Inflation has slowed, but the pain lingers. The pandemic upended the economy, but the fundamentals remain solid. How will that affect voters as they fill out Colorado ballots?
As the 2024 election approaches, here's what to know about ballot tracking, vote-by-mail deadlines, and finding your polling site in Colorado.
Plus: Mike Johnston on his affordable housing push. Interesting campaign donations. New TV ads in CD3 and CD8.
Plus: A setback for Denver Water is a win for environmentalists, updated health insurance prices, who are the Free Land Holders and more Colorado news
You can put the ballot in the mail as long as it has time to get to the county clerk's office by Election Day. If you're worried there isn't enough time for your ballot to be sent via mail, then return your ballot in person. You can find a list of all ballot collection boxes in Larimer County on the Larimer Clerk and Recorder's site.
Colorado voters must pick new elected leaders and answer a litany of major policy questions in the 2024 election. Why it matters: The ballot is the longest in history, making the November election one of the most consequential in recent memory.
Three-term U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse again faces a challenge for his seat in the House of Representatives from Longmont-based tech worker Marshall Dawson.
A blue bus emblazoned with the words “Fighting for Reproductive Freedom” pulled up outside a brewery in Denver last week, attracting a crowd of over 100 people. It was part of the Harris-Walz campaign’s effort to bring the national battle for abortion access to Colorado.
Republican Jarvis Caldwell faces Democrat Arik Dougherty in the race for Colorado House District 20, a seat left open when Monument Republican Don Wilson decided to throw his hat into
Republican candidate Elizabeth Riggs is challenging Democratic incumbent Regina English this November to represent Colorado State House District 17.
Sen. JD Vance is standing by his running mate, former President Donald Trump, and his false claims that Venezuelan gangs have invaded and conquered Aurora, Colorado.
A total of roughly $26 million has been spent so far by the groups supporting and opposing the 14 statewide measures on the November ballot