The Colorado Springs Gazette

Voter registration updates as Colorado grows

TOM CRONIN AND BOB LOEVY Tom Cronin and Bob Loevy are news columnists who write about Colorado and national politics.

‘ Within the state, the county with the most registered voters in 2023 was El Paso County, home of Colorado Springs. El Paso County in July 2023 had 476,481 registered voters, up 202,777 voters from its total in 2010 of 273,704. That voter increase was the largest in the state. The percentage gain was 74.1%.’

Political scientists often use voter registration numbers rather than estimated population data to keep track of population growth.

The problem with population figures is they are only exact once every 10 years on the occasion of the U.S. Census. Voter registrations, however, are kept up to date. County clerks work hard to add voters as they register to vote and to eliminate voters who have died or moved out of the state.

Also, Colorado has an “active voter” system that automatically removes from the voter rolls those voters who are not actively voting in current elections. You know the voters you are counting are real, because they are voting in ongoing state and local elections.

The Colorado secretary of state publishes current voter registration in the state on the internet once a month. The data is always handy. We are using the voter registration data for April 1, 2010, and July 2, 2023.

Here’s the best reason to use voter registration data. It is part of the information population experts use to make their estimates in the time between one census count and another.

From 2010 to 2023, Colorado increased the total number of its registered voters from 2.4 million to 3.9 million. That was a percentage gain of 60.4%.

Thus, Colorado has been growing its electorate and growing it fast.

Within the state, the county with the most registered voters in 2023 was El Paso County, home of Colorado Springs. El Paso County in July 2023 had 476,481 registered voters, up 202,777 voters from its total in 2010 of 273,704. That voter increase was the largest in the state. The percentage gain was 74.1%.

In terms of registered voters, El Paso County is the growth center of Colorado. It not only has more voters than any other county, but it is adding voters faster than any other county. We predict it will continue to add voters faster than the rest.

For years, Denver had more registered voters than any other county, but it dropped behind El Paso County a decade or so ago. Denver is in second place with a total 441,992 registered voters, about 35,000 fewer than El Paso County. Denver increased its registered voters from 2010 to 2023 by 69.1%, 5% less than El Paso County’s percentage increase.

Denver’s problem is that it is surrounded by other cities and lacks open buildable land for adding more houses and more shopping centers and more voters. El Paso County, on the other hand, has a great deal of open land ready for development, particularly in the eastern portion of the county.

The third largest electorate in Colorado is Jefferson County (Golden), a western suburb of Denver. In 2023, it had 426,098 registered voters and a relatively low 45% growth rate. The fourth-largest is Arapahoe County, a suburb on Denver’s south side, with 414,244 voters and a 52.9% growth rate.

A number of counties have high growth percentages, higher than El Paso County or Denver, but their relatively small populations leave them behind in the total registered voter count.

Thus Weld County (Greeley), northeast of Denver, had a high growth rate from 2010 to 2023 of 95.6%, but ended up with only 216,276 voters, about half as many as El Paso County. Adams County (Brighton), a suburb on Denver’s north side, grew by 83% but only had 302,895 registered voters by July 2023.

We expect Weld and Adams counties to continue to add voters rapidly, but we expect the rates of growth to go down as the two counties get larger. There is little chance that either will come close to replacing El Paso or Denver as the top counties for numbers of registered voters.

Denver shines when the Denver metropolitan area is compared to the Colorado Springs metropolitan area. Denver metro has almost 2.2 million of Colorado’s 3.9 million registered voters. That is 56.6% of Colorado voters.

The Colorado Springs metropolitan area (El Paso plus Teller counties) has almost a half-million (495,496) registered voters, about one quarter the size of Denver metro. Colorado Springs metro is only 12.8% of the state’s electorate.

When you add Denver metro’s 56.6% of all Colorado voters to Colorado Springs metro’s 12.8%, you get 69.4%. Denver metro and Colorado Springs metro contain almost 70% of the voters of Colorado.

We expect that Denver metro/Colorado Springs metro number to go up as much future growth of registered voters continues to occur in the Denver and Colorado Springs regions.

Recently, four counties were added to the Denver metropolitan area. They are Park County (Fairplay), Clear Creek County (Georgetown), Gilpin County (Central City), and Elbert County (Elizabeth).

Two of those counties, Park and Elbert, are large geographically and will provide lots of acres for future housing and shopping center development in Denver metro. Elbert County, just east of Douglas County, is a fast-growing county with a growth percentage from 2010 to 2023 of 64.7%.

The Front Range is the thickly populated corridor that runs from Pueblo in the south through Colorado Springs and Denver to Fort Collins and Greeley in the north. It can also be referred to as the Interstate 25 Corridor.

It now contains 3.3 million of Colorado’s 3.9 million registered voters. It grew 63.2% in voter registrations from 2010 to 2023. It is 84.6% of the state’s registered voters.

For the foreseeable future, the Front Range will continue to be the main growth and activity portion of the state.

Much is happening in the extensive part of Colorado that is not on the Front Range, with some of the counties showing respectable registered voter growth rates.

Eagle County (Vail ski resort) added registered voters from 2010 to 2023 at a rate of 54.1%. Pitkin county (Aspen ski resort) registered new voters at 41.9%.

In southern Colorado, Alamosa County (Alamosa) was experiencing growth in registered voters at a 57.9% rate.

But the growth in registered voters that was so strong from 2010 to 2023 did not extend to rural agricultural Colorado. Over the 13 years studied, Cheyenne and Kiowa counties on the Eastern Plains grew voters by only 4.4% and 9.4%, respectively.

The State Demographer’s office says economic problems created by the coronavirus epidemic in 2020 slowed down population growth in Colorado. Despite that, we expect the vibrant growth in registered voters that occurred from 2010 to 2023 to become normal again.

LOCAL & STATE

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2023-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://daily.gazette.com/article/281758453893097

The Gazette, Colorado Springs