Less than one year into a new administration, speculation is already in full swing for the 2024 presidential election. While no politician seems to have escaped the rumor mill, political spectators have honed in on two prominent state leaders who may be positioning themselves for a spot on the Republican ticket. Governors Greg Abbott (R-Texas) …
Colorado Government:
Governor: Jared Polis (D)
Lieutenant Governor: Dianna Primavera (D)
Attorney General: Phil Weiser (D)
Secretary of State: Jena Griswold (D)
State Treasurer: Dave Young (D)
Agriculture Commissioner: Kate Greenburg (Nonpolitical)
Education Commissioner: Katy Anthes (Nonpolitical)
Insurance Commissioner: Michael Conway (Nonpolitical)
Public Utilities Commissioners: Eric Blank (Nonpolitical), Megan Gilman (Nonpolitical), with one vacant seat.
Executive Director of Labor and Employment: Joe Barela (Nonpolitical)
Executive Director of Natural Resources: Dan Gibbs (Nonpolitical)
Learn More About Colorado:
- Limits on Campaign Contributions
- Upcoming Elections
- Campaign Finance Filing Deadlines
- Legislative Sessions
- State House of Representatives
- State Senate
- Term Limits
Candidate | Total Contributions |
---|---|
John Walsh | $597,904.51 |
Leora Joseph | $351,233.26 |
Judy Amabile | $240,031.52 |
Elliott Hood | $214,351.29 |
Lindsey Daugherty | $211,378.98 |
Chris Kolker | $203,126.37 |
Sean Camacho | $188,447.56 |
Rebekah Stewart | $178,907.87 |
Charles Johnson | $173,379.22 |
Marc Snyder | $168,728.92 |
Committee | Total Contributions |
---|---|
Colorado Voters First Dba Yes on 131 | $10,847,524.18 |
Coloradans for Protecting Reproductive Freedom | $8,852,157.40 |
Protecting Colorado's Environment Economy and Energy Independence | $5,727,216.00 |
Senate Majority Fund | $4,452,683.99 |
Public Schools Strong | $3,788,747.21 |
Cats Aren't Trophies | $2,972,129.35 |
Property Tax Relief Now | $2,928,194.83 |
All Together Colorado | $2,845,976.74 |
Keep Our Pets Safe | $2,441,007.70 |
Colorado Way Forward | $2,058,427.61 |
Contributor | Contributions |
---|---|
Aggregated Unitemized Contributions | $5,640,736.09 |
Unite America PAC Inc | $4,695,783.44 |
National Education Association (Nea) Fund for Children and Public Education Federal | $3,448,708.00 |
Kent Thiry | $3,137,212.37 |
Chevron USA Inc | $2,726,750.00 |
Occidental Petroleum Company | $2,634,750.00 |
American Veterinary Medical Association | $2,308,777.70 |
Education Reform Now Advocacy - Federal | $1,357,967.89 |
Sixteen Thirty Fund Federal | $1,178,000.00 |
Denver Families Action | $1,050,000.00 |
Across the 10 states included in Transparency USA’s database, several prominent women dominated donor lists in the 2020 election cycle. Some, like Karla Jurvetson and Deborah Simon, targeted key state-level elections across multiple swing states. Others focused their contributions closer to home, supporting candidates and PACs in their state of residence. While Transparency USA focuses …
In state-level elections, the race for governor is the marquee contest on the ballot, setting the tone for the next two to four years in state government. And several upcoming governor’s races are expected to garner more attention — and be more contentious — than usual due to governors’ COVID-related decisions and rumored 2024 presidential …
The For the People Act of 2021—known as H.R. 1 in the House and S.1 in the Senate—was introduced in the US House on January 4 as a primary concern of the Biden administration, and passed in the U.S. House on March 3rd. An almost identical bill was introduced in 2019, and passed in the …
The stakes were particularly high for the 2020 elections, and not just for the presidency. At the state-level, some of the most closely watched races were Democratic efforts to flip swing state legislatures blue and take control of the upcoming redistricting process. What’s At Stake Simply put, redistricting is the process of redrawing the boundary …