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The Colorado lieutenant gubernatorial election of 2010 was held on November 2, 2010 following a primary election on August 10, 2010.[1] Polling hours on all election days were from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm, local time.
Colorado is one of 20 states that elects its governor and lt. governor on a single ticket. In Colorado, a party's lieutenant gubernatorial candidate is nominated along with the party's gubernatorial pick. As of mid-August 2010, not all candidates on the gubernatorial ballot had named a running mate. For Colorado, this was not unusual, as gubernatorial candidates may delay the timing of announcing a running mate to favor their campaigns or wait as long as they can before making a selection in order to gauge voter attitudes to potential running mates.
By late August, all major candidates had selected their running mates. Joe Garcia ran on the Democratic ticket with John Hickenlooper against Republicans Dan Maes and former state Rep. Tambor Williams. Tom Tancredo, who left the Republican Party to run with the Constitution Party, selected Pat Miller, also a former state Representative for the GOP.
Ultimately, Garcia and Hickenlooper won just over half the vote. The two assumed office in early 2011.
The November Ballot – Who Made It? Colorado Lieutenant Governor | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominee | Affiliation | ||||
Joseph Garcia, with John Hickenlooper[2] | Democrat | ||||
Tambor Williams, with Dan Maes[3] | Republican | ||||
Ken Wyble, with Jaimes Brown[4] | Libertarian | ||||
Pat Miller, with Tom Tancredo[5] | American Constitution Party | ||||
Victoria A. Adams, with Jason R. Clark[6] | Independent | ||||
Heather A. McKibben, with Paul Noel Fiorino[7] | Independent | ||||
Sherry Cusson, with Michael R. Moore[8] | (write-in) | ||||
Antoinette M. Schaeffer, with Peter J. Carr[9] | (write-in) | ||||
Stephanie L. Mercer, with Holly Cremeens[10] | (write-in) | ||||
Ed. E. Coron, with Willie Travis[11] | (Democratic write-in) | ||||
This lists candidates who won their state's primary or convention, or who were unopposed, and who have since been officially certified for the November ballot by their state's election authority. |
98% of precincts had reported as of November 8, 2010. The Colorado Secretary of State was not expected to provide any results until November 26, 2010, when they posted the official canvass. The Washington Post posted live results in the meantime.[12]
Ultimately, official results were posted November 24, 2010, at 17:31 MDT.[13]
2010 Colorado lieutenant gubernatorial general election | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Vote Percentage | |
Democratic Party | Joseph Garcia | 51.01% | |
Republican Party | Tambor Williams | 11.13% | |
Constitution Party | Pat Miller | 36.43% | |
Libertarian Party | Ken Wyble | 0.74% | |
Independent | Victoria A. Adams | 0.48% | |
Independent | Heather A. McKibben | 0.19% | |
write-in | Ed E. Coron | >0.01% | |
write-in | Sherry Cusson | >0.01% | |
write-in | Antoinette M. Schaeffer | >0.01% | |
write-in | Stephanie L. Mercer | >0.01% | |
Total Votes | 1,787,730 |
State of Colorado Denver (capital) | |
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