Spending on the litany of measures on Coloradans’ ballots has surpassed $24.5 million, led by the campaigns to overhaul the state’s election system and to protect abortion access in the state constitution.
The 2024 election is now just a few weeks away and it certainly feels like it in Boulder. On Saturday, different political rallies were going on all across the city, including one hosted by the YWCA that focused on the future of abortion access in Colorado.
When I look at my monthly stock market account, I am pleased. When I go to a restaurant, I see smaller crowds. When I go to the grocery store, I sometimes cringe,” said Broomfield
Colorado head coach Deion Sanders called out Barack Obama after the former president incorrectly predicted Arizona would beat Sanders' Colorado Buffaloes.
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
As the 2024 election approaches, here's what to know about ballot tracking, vote-by-mail deadlines, and finding your polling site in Colorado.
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.
The 8th Congressional District seat is the deciding vote in Colorado State Board of Education's decisions to side with a charter school or school district.
As election day draws near, all eyes are on Colorado's Congressional District 8. The race is one of handful that will decide control of the U.S. House.
Proposition 131 is backed by big money from Kent Thiry and other billionaires. That makes me a little nervous.
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.