Senator John Hickenlooper, Democratic from Colorado

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.

Senator John Hickenlooper represents 5,862,189 residents of Colorado. The state has estimated median household income of $95,470 and unemployment rate of 4.6%.

Economic & Demographic Snapshot

5,862,189Population
↑ 91,399
$95,470Median Incomenat'l $37,585
↑ $7,872
4.6%Unemploymentnat'l 3.5%
↑ 0.1%
5.9%Poverty Ratenat'l 12.4%
↓ 0.1%
66.2%Homeownershipnat'l 65.5%
→ no change
$1,761Median Rentnat'l $1,163
↑ $167
1.6%Public Transitnat'l 5%
→ no change
25.2 minMean Commutenat'l 26.4 min
↓ 0.4 min

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)

Key Issues for This District
Rent burden

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.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates
Data represents 5-year statistical estimates for increased reliability.

Colorado Senate FAQ

Reach Colorado Lawmakers

Senator Hickenlooper focuses on Science, Technology, Communications, Energy and Public Lands and Natural Resources. Deliver personalized constituent letters to Colorado's federal, state, and local officials — live in under five minutes.

Grassroots advocacy & legislator intelligence. Used by nonprofits, associations, and GR firms nationwide.

Start a Campaign