Valerie Richardson
Articles by Valerie Richardson
Prisoner-transfer plan resisted in Colorado
Nuclear waste has nothing on terrorist detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Published January 27, 2009
Inaugural poet fits right in with Obama choices
Elizabeth Alexander is a poet, not a politician, but there's a symmetry between her selection as inaugural poet and that of the president-elect's choices for his inner circle of advisers. Published January 19, 2009
Traditions stand test of time, D.C. politics
The presidential inauguration is steeped in history, pageantry and tradition, much of which occurred by accident. Published January 19, 2009
Bush delists gray wolf in majority of U.S.
DENVER | The Bush administration removed the Canadian gray wolf from the Endangered Species List on Wednesday in every state except Wyoming, making a last-ditch bid to put states in charge of the animal's recovery in the face of staunch environmental opposition. Published January 15, 2009
Blacks lead both houses in Colo.
Terrance Carroll and Peter C. Groff can be forgiven if they're secretly annoyed with the president-elect for stealing their thunder. The two Coloradans are about to make history as the first blacks to preside over both houses of a state legislature in the same session. Published January 6, 2009
Gay marriage backers target New England
Two New England states have already legalized same-sex marriage, and a Boston-based advocacy group wants to see the other four join them. Published January 4, 2009
Colo. GOP sees 2010 election boost
It's hard to say who was feeling luckier after the Senate announcement in Colorado Saturday: Published January 4, 2009
Denver educator eyed for Salazar’s Senate seat
Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter Jr. stunned the state's political establishment Friday after word leaked that he planned to name Denver's little-known schools chief to succeed Sen. Ken Salazar, the Interior secretary nominee. Published January 3, 2009
Unions clash with cost-cutting state legislators
Unions invested heavily in the 2008 election in Colorado, and it paid off: The labor movement defeated three anti-labor initiatives, including a right-to-work measure, and helped Democrats increase their edge in Congress and the Legislature. Published December 30, 2008
Denver axes mascot ‘Boone’ in diversity drive
Many universities have come under pressure to reject their American Indian mascots, but in what may be a first, the University of Denver has ditched a non-Indian mascot on the grounds he wasn't sufficiently diverse. Published December 27, 2008
Candidates aplenty for Salazar’s seat
DENVER | When Ken Salazar leaves the Senate to head the Interior Department, as expected, there won't be any shortage of prominent Colorado Democrats to succeed him. Published December 19, 2008
Greens worry Obama will drop their cause
Environmentalists fear their top priority - a national climate-change policy - will be sidetracked in Congress by concerns over the slumping economy. Published December 16, 2008
Exclusive millionaires club falls on hard times
Nobody in Montana is laughing at the millionaires-only Yellowstone Club as it struggles to stay open after declaring bankruptcy. It's more like smirking. Published November 28, 2008
Book fans descend on town’s ‘Twilight’ zone
Strange, previously unseen creatures have overrun this tiny logging burg, creeping through its neighborhoods and staring at the town's high school. The locals have a name for these otherworldly beings: "Twilight" fans. Published November 20, 2008
Gay rights left on sidelines after election
The 2008 election was a success for nearly every segment of the Democratic coalition, with one stark exception: gay rights advocates. The same voters who backed Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and defeated conservative ballot measures on issues such as abortion, assisted suicide and marijuana legalization suddenly veered from the script when it came to advancing rights for gays. Published November 18, 2008
Obama helped defeat anti-affirmative action
Ward Connerly says his anti-affirmative-action movement wouldn't have taken its first ballot defeat if not for a buzzsaw named Barack Obama. Published November 8, 2008
Blacks, youths turn out; vote record holds
Tuesday's presidential election was historic for many reasons, but achieving the record-shattering voter turnout many expected wasn´t one of them. Published November 6, 2008
Obama’s key state victories flip electoral map
President-elect Barack Obama's victories in previous Republican states Tuesday night transformed the red-blue electoral map that has helped define the nation's regional political bent for the last few presidential elections. Published November 5, 2008
Changes expected to red-blue electoral map
The red-blue electoral map that has helped define the nation's regional political bent is expected to look quite different after Tuesday's presidential vote. Published November 4, 2008
Moderation not key for GOP incumbent
Republican Sen. Gordon H. Smith has compiled one of the most moderate voting records in the Senate during his two terms, but that may not be enough to win over voters in this increasingly "blue" state. Published November 3, 2008