana Republican Party, also released a statement, claiming that Collins will be out of step with Montanans.

“Wilmot Collins is just another liberal Democrat who will be a rubberstamp for the far-left’s radical agenda,” she said. “Collins will stand against President Trump every chance he gets and reverse all that we’ve accomplished these last few years.”

-Reported by Jonathon Ambarian/MTN News