Justin Wingerter is a political reporter for The Denver Post, primarily covering Colorado's congressional delegation and other federal topics. He previously reported for The Oklahoman and The Topeka Capital-Journal. He is a native of Granite City, Illinois, and a graduate of Southern Illinois University.
Colorado’s four U.S. House Democrats appear to be on a one-way road to impeaching President Donald Trump, but they merged onto it at different times and for different reasons.
Taxpayers have spent $43,390 — at a rate of $525 per hour — to defend John Hickenlooper before the Colorado Independent Ethics Commission as part of an arrangement that dates...
The host of a fundraiser for U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner has, in recent years, lobbied the Senate on behalf of Middle East banks as they opposed sanctions on the terrorist...
A Denver lawmaker is proposing a one-year committee investigate the U.S. Olympic Committee after it allegedly failed to protect Olympic athletes from serial child molester Larry Nassar, giving a boost...
Two cases of mumps and a case of chickenpox at Aurora's immigration detention facility has forced 142 detainees into isolation, the latest in a string of outbreaks at the center.
Ben Carson, the U.S. secretary of housing and urban development, will stop in Colorado for the second time in as many months when he speaks to conservatives in Denver on...
The campaign arm for U.S. House Democrats took aim Friday at Republican Rep. Scott Tipton, an early indication that national Democrats will work to unseat the five-term congressman in 2020.
Colorado’s population of undocumented immigrants fell significantly between 2007 and 2017, part of a similar nationwide decrease, according to a Pew report released Wednesday.
Gov. Jared Polis says he did not speak with Interior Secretary David Bernhardt on Monday about relocating the Bureau of Land Management headquarters to Colorado, but continues to favor its...
For the first time, 2020 candidates for U.S. Senate in Colorado stood before a crowd and made the case that voters should elect them next year in what promises to...
U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner told colleagues Friday that "current and proposed tariffs" by President Donald Trump’s administration will "take money" from American workers and consumers.