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Draft:2024 Colorado Proposition 131

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Proposition 131

November 5, 2024

Establishing All‑Candidate Primary and Ranked Choice Voting General Elections

2024 Colorado Proposition 131 is a proposed ballot measure that will appear before voters in Colorado during the 2024 general election. The citizen initiated proposition would replace Colorado's current partisan primaries with non-partisan blanket primaries and would implement ranked-choice voting for most statewide and state legislative general elections in which the top four candidates in the primary would qualify for the general election ballot.[1]

Background

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Contents

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The proposition will appear on the ballot as follows:[2]

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 is being led by Colorado Voters First. Additionally, Colorado's official voter guide offers 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 offers 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'
group 1
  • person 1

Opposition

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There are two main groups leading opposition against Proposition 131: Voters Rights Colorado and First Choice Counts.[3] Colorado's official voter guide also offers 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 offers 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.

'No'
group 1
  • person 1

Results

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Results will begin being made public for Proposition 131 at 7:00 pm on November 5, 2024. Proposition 131 requires a simple majority to pass.

Proposition 131
Choice Votes %
Result not yet known
Total votes 100.00

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Kenney, Andrew (August 29, 2024). "Colorado to vote on ranked-choice voting, eliminating partisan primaries". Colorado Public Radio. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
  2. ^ "2024 State Ballot Information Booklet" (PDF). Colorado General Assembly. September 11, 2024. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  3. ^ Jena Griswold. "Amendments and Propositions on the 2024 Ballot". Colorado Secretary of State. Retrieved September 18, 2024.