
Daniel Herrera Carbarjal ICT
Four Native candidates will appear on Tuesday’s primary ballots in Colorado, the last of the June primaries across the country.
Two Native candidates are running for the Colorado House of Representatives and two Native candidates are running for Denver City Council.
If either candidate is elected they will be the first Native American to be on Denver City Council.
“Denver was a relocation city and we’ve never had a Native person serving on city council and we’ve got a lot of projects, a lot of issues in this community that really need help and I think an Indigenous perspective is important,” Teddy McCullough, Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians, ICT at the Denver March Powwow in the spring.
McCullough is running for city council in district 8, which covers the Central Park, Northeast and part of Montebello neighborhoods.
Denver was one of many cities alongside Chicago, Seattle and Los Angeles that Native Americans and Alaska Natives relocated to under the federal government’s urban Indian relocation program.
The purpose of the program was to assimilate Native people into mainstream American society by encouraging them to leave reservations for major cities with the promise of jobs.
“City council has existed for 100 years and we have never had a Native person in office – that would be crazy,” Maldonado Bad Hand told ICT.
More than 100,000 American Indians and Alaska Natives alone or in combination with another race live in Colorado, according to the 2020 Census. In Denver County almost 9,000 residents identify as American Indian and Alaska Native.

Teddy McCullough, Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians, is running for Denver City Council in District 8 for the 2026 midterm elections. (Jourdan Bennett-Begaye/ICT)
With that history and the amount of Native people living in the Mile High city, McCullough says more needs to be done.
“There’s a lot going on in Denver and I think our leadership needs to reflect the people that we are serving,” McCullough said. “I’m going to neighborhood leaders and talking with them and seeing what issues they’re facing that they don’t feel like the city is addressing directly.”
Kristina Maldonado Bad Hand, Sicangu Lakota, who is also running for Denver City Council, said she is ready for the position.
“Being Native is a political existence, I feel like I’ve been training for it my whole life,” she told ICT. She’ll be on the ballot under the at-large, seat B role for city council.
Colorado is home to two federally recognized tribes: Southern Ute Tribe and Ute Mountain Ute Tribe.
The other two candidates running for office are Consuelo Redhorse, Navajo, and Gabriel Cervantes, descendent of the Coahuiltecan and Nahua peoples, according to ICT and Advance Native Political Leadership’s database.
Jourdan Bennett-Begaye contributed to this report.
The post Last June primary election has four Native candidates in Colorado appeared first on ICT.
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