Because you can’t talk about 372,000 dirty names being cleared without mentioning the two people who let it rot in the first place.
Jena Griswold — the same official who has spent years dodging transparency, punishing whistleblowers, and acting like oversight is a personal insult — should have been held accountable a long time ago.
And everyone in this state knows why she wasn’t.
Phil Weiser.
Colorado’s Attorney General.
The man who was supposed to enforce the law, not run political cover.
He protected her.
He shielded her.
He made sure nothing touched her — not the scandals, not the questions, not the mess that just got exposed by Judicial Watch’s cleanup.
So when people ask, “How did Colorado end up with 372,000 dirty voter‑roll entries?”
The answer is simple:
Because the people in charge wanted it that way.
Because accountability in Colorado only happens when someone from the outside forces it.
This cleanup isn’t just numbers.
It’s a spotlight.
And it’s shining directly on the people who spent years pretending everything was perfect.
Colorado is finally being dragged into the light — and the excuses are dead.
@concernedforco @mrosazza @NickRogersBTL @KottenState @18WheelerChris @ForestMommy @4familyfreedom4 @logiclives