A year ago, Colorado's African-American community braced for the unimaginable: a legislature without a single black lawmaker for the first time in nearly six decades.
Denver's first black mayor, Wellington Webb, was among those who fretted about whether African-Americans would have a voice when the legislature convened in 2011.
But much has changed in the past 12 months.
Two blacks serve in the Colorado General Assembly.
Two blacks are now on the Denver City Council.
And Denver, with a black population of only 10 percent, just elected its second black mayor, Michael Hancock.
A year ago, it was Hancock, a city councilman at the time, who was upbeat despite worries from some in the black community.
"African-American candidates, no matter where they live, can appeal to voters because their issues are the same: education, job security, the economy," he said.
He soared past the white front-runner in the mayoral race, which came as no surprise to David Bositis, a Beltway political analyst.
"When you're talking about a place like Colorado, its record in many respects is extraordinary," said Bositis, with the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C. "The state has a long history of white voters supporting the candidate they believe is best."
Read more at The Denver Post.