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Colorado Republican Primary Election Results

Winner

Donald J. Trump wins the Colorado Republican primary.

Race called by The Associated Press.

Latest results from April 3
Vote totals certified

Republican Primary race called

Republican Primary
Candidate Votes Percent Chart showing percent Delegates
Donald J. TrumpD. TrumpTrump
555,863 63.5% 24
Nikki HaleyN. HaleyHaley
291,615 33.3 12
Ron DeSantisR. DeSantisDeSantis
12,672 1.4 No delegates
Total reported
875,940

97% of delegates allocated (36 of 37)

New update

Analysis from our reporters

New update

Analysis from our reporters

DenverColorado SpringsPuebloFort CollinsDenverColorado SpringsPuebloFort Collins
New update

Analysis from our reporters

Where votes have been reported and where votes remain

These maps show the leading candidates’ margins in the vote reported so far, and estimates for which candidate leads in the remaining votes that we expect from each place.

Votes reported

Estimated votes remaining

We stopped updating our estimates. This map is now archived.

Votes reported and estimated votes remaining
County Trump Haley DeSantis Total votes Percent of votes in
El Paso 67% 30% 2% 128,629 100%
Jefferson 58 39 1 99,502 100%
Douglas 61 36 2 83,630 100%
Arapahoe 59 37 2 76,483 100%
Larimer 59 38 2 60,270 100%
Weld 73 23 2 55,619 100%
Adams 70 27 1 50,877 100%
Denver 43 53 1 45,823 100%
Mesa 70 27 2 37,669 100%
Boulder 42 54 1 35,485 100%
Pueblo 77 21 1 23,279 100%
Broomfield 52 44 1 11,939 100%
Montrose 74 23 1 11,454 100%
Fremont 78 19 1 11,133 100%
La Plata 59 38 1 10,543 100%
Elbert 79 18 2 9,736 100%
Garfield 65 32 1 9,331 100%
Delta 76 21 1 8,822 100%
Teller 76 22 1 7,288 100%
Eagle 50 47 1 6,557 100%
Montezuma 75 22 1 6,331 100%
Morgan 81 16 2 5,588 100%
Logan 82 15 1 5,122 100%
Chaffee 60 37 1 4,818 100%
Park 72 26 1 4,556 100%
Routt 48 49 1 4,043 100%
Summit 41 55 1 3,826 100%
Archuleta 67 29 2 3,788 100%
Otero 82 15 1 3,427 100%
Grand 62 34 2 3,327 100%
Moffat 85 13 1 3,165 100%
Gunnison 52 45 1 2,794 100%
Yuma 83 15 1 2,510 100%
Prowers 86 12 1 2,462 100%
Las Animas 81 16 1 2,436 100%
Rio Grande 76 21 2 2,348 100%
Alamosa 75 21 2 2,260 100%
Kit Carson 86 11 2 2,031 100%
Custer 73 24 1 1,994 100%
Rio Blanco 81 16 2 1,985 100%
Pitkin 38 58 1 1,873 100%
Washington 85 12 1 1,753 100%
Clear Creek 61 36 2 1,645 100%
Huerfano 77 21 1 1,516 100%
Ouray 55 43 1 1,424 100%
Lincoln 84 13 1 1,363 100%
Conejos 81 17 1 1,304 100%
Phillips 81 16 2 1,284 100%
Gilpin 66 31 1 1,182 100%
Baca 88 10 1 1,129 100%
Bent 82 15 2 966 100%
Saguache 73 23 1 950 100%
San Miguel 44 52 1 944 100%
Crowley 84 12 2 869 100%
Lake 66 31 2 731 100%
Dolores 89 10 1 710 100%
Sedgwick 82 16 1 684 100%
Cheyenne 88 10 1 621 100%
Kiowa 86 12 1 491 100%
Jackson 76 21 1 477 100%
Costilla 77 20 1 413 100%
Mineral 74 23 1 336 100%
Hinsdale 64 32 1 269 100%
San Juan 48 49 2 126 100%

We stopped updating our estimates. These graphics and estimates are now showing archived data.

Live forecast

This is our current best estimate for the outcome of this race. We look at the votes that have been reported so far and adjust our estimate based on what we expect from the votes that remain. Read more about how it works.

Estimated margin

Needle chart shows the New York Times forecast+35+30+25+20+15+10+5+5+10+15+20+25+30+35

Trump +30

Trump +26 to Trump +33

Estimating the final vote shares for Trump and Haley

This chart shows the range of estimates for the leading candidates’ shares of the final vote. As more votes are reported, the ranges should narrow as our statistical model becomes more confident.

Estimated and reported final vote share
Candidate Reported
vote share
Estimate of final vote share Needle chart
Donald J. TrumpD. TrumpTrump
64% 63% 61% to 65%
Nikki HaleyN. HaleyHaley
33% 34% 32% to 36%

How our estimates changed over time

Once a state has counted all its votes, our estimated margin and the reported margin will match. As a rule, when our estimated margin is steady in the presence of new data, our forecast is more trustworthy.

How our final margin estimate has changed so far

NYT estimate Reported vote share
Chart showing changes in the estimated margin over time+50 +40 +30 +20 +10 Even 12:34 PM 2:29 AM ET

Share of expected turnout reported

Chart showing changes in the total expected vote over time 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 12:34 PM 2:29 AM ET

What’s powering our forecast right now?

Our election model makes use of three indicators in creating an estimate of the final result.

Pre-election polls

0%

Our model

14%

Actual results

86%

  • Pre-election polls: At the start of the night, our estimate is based on pre-election polls, results of past elections and demographic data.
  • Our model: As results come in, we compare actual results in places that have mostly completed reporting to our pre-election estimates to create a statistical model for the remaining vote.
  • Actual results: As a county reports more of its vote, those actual results will gradually supersede our previous estimates.

Share of vote by county

What to expect

Polls close in Colorado’s presidential primary at 9 p.m. Eastern time, and the first results are expected soon after. In the 2022 state primaries, the last update of the night was at 4:05 a.m. Eastern time with 90 percent of votes reported.

All registered voters were mailed primary ballots corresponding to the party they are registered with; unaffiliated voters were mailed Republican and Democratic ballots but could only return one. Voters could return ballots by mail, drop box or in person, as long as they were received by the close of polls. In-person voting centers have been open since Feb. 26.

On Monday, the Supreme Court ruled that Donald J. Trump could stay on the state’s ballot. His eligibility had been challenged over his actions after the 2020 election.

The state primary, which will include races for state and congressional offices, will be held on June 25.

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