staging.rockymountainvoice.com

State

Trump wins 57 of Colorado’s 64 counties in Super Tuesday rout of Haley
Rocky Mountain Voice, State

Trump wins 57 of Colorado’s 64 counties in Super Tuesday rout of Haley

How did your county vote? See the county-by-county outcome below. By BRIAN PORTER | The Rocky Mountain Voice From the Western Slope to the Eastern Plains and from Fort Collins to Trinidad, on Super Tuesday former President Donald Trump garnered broad support from Colorado Republicans across the state. He won 57 of the state’s 64 counties, with more than half of those counties providing him at least 75% support. He won 20 counties – mostly in Eastern Colorado – with at least 80% support in a race that largely came down to Trump against former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Only 3.3% of Republican ballots supported someone other than Trump or Haley. The unofficial ballot count gave Trump 517,884 votes across Colorado to secure 63.3% of the vote, with Haley taking 273,809 for 33...
Trump projected to win Colorado’s Republican primary over Nikki Haley
Rocky Mountain Voice, State

Trump projected to win Colorado’s Republican primary over Nikki Haley

By BRIAN PORTER | The Rocky Mountain Voice Donald Trump is projected as the winner of Colorado’s Republican Party Presidential primary election. In early returns, he collected decisive victories in Douglas, El Paso, Jefferson, Mesa and Weld, taking victories in all but three counties in early returns from the Western Slope to the Eastern Plains. Nikki Haley was leading by about 4,000 votes in Denver County, where she held a campaign event and also in Eagle and Routt Counties. Early returns gave Trump 63.3% support toward his third straight Republican Party nomination in Colorado, with Haley gathering 33.3% of the vote. Among those with suspended campaigns gathering support, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis earned 1.5% support in early returns. Joe Biden is projected to easily earn ...
Secretary Griswold: ‘Election night results are not final results’
Rocky Mountain Voice, State

Secretary Griswold: ‘Election night results are not final results’

By BRIAN PORTER | The Rocky Mountain Voice As polls close on Election Day and votes are tallied, there is a specific process that follows, Secretary of State Jena Griswold indicates. “Election night results are not final results in Colorado,” Griswold said. “After Election Day, ballots continue to be counted, military and oversees voters return their ballots, signature discrepancies can be fixed, and bipartisan audits are conducted to confirm the results – there is quite a bit of activity that occurs after Election Day across the state.” Initial results are not reported within the state until polls close across the state. After polls close at 7 p.m., counties begin to upload results to the state’s centralized Election Night Reporting system, Griswold said, and results will be avai...
Rep. Mike Lynch proposes tougher approach to fentanyl possession
coloradopolitics.com, State

Rep. Mike Lynch proposes tougher approach to fentanyl possession

By Thelma Grimes | Colorado Politics Arguing the status quo has failed to curb overdose deaths in Colorado, a Republican legislator is pushing for legislation to make it a felony for possessing any amount of fentanyl. In response the overdose crisis, state policymakers in 2022 approved legislation to heighten the felony charges for possession of 1 to 4 grams of any substance containing fentanyl. The criminal penalty increase above 4 grams, an under 1 gram, possession is a misdemeanor. In addition, the law allows defendants charged with the new felony to argue to a judge or jury that they didn't know they possessed fentanyl, and if a "finder of fact" determines the defendant made a reasonable mistake of fact, the offense becomes a Level 1 drug misdemeanor. READ THE FUL...
Reminder: Head to the polls today to weigh in on Presidential primary
Rocky Mountain Voice, State

Reminder: Head to the polls today to weigh in on Presidential primary

By BRIAN PORTER | The Rocky Mountain Voice About one-quarter of registered voters statewide had cast a ballot in a party primary entering Monday. Election Day is today, March 5. Among the 838,903 ballots to have been processed, 58.6% have been in the Republican Party. Ballots cast in the Democratic Party primary are trailing by 17.4%. Unaffiliated voters have returned 356,940 ballots, of which 161,274 have been in the Republican Party’s primary and 120,317 of which are being processed. Today, voters will have a couple of options. First, a completed ballot may still be cast at a drop box location through 7 p.m. Also, voters may cast a ballot in-person at the voting center in their county of residence. The last day for a county clerk to receive a ballot by mail is today. Polls are o...
Sonnenberg wins 4th District straw poll in Holyoke, his second straw poll victory
Eastern Plains, Local, Rocky Mountain Voice, State

Sonnenberg wins 4th District straw poll in Holyoke, his second straw poll victory

By BRIAN PORTER | The Rocky Mountain Voice The candidate that emerges in Colorado’s 4th District to represent the eastern third of the state in Congress will have a tall order – to serve a predominately urban population along the Front Range and a mostly rural population along the furthest reaches of the Eastern Plains. Jerry Sonnenberg may have begun making the case he is one who can do it, winning his second straw poll in the district Sunday at a tri-county forum held in Holyoke. The combined Phillips, Sedgwick and Yuma County event drew a crowd of about 200-250 and Sonnenberg came away with 55 of the 184 votes cast to take 29.9% of the vote. Ted Harvey gathered 38 votes to finish second and Lauren Boebert was third with 30 votes. Boebert had won a previous straw poll in Windsor...
Republicans rip Colorado GOP chair Dave Williams over use of party resources to attack primary rival
coloradopolitics.com, State

Republicans rip Colorado GOP chair Dave Williams over use of party resources to attack primary rival

By Ernest Luning | Colorado Politics Colorado Republican Party Chairman Dave Williams is drawing fire from fellow Republicans after the state GOP mailed a brochure to El Paso County voters this week that includes attacks on one of the congressional candidates running against Williams in this year's Republican primary. Since announcing his candidacy in Colorado Springs-based 5th Congressional District in January in an email distributed by the state GOP, Williams has faced calls to step down from the party post, with critics citing party bylaws that prohibit the party and its officers from taking sides in primaries, including on their own behalf. Those calls have intensified this week, including from three of Williams' predecessors as state party chair. "That’s misappropriatio...
The cost of universal pre-K in Colorado: Thousands of at-risk kids got less classroom time
State, The Colorado Sun

The cost of universal pre-K in Colorado: Thousands of at-risk kids got less classroom time

By Brian Eason | Colorado Sun Colorado Gov. Jared Polis’ signature preschool initiative is serving thousands more families than expected in its first year, but its success has come with a costly downside: Fewer low-income children attend full-day preschool today than before the program launched. The trade-off was laid out in stark terms during Joint Budget Committee hearings last month: The more enrollment grows for universal pre-K, the less state funding will be available for at-risk children to attend full-day preschool. Under Colorado’s previous state-funded preschool program, which ended July 1, more than 6,000 at-risk 4-year-olds received funding for a full-day classroom slot last school year. This year, the state provided only 3,500 full-day slots to the most at-risk kids — ...
Colorado lawmakers eye expansion of ‘right to repair’ laws to include electronic equipment
coloradopolitics.com, State

Colorado lawmakers eye expansion of ‘right to repair’ laws to include electronic equipment

By Marissa Ventrelli  | Colorado Politics A proposal in the Colorado House could see a major expansion to the state's "right to repair" laws, notably in the area of electronic equipment, such as mobile phones and other devices.  House Bill 1121 would expand the state's right to repair laws to include digital electronic equipment, such as cellphones, computers, and kitchen appliances. The proposed legislation includes exemptions for a number of products, including motor vehicles, security alarms, and certain medical devices.   The proposal comes on the heels of Colorado's first law on the issue in 2022, under which manufacturers of powered wheelchairs are required to provide independent repair shops and owners of their products with "parts, embedded software, fi...
Reviewing the good and bad bills filed in the Colorado Legislature
State

Reviewing the good and bad bills filed in the Colorado Legislature

The light speed at which bills are proceeding in the Colorado Legislature is daunting, with one member of the House even calling it record-setting. Bills are proceeding with such speed, it is reasonable the majority of Coloradans just can’t keep up with the bills. But, with Democrats holding a super majority in the House, monitoring these bills is essential. Former state legislator Kevin Lundberg attempts to ease the madness in his report of the list of “Significant Bills for 2024”. SEE THE LIST OF GOOD AND BAD BILLS AT KEVIN LUNDBERG.COM