Weiser wins Dems' primary for governor; GOP race is close
National News
Audio By Carbonatix
9:10 PM on Tuesday, June 30
(The Center Square) - Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser was projected to win the Democratic primary for governor after Tuesday's primary, but the Republican primary for the same seat remained too close to call as of Wednesday morning.
Meanwhile, the attorney general primaries were determined by large margins.
In the gubernatorial race, Weiser had 54.8% of the votes, which gave him a big lead over his opponent, U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado, with 45.2% during early results. Weiser led Bennet with over 600,000 total votes cast across the state, according to the Colorado Secretary of State's Office. Weiser was most notably ahead in the greater Denver area.
As of Wednesday morning, Weiser's lead grew slightly to 55.8% of the ballots or 420,127 votes. Bennet was at 44.2%, with 332,376 votes. More than 750,000 ballots have been counted.

Sen. Michael Bennet speaks at Presidential Gun Sense Forum
U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet speaks at the Presidential Gun Sense Forum in Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 10, 2019. Photo: Gage Skidmore / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0 / Cropped from Original.
Weiser is projected to go up in the Nov. 3 election against whoever wins the Republican primary, and the winner of that election will succeed Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, who's termed-out.
While Scott Bottoms trailed in the Republican gubernatorial primary with 19.8% of votes, Victor Marx (38.7%) and state Sen. Barb Kirkmeyer (41.5%) remained within 11,000 votes of each other out of a total 385,000 counted Tuesday evening.
On Wednesday morning, with 466,400 ballots counted, the race was still close between Marx, now at 39.7% of the votes, and Kirkmeyer at 39.9%.
A nonprofit founder, Marx positioned himself as the outsider candidate, while Kirkmeyer, R-Larimier and Weld counties, leaned on her political experience during her campaign.
The Democratic primary race had centered around an economic agenda with one of the biggest talking points between the political heavyweights being who could push back against President Donald Trump most effectively.
The Republican primary race has also focused on the economy.
In other races, state attorney general primaries were decided by wide margins Tuesday evening.
Two Republican candidates squared off for their party ticket, with El Paso District Attorney Michael Allen (60.7%) projected to beat lawyer David Wilson (39.3%) as of Tuesday evening. That remained the case Wednesday morning with Allen at 60.2% vs. Wilson's 39.8%.
Four Democrats looked to succeed Weiser, who's termed-out as attorney general. As of Tuesday evening, Secretary of State Jena Griswold (47.0%) appeared to handedly win the primary over Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty (20.3%), nonprofit executive David Seligman (17.3%) and former state Deputy Assistant Attorney General Hetal Doshi (15.8%). As of Wednesday morning, there wasn't much change, with Griswold at 45.7% and Dougherty at 19.8%, Seligman at 18.3% and Doshi at 16.2%.