How to read this & what's missing
Net worth. Only federal officeholders must file financial disclosures, so a real figure exists for Sens. Hickenlooper and Bennet. Colorado's state candidates (AG, Secretary of State, state legislators, and the governor's state filings) are not required to disclose net worth — that's why most cards read "not publicly disclosed." The data legally doesn't exist in public form.
Roots, quotes & controversies. Backstories and signature records are drawn from biographical reporting and Ballotpedia; quotes are short excerpts from public debates, forums and interviews; controversies come from news reporting. All are richer for high-profile candidates. A blank tab means nothing surfaced — not a guarantee none exists.
Funding. Figures come from FEC filings (federal Senate & House) and Colorado Secretary of State / TRACER filings (Governor, AG, SoS), reported through mid-to-late June 2026 and approximate. "Super PAC" money is spent independently and can't legally coordinate with the campaign. "Not reported" means no public figure was found, not zero.
One unresolved discrepancy: sources disagree on the second Republican in the AG primary. Recent state finance filings and voter guides name David Willson (with a campaign and bio); Ballotpedia lists Conner Pennington. The card uses Willson and flags this.
Also on your ballot, not shown: the Republican primary for Secretary of State (James McKinzie, Cory Parella, Ross Taraborelli, James Wiley), CU Regents, State Board of Education, dozens of legislative seats, and local races — all vary by address.
Sources: Colorado Sun, CPR News, Colorado Newsline, Colorado Politics, Axios, Sky-Hi/Summit/Aspen Times, Grand Junction Sentinel, Denver7, Colorado Times Recorder, The Hill, JTA, Yale Center for Dyslexia, 9News, Ballotpedia, Wikipedia, FEC.gov, candidate sites. Informational, not an endorsement. Verify your registration and exact ballot at GoVoteColorado.gov.