Colorado 1962 ballot measures
In 1962, voters decided on eight statewide ballot measures in Colorado on November 6.
- Two were initiated constitutional amendments.
- Six were legislatively referred constitutional amendments.
- Voters approved five (62.50%) and rejected three (37.50%).
On the ballot
November 6, 1962
Type | Title | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proposal No. 1 | Provide for the reorganization of the court system and redefine the terms of judicial offices. |
|
303,740 (64%) |
169,052 (36%) |
|
Proposal No. 2 | Determine the means for setting salaries for officers of the City and County of Denver. |
|
157,249 (38%) |
254,354 (62%) |
|
Proposal No. 3 | Allow the use federal income tax laws to define Colorado's income tax laws and prohibit the use of a percentage of the federal tax as the state tax. |
|
231,784 (53%) |
201,795 (47%) |
|
Proposal No. 4 | Establish provisions relating to the residency requirements for electors in Colorado presidential elections. |
|
303,942 (69%) |
137,323 (31%) |
|
Proposal No. 5 | Eliminate the requirement that all property must be assessed at its full cash value for taxation purposes. |
|
215,413 (50%) |
212,477 (50%) |
|
Proposal No. 6 | Change provisions relating to the selection of county officers and the compensation of county and municipal officers. |
|
207,442 (50%) |
208,867 (50%) |
|
Proposal No. 7 | Establish provisions relating to apportioning senatorial districts, establish that representation for the House be decided based on population, and require the General Assembly to reapportion itself. |
|
305,700 (64%) |
172,725 (36%) |
|
Proposal No. 8 | Create a commission to reapportion the General Assembly and require the state supreme court to review and affirm such reapportionments. |
|
149,822 (32%) |
311,749 (68%) |
See also
- Laws governing the initiative process in Colorado
- List of Colorado ballot measures
- 1962 ballot measures
External links
![]() |
State of Colorado Denver (capital) |
---|---|
Elections |
What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2025 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures |
Government |
Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy |