Colorado voters will have the chance through Amendment I in the November election to overrule a state Supreme Court decision that found first-degree murder defendants must be offered bail. Everyone who is charged with a crime in Colorado is entitled to bail — that is,
Colorado lawmakers last year voted to reform the way Colorado’s judges are investigated and disciplined for professional misconduct on the bench — but now voters must give final approval for the reforms to take effect.
Amendment 80 on the state ballot would elevate the right to school choice into the Colorado Constitution. Here’s an explainer.
In every Colorado county, bipartisan teams of election workers will pull random ballots and manually enter their votes into a software portal managed by the Secretary of State’s office. Its job is to compare the audited ballot’s physical entries to the scanned and counted ballot already on file from election night.
Courthouse staff in Grand Junction, Colorado, received multiple threats that were being vetted by law enforcement while extra security was provided
Colorado Voters are set to vote on one of the initiatives that would change how people vote in the next election.
If approved by Colorado voters, the new fund would direct $350 million to recruit and train officers or fund bonuses to keep them. It would likely require unspecified cuts to the state budget to pay for it.
The mayors of Colorado’s three largest cities have endorsed Proposition 131, a statewide ballot measure that proposes to eliminate single-party primaries and enact ranked-choice voting in most state and federal elections.
Former President Trump will appear in Aurora, Colorado, for a campaign rally next week, highlighting illegal immigration and gang violence.
This fall, residents will vote on two major criminal justice ballot measures, one of which would increase the time some criminals serve in prison and the other would create a $350 million fund for police agencies.