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Legislative Year: 2025 Change
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Bill Detail: HB25-1315

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Title Vacancies in the General Assembly
Status Introduced In House - Assigned to State, Civic, Military, & Veterans Affairs (03/31/2025)
Bill Subjects
  • Elections & Redistricting
  • State Government
House Sponsors E. Sirota (D)
R. Pugliese (R)
Senate Sponsors M. Weissman (D)
B. Kirkmeyer (R)
House Committee State, Civic, Military and Veterans Affairs
Senate Committee
Date Introduced 03/31/2025
AI Summary

This bill modifies and standardizes how vacancies in the Colorado General Assembly are filled—especially for members of major political parties—by creating a more transparent, participatory, and regulated system that includes special elections, contribution limits, and campaign finance disclosures.

  1. Vacancy Committee Composition and Procedure (Sections 1–2)
  • Central committees must select minimum members for any vacancy committee.
  • If a state senate or house central committee fails to do so, the default committee includes:
    • The central committee itself
    • County commissioners from the same political party who live in the district
  1. Introduction of Major Political Party Vacancy Elections (Sections 3–4)
  • A new election process is created for certain legislative vacancies occurring during specific time windows:
    • If a vacancy occurs between July 31 of an even year and July 31 of the following odd year, the seat will be temporarily filled by a party committee, but must be filled by election the following November.
  • These “major political party vacancy elections” will:
    • Be open only to candidates of the same party as the former legislator
    • Allow voting only by voters affiliated with that party or unaffiliated voters in the same district
    • Permit two pathways to get on the ballot:
      1. Signature from 30% of the vacancy committee
      2. A petition signed by 200 voters from the party and district
  1. Transparency and Public Access (Section 4 continued)
  • Vacancy committee meetings must be livestreamed and recorded
  • Proxy voting is prohibited
  • If the committee fails to act within 30 days, the governor appoints a replacement
  1. Campaign Finance and Definitions (Sections 5–7)
  • Defines a new term: "vacancy contender" – someone seeking to be selected by a vacancy committee
  • Vacancy contenders become official candidates if they accept or spend money
  • Clarifies how contribution limits apply to vacancy contenders:
    • If they do not run in a future election, limits apply only during their selection period
    • If they do run, limits extend through the next general election
  • Requires weekly campaign finance reports while the selection process is active
  • Any contribution of $1,000 or more must be reported within 24 hours during the vacancy period
  1. Summary of Key Impacts

Area

Change Introduced

Vacancy Committees

Clear rules for who must be included and how they’re formed

Filling Vacancies

Some vacancies now require special elections, not just appointments

Eligibility to Run

Limited to party members in the same district as former officeholder

Voter Eligibility

Party-affiliated and unaffiliated voters in the district may vote

Campaign Finance Rules

Extends contribution tracking, limits, and disclosure to contenders

Transparency Measures

Requires public access to vacancy meetings (livestreamed/recorded)

Summary

HB25-1315 reforms the process for legislative vacancies by requiring more democratic input, financial transparency, and public accountability. It prevents party insiders from having exclusive, opaque control over filling seats by creating timely elections and clearer rules for candidate participation and campaign conduct.

Summary

Sections 1 and 2 of the bill change the number of
committeepersons elected at a political party's precinct caucus from 2 to
4.
Current law requires the political party central committee of most
jurisdictions to select a vacancy committee to fill vacancies in the central
committee and in the district and state offices held by members of the
political party. Current law also requires a vacancy committee to consist
of, at a minimum, the members of the central committee of a jurisdiction.
Section 2 requires that a vacancy committee selected by a state senatorial
central committee or state representative central committee to fill a
vacancy also consist of, at a minimum, any county commissioners who
are members of the political party and reside within the state senatorial or
state representative district. Section 2 also provides that if a vacancy in
the office of precinct committeeperson is filled, the new appointee shall
not participate in the vacancy committee process to fill a vacancy in the
general assembly until, at the earliest, 91 days after appointment.
Current law provides that vacancies in the general assembly are
filled by vacancy committee selection until the next general election after
the vacancy occurs, when the vacancy is filled by election. Section 4
modifies the way that vacancies are filled by election when the vacating
member of the general assembly is affiliated with a major political party
by requiring that, if the vacancy occurs on or after July 31 of an
even-numbered year and before July 31 of an odd-numbered year, the
vacancy must be filled by vacancy committee selection until the Tuesday
succeeding the first Monday of November of the odd-numbered year
following the vacancy, when the vacancy must be filled by a major
political party at the odd-year November election (major political party
vacancy election). The candidate elected in the major political party
vacancy election serves until the next general election. If a vacancy in the
general assembly occurs on or after July 31of an odd-numbered year and
before July 31 of an even-numbered year and the vacating member is
affiliated with a major political party, the vacancy is filled pursuant to
current law.
The only candidates who may run in a major political party
vacancy election are candidates who are members of the same political
party and of the same representative or senatorial district represented by
the former member of the general assembly whose seat is vacant. The
only voters who may vote in the major political party vacancy election are
voters who are unaffiliated or are members of the same political party as
the former member of the general assembly whose seat is vacant and who
reside in the same representative or senatorial district represented by the
former member of the general assembly whose seat is vacant.
A candidate must be placed on the ballot for a major political party
vacancy election if the candidate:
  • Files a nominating statement signed by 30% of the district
vacancy committee members with the secretary of state and
the candidate's major political party before 5p.m. on the
seventieth day preceding the major political party vacancy
election; or
  • Submits to the secretary of state, at least 75 days prior to
the major political party vacancy election, a notarized
candidate's statement of intent and a petition signed by at
least 200 electors who are affiliated with the same major
political party as the candidate and are eligible to vote in
the district for which the candidate is to be elected.
No other candidates are placed on the ballot. If a vacancy committee
member signs a nominating statement after having signed another
nominating statement filed for the same office in the same major political
party election, the vacancy committee member's later signature does not
count towards the thirty percent of applicable vacancy committee member
signatures required. If an eligible elector signs a petition after having
signed another petition submitted for the same office in the same major
political party election, the elector's later signature does not count towards
the two hundred elector signatures required.
Section 4 also requires vacancy committee meetings to fill
vacancies in the general assembly to be accessible in real time by live
streaming video or audio that is recorded and accessible to the public.
Section 3 provides that a political party may, by vote of the party's state
central committee, forego a major political party election and choose to
nominate a candidate by assembly or convention instead.
Section 5 defines a vacancy contender for the purpose of campaign
finance regulations as any person who seeks to be selected by a vacancy
committee to fill a vacancy in the general assembly (vacancy contender)
and adds vacancy contenders to the definition of candidate.
Section 6 establishes contribution limits for a candidate committee
established in the name of a candidate who is a vacancy contender and
provides deadlines by which a candidate committee established in the
name of a vacancy contender may expend contributions.
Section 7 requires disclosures for contributions related to vacancy
contenders and requires those disclosures to be filed on the Monday of
each week during the period in which the vacancy committee is selecting
a vacancy contender to fill the vacancy in the general assembly.

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with Amendments
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