Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
2022 Colorado Attorney General election
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The 2022 Colorado Attorney General election was held on Tuesday, November 8, to elect the Attorney General of Colorado. Incumbent attorney general Phil Weiser won re-election to a second term, improving on his 2018 results.[1]
Remove ads
Democratic primary
Candidates
Nominee
- Phil Weiser, incumbent attorney general[2]
Results
Republican primary
Candidates
Nominee
- John Kellner, district attorney for the 18th district court of Colorado[4][5]
Disqualified
- Stanley Thorne[6] (running as independent)
Declined
- Jason R. Dunn, former United States Attorney for the district of Colorado[7]
- Mark Waller, former member of the Colorado House of Representatives from the 15th district[7]
Results
Remove ads
Independents
Candidates
Declared
- Stanley Thorne, attorney (write-in candidate)[8]
General election
Summarize
Perspective
Debate
Predictions
Endorsements
John Kellner (R)
Phil Weiser (D)
State officials
- Bernie Buescher, former Secretary of State of Colorado (2009–2011)[14]
- Cynthia Coffman, former attorney general (2015–2019) (Republican)[15]
- Rebecca Love Kourlis, former Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court (1995–2006)[16]
- Donna Lynne, former lieutenant governor of Colorado (2016–2019)[14]
- Jared Polis, Governor of Colorado (2019–present)[14]
- Dianne Primavera, lieutenant governor of Colorado (2019–)[14]
- Bill Ritter, former governor of Colorado (2007–2011)[14]
- Roy Romer, former governor of Colorado (1987–1999)[14]
- Dave Young, Colorado State Treasurer (2019–)[14]
State senators
- All 20 Democratic state senators[14]
State representatives
- Don Coram, incumbent state representative for the 6th district (Republican)[17]
- Russell George, former Speaker of the Colorado House of Representatives (1999–2000) (Republican)[16]
- Cole Wist, former state representative for the 37th district (Independent)[16]
- Rob Witwer, former state representative for the 25th district (Republican)[16]
- All 61 Democratic state representatives[14]
Organizations
- End Citizens United[18]
- Everytown for Gun Safety[19]
- Let America Vote[18]
- NARAL Pro-Choice America[20]
Newspapers
Polling
Results
By congressional district
Weiser won five of eight congressional districts.[26]
Remove ads
Notes
Partisan clients
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads