Secretary of State Jena Griswold Talks 2023 elections

9 de octubre de 2023

A woman stands at the front of a room speaking to an audience seated on black folding chairs. The space has art on the walls, hanging lights, and a staircase. The audience is diverse in age and gender.

Griswold speaking at an event in Telluride.

Election Day in Colorado is less than a month out — ballots should be in boxes by 7 PM on Tuesday, November 7th. Although this election deals mostly with local issues, Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold is still busy preparing. 

Griswold was in Telluride this weekend, and stopped by KOTO. She begins filling us in on the election 2023 details:

JG: We have a state-wide coordinated election, and I think it will be a great election just like all the elections we have. The county clerks have been working hard preparing ballots, testing all the equipment, doing everything they do to ensure security and accuracy. And then I’ll play the oversight role.

KOTO: As you like to point out, Colorado is consistently recognized for having some of the best run and most trusted elections in the country — what challenges remain and what have you been doing to improve our elections further?

JG: Over the last five years that I’ve been Secretary of State we’ve increased access. So, for example, we partnered with the tribes and saw a 25% increase in tribal voting, we passed parolee re-enfranchisement, automatic voter registration, guaranteed access on all public universities and tribal lands. We’ve also had to increase our security posture, the physical security around elections. We’ve seen threats to election workers skyrocket and Colorado has lost about one third of its elected county clerks in the last three years. Election administration is very hard. We had the pandemic, followed by the insurrection, and I’ve been very vocal on the subject: we cannot use threats of intimidation to force good people to step down.

KOTO: So the 2023 election is mostly focused on local issues, but 2024 is going to look a bit different…is your office already looking ahead?

JG: Absolutely — and, by the way — that might be the understatement of the day, that 2024 will look different from 2023. So 2024 is the Presidential Election, and we saw what happened last presidential election. The former President did everything he could to make it hard for Americans to vote in the middle of the pandemic, ultimately inciting the insurrection on the United State Capital. You’re listeners probably know what happened. And that attack on democracy from 2020 and January 6th has not stopped; it hasn’t. What I can tell your listeners is that I believe we’ll have great elections just as we always do. If there are incidents that happen — such as we saw in Mesa County with their security breach, or in Elbert County — I will act to make sure that every Republican, Democrat and Unaffiliated voter can cast a ballot in our elections.

KOTO: How does your work overseeing elections fit together with all the other issues that Coloradans are facing today?

JG: I just think it’s so important to recognize that a well functioning democracy is imperative for all the other things we care about. Because when extremists get elected either because democracy isn’t quite working right, or because of dark money, it leads to the state we’re in today.

So I think we need urgent climate action right now; it should be coupled with good union paying jobs because people shouldn’t be left behind, and we should be building the blueprint of what the future looks like for our state and the nation. The state is on a really good path but there are some big issues facing us. That calls for dynamic and bold leadership, and I am just so honored to be Secretary of State to work in a small way on these issues.

That was Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, who stopped by KOTO to discuss her work on the 2023 election, and beyond.

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