What Their TV Ads Say About These Denver Mayoral Candidates
Get the message? Six contenders using commercials to suggest how they’d run the Mile High City.
Get the message? Six contenders using commercials to suggest how they’d run the Mile High City.
With a background in IT and police oversight, he thinks he can fix the city’s stickier issues.
The security agency got into trouble with city officials after a fatal shooting in October 2020.
A former gang member who’s now an anti-gang activist, he believes poverty is the root of most problems in this city.
If municipal races aren’t decided on April 4, top vote-getters will go to a June 6 runoff…with the help of public financing.
As the largest minority group in Colorado, Latinos voters are not to be messed with this election season.
Tschetter Sulzer’s attempts to dismiss a class-action lawsuit about deceiving tenants in eviction proceedings have been spiked yet again.
Ten candidates debated everything from creationism to UFOs. And Michael Hancock wanted to bring casinos to town.
As Denver mayor, the Curtis Park resident would give neighborhoods more control over development.
Born and raised in west Denver, he has a bucket list of occupations that includes sushi chef and Denver mayor.
After twelve years, Denver voters will vote for a new mayor on April 4. But that’s just the start.
With degrees from Kansas State, MIT and Oxford, he wants to put his education to work as Denver mayor.
He’s been a champion ski racer, a principal, a state senator and the head of a major nonprofit. Now he’s focused on the mayor’s office.
The first LGBTQ Black individual to serve in an elected office in Colorado, is well-known for her work on criminal-justice reform.
After a “Trans Day of Resistance” rally at Civic Center today, protesters will head down Broadway to Milk Bar.
If elected, this mayoral candidate would quickly create entry-level housing: 7,000 cubicle dwellings at $25,000 per unit.
The Tattered Cover CEO is putting is now supporting Kelly Brough, one of sixteen remaining candidates on the ballot.
A longtime teacher at the University of Colorado Denver, he wants to be “the first people’s mayor in the city’s history.”
While two are largely housekeeping moves, 2O could determine the future of the Park Hill Golf Course property.
This time, the contenders got to take shots at each other. And there was definitely a favorite target.
One is the head coach of the Croatian national lacrosse team, some need oxygen, and all say that you should trust the vote count.
Even before she was first elected to Denver City Council in 1987, she had experience working for public officials.