The Colorado Secretary of State’s office said mail ballots will be sent out sometime in the next week or two. With election season coming up, here are a few things that might help potential voters. According to Colorado’s Secretary of State’s Office,
The November election is approaching quickly — so quickly that Colorado’s ballots will begin arriving in mailboxes just two weeks from now. The Denver Post’ staff is now at work on our fall election coverage.
Independent expenditure committees are pouring money into a handful of competitive Colorado legislative races ahead of November’s election, which will determine the size of Democrats’ majorities in the state House and Senate.
Proposition 131 on Colorado’s November ballot proposes significant changes to how many high-profile elections would be conducted.
Last month, opponents of party chair Dave Williams voted to oust him after a series of controversies, including using party resources for his congressional campaign, attacking fellow Republicans and making anti-LGBTQ remarks.
Kent Thiry first came to Colorado in 1973 for a high school student government conference. After the four-day event ended, the teen called his parents back in Wisconsin to ask for some money. He didn’t want to leave just yet.
Amendment 79 would put the right to an abortion in the state constitution. This is a constitutional amendment, so it will need 55% of the vote to pass.
September, former President Donald Trump said he planned to visit Aurora “in the next two weeks” as he stoked a national firestorm about immigration and an alleged Venezuelan gang takeover in the city.
While ballots don’t get mailed to Colorado voters until Oct. 11, county clerks were permitted to start handing out ballots to eligible voters as of Sept. 21. Clerks aren’t required to provide ballots to eligible voters until Oct.
Colorado Republicans are fighting to hold onto Rep. Lauren Boebert's seat in the 3rd Congressional District after she switched to CD4.
The complaint, from a parent, says the district violated laws on considering the needs of all public schools and wrongly advocated for a bond proposal to raise money from voters.