2006 Colorado Referendum K

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Referendum K

November 7, 2006
Immigration Lawsuit Against Federal Government
Results
Choice
Votes%
Yes830,62855.72%
No660,01244.28%
Total votes1,490,640100.00%

Referendum K was a referendum on the 2006 Colorado ballot. It "directs the Colorado attorney general to initiate, or join other states in, a lawsuit against the U.S. attorney general to demand that the federal government enforce existing federal immigration laws".1 The referendum passed, garnering 55.72% of the vote.[1][2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Colorado Immigration Lawsuit Against Federal Government, Referendum K (2006)". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  2. ^ Mike Coffman. "Official Publication of the Abstract of Votes Cast for the 2005 Coordinated 2006 Primary 2006 General" (PDF). Colorado Secretary of State. Retrieved October 4, 2024.
[edit]


    Referendum K

    November 7, 2006
    Immigration Lawsuit Against Federal Government
    Results
    Choice
    Votes%
    Yes830,62855.72%
    No660,01244.28%
    Total votes1,490,640100.00%

    Referendum K was a referendum on the 2006 Colorado ballot. It "directs the Colorado attorney general to initiate, or join other states in, a lawsuit against the U.S. attorney general to demand that the federal government enforce existing federal immigration laws".1 The referendum passed, garnering 55.72% of the vote.[1][2]

    See also

    References

    1. ^ "Colorado Immigration Lawsuit Against Federal Government, Referendum K (2006)". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
    2. ^ Mike Coffman. "Official Publication of the Abstract of Votes Cast for the 2005 Coordinated 2006 Primary 2006 General" (PDF). Colorado Secretary of State. Retrieved October 4, 2024.
    • Colorado Legislative Council ballot analysis


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