Local News, Denver Post, Politics

Yadira Caraveo’s advantage over Gabe Evans shrinks to just 1,321 votes in battle for Congress

Denver Post

The race for Congress between U.S. Rep. Yadira Caraveo and Republican state Rep. Gabe Evans narrowed once again Friday afternoon, according to newly updated results.

But there are still thousands of ballots outstanding in Adams County, which has been favoring Caraveo by nearly 12 percentage points. As of 12:18 p.m., the Democrat held a slim 1,321-vote lead over Evans — equating to a 48.9% to 48.4% edge — out of 297,106 ballots tallied.

It’s not clear when Adams County will post more results from its counting efforts. It had more than 20,000 ballots to process Friday, according to the Clerk and Recorder’s Office. Weld County had fewer than 3,000 ballots to count at the beginning of the day and Larimer County had only 200.

The race in Colorado’s ultra-competitive 8th Congressional District could help determine control of next year’s Congress. It has been a grueling affair, with big-money backing and pointed campaign ads blanketing the airwaves for weeks.

In its maiden election in 2022, the district was won by Caraveo by just over 1,600 votes out of more than 236,000 ballots cast. It was listed by political prognosticators as one of 2024’s closest House contests.

Caraveo, a pediatrician and former state lawmaker, has performed appreciably better in Adams County than Evans, while the former Army vet and police officer has done better than his opponent among Weld County voters.

The 8th Congressional District sweeps across Denver’s northern suburbs and covers rural sections of Adams and Weld counties as well, along with a small slice of Larimer County. It is the most heavily Latino congressional district in Colorado, with around one in four residents identifying that way.

That fact helped push Caraveo, the daughter of Mexican immigrants, past state Sen. Barb Kirkmeyer in 2022. This cycle, however, she faced a Republican foe who also has Latino roots, complicating that picture.

In fact, an exit poll of Latino voters this week found that Caraveo lost substantial support from the demographic compared to two years ago. In her first campaign in 2022, she won about 75% of the Latino vote; this year, it was about 56%, according to the polls.

Pollster Gabe Sanchez, of BSP Research, chalked it up to both major parties fielding Latino candidates.

“Whenever Latinos see two candidates on the ballot, they essentially split the ballot between those Latino candidates,” Sanchez said. “… By running a co-Latino on the Republican side, they were basically able to eat into that advantage.”


Staff writer Nick Coltrain contributed to this story.

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