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2024 Colorado Proposition 131

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Proposition 131

November 5, 2024
Establishing All‑Candidate Primary and Ranked Choice Voting General Elections
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 1,385,060 46.47%
No 1,595,256 53.53%
Total votes 2,980,316 100.00%

2024 Colorado Proposition 131 was a proposed ballot measure that appeared before voters in Colorado during the 2024 general election. The citizen initiated proposition would have replaced Colorado's partisan primaries with non-partisan blanket primaries and would have implemented ranked-choice (instant-runoff) voting for most statewide and state legislative general elections in which the top four candidates in the primary would have qualified for the general election ballot.[1]

Background

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Currently, Colorado uses partisan primaries to select who appears on general election ballots and a first past the post voting system like most US states. Had Proposition 131 passed, Colorado would have switched to a system of blanket primaries and ranked choice general elections. Similar systems were adopted by Maine in 2016 and Alaska in 2020. The proposition was initiated by citizen petition, largely funded by health care executive Kent Thiry. Similar proposals were on the ballot in Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Oregon, funded by a network of donors of which Thiry is a part.[1]

In 2024, Governor Jared Polis signed into law Senate Bill 210 which heightened requirements for the adoption of ranked choice voting in Colorado. Specifically, the law requires that at least 12 communities of various required sizes adopt ranked choice voting at a local level before it can be implemented statewide. This made it unclear how quickly ranked choice voting would have been implemented in Colorado had Proposition 131 passed. However, Polis had committed to ensuring ranked choice voting was put into effect by the 2028 election if voters approved the proposition. In addition, Polis endorsed the measure.[2]

Contents

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The proposition will appeared on the ballot as follows:[3]

Shall there be a change to the Colorado Revised Statutes creating new election processes for certain federal and state offices, and, in connection therewith, creating a new all-candidate primary election for U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, governor, attorney general, secretary of state, treasurer, CU board of regents, state board of education, and the Colorado state legislature; allowing voters to vote for any one candidate per office, regardless of the voter’s or candidate’s political party affiliation; providing that the four candidates for each office who receive the most votes advance to the general election; and in the general election, allowing voters to rank candidates for each office on their ballot, adopting a process for how the ranked votes are tallied, and determining the winner to be the candidate with the highest number of votes in the final tally?

Campaigns

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Support

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The campaign in support of Proposition 131 was led by Colorado Voters First. Additionally, Colorado's official voter guide offered the arguments in support of Proposition 131 that a blanket primary system would create an equal opportunity for everyone to participate in primary elections, increase voter turnout in primaries, and make general elections more competitive. It also offered that ranking candidates in order of preference in general elections gives voters more choices, minimizes the spoiler effect, and results in outcomes that better reflect the will of the voters.

'Yes'[4]
Federal officials
State officials
State senators
State representatives
Local politicians
Newspapers
Organizations

Opposition

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There were two main groups leading opposition against Proposition 131: Voters Rights Colorado and First Choice Counts.[5] Colorado's official voter guide also offered the arguments against Proposition 131 that the measure will make elections more expensive, confuse voters, and weaken faith in the outcomes of Colorado elections. Additionally, it offered that political parties should have separate primaries, with unaffiliated voters already being able to participate in Colorado's primary system, and a blanket primary system would result in more expensive primary campaigns.[6]

'No'
Federal officials
State senators
State representatives
Local officials
Organizations

Polling

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Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
For Against Undecided
Keating Research August 28 – September 1, 2024 400 (LV) ± 3.5% 56% 21% 23%

Results

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Proposition 131 required a simple majority to pass. It failed, only receiving 46% of the vote.[12]

Proposition 131
Choice Votes %
Referendum failed No 1,595,256 53.53
Yes 1,385,060 46.47
Total votes 2,980,316 100.00

Results by county

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County For Against Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # %
Adams 107,637 50.28% 106,454 49.72% 1,183 0.55% 214,091
Alamosa 3,130 44.67% 3,877 55.33% -747 -10.66% 7,007
Arapahoe 144,974 47.83% 158,100 52.17% -13,126 -4.33% 303,074
Archuleta 3,809 43.76% 4,895 56.24% -1,086 -12.48% 8,704
Baca 526 27.93% 1,357 72.07% -831 -44.13% 1,883
Bent 837 40.03% 1,254 59.97% -417 -19.94% 2,091
Boulder 87,425 48.02% 94,626 51.98% -7,201 -3.96% 182,051
Broomfield 20,985 48.21% 22,541 51.79% -1,556 -3.57% 43,526
Chaffee 6,308 46.46% 7,268 53.54% -960 -7.07% 13,576
Cheyenne 251 24.80% 761 75.20% -510 -50.40% 1,012
Clear Creek 2,773 49.19% 2,864 50.81% -91 -1.61% 5,637
Conejos 1,423 36.64% 2,461 63.36% -1,038 -26.73% 3,884
Costilla 908 47.74% 994 52.26% -86 -4.52% 1,902
Crowley 609 36.95% 1,039 63.05% -430 -26.09% 1,648
Custer 1,304 35.39% 2,381 64.61% -1,077 -29.23% 3,685
Delta 7,128 38.19% 11,536 61.81% -4,408 -23.62% 18,664
Denver 180,060 53.81% 154,578 46.19% 25,482 7.61% 334,638
Dolores 446 33.74% 876 66.26% -430 -32.53% 1,322
Douglas 92,669 40.57% 135,721 59.43% -43,052 -18.85% 228,390
Eagle 12,544 49.19% 12,958 50.81% -414 -1.62% 25,502
El Paso 163,032 45.35% 196,484 54.65% -33,452 -9.30% 359,516
Elbert 6,708 34.50% 12,738 65.50% -6,030 -31.01% 19,446
Fremont 10,105 42.01% 13,949 57.99% -3,844 -15.98% 24,054
Garfield 12,385 43.47% 16,103 56.53% -3,718 -13.05% 28,488
Gilpin 1,831 46.67% 2,092 53.33% -261 -6.65% 3,923
Grand 4,198 44.88% 5,155 55.12% -957 -10.23% 9,353
Gunnison 4,939 48.82% 5,177 51.18% -238 -2.35% 10,116
Hinsdale 234 40.84% 339 59.16% -105 -18.32% 573
Huerfano 1,835 43.66% 2,368 56.34% -533 -12.68% 4,203
Jackson 280 35.76% 503 64.24% -223 -28.48% 783
Jefferson 160,907 47.17% 180,181 52.83% -19,274 -5.65% 341,088
Kiowa 204 25.19% 606 74.81% -402 -49.63% 810
Kit Carson 1,054 30.21% 2,435 69.79% -1,381 -39.58% 3,489
La Plata 15,396 46.86% 17,457 53.14% -2,061 -6.27% 32,853
Lake 1,899 52.49% 1,719 47.51% 180 4.98% 3,618
Larimer 101,724 48.40% 108,430 51.60% -6,706 -3.19% 210,154
Las Animas 3,259 44.32% 4,094 55.68% -835 -11.36% 7,353
Lincoln 792 31.95% 1,687 68.05% -895 -36.10% 2,479
Logan 3,275 34.10% 6,330 65.90% -3,055 -31.81% 9,605
Mesa 35,790 41.77% 49,886 58.23% -14,096 -16.45% 85,676
Mineral 311 43.50% 404 56.50% -93 -13.01% 715
Moffat 2,145 34.73% 4,031 65.27% -1,886 -30.54% 6,176
Montezuma 5,463 38.67% 8,666 61.33% -3,203 -22.67% 14,129
Montrose 8,310 34.57% 15,725 65.43% -7,415 -30.85% 24,035
Morgan 4,819 37.71% 7,959 62.29% -3,140 -24.57% 12,778
Otero 3,342 39.06% 5,214 60.94% -1,872 -21.88% 8,556
Ouray 1,714 44.24% 2,160 55.76% -446 -11.51% 3,874
Park 4,859 42.15% 6,668 57.85% -1,809 -15.69% 11,527
Phillips 669 30.83% 1,501 69.17% -832 -38.34% 2,170
Pitkin 4,475 44.87% 5,499 55.13% -1,024 -10.27% 9,974
Prowers 1,630 33.52% 3,233 66.48% -1,603 -32.96% 4,863
Pueblo 35,967 44.38% 45,074 55.62% -9,107 -11.24% 81,041
Rio Blanco 1,087 31.16% 2,401 68.84% -1,314 -37.67% 3,488
Rio Grande 2,483 41.80% 3,457 58.20% -974 -16.40% 5,940
Routt 7,456 49.24% 7,687 50.76% -231 -1.53% 15,143
Saguache 1,487 46.98% 1,678 53.02% -191 -6.03% 3,165
San Juan 270 51.43% 255 48.57% 15 2.86% 525
San Miguel 2,201 51.40% 2,081 48.60% 120 2.80% 4,282
Sedgwick 419 33.57% 829 66.43% -410 -32.85% 1,248
Summit 8,275 51.70% 7,732 48.30% 543 3.39% 16,007
Teller 5,863 37.85% 9,628 62.15% -3,765 -24.30% 15,491
Washington 752 28.03% 1,931 71.97% -1,179 -43.94% 2,683
Weld 74,119 44.07% 94,084 55.93% -19,965 -11.87% 168,203
Yuma 1,351 30.46% 3,085 69.54% -1,734 -39.09% 4,436
Total 1,385,060 46.47% 1,595,256 53.53% -210,196 -7.05% 2,980,316

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear

References

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  1. ^ a b Kenney, Andrew (August 29, 2024). "Colorado to vote on ranked-choice voting, eliminating partisan primaries". Colorado Public Radio. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
  2. ^ Paul, Jesse (September 20, 2024). "Colorado's all-candidate primary and ranked choice general election ballot measure is poised to pass, poll shows". Colorado Sun. Retrieved September 24, 2024.
  3. ^ "2024 State Ballot Information Booklet" (PDF). Colorado General Assembly. September 11, 2024. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  4. ^ "Endorsements". Yes On Prop 131. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
  5. ^ Jena Griswold. "Amendments and Propositions on the 2024 Ballot". Colorado Secretary of State. Retrieved September 18, 2024.
  6. ^ Zelinger, Marshall (September 24, 2024). "What does Proposition 131 mean for Colorado?". KUSA. Retrieved September 24, 2024.
  7. ^ Klamann, Seth (October 14, 2024). "Proposition 131 would change Colorado's election system in races for governor, Congress, other offices". The Denver Post. Retrieved October 15, 2024.
  8. ^ Venegas, Natalie (20 November 2023). "Lauren Boebert Rages Against Plan That Could Keep Republicans Off Ballots". Newsweek. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Paul, Jesse; Eason, Brian (4 October 2024). "An Alaska lawmaker's experience with an all-candidate primary, ranked choice general election". The Colorado Sun. Archived from the original on 7 October 2024. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
  10. ^ "November 2024 Ballot Initiatives and Referred Measures". Colorado Democratic Party. Retrieved October 17, 2024.
  11. ^ "2024 COLORADO BALLOT QUESTIONS". Colorado Republican Party. Retrieved October 17, 2024.
  12. ^ "Results". Colorado Secretary of State. Retrieved December 3, 2024.