Labor 24

2024 Elections

= Colorado AFL-CIO Endorsed Candidate

Presidential Candidates

Coming Soon

U.S. Congress Candidates

Congressional District 4


Congressional District 5


Congressional District 7

Colorado State Senate Candidates

Senate District 10


Senate District 12

Colorado State House Candidates

House District 13


House District 14


House District 15


House District 16


House District 17


House District 18


House District 20


House District 21


House District 22


House District 56


House District 60

County Candidates

Cheyenne County

County Commissioner District 3


El Paso County

County Commissioner District 2


County Commissioner District 3


County Commissioner District 4


Elbert County

County Commissioner District 1


County Commissioner District 3


Kit Carson County

County Commissioner District 1


County Commissioner District 3


Lincoln County

County Commissioner District 2


County Commissioner District 3


Park County

County Commissioner District 1


County Commissioner District 2


Teller County

County Commissioner District 1


County Commissioner District 3


Treasurer

Ballot Initiatives

Oppose: Amendment 80 - Public funds for private schools

A properly funded, high-quality education system for all Colorado’s kids is critical to strong, prosperous communities and to our state’s future. Amendment 80 is not about choice since Colorado families already have the ability to send their child to the school that best fits their needs. It’s about creating a voucher program that will funnel money to exclusionary, expensive, and unaccountable private schools at the expense of our kids’ education and our public schools.


Oppose: Proposition 131 Concerning a new election process with ranked choice voting and all-candidate primaries

Colorado has the 2nd highest turnout in the nation. Our voters are engaged and have built strong civic engagement habits. Proposition 131 is an overly complicated, costly election reform effort led by millionaires and billionaires not happy about election outcomes. Proposition 131 is not a typical “ranked-choice voting” model and will not deliver on its promises. Millionaires and billionaires supporting 131 promise less partisanship and more moderate candidates but experience and studies in other states demonstrates it leads to more dark money in politics where the person with the most money wins. It would cost Colorado taxpayers $21 million to implement over just the first two to three years. Only about half of candidates are included in the proposed change, which means Colorado voters would cast ballots in two confusingly different ways in both the primary and general elections. Because of confusion, studies show votes cast in this model are 10 times more likely to have mistakes that invalidate the vote and the voter will never know. It also leads to long delays (up to two weeks) in election results.