-
Gov. Jared Polis signed three reproductive healthcare bills on Friday that protect and expand access to abortions and gender-affirming care in Colorado. They also regulate anti-abortion pregnancy centers and mandate insurance coverage for reproductive healthcare and sexually transmitted infections.
-
A new bill introduced this week in the state legislature would make historic advances in voting access for Colorado’s two Native American tribes. It would also expand access to students and inmates, and make changes to ballot counts, election transparency and campaign finance.
-
The insurrection in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 stunned the nation and the world. Many lawmakers in the Mountain West played a role in this unprecedented…
-
Updated 1:50 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 10A newly elected congresswoman from Colorado says she’ll carry a handgun on Capitol Hill."Even though I now live in one of…
-
As the pandemic nears its one year mark, Gov. Jared Polis has issued more than 260 executive orders aimed at slowing the spread of COVID-19. He says he…
-
The nine members of Colorado's electoral college, like their counterparts across the country, met Monday at the state Capitol to cast their votes in the…
-
The timeline and the application process will be different depending on what kind of aid residents are seeking.
-
Colorado’s election results will be official within a week at the most without the controversies surrounding lawsuits and certification seen in other…
-
Colorado lawmakers passed a state-funded stimulus package worth more than $200 million during a three-day special session that stayed mostly cordial and…
-
Lawmakers spent the week leading up to the special session trying to manage their constituents’ expectations for the state-funded stimulus.
-
Following the narrow passage of Proposition 114, Colorado Parks and Wildlife will now spend the next three years coming up with a plan for how to reintroduce the animals by 2023.
-
Country Moves Closer To National Popular Vote System After Colorado Voters Narrowly Approve Prop 113Colorado lawmakers made the decision to join the national popular vote movement last year, but the new law stirred up so much controversy, more than 600,000 residents signed a petition to get the question on November’s ballot.