To display a district, check the box next to the district you wish to display. In the map, if you click on the district it will give the current representative and the number of that district. Districts are coded by party (red for Republicans, blue for Democrats). Unchecking the box will remove that district from the map. Clicking the name next to each checkbox will send you to that district's page results here on COMaps.
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available, but will have out of date information on the current representative.
Elections
After 2006, the Democrats gained an additional four seats, increasing their majority to 39-26. With this majority, seven seats would have to change in order for the GOP to regain control. In 2007, Debbie Stafford switched to the Democratic side for the last year in office, as she is term limited in 2008 and cannot run again. Most of the battles will be over the four Democratic freshman, and the always challenged candidates, such as Rep. Jim Reisburg (HD-50). The main strongholds of the GOP are El Paso County (Colorado Springs), Douglas County (southern Denver exurbs), and Mesa County (Grand Junction). Democrats have a hold on districts in Denver, Boulder, Aurora and the ski villages. A large majority of the shift over the past years has come from Jefferson and Larimer County, with a significant shift toward the Democratic side.
Disclaimer
If there are any problems with this or any other map or text, please let webmaster know of the error. As always, due to errors between the data and Google Maps, these maps should not be taken as definitive proof of one's current representatives.