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2008 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado

The 2008 congressional elections in Colorado were held on November 4, 2008 to determine who will represent the state of Colorado in the United States House of Representatives, coinciding with the presidential and senatorial elections. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected served in the 111th Congress from January 3, 2009 until January 3, 2011.

2008 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado

← 2006 November 4, 2008 2010 →

All 7 Colorado seats to the United States House of Representatives
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 4 3
Seats won 5 2
Seat change 1 1
Popular vote 1,259,768 990,870
Percentage 55.16% 43.38%
Swing 1.04% 2.85%

Colorado had seven seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States census. Its 2007-2008 congressional delegation consisted of four Democrats and three Republicans. After the elections, it consisted of five Democrats and two Republicans. District 4 changed party (from Republican to Democratic), which was the only district CQ Politics had forecasted to be at some risk for the incumbent party.

The Primary election was held August 12, 2008.[1]

Overview edit

United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado, 2008[2]
Party Votes Percentage Seats +/–
Democratic 1,259,768 55.16% 5 +1
Republican 990,870 43.38% 2 –1
Libertarian 12,136 0.61% 0 0
Green 10,031 0.50% 0 0
American Constitution 8,894 0.44% 0 0
Unity 2,176 0.11% 0 0
Independent 56 0.00% 0 0
Valid votes 2,283,931 82.60%
Invalid or blank votes 138,305 17.40%
Totals 2,422,236 100.00% 7
Voter turnout 91.67%

Match-up summary edit

District Incumbent 2008 Status Democratic Republican Other Party
1 Diana DeGette Re-election Diana DeGette George Lilly
2 Mark Udall Open Jared Polis Scott Starin
3 John Salazar Re-election John Salazar Wayne Wolf
4 Marilyn Musgrave Re-election Betsy Markey Marilyn Musgrave
5 Doug Lamborn Re-election Hal Bidlack Doug Lamborn
6 Tom Tancredo Open Hank Eng Mike Coffman
7 Ed Perlmutter Re-election Ed Perlmutter John W. Lerew

District breakdown edit

District 1 edit

 

Democratic incumbent Diana DeGette won against Republican nominee George Lilly. DeGette was unopposed in her primary, and Lilly won against Charles Crain in his primary. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Safe Democrat'.

Colorado's 1st congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Diana DeGette (incumbent) 203,756 71.94
Republican George Lilly 67,346 23.78
Libertarian Martin Buchanan 12,136 4.28
Independent Gary Swing (write-in) 11 0.00
Valid ballots 283,249 92.84
Invalid or blank votes 21,844 7.16
Total votes 305,093 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 88.74
Democratic hold

District 2 edit

 

Democratic nominee Jared Polis, a businessman, won against Republican nominee Scott Starin, an aerospace engineer. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Safe Democrat'.

This district had been represented by Democrat Mark Udall since 1999. With the retirement of Senator Wayne Allard, Udall ran for the Senate, leaving this an open seat. Polis won the Democratic primary against Senate President Joan Fitz-Gerald and Colorado Conservation Trust Director Will Shafroth. Starin was unopposed in the Republican primary. Former Eagle County Commissioner Tom Stone was earlier considered a possible Republican candidate, as was Boulder Mayor Mark Ruzzin for the Green Party. Democrats held a strong edge in this district, with the most recent Democratic presidential candidate, John Kerry, having won 59% in 2004, as it was centered around heavily Democratic Boulder.

Colorado's 2nd congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jared Polis 215,602 62.60
Republican Scott Starin 116,619 33.86
Green J. A. Calhoun 10,031 2.91
Unity William Hammons 2,176 0.63
Valid ballots 344,428 93.54
Invalid or blank votes 23,805 6.46
Total votes 368,233 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 92.49
Democratic hold

District 3 edit

2008 Colorado's 3rd congressional district election
 
← 2006
2010 →
     
Nominee John Salazar Wayne Wolf
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 203,457 126,762
Percentage 61.6% 38.4%

 
County Results
Salazar:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%     80-90%
Wolf:      50-60%     60-70%

U.S. Representative before election

John Salazar
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

John Salazar
Democratic

 

Democratic incumbent John Salazar won against Republican nominee Wayne Wolf. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Safe Democrat'.

Colorado's 3rd congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John Salazar (incumbent) 203,457 61.61
Republican Wayne Wolf 126,762 38.39
Valid ballots 330,219 96.42
Invalid or blank votes 12,248 3.58
Total votes 342,467 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 89.50
Democratic hold

District 4 edit

2008 Colorado's 4th congressional district election
 
← 2006
2010 →
     
Nominee Betsy Markey Marilyn Musgrave
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 187,348 146,030
Percentage 56.2% 43.8%

 
County Results
Markey:      50-60%      60-70%
Musgrave:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%

U.S. Representative before election

Marilyn Musgrave
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Betsy Markey
Democratic

 

Democratic nominee Betsy Markey, businesswoman and regional director for Senator Ken Salazar won against Republican incumbent Marilyn Musgrave, who had represented this district since 2003. Both ran unopposed in the party primary elections. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Leans Democratic'. The Rothenberg Political Report rated it 'Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic'. The Cook Political Report ranked it 'Republican Toss Up'.

Musgrave, a conservative known for her staunch opposition to gay marriage, won in 2006 by winning a plurality (46%) of the vote against Angie Paccione (D) and a strong Reform Party challenge from Eric Eidsness, who managed to garner 11% of the vote. That, along with her 51% showing in 2004 despite George W. Bush winning 58% of the vote in this eastern Colorado district that includes the Fort Collins area, made her vulnerable in 2008.

Democrats suffered a setback earlier when State Senator Brandon Schaffer suddenly dropped out, citing his party's failure to clear the field.[3] Eidsness switched parties again, having switched from Republican to Reform Party the year prior, and became a Democrat, which could have fueled a potential rematch with Musgrave in 2008. 2006 nominee Angie Paccione briefly launched a campaign as well, but left the race in September 2007. On October 24, 2008, the National Republican Congressional Committee abandoned Marilyn Musgrave's 2008 reelection campaign, believing the race was lost. This decision was based solely on Musgrave's poor poll numbers.

Musgrave launched a negative advertisement, attacking Markey over the business of Syscom Systems, the data-processing equipment company run by Markey and her husband. The Musgrave ad was called "highly misleading" by a Denver television station that investigated the facts.[4] After her defeat, Musgrave would not comment on the election results with the media, nor would she concede the race or contact Markey to congratulate her. She also did not thank her campaign staff for their efforts. She later recorded a robocall for Republican Georgia senator Saxby Chambliss, saying that she was defeated by "leftist special interests" who "suppressed the truth with vicious attacks and lies."

Colorado's 4th congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Betsy Markey 187,348 56.20
Republican Marilyn Musgrave (incumbent) 146,030 43.80
Valid ballots 333,378 95.27
Invalid or blank votes 16,565 4.73
Total votes 349,943 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 91.30
Democratic gain from Republican

District 5 edit

 

Freshman Republican incumbent Doug Lamborn won against Democratic nominee Hal Bidlack, a Clinton administration National Security Council official, and Independent Rich Hand, running as a write-in candidate. The district is based in heavily Republican Colorado Springs. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Safe Republican'.

Lamborn got bad press when two constituents accused him of making a threatening phone call in response to a critical letter they wrote.[5] He won against Jeff Crank and Bentley Rayburn, more moderate Republicans who had also run in 2006, in the Republican primary. In 2006, Lamborn had narrowly won a nasty multi-candidate primary with 27% of the vote, despite previous representative Joel Hefley's endorsement of Crank, citing Lamborn's "sleazy" campaign. Crank and Rayburn thus came to a gentleman's agreement - they would jointly conduct a poll of the primary, and whoever of the two of them was in third place would drop out and endorse the other, so as to have a better chance of defeating Lamborn. Rayburn came third in the poll, but he refused to drop out and Lamborn won the primary with 44% of the vote.[6]

Amid worries of vulnerability, Lamborn then won the general election by a 59%-41% margin, becoming the highest vote getter for a GOP Congressional candidate in the state in the 2006 cycle.

Colorado's 5th congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Doug Lamborn (incumbent) 183,179 60.03
Democratic Hal Bidlack 113,027 37.04
Constitution Brian Scott 8,894 2.91
Independent Richard Hand (write-in) 45 0.01
Valid ballots 305,145 93.74
Invalid or blank votes 20,371 6.26
Total votes 325,516 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 90.45
Republican hold

District 6 edit

 

Republican nominee Mike Coffman won against Democratic nominee Hank Eng. CQ Politics, The Cook Political Report and The Rothenberg Political Report all forecasted the race as 'Safe Republican', despite some minor controversies surrounding Mike Coffman and Colorado Ethics Watch.[7]

Eng ran unopposed in the Democratic Primary. Coffman defeated a crowded field of candidates including Ted Harvey, Steve Ward, and Will Armstrong (who was endorsed by the State GOP). Republican incumbent Tom Tancredo, who held the seat since 1999, decided to retire leaving it an open seat. His seat was considered to be the most Republican-dominated district of the Denver-area seats and was also one of the wealthiest in the nation. Tancredo was the second highest vote getter for a Republican congressional candidate statewide (59%-40%) in 2006, just behind Doug Lamborn in the 5th district. The district includes Columbine High School, which was devastated in a tragic 1999 school massacre.

Colorado's 6th congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mike Coffman 250,877 60.66
Democratic Hank Eng 162,641 39.33
Valid ballots 413,518 93.97
Invalid or blank votes 26,527 6.03
Total votes 440,045 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 95.70
Republican hold

District 7 edit

 

Democratic incumbent Ed Perlmutter, who had represented this district since 2007, won against Republican nominee John W. Lerew. CQ Politics forecasted the race as 'Safe Democrat'.

In 2006, Perlmutter won 55% of the vote in this suburban Denver district that narrowly went to John Kerry with 52% in 2004. The district's voter registration was split, with independents constituting a slim plurality of 35% compared to Democrats (34%) and Republicans (31%).

Colorado's 7th congressional district election, 2008[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ed Perlmutter (incumbent) 173,937 63.48
Republican John Lerew 100,057 36.51
Valid ballots 273,994 94.18
Invalid or blank votes 16,945 5.82
Total votes 290,939 100.00
Turnout {{{votes}}} 92.47
Democratic hold

References edit

Specific
  1. ^ Candidate List for the August 12, 2008 Primary Election Colorado Secretary of State
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h (PDF). Secretary of State of Colorado. August 14, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 27, 2010. Retrieved October 8, 2009.
  3. ^ [1] The Coloradoan
  4. ^ . cbs4denver.com. KCNC-TV. September 19, 2008. Archived from the original on October 30, 2008. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
  5. ^ Colo Springs couple says got threatening call from congressman 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine KJCT 8 News, September 2, 2007
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2014.
  7. ^ Ethics Watch Requests Criminal Investigation of Coffman 2009-01-09 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Ethics Watch, June 15, 2007
General

External links edit

2008, united, states, house, representatives, elections, colorado, 2008, congressional, elections, colorado, were, held, november, 2008, determine, will, represent, state, colorado, united, states, house, representatives, coinciding, with, presidential, senato. The 2008 congressional elections in Colorado were held on November 4 2008 to determine who will represent the state of Colorado in the United States House of Representatives coinciding with the presidential and senatorial elections Representatives are elected for two year terms those elected served in the 111th Congress from January 3 2009 until January 3 2011 2008 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado 2006 November 4 2008 2010 All 7 Colorado seats to the United States House of Representatives Majority party Minority party Party Democratic Republican Last election 4 3 Seats won 5 2 Seat change 1 1 Popular vote 1 259 768 990 870 Percentage 55 16 43 38 Swing 1 04 2 85 Election results by districtElection results by countyDemocratic 50 60 60 70 70 80 Republican 60 70 Colorado had seven seats in the House apportioned according to the 2000 United States census Its 2007 2008 congressional delegation consisted of four Democrats and three Republicans After the elections it consisted of five Democrats and two Republicans District 4 changed party from Republican to Democratic which was the only district CQ Politics had forecasted to be at some risk for the incumbent party The Primary election was held August 12 2008 1 Contents 1 Overview 2 Match up summary 3 District breakdown 3 1 District 1 3 2 District 2 3 3 District 3 3 4 District 4 3 5 District 5 3 6 District 6 3 7 District 7 4 References 5 External linksOverview editUnited States House of Representatives elections in Colorado 2008 2 Party Votes Percentage Seats Democratic 1 259 768 55 16 5 1 Republican 990 870 43 38 2 1 Libertarian 12 136 0 61 0 0 Green 10 031 0 50 0 0 American Constitution 8 894 0 44 0 0 Unity 2 176 0 11 0 0 Independent 56 0 00 0 0 Valid votes 2 283 931 82 60 Invalid or blank votes 138 305 17 40 Totals 2 422 236 100 00 7 Voter turnout 91 67 Match up summary editDistrict Incumbent 2008 Status Democratic Republican Other Party 1 Diana DeGette Re election Diana DeGette George Lilly 2 Mark Udall Open Jared Polis Scott Starin 3 John Salazar Re election John Salazar Wayne Wolf 4 Marilyn Musgrave Re election Betsy Markey Marilyn Musgrave 5 Doug Lamborn Re election Hal Bidlack Doug Lamborn 6 Tom Tancredo Open Hank Eng Mike Coffman 7 Ed Perlmutter Re election Ed Perlmutter John W LerewDistrict breakdown editDistrict 1 edit nbsp See also Colorado s 1st congressional district Democratic incumbent Diana DeGette won against Republican nominee George Lilly DeGette was unopposed in her primary and Lilly won against Charles Crain in his primary CQ Politics forecasted the race as Safe Democrat Colorado s 1st congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Diana DeGette incumbent 203 756 71 94 Republican George Lilly 67 346 23 78 Libertarian Martin Buchanan 12 136 4 28 Independent Gary Swing write in 11 0 00 Valid ballots 283 249 92 84 Invalid or blank votes 21 844 7 16 Total votes 305 093 100 00 Turnout votes 88 74 Democratic hold District 2 edit nbsp See also Colorado s 2nd congressional district Democratic nominee Jared Polis a businessman won against Republican nominee Scott Starin an aerospace engineer CQ Politics forecasted the race as Safe Democrat This district had been represented by Democrat Mark Udall since 1999 With the retirement of Senator Wayne Allard Udall ran for the Senate leaving this an open seat Polis won the Democratic primary against Senate President Joan Fitz Gerald and Colorado Conservation Trust Director Will Shafroth Starin was unopposed in the Republican primary Former Eagle County Commissioner Tom Stone was earlier considered a possible Republican candidate as was Boulder Mayor Mark Ruzzin for the Green Party Democrats held a strong edge in this district with the most recent Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry having won 59 in 2004 as it was centered around heavily Democratic Boulder Colorado s 2nd congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Jared Polis 215 602 62 60 Republican Scott Starin 116 619 33 86 Green J A Calhoun 10 031 2 91 Unity William Hammons 2 176 0 63 Valid ballots 344 428 93 54 Invalid or blank votes 23 805 6 46 Total votes 368 233 100 00 Turnout votes 92 49 Democratic hold District 3 edit 2008 Colorado s 3rd congressional district election nbsp 20062010 nbsp nbsp Nominee John Salazar Wayne Wolf Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 203 457 126 762 Percentage 61 6 38 4 nbsp County Results Salazar 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 Wolf 50 60 60 70 U S Representative before election John Salazar Democratic Elected U S Representative John Salazar Democratic nbsp See also Colorado s 3rd congressional district Democratic incumbent John Salazar won against Republican nominee Wayne Wolf CQ Politics forecasted the race as Safe Democrat Colorado s 3rd congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic John Salazar incumbent 203 457 61 61 Republican Wayne Wolf 126 762 38 39 Valid ballots 330 219 96 42 Invalid or blank votes 12 248 3 58 Total votes 342 467 100 00 Turnout votes 89 50 Democratic hold District 4 edit 2008 Colorado s 4th congressional district election nbsp 20062010 nbsp nbsp Nominee Betsy Markey Marilyn Musgrave Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 187 348 146 030 Percentage 56 2 43 8 nbsp County Results Markey 50 60 60 70 Musgrave 50 60 60 70 70 80 U S Representative before election Marilyn Musgrave Republican Elected U S Representative Betsy Markey Democratic nbsp See also Colorado s 4th congressional district Democratic nominee Betsy Markey businesswoman and regional director for Senator Ken Salazar won against Republican incumbent Marilyn Musgrave who had represented this district since 2003 Both ran unopposed in the party primary elections CQ Politics forecasted the race as Leans Democratic The Rothenberg Political Report rated it Toss Up Tilt Democratic The Cook Political Report ranked it Republican Toss Up Musgrave a conservative known for her staunch opposition to gay marriage won in 2006 by winning a plurality 46 of the vote against Angie Paccione D and a strong Reform Party challenge from Eric Eidsness who managed to garner 11 of the vote That along with her 51 showing in 2004 despite George W Bush winning 58 of the vote in this eastern Colorado district that includes the Fort Collins area made her vulnerable in 2008 Democrats suffered a setback earlier when State Senator Brandon Schaffer suddenly dropped out citing his party s failure to clear the field 3 Eidsness switched parties again having switched from Republican to Reform Party the year prior and became a Democrat which could have fueled a potential rematch with Musgrave in 2008 2006 nominee Angie Paccione briefly launched a campaign as well but left the race in September 2007 On October 24 2008 the National Republican Congressional Committee abandoned Marilyn Musgrave s 2008 reelection campaign believing the race was lost This decision was based solely on Musgrave s poor poll numbers Musgrave launched a negative advertisement attacking Markey over the business of Syscom Systems the data processing equipment company run by Markey and her husband The Musgrave ad was called highly misleading by a Denver television station that investigated the facts 4 After her defeat Musgrave would not comment on the election results with the media nor would she concede the race or contact Markey to congratulate her She also did not thank her campaign staff for their efforts She later recorded a robocall for Republican Georgia senator Saxby Chambliss saying that she was defeated by leftist special interests who suppressed the truth with vicious attacks and lies Colorado s 4th congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Betsy Markey 187 348 56 20 Republican Marilyn Musgrave incumbent 146 030 43 80 Valid ballots 333 378 95 27 Invalid or blank votes 16 565 4 73 Total votes 349 943 100 00 Turnout votes 91 30 Democratic gain from Republican District 5 edit nbsp See also Colorado s 5th congressional district Freshman Republican incumbent Doug Lamborn won against Democratic nominee Hal Bidlack a Clinton administration National Security Council official and Independent Rich Hand running as a write in candidate The district is based in heavily Republican Colorado Springs CQ Politics forecasted the race as Safe Republican Lamborn got bad press when two constituents accused him of making a threatening phone call in response to a critical letter they wrote 5 He won against Jeff Crank and Bentley Rayburn more moderate Republicans who had also run in 2006 in the Republican primary In 2006 Lamborn had narrowly won a nasty multi candidate primary with 27 of the vote despite previous representative Joel Hefley s endorsement of Crank citing Lamborn s sleazy campaign Crank and Rayburn thus came to a gentleman s agreement they would jointly conduct a poll of the primary and whoever of the two of them was in third place would drop out and endorse the other so as to have a better chance of defeating Lamborn Rayburn came third in the poll but he refused to drop out and Lamborn won the primary with 44 of the vote 6 Amid worries of vulnerability Lamborn then won the general election by a 59 41 margin becoming the highest vote getter for a GOP Congressional candidate in the state in the 2006 cycle Colorado s 5th congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Republican Doug Lamborn incumbent 183 179 60 03 Democratic Hal Bidlack 113 027 37 04 Constitution Brian Scott 8 894 2 91 Independent Richard Hand write in 45 0 01 Valid ballots 305 145 93 74 Invalid or blank votes 20 371 6 26 Total votes 325 516 100 00 Turnout votes 90 45 Republican hold District 6 edit nbsp See also Colorado s 6th congressional district Republican nominee Mike Coffman won against Democratic nominee Hank Eng CQ Politics The Cook Political Report and The Rothenberg Political Report all forecasted the race as Safe Republican despite some minor controversies surrounding Mike Coffman and Colorado Ethics Watch 7 Eng ran unopposed in the Democratic Primary Coffman defeated a crowded field of candidates including Ted Harvey Steve Ward and Will Armstrong who was endorsed by the State GOP Republican incumbent Tom Tancredo who held the seat since 1999 decided to retire leaving it an open seat His seat was considered to be the most Republican dominated district of the Denver area seats and was also one of the wealthiest in the nation Tancredo was the second highest vote getter for a Republican congressional candidate statewide 59 40 in 2006 just behind Doug Lamborn in the 5th district The district includes Columbine High School which was devastated in a tragic 1999 school massacre Colorado s 6th congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Republican Mike Coffman 250 877 60 66 Democratic Hank Eng 162 641 39 33 Valid ballots 413 518 93 97 Invalid or blank votes 26 527 6 03 Total votes 440 045 100 00 Turnout votes 95 70 Republican hold District 7 edit nbsp See also Colorado s 7th congressional district Democratic incumbent Ed Perlmutter who had represented this district since 2007 won against Republican nominee John W Lerew CQ Politics forecasted the race as Safe Democrat In 2006 Perlmutter won 55 of the vote in this suburban Denver district that narrowly went to John Kerry with 52 in 2004 The district s voter registration was split with independents constituting a slim plurality of 35 compared to Democrats 34 and Republicans 31 Colorado s 7th congressional district election 2008 2 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Ed Perlmutter incumbent 173 937 63 48 Republican John Lerew 100 057 36 51 Valid ballots 273 994 94 18 Invalid or blank votes 16 945 5 82 Total votes 290 939 100 00 Turnout votes 92 47 Democratic holdReferences editSpecific Candidate List for the August 12 2008 Primary Election Colorado Secretary of State a b c d e f g h Official Publication of the Abstract of Votes Cast for the 2008 Primary and 2008 General PDF Secretary of State of Colorado August 14 2009 Archived from the original PDF on May 27 2010 Retrieved October 8 2009 1 The Coloradoan Musgrave Attack Ad Hits Markey On Biz Dealings cbs4denver com KCNC TV September 19 2008 Archived from the original on October 30 2008 Retrieved October 30 2008 Colo Springs couple says got threatening call from congressman Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine KJCT 8 News September 2 2007 Rayburn loses GOP gamble Colorado Statesman Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved April 2 2014 Ethics Watch Requests Criminal Investigation of Coffman Archived 2009 01 09 at the Wayback Machine Colorado Ethics Watch June 15 2007 General 2008 Competitive House Race Chart The Cook Political Report October 28 2008 2008 House Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report October 22 2008External links editElections Center from the Colorado Secretary of State U S Congress candidates for Colorado at Project Vote Smart Colorado U S House Races from 2008 Race Tracker Campaign contributions for Colorado congressional races from OpenSecrets District 1 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 1 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets District 2 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 2 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets District 3 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 3 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets District 4 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 4 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets Musgrave R i vs Markey D graph of collected poll results from Pollster com District 5 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 5 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets Cherry Creek News Where s Hank from Cherry Creek News District 6 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 6 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets District 7 race ranking and details from CQ Politics District 7 campaign contributions from OpenSecrets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado amp oldid 1184579086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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