John Hickenlooper
State of Colorado
Colorado Senate Intelligence
Hickenlooper represents a Colorado that is blue but not complacent: the state leans D+12, yet its 88% competitiveness score reflects a coalition that still demands pragmatism over ideology. His brand is pro-growth, tech-friendly, and Western—well suited to a fast-growing, highly educated state where professional/scientific work is a major economic engine and public-lands politics are never far from the ballot box. The defining tension is between affluent Front Range voters and a broader statewide electorate that wants climate action, housing relief, and economic stability without looking hostile to business, energy, or agriculture.
For advocates, the opening is “innovation plus affordability.” Colorado’s $95,470 median income masks real cost pressure, especially with median home values at $539,400, making housing, workforce, and cost-of-living arguments potent even in a relatively prosperous state. Hickenlooper’s committee profile gives him lanes on energy, commerce, health, and small business; campaigns should frame asks around competitiveness, resilience, and local job creation, not pure regulation. Conservation can work here, but only when paired with permitting, technology, or rural economic upside.
Economic & Demographic Snapshot
Data sourced from U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates (2017-2021 vs. 2019-2023). All figures are statistical estimates with 90% confidence level.
Colorado State Demographics
Median Age 37.7 (vs 38.5) · Homeownership 66.2% (vs 65.5%) · Bachelor’s+ 45.7% (vs 33.7%) · Poverty 5.9% (vs 12.4%) · Income $95,470 (vs $37,585)
Age Distribution
Near the national median age (37.7 vs 38.5 nationally). 30% of residents are in the 20–39 working-age bracket — housing affordability, student debt, and workforce messaging indexes high.
Race & Ethnicity
White residents are the largest group at 70.5%. Also significant: Hispanic (22.5%).
* Hispanic includes respondents of any race. Racial categories include both Hispanic and non-Hispanic individuals.
Education
Highly educated: 45.7% hold a bachelor’s degree or higher, well above the 33.7% national average. 17.6% hold a post-graduate degree.
Income Distribution
Median household income is $95,470, well above the $37,585 national median.
Housing
Homeownership at 66.2% (vs 65.5% nationally). Median rent is $1,761. Median home value is $539,400.
How People Get to Work
65.1% drive alone. Average commute is 25.2 minutes.
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