Check your mail, Colorado voters. Election officials began sending out ballots on Friday, October 10, giving Coloradans a preview of the various issues they’ll be asked to weigh in on come Election Day, November 4. Residents can check and update their voter registration at sos.state.co.us.
The 2025 Coordinated election is just three weeks away, and Teller County voters have a lot to decide from municipal government leaders to school district offices.
Election season is here again, though voters are in for a quieter year compared to last. Voters in Colorado won’t be weighing in on any national races — control of Congress will be decided
A billion-dollar bond proposal and a significant change to how at-large council members are elected are among the questions Denver voters will weigh in on in the city’s 2025 municipal election. Ballots began going out by mail Oct.
Littleton voters in November will decide whether the city’s land-use code should be frozen as it was at the beginning of the year, essentially locking single-family zoning into place and preventing higher density neighborhoods.
Propositions LL and MM on Colorado’s 2025 ballot will determine if the universal free school meals program can reach sustainability or if it will be significantly cut back.
The Nov. 4 off-year election will feature two state ballot issues and a wide array of local measures and candidates running for office, but no federal or statewide races.
Jurinsky and four other conservative Aurora City Council candidates are backed by Building Aurora’s Future, an independent expenditure committee that has raised a combined $295,000 this year from Advance Colorado and Our Community Our Future, two dark money groups that do not disclose their donors.
Term limits are up across many of Colorado Springs’ larger school districts, so big changes could be coming to local education’s leadership following the November coordinated election. Candidates are vying for multiple seats in Colorado Springs D-11 and Academy D-20.
Colorado begins mail-in ballot distribution for the 2025 Coordinated Election, with important deadlines outlined.
An Arapahoe County judge will soon decide if a controversial ballot measure in Littleton will be counted. It's a fight over what neighborhoods will look like and what property owners can do with their land.
The 2025 Coordinated election is just three weeks away, and Pueblo County residents have a lot to decide from municipal government leaders to reshaping the Pueblo City charter.