Part 2 of CCLP’s 2026 legislative wrap-up, including defending public programs, strengthening consumer rights, and looking to the future.
Recent articles
2026 Legislative wrap-up, part 1
Part 1 of CCLP's 2026 legislative wrap-up, including advocacy work, policy priorities, and advancing economic justice.
CCLP testifies in support of Colorado families
Charles Brennan provided testimony in support of House Bill 26-1221, which would have scaled back two corporate tax breaks to go to a new tax credit to help families with kids. This bill was one of four bills a part of Colorado Fiscal Institute’s fiscal policy package, and one of CCLP’s priorities. Unfortunately, the bill was postponed indefinitely.
CCLP testifies against bill that could harm low-wage workers
Katherine Wallat, Legal Director at CCLP, provided testimony against House Bill 26-1327, which aimed to address the problem of large corporations relying on the state to provide health insurance by paying their workers low enough wages to enroll in Medicaid. CCLP agrees corporations should pay their fair share, but ultimately opposed the bill because of the harm it could cause workers perceived to use Medicaid due to their age, disability, or income level.
CCLP statement on Governor Polis’s veto streak

CCLP statement on Governor Polis’s veto streak
Undermining justice, affordability, and worker rights, the Governor continues to sacrifice Coloradans’ futures to special interests.
DENVER, CO — June 6, 2025 — Colorado Center on Law and Policy (CCLP), a statewide antipoverty organization, released the following statement regarding Governor Polis’s vetoes:
In a deeply disappointing series of vetoes, Governor Jared Polis has rejected multiple transformative, community-driven bills that aimed to protect working families, advance equity, and hold powerful interests accountable. CCLP is alarmed not only by the substance of these vetoes but also by the growing disconnect between the Governor’s actions and the values he claims to uphold.
In his own budget proposal, Governor Polis named affordability, public safety, equity, and transparency as top state priorities. Yet, he vetoed several bills that would have made meaningful progress on those very goals. These are not isolated decisions. Rather, they reflect a troubling pattern of obstruction, interference, and alignment with corporate interests over the well-being of Coloradans. The message is clear: despite his rhetoric, Governor Polis does not prioritize the people of Colorado; he prioritizes special interests and political convenience.
“These vetoes reflect a disturbing throughline,” said Annie Martínez, Litigation Director at CCLP. “Rather than standing with working families, renters, and those most impacted by inequality, the Governor has repeatedly chosen to side with entrenched power, whether that’s corporate landlords, big tech firms, closed-door municipal systems, or employers trying to deny workers a voice.”
Among the most disappointing vetoes of this legislative session:
- Worker Protection Collective Bargaining (SB25-005): A bill to align Colorado with federal law by requiring only a simple majority for workers to organize, removing a redundant supermajority threshold.
- Fairness & Transparency in Municipal Court (HB25-1147): A bill to align municipal sentences with their state level counterparts, curbing the criminalization of poverty, and making municipal court practices comport with the Constitution.
- No Pricing Coordination Between Landlords (HB25-1004): A bill to prohibit landlords from using shared data platforms to artificially inflate rent prices.
- Costs for Ground Ambulance Services (HB25-1088): A bill with unanimous, bipartisan support to prevent surprise ambulance billing and close a critical consumer protection gap.
- Repeal Copayment for DOC Inmate Health Care (HB25-1026): A bill to eliminate medical copays for incarcerated people seeking basic care.
- Automated Driving System Safeguards (HB25-1122): A bill to ensure safer roads by requiring human oversight in commercial vehicles using automated systems.
In many veto messages, the Governor cited concerns about regulatory complexity, agency authority, or potential unintended consequences. But his vetoes reflect a broader pattern of rejecting reforms of entrenched power in Colorado.
“The bills the Governor vetoed were commonsense reforms meant to restore trust in our institutions, curb exploitative practices, and give working Coloradans a voice,” said Bethany Pray, CCLP’s Chief Legal and Policy Officer. “But not only did he veto them; the Governor inserted himself repeatedly in the legislative process throughout the session, only to dismantle the work when it didn’t serve powerful interests.”
The bills Governor Polis vetoed were the products of extensive research, broad coalition-building, and deep public engagement. Shockingly, one vetoed bill passed with unanimous bipartisan support. Yet even with legislative and stakeholder consensus, Governor Polis delayed, diluted, or rejected these initiatives, undermining months of collaboration.
Despite these setbacks, CCLP remains committed to fighting for policy that centers dignity, fairness, and opportunity for all Coloradans.
“We will not be deterred,” said Lydia McCoy, Chief Executive Officer of CCLP. “The people of Colorado deserve better, and we will continue the work in the legislature, in the courts, and in communities across Colorado to make it happen. These bills may have been vetoed, but the movement behind them only grows stronger.”
Governor Polis had the opportunity to align his leadership with the values he espouses. Instead, he chose political convenience over principled action. It is the view of CCLP that Colorado deserves more than performative progress. We believe we deserve bold, values-driven leadership that delivers real change.
About Colorado Center on Law and Policy
Founded in 1998, Colorado Center on Law and Policy is an antipoverty organization advancing the rights of every Coloradan through research, legal advocacy, legislative advocacy, and coalition building. Driven by our core values of equity, integrity, strategic advocacy, collaboration, and community engagement, CCLP envisions a Colorado where everyone has what they need to succeed. Learn more at copolicy.org.
