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Map: How Denver Neighborhoods Voted in the Presidential Election

For the second straight election, not one precinct went to Donald Trump.
Image: Denver precinct voting map
Every Colorado precinct showed strong support for Kamala Harris Denver Elections Division
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The Denver Elections Division still has some votes left to count, but it's clear that Kamala Harris, despite losing the presidential election, won Denver in a landslide. In fact, Donald Trump failed to garner more than 50 percent of the vote in any Denver precinct for the second straight election, with 195 of Denver’s 301 precincts giving the Harris-Walz campaign over 75 percent of the vote.

Harris currently holds 78.71 percent of Denver’s overall votes, while Trump has 19.18 percent.

Generally, precincts on the city's edges were the least supportive of Harris, with southwest Denver from Ruby Hill to Bear Valley giving Harris between 50 percent and 75 percent of the vote. Northeast neighborhoods near Denver International Airport, like Green Valley Ranch, voted similarly, as did those in the southeast portion of the city.

Neighborhoods giving Harris over 75 percent of the vote are generally in the center of the city, though the northwest corner also went hard for the Democrat, with Berkeley, Sunnyside and Highland tallying over 75 percent for the losing candidate.

The 2020 election told a similar story. When Joe Biden and Harris were a ticket together, every Denver precinct went blue, too. By the final vote count, the pair had earned 79.55 percent of Denver’s votes to Trump and Mike Pence’s 18.19 percent, showing very similar numbers to the vote totals so far in 2024.

One difference from 2020 at this point is that the northeast areas near the airport ended up swinging into the over-75 percent category for the Biden/Harris ticket. The rest of the map in 2024 looks extremely similar to 2020's version, down to the Wash Park-Country Club-Cherry Creek band of slightly more conservative neighborhoods.

Colorado’s precinct boundaries changed in 2021 ahead of Denver City Council’s redistricting efforts, which were prompted by the 2020 United States Census. The last time a Denver precinct went for a non-Democrat candidate for president was in 2016, when precinct number 135, the farthest-south precinct in the west of the city, gave between 50 and 55 percent of its vote to the Trump/Pence ticket. That precinct is in the Marston neighborhood.

That year, the rest of the city voted for Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine, with the vast majority of precincts giving that pair over 70 percent of the vote.

Despite a strong Harris lean in Denver and the state as a whole, the election was called for the Trump/JD Vance ticket early on November 6. But if Denver matches its 2020 voter turnout, there are still likely over 100,000 ballots left to count, so some neighborhoods could shift slightly higher or lower.

In the meantime, keep up with the results of Denver's many ballot measures and several Colorado initiatives that are in tight races.