There is one political party Primary election for this race: Republican. All Republican affiliated and unaffiliated voters will be eligible to cast a vote in this race. Unaffiliated voters will receive both DEM and REP ballots. Unaffiliated voters must return only ONE ballot. The State House of Representatives is made up of 65 members who are elected by voters in their district for a two-year term. They are limited to serving four consecutive terms in office, but after a two-year break, they are eligible to run again. Every two years, all 65 seats are open for election. The legislative branch of the Colorado state government is composed of the State House and the State Senate. Their legislative authority and responsibilities include passing bills related to public policy matters, approving state budget spending, raising and lowering taxes, and voting to uphold gubernatorial vetoes. Scroll for Spanish Translation.
Submitted Biography
I’m a Colorado resident living in northern Fort Collins. I was adopted and raised by parents who have been married nearly 50 years. My father has been a minister for almost 50 years this August, and my mother has been a schoolteacher for just as long. I called Alaska home before moving to Colorado in 2010. I’ve been raising my four children here since then. I served in the U.S. Air Force from 2002 to 2010 in aircraft maintenance and later deployed as a contractor in Afghanistan. I earned a Bachelor’s in Business Management and completed an MBA from Grand Canyon University.
Campaign Phone
8708371737
Honesty and integrity are at the top. If an elected official can’t tell the truth or keep their word, nothing else they do really matters. I’ve watched too many promise one thing on the campaign trail and do the opposite once in power. That kind of betrayal kills trust fast.
They also need a solid grasp of the Constitution and the limits it sets on government. Real competence matters too, especially when it comes to spending. You can’t keep kicking debt down the road just to buy votes today.
Humility and a genuine respect for individual liberty round it out. The best ones listen more than they talk, admit mistakes, and remember government exists to protect people’s rights, not run their lives. Without that core, they’re in the wrong job.
Compromise in policymaking can be necessary sometimes, but only if it actually moves the needle toward more freedom and stays firmly within the Constitution. I’m not against it on principle. If both sides give a little to cut wasteful spending, simplify regulations, or protect rights that are under attack, then fine. But it has to be a genuine step forward, not just splitting the difference and calling it progress.
What I won’t do is compromise on core individual liberties. You don’t trade away Second Amendment protections, free speech, or property rights just to get a bill passed. Too many politicians treat liberty like a bargaining chip, and that’s how we end up with bigger government every single time. If a compromise weakens the Constitution or hands more power to Washington at the expense of the people, it’s not compromise. It’s surrender.
I’m passionate about affordability because Colorado families are getting crushed by high housing costs, energy prices, and taxes. We need to cut regulations that drive up prices, rein in government spending, and make it easier for working people to get ahead without Washington or Denver making everything more expensive.
Parental rights and education reform are huge for me too. Parents should have real control over their kids schooling, not bureaucrats. That includes strong school choice and getting politics out of the classroom. Mental health reform needs a practical fix focused on results instead of endless spending. Criminal justice reform should keep communities safe by holding violent offenders accountable while protecting rights and fixing what doesn’t work. Above all, I stand for protecting every part of the Constitution, no exceptions. Free speech, the Second Amendment, due process, all of it. Government exists to secure our liberties, not erode them.
I think our elections lack the integrity they need to earn full public trust. Too much reliance on mail-in ballots, unsecured drop boxes, and electronic systems without proper safeguards has created real vulnerabilities. Colorado and the country deserve better than this patchwork approach that leaves too many questions unanswered.
We should move toward paper ballots as the standard, with voting done in person on Election Day or through secure, monitored ballot drop-offs at physical locations with cameras, bipartisan observers, and strict chain-of-custody rules. ADD VOTER ID REQUIREMENTS, same-day registration only with proof, and full audits after every election. These aren’t extreme measures. They’re basic protections to make sure every legal vote counts and no illegal ones do. Without them, we keep inviting doubt into the process.
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