Colorado
Colorado's AG filed 54 lawsuits against Trump. The state is defending gun safety, abortion access, and public lands. What you can do.
Latest: June 30, 2026 Latest BriefOuray Wildfire Online VotingJune 30, 2026Colorado’s attorney general has filed 54 lawsuits against the Trump administration and won 34 of them. A federal judge found Trump withheld Colorado funding as “punishment and nothing more.” Democrats control the governor’s office and both chambers of the Legislature, but a $1.5 billion budget deficit is forcing cuts to Medicaid and TABOR refunds.
Federal lawsuits
Phil Weiser has sued the Trump administration 54 times since January 2025. Courts have partially or fully blocked Trump policies in 34 cases. Eight went against the state. Twelve are still pending.
Weiser blocked Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship, stopped DOGE from accessing private taxpayer data, and restored $6.8 billion in paused education funds. He also helped bring a tariff challenge that the Supreme Court ultimately struck down.
”This administration is lawless, they are bullying, and we are forced again to bring basic legal challenges because this administration acts as if they’re above the law.”
Phil Weiser, Colorado Attorney General| Area | What Weiser blocked | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Immigration | End of birthright citizenship | Colorado Sun |
| Consumer data | DOGE access to private taxpayer records | CO AG |
| Energy | Freeze on EV charging and wind development | Colorado Sun |
| Education | $6.8B in paused federal education funds | CO Newsline |
| Child care | Cuts to funding for low-income families | Colorado Sun |
| Consumer finance | Defunding of CFPB | CO AG |
Weiser is now running for governor. His lawsuit record is the centerpiece of his campaign, and voters will decide whether that record translates to executive leadership.
Federal punishment
A federal judge found that Trump withheld Colorado funding as “punishment and nothing more” for the state’s handling of Tina Peters, the former Mesa County clerk convicted of facilitating a security breach of county voting machines.
The retaliation hit rural, Republican-voting areas hardest. Trump vetoed a clean water pipeline for southeastern Colorado and denied disaster funding for wildfire recovery in the northwest. He ordered five counties to recertify over 100,000 SNAP households in 30 days or lose millions.
100,000+ SNAP households in five rural counties ordered to recertify within 30 days or lose federal funding
Governor Polis commuted Peters’ sentence on May 15, 2026, reducing it from eight years to four and making her eligible for parole June 1. He framed it as a free speech issue. The Colorado Democratic Party disagreed. On May 20, 90% of the State Central Committee voted to censure Polis and suspended him from speaking at party events.
”Reducing her sentence now, under pressure from Donald Trump, is not justice. It sends a message to future bad actors that election tampering has consequences, unless you’re friends with the president.”
Colorado Democratic Party statement on the Peters commutationThe Peters episode shows how federal pressure can fracture state-level coalitions. Trump punished the whole state. Polis tried to relieve the pressure. His own party punished him for it. The funding cuts remain.
Healthcare and benefits
Colorado’s budget shortfall grew to $1.5 billion in 2026. The core problem is structural: Medicaid costs grow at roughly 9% per year, but TABOR limits state spending growth to approximately 3.2%.
The Legislature closed the gap by cutting $270 million in Medicaid reimbursement rates (a 2% reduction) and withholding $300 million in TABOR refunds. New eligibility criteria for the Cover All Coloradans program further tightened access.
The federal reconciliation bill made it worse. H.R. 1 constrained investments and deepened the state-level deficit at the same time Colorado was already cutting.
Who This Affects
A Medicaid provider in rural Colorado, Western Slope
She runs a small family practice that serves 600 Medicaid patients. The 2% reimbursement cut means she loses roughly $12,000 a year. She is already the only primary care provider within 40 miles. If she closes, her patients will drive to Grand Junction or go without care.
Based on documented cases and public data.
Immigration
Federal immigration agents have been pulling defendants out of active Colorado criminal cases, including people awaiting trial for sexual assault. ICE refuses to return them to state courts. Victims are denied justice. Cases collapse.
Colorado passed SB25-276, which bars local officials from sharing immigration status with ICE and limits where ICE can operate without a judge-signed warrant (including schools and hospitals). A federal judge dismissed Trump’s challenge to the law, ruling that the Supremacy Clause “does not go so far as to compel state assistance.”
If sanctuary protections hold
- Immigrant families can access schools and hospitals without fear of arrest.
- State criminal cases proceed to trial instead of collapsing when defendants disappear.
- Colorado courts maintain jurisdiction over crimes committed in Colorado.
If federal enforcement overrides state law
- Victims of violent crimes lose their day in court.
- Immigrant communities stop reporting crimes and seeking medical care.
- Local police become de facto ICE agents without the training or authority.
The Aurora gang situation that dominated 2024 headlines has diminished. Of 30 people charged in two federal indictments, nearly half took plea deals. No cases went to trial. One expert told CPR “it’s quieted down a lot in 2025.” Trump continued to cite Aurora to justify military action against Venezuela, muddling facts and omitting context.
2026 elections
Governor Polis is term-limited. The June 30 primary will narrow a crowded field. On the Democratic side, Senator Michael Bennet and Attorney General Phil Weiser are the leading candidates. Republicans have 21 candidates and no consensus.
| Race | Key candidates | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Governor (D primary) | Michael Bennet, Phil Weiser | June 30, 2026 |
| Governor (R primary) | Scott Bottoms, Barbara Kirkmeyer, Victor Marx, 18 others | June 30, 2026 |
| General election | Primary winners | November 3, 2026 |
Republicans have not won a Colorado governor’s race since 2002. The Democratic primary is the race that will likely determine the next governor. The choice between Bennet and Weiser is a choice between a senator who knows Washington and an AG who has spent 18 months in court against it.
”My job is to protect Colorado — to defend this concept that we live under the rule of law.”
Phil Weiser, Colorado Attorney GeneralThe next governor inherits a $1.5 billion deficit and a TABOR constraint that makes Medicaid unsustainable. Federal funding fights are personal and punitive. The Democratic Party just censured the outgoing governor. Voters should ask every candidate how they will manage that combination.
Protect yourself right now
-
Check your voter registration. Colorado’s primary is June 30, 2026. Confirm your registration and party affiliation at GoVoteColorado.gov.
-
Track your mail ballot. Use Colorado’s ballot tracking tool and fix any signature issues immediately.
-
Verify your Medicaid and SNAP status. If you receive benefits, check your eligibility and keep your contact information current. Reimbursement cuts and new eligibility rules take effect this year.
-
Know your rights with ICE. Under SB25-276, ICE cannot operate in schools, hospitals, or libraries without a judge-signed warrant. You do not have to answer questions about immigration status.
-
Ask governor candidates about the deficit. TABOR limits spending growth to 3.2% while Medicaid grows at 9%. Every candidate should explain how they will close that gap without gutting services.
Show Up Locally
Walk in the Greeley Fourth of July Parade With Us!
Community Event · Greeley-Weld Indivisible
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Greeley, CO, 80639
Come march in the Greeley Fourth of July Parade with Greeley-Weld Indivisible! Express your (non-partisan) support for voting rights, voter registration, and civic engagement, while handing out.
Start your 4th of July right!
Visibility Event · Indivisible
7100 Grandview Ave, Arvada, CO, 80002
Join us to rally and protest! Republicans are rushing to steal billions in taxpayer funding from the essential services families rely on, all to supercharge Trump’s authoritarian power grabs and give.
We Hold These Truths
Rally · Indivisible Westminster
7200 Grandview Ave, Arvada, CO, 80002
NOTE: Address and times have changed. We will read the Declaration of Independence! And there will be banjos! This Fourth of July 2026, we are urging all Americans to return to and remember the.
Fund Communities, Not Chaos
Visibility Event · Indivisible
7200 Grandview Ave, Arvada, CO, 80002
Join us for a protest rally July 4Th, to celebrate our independence, and protest the fact that billions in taxpayer funding is being stolen from the essential services families rely on, all to.
We Are America!
Visibility Event · SoBoCo Indivisible
2 S Marshall Rd, Superior, CO, 80027
This Fourth of July, join us as we reclaim the flag and celebrate the America we believe in! Bring a sign that reflects your vision for our country, an America rooted in freedom, justice, equality.
Stand Up! Speak Out!
Visibility Event · SoBoCo Indivisible
2 S Marshall Rd, Superior, CO, 80027
Join us at the Superior Tesla dealer to stand up and speak out! Bring your signs, your energy and a positive attitude. We are calling out ALL the harm the Trump regime has done in our country, so.
4th of July Protect Democracy Rally
Greeley-Weld Indivisible
901 9th Ave, Greeley, CO, 80631
This Fourth of July, raise your voice to protect and expand American democracy! We'll rally on the Weld County courthouse steps as we mourn together what we've lost and celebrate in community what.
We Hold These Truths - Brighton
Rally · Indivisible Westminster
650 E Southern St, Brighton, CO, 80601
This 4th of July, Indivisible Bridge to Brighton is hosting a public reading of the Declaration of Independence! We’re going to meet on the northeast corner of Carmichael Park at 6th Ave and Southern.
What Changed Recently
Gold Mountain Fire Triggers Emergency Online Voting in Ouray County
Ouray County, Colorado activated emergency online ballot casting after the Gold Mountain Fire burned more than 8,000 acres, displacing voters on Election
Denver Chicano Students Walked Out in 1969. 1,200 Showed Up. Schools Changed.
On March 20, 1969, Chicano students at Denver's West High School launched a four-day walkout demanding curriculum reform. More than 1,200 students joined.
Federal Court Voids SNAP Soda Bans in 24 States. USDA Lacked Authority.
A federal judge ruled the USDA had no legal authority to approve state waivers banning soda purchases with food assistance benefits, blocking plans that
Denver Water Raises Home Connection Fees 32%. New Costs Start July 1.
Denver Water is hiking tap fees for new homes by 32% starting July 1, 2026, pushing the single-family connection fee within city limits to $10,450 per unit.
Colorado's Family Affordability Credit Off for Two Years. It Cut Child Poverty 37%.
Colorado's Family Affordability Tax Credit is off for 2026 and 2027 after weak revenue forecasts. It cut child poverty 37% in its one fully active year.
Judge Blocks Transfer of NCAR Supercomputer. Calls It Retaliation Against Colorado.
A federal judge blocked NSF from transferring NCAR's Wyoming supercomputer to a third party, finding the move was likely retaliation against Colorado over the Tina Peters case.
Voter Registration and Resources
Don't see a letter on your issue? Text RESIST to 50409 to write your own to any official.