Donald Trump beat Joe Biden in total votes on Colorado’s Super Tuesday. If only they were running against each other on the same ballot.

Trump won the state GOP primary with 517,884 votes while Biden carried 446,395 votes in the Democrat primary.

That’s more than half a million tears cried by Secretary of State Jena Griswold as the mean Supreme Court unanimously forced her to count Republican votes for Trump.

Click here to see the most up to date ballot count in Colorado.

Granted, Biden only lost about 88,000 Democrat voters while Trump lost about 300,000 in his race against Nikki Haley.

We would argue that Biden would have lost just as many votes, if not the Democrat Primary, if Haley had been on the Democrat ballot.

But alas, the former South Carolina governor gave it her best shot, and has now suspended her campaign. In Colorado, Haley pulled nearly 274,000 votes, 33%.

Trump is the last man standing, and the Republican Party’s nominee for the 2024 presidential election.

In other important election news, it appears that “uncommitted delegate” in Colorado, having garnered 43,439 votes and 8.13% of the Democrat vote against Biden, will fall short of the required 10% to make an impact during the convention.

PeakNation™ will recall former U.S. Rep. David Skaggs urged fellow Democrats and independents to go rogue and cast their ballots for uncommitted delegate to contest and make trouble at the Democratic National Convention.

In other states, Muslim and anti-Israeli activists also urged Democrats to cast a protest ballot against Biden with “uncommitted delegate” because the U.S. hasn’t stopped the war it’s not fighting between Israel and the Hams terrorist group in Gaza.

It’s unclear how “uncommitted delegates” fared in other Super Tuesday states, but in Michigan last week the protest vote carried 16%.

Griswold had this to say to MSNBC following the 9-0 Supreme Court decision that chaos would ensue if each state were permitted to determine who could run for president.

“It will be up to the American voters to save our democracy in November.”

Colorado voters spoke loud and clear on Tuesday.

Trump was overwhelmingly elected, while a half million less voters bothered to even mail in a ballot for the Democrat’s primary than did so in 2020.