Colorado’s March 5 presidential primaries are firming up. Given Donald Trump’s status after a recent court ruling, the competition isn’t as simple as incumbent-versus-challenger.
Frankie Lozada, president of an event logistics and management company
Stephen P. Lyons, business owner and plumber
Jason Michael Palmer, entrepreneur and philanthropist
Armando “Mando” Perez-Serrato, educator
Dean Phillips, U.S. representative for Minnesota
Marianne Williamson, 2020 presidential candidate and self-help book author
Noncommitted Delegate: An option provided by the Democratic Party for primary voters with no candidate preference. It’s a vote to send a non-committed delegate to the party’s national convention this summer.
Republican candidates
Ryan Binkley, business consultant and pastor
Chris Christie, former governor of New Jersey
Ron DeSantis, governor of Florida
Nikki Haley, former governor of South Carolina and former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
Asa Hutchinson, former governor of Arkansas
Vivek Ramaswamy, entrepreneur and founder of a biotech company
The article very much explicitly says that Trump will be on it unless the Supreme Court makes a ruling by Friday.
But in Colorado’s case, the court put a stay in place pending any appeals filed with the U.S. Supreme Court. The state Republican Party filed its petition to the higher court on Wednesday, and that will secure Trump a spot on the primary ballot unless the federal justices deny the case by Jan. 5, when the state certifies its primary ballots, or upholds the Colorado ruling.
From the article:
Not on Colorado or Maine ballots
Vivek misses a point like he usually does.
The article very much explicitly says that Trump will be on it unless the Supreme Court makes a ruling by Friday.