Michael Bennet
Michael F. Bennet (born November 28, 1964) is an American attorney, businessman, and politician serving as the senior United States senator from Colorado since 2009.[1] A member of the Democratic Party, he was appointed to the Senate in January 2009 to fill the vacancy left by Ken Salazar's resignation as Secretary of the Interior and won the ensuing special election in 2010 by a narrow margin of less than 1%, followed by reelections in 2016 and 2022.[1] Prior to his Senate tenure, Bennet served as superintendent of the Denver Public Schools from 2005 to 2009, implementing reforms such as a merit-based teacher pay system amid efforts to improve urban education outcomes, and earlier as chief of staff to Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper.[1] With a background in private equity, including as managing director at Anschutz Investment Company, Bennet has emphasized pragmatic, bipartisan approaches to issues like economic competitiveness, infrastructure investment, and education policy during his Senate career.[2] In 2019, he briefly pursued the Democratic presidential nomination, focusing on anti-corruption measures and reducing partisan polarization, but suspended his campaign in February 2020 after struggling to gain traction in early primary polling.[2]
Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Michael Bennet was born on November 28, 1964, in New Delhi, India, to U.S. parents Douglas J. Bennet Jr., a career foreign policy official, and Susanne Klejman Bennet, of Polish-Jewish descent.[1] His father's role as administrative assistant to U.S. Ambassador Chester Bowles in India during the early 1960s necessitated the family's temporary residence there, resulting in Bennet's birth abroad to American citizens.[3] Douglas Bennet subsequently advanced in the State Department, serving as Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs from 1977 to 1979 and as Administrator of the Agency for International Development from 1979 to 1981, roles that involved oversight of U.S. foreign aid and diplomatic coordination.[4][5] Bennet's mother, born in Warsaw in 1938, endured separation from her parents amid the Nazi occupation of Poland; as a young child, she was evacuated to England for safety while her parents fled to the United States, with the family reuniting after the war.[6][7] The Bennet family relocated to Washington, D.C., soon after Michael's birth, where they remained during his childhood, immersed in environments tied to his father's international postings and government service. This setting exposed Bennet to discussions of global challenges, including development policy and geopolitical tensions, through everyday family interactions rather than structured programs.[8] He was raised alongside his brother James Bennet, born in 1966 and later a prominent journalist, and sister Holly, in a household benefiting from connections to Washington's policy elite.[9] The diplomatic lineage provided practical insights into international relations, fostering an early awareness of causal factors in foreign affairs, such as aid efficacy and conflict resolution, unfiltered by institutional narratives. Such dynamics, rooted in parental experiences, likely contributed to Bennet's orientation toward pragmatic global engagement over isolationism.[10]Academic achievements
Bennet earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in history with honors from Wesleyan University in 1987.[2][1] During his undergraduate years, he participated in the Wesleyan Student Assembly, the university's student government body, and advocated for open debate amid campus controversies over free speech and administrative policies.[11][12] After graduating from Wesleyan, Bennet studied modern history at New College, University of Oxford, for two years as a Rhodes Scholar but departed without completing a DPhil, choosing instead to gain practical experience in the United States. Official biographical records, such as the Congressional Biographical Directory, omit formal recognition of Oxford coursework, reflecting no terminal degree from the institution.[1] Bennet received a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1993, completing his formal legal training there following the interval at Oxford.[1][13] No additional academic honors or publications from his Yale tenure are documented in primary records.Pre-political career
Legal and consulting work
After earning his J.D. from Yale Law School in 1993, Michael Bennet pursued a series of legal positions on the East Coast over the next four years. He began as an associate at the Washington, D.C.-based law firm Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, a prominent firm known for handling complex litigation and regulatory matters.[14] Bennet subsequently served as a special assistant to the U.S. Deputy Attorney General in the Department of Justice, followed by a role as special assistant to the U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut. These government positions involved supporting federal prosecutorial and enforcement activities, though specific case details from his tenure remain undocumented in public records.[15] During this period, Bennet's work emphasized adaptability across legal environments, transitioning from private practice to federal roles amid a landscape of high-profile antitrust and regulatory challenges in the mid-1990s. No verifiable records indicate involvement in management consulting firms like McKinsey & Company at this stage; his documented professional shifts culminated in a move to Denver in 1997 for investment-related restructuring, distinct from pure consulting engagements.[15]Business and executive roles
Prior to his public service roles, Michael Bennet worked as managing director at Anschutz Investment Company from 1997 to 2003.[16] In this capacity, he contributed to the 2002 merger that formed Regal Entertainment Group by combining three major movie theater chains, during which $3 billion in debt was restructured down to $450 million in liabilities, creating the world's largest theater chain at the time.[17] Bennet served on Regal's board of directors following the deal and received approximately $5 million in stock and stock options as compensation for his involvement.[17] The transaction demonstrated effective financial engineering in a distressed sector, enabling significant value creation amid the early 2000s challenges facing the cinema industry, such as competition from home video and digital alternatives.[17] Bennet retained Regal shares post-merger, holding stock valued at a minimum of $500,000 as of his 2009 appointment to the U.S. Senate; he divested these holdings in 2017 when Cineworld acquired Regal for $3.6 billion.[17] This private sector experience in investment management and corporate restructuring formed a core part of Bennet's pre-political career, contributing to his personal wealth accumulation, estimated at $15 million in 2019 through diversified assets including real estate, hedge funds, and retirement accounts tied to such ventures.[17]Public administration in Denver
In July 2005, Michael Bennet was appointed superintendent of Denver Public Schools (DPS) by the district's board, succeeding Jerry Wartgow amid ongoing financial and academic challenges.[18] During his tenure through 2008, Bennet pursued aggressive reforms, including the expansion of the ProComp teacher compensation system, which tied pay incentives to student performance metrics, school-wide results, and professional evaluations rather than solely on seniority or credentials.[19] This system, initially voter-approved in 2005 with $25 million in funding, aimed to reward effective teaching empirically linked to outcomes like test scores and graduation rates.[20] Bennet's strategy emphasized a "portfolio" model of school management, authorizing closures of underenrolled or low-performing schools—over 20 during his era—and reallocating resources to higher-quality options, including charters, to stem enrollment declines that had dropped district numbers by thousands in prior years.[21] He addressed a structural budget deficit inherited from previous administrations by consolidating operations, negotiating cost savings, and achieving operational balance for the first time in years, though long-term pension obligations were managed via financial instruments that later drew scrutiny for added costs.[22] These closures and reallocations stabilized enrollment by fostering competition and parental choice, with subsequent analyses attributing initial reversals in decline to the model's emphasis on accountability over preservation of failing institutions.[23] Empirical outcomes under and following Bennet's reforms showed causal links to academic gains: a 2024 University of Colorado study found that students transferring from closed low-performing schools experienced test score increases equivalent to 0.2-0.3 standard deviations in math and reading, with broader district reforms yielding some of the largest documented improvements in U.S. urban education history.[24] Graduation rates rose from around 52% in 2005 to over 60% by 2009, correlating with reduced dropout indicators through targeted interventions like extended school days and data-driven interventions.[25] Proficiency rates on state assessments improved district-wide, particularly in elementary math, though high school gains lagged and achievement gaps by race and income persisted, suggesting reforms boosted averages but did not fully resolve underlying inequities tied to student demographics and inputs like family mobility.[26] Reforms faced resistance from the Denver Classroom Teachers Association, sparking protracted contract negotiations over ProComp's perceived emphasis on quantifiable results at the expense of job security and base pay guarantees, which Bennet defended as essential for incentivizing causal improvements in instruction.[27] Critics, including union advocates, argued the approach exacerbated teacher turnover in high-needs schools and prioritized market-like mechanisms over collaborative input, leading to uneven implementation where performance metrics sometimes conflicted with contextual challenges like poverty.[28] Independent evaluations, however, credit the era's focus on evidence-based accountability—rather than narrative-driven preservation—for durable gains, with later board shifts away from closures correlating to stalled progress in some metrics.[29]U.S. Senate career
Appointment to the Senate
Ken Salazar resigned from the U.S. Senate in December 2008 after being nominated by President-elect Barack Obama as Secretary of the Interior, creating a vacancy in Colorado's Class III seat. On January 2, 2009, Democratic Governor Bill Ritter announced the appointment of Michael Bennet, the unelected superintendent of Denver Public Schools, to fill the position until a special election in 2010. Bennet was sworn in on January 21, 2009, assuming office without prior electoral experience or widespread name recognition outside Denver.[30][31] The appointment process unfolded amid Democratic dominance in Colorado state government and the national party's transition to power under Obama. Ritter considered over a dozen candidates, including Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper, state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff—a more progressive figure—U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette, and U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter. Despite pressures from allies advocating for a female appointee and opposition from Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, who preferred polled alternatives and doubted Bennet's electability, Ritter selected him based on their longstanding professional ties, Bennet's education reform achievements, and his intellectual and foreign policy credentials. This insider choice, influenced by post-Blagojevich transparency demands, prioritized pragmatic governance and perceived general-election viability over ideological alignment or broader party consultation.[32][33] Bennet entered the Senate pledging support for economic recovery efforts, including the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act enacted in February 2009 to counter the Great Recession. However, his tenure began with legitimacy hurdles as an appointee lacking voter endorsement; a April 2009 poll indicated just 34% approval of his performance among Colorado voters. These early challenges highlighted the risks of gubernatorial appointments in bypassing electoral mandates, setting the stage for intra-party contention in the impending special election.[34]Electoral campaigns
Bennet's Senate campaigns have emphasized a moderate, pragmatic image to appeal to Colorado's independent voters in a state that transitioned from swing status to Democratic-leaning while remaining competitive. He has consistently highlighted bipartisan efforts, such as positive advertisements in 2016 touting his cross-aisle work in Washington.[35] Fundraising has relied heavily on contributions from business sectors, including over $1.5 million from securities and investment firms in the 2019-2024 cycle, enabling robust media buys and ground operations.[36] The 2010 special election, a narrow victory by less than 2 percentage points against Republican Ken Buck amid the Tea Party surge, exposed Bennet's vulnerability in high-turnout midterms and prompted a strategic pivot toward fiscal restraint messaging.[37][38] Post-2010, campaigns stressed pragmatism, with ads and rhetoric focusing on deficit reduction and economic accountability to counter perceptions of Democratic overspending, aligning with his self-branding as a problem-solver rather than ideologue.[39] In 2022, following the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Bennet integrated abortion rights advocacy into broader economic appeals, warning of Republican policies that could exacerbate inflation and job losses through restrictive state laws.[40] This approach correlated with polling fluctuations, where leads expanded to double digits in some surveys before tightening amid economic concerns, supported by ad spending that, while below national Senate averages, included targeted super PAC investments.[41][42] Voter turnout patterns across cycles—lower in the 2010 midterm (~1.78 million votes cast) compared to presidential-year 2016—underscored the challenge of mobilizing moderates without national coattails.[38]2010 special election
Following his appointment to the U.S. Senate in January 2009, Michael Bennet sought election to a full term in the 2010 election, which served as a special election to complete the remainder of Ken Salazar's term while electing for the subsequent six-year term. Bennet first won the Democratic primary on August 10, 2010, defeating former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff with 77% of the vote amid national anti-incumbent sentiment.[43][44] In the general election, he faced Republican Ken Buck, the Weld County District Attorney and a Tea Party-backed candidate who had upset establishment favorite Jane Norton in the GOP primary.[43] The contest unfolded against a national Republican wave fueled by Tea Party activism protesting federal spending and deficits, with Buck emphasizing opposition to the 2009 stimulus and health care reform. Bennet's campaign pivoted toward fiscal restraint, introducing the Pay It Back Act in February 2010 to dedicate TARP repayments to debt reduction rather than new spending, and co-sponsoring bipartisan efforts to curb deficits.[45][46][47] He critiqued excessive government outlays while defending the necessity of prior stimulus measures, navigating a delicate balance in debates where Buck's controversial statements—such as questioning rape victims' credibility in prosecutions—alienated some moderates.[48][49] Multiple televised debates, including those on October 23 and October 25, highlighted economic issues and national debt, with Bennet gaining traction among undecided voters through pointed exchanges on fiscal policy.[50][51] Bennet secured victory on November 2, 2010, with 995,185 votes (46.83%) to Buck's 979,675 (46.05%), a margin of 1.78 percentage points, bolstered by strong urban turnout in Denver and a majority of independent voters who broke 53% for Bennet.[38] The outcome positioned Colorado as a Democratic firewall against further GOP Senate gains during the midterms, though Buck's nomination reflected Tea Party influence fracturing Republican moderates and exposing broader party tensions.[52][53] Despite the national tide, Bennet's survival underscored the role of local dynamics, including independents' preference for his centrist fiscal messaging over Buck's hardline conservatism.[45]2016 reelection
Incumbent Democrat Michael Bennet faced Republican Darryl Glenn, an El Paso County commissioner and conservative activist who won the GOP primary on June 28, 2016, defeating establishment favorites by appealing to Tea Party voters with criticism of federal overreach.[54] Bennet campaigned on his record of bipartisan legislation, airing 13 positive ads highlighting cross-aisle work on issues like criminal justice reform before shifting to attacks on Glenn's extremism in the race's final weeks.[35] Amid Donald Trump's presidential rise, Bennet pivoted toward moderation, supporting regulated fracking to bolster Colorado's energy sector and offering nuanced positions on gun rights—backing universal background checks while affirming Second Amendment protections to court Western state conservatives wary of urban-focused policies.[55] He largely sidestepped national partisan clashes, emphasizing local economic priorities such as job growth in rural areas and infrastructure. Bennet secured reelection on November 8, 2016, with 50.0% of the vote (1,370,397 ballots) to Glenn's 44.3% (1,223,178), a margin of 5.7 percentage points, while third-party candidates like Libertarian Lily Tang Williams took 3.5%.[56] The race reflected Colorado's urban-rural divide, with Bennet dominating Denver metro counties (e.g., over 60% in Denver County) due to demographic shifts toward younger, educated voters, but trailing in eastern plains and some mountain counties where Glenn captured rural discontent over federal regulations.[57] Overall turnout exceeded 3 million voters statewide, driven by the presidential contest, yet Bennet's focus on pragmatic governance over ideological battles helped retain swing voters in a year of national polarization.[58]2022 reelection
Incumbent Democrat Michael Bennet sought a third full term in the November 8, 2022, general election against Republican nominee Joe O'Dea, a construction company executive whose firm had secured millions in government contracts.[59] [60] O'Dea's business background echoed Bennet's own pre-political experience in private equity and corporate restructuring, compelling Bennet to emphasize his fiscal conservatism and independence from party orthodoxy amid attacks questioning his private-sector impartiality.[61] The race unfolded against national Democratic headwinds, including elevated inflation rates peaking at 9.1% in June 2022 and lingering fallout from the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, which polarized voters on institutional trust.[62] Bennet campaigned on bipartisan achievements like the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which allocated $550 billion for new federal spending on roads, bridges, and broadband, while publicly criticizing excessive Democratic fiscal policies for contributing to inflationary pressures.[63] [64] In their sole televised debate on October 28, 2022, Bennet defended preserving the Senate filibuster to foster cross-aisle compromise, positioning himself to centrists wary of partisan overreach.[62] Abortion rights emerged as a flashpoint following the Supreme Court's June 2022 Dobbs decision; pre-election polls showed it motivating higher Democratic turnout in Colorado, where 69% of voters supported pro-choice candidates, though Bennet and O'Dea both expressed support for abortion access with gestational limits.[65] [66] Bennet prevailed with 1,422,935 votes (55.9%) to O'Dea's 1,072,718 (42.3%), outperforming President Biden's 2020 Colorado margin by 2.5 points despite midterm dynamics typically favoring the opposition party.[67] The victory margin reflected Colorado's leftward shift since Bennet's narrower 2016 win, bolstered by urban voter mobilization in Denver and its suburbs.[68]Legislative record and key votes
Bennet supported the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (H.R. 3684), voting in favor on August 10, 2021, in a 69-30 Senate tally that authorized $550 billion in new spending on roads, bridges, broadband, and water systems alongside reauthorizing existing programs.[69] [70] He advocated extending elements of the stalled Build Back Better framework, such as the child tax credit, but emphasized the need for fiscal offsets to address long-term debt sustainability amid projections of added trillions to the deficit.[71] In fiscal policy, Bennet's record reflects occasional deviations from strict party-line support for expansive spending. His lifetime alignment with Democratic leadership on partisan votes averages around 93%, lower than many colleagues on budgetary matters where he has joined Republicans in opposing unchecked increases.[72] For instance, despite prior warnings about unsustainable deficits—citing the national debt exceeding $34 trillion by 2023—he voted for the $1.7 trillion omnibus spending package (H.R. 2617) on December 22, 2022, which funded government operations through fiscal year 2023 without significant cuts, drawing criticism for contributing to inflationary pressures that peaked at 9.1% earlier that year per Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Bennet contributed to bipartisan criminal justice reforms, cosponsoring and voting for the First Step Act (S. 756) on December 18, 2018, which passed 87-12 and retroactively reduced mandatory minimum sentences for certain nonviolent drug offenses while mandating evidence-based recidivism reduction programs.[73] Implementation led to over 7,100 federal inmates receiving sentence reductions by mid-2023, correlating with a 37% drop in federal prison population from 2011 peaks and lower recidivism rates among program participants (from 67.8% to 38.7% within three years per Bureau of Justice Statistics tracking). Earlier, he backed the 2014 Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act (H.R. 3230), passing the Senate 91-3 amid the VA scandal exposing falsified wait-time records.[74] The law enabled veterans facing waits over 30 days or living more than 40 miles from facilities to access private care, reducing average primary care wait times from 38.7 days in June 2014 to 20.4 days by December 2015 per VA Inspector General reports, though sustaining access required subsequent funding amid ongoing backlogs. These efforts highlight targeted reforms yielding measurable outcomes, yet broader fiscal votes underscore tensions between immediate priorities and long-term debt trajectories, where unchecked spending has empirically driven interest payments to surpass $800 billion annually by 2024 without proportional revenue growth.Committee assignments and bipartisan initiatives
Bennet serves on the Senate Committee on Finance, the Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.[75] He previously served on the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.[75] Bennet has engaged in cross-aisle collaborations, including co-sponsoring reauthorizations of the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) with Republican Senator Cory Gardner in efforts to extend funding and coverage for children.[76] He led bipartisan calls for comprehensive deficit reduction, joining Senator Mike Johanns (R-NE) in urging presidential support for measures drawing from fiscal commission recommendations, and participated in coalitions pressing the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to adopt ambitious reforms.[77][78] In October 2025, Bennet voted against the bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act during Senate Agriculture Committee markup, a bill advanced by Colorado colleague John Hickenlooper (D-CO) to expedite forest thinning projects, citing fiscal concerns.[79] His record includes higher-than-average co-sponsorship rates for bipartisan bills compared to fellow Democrats, as tracked by metrics like the Lugar Center's Bipartisan Index.[80]Political positions
Fiscal and economic policy
Bennet has positioned himself as a proponent of fiscal restraint within the Democratic Party, advocating for the implementation of deficit-reduction measures outlined by the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, known as the Simpson-Bowles Commission, established in 2010 to propose balanced approaches to entitlement reforms, tax code simplification, and spending cuts aimed at stabilizing the debt-to-GDP ratio.[81] He has criticized excessive federal spending, including in responses to budget proposals, urging a "serious conversation" on long-term solvency amid rising deficits that exceeded $1 trillion annually by the early 2010s and continued to grow.[82] On taxation, Bennet has supported selective extensions of provisions from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), such as expansions to the child tax credit and earned income tax credit, which he argues benefit middle- and low-income families without fully endorsing the broader Republican framework, as evidenced by his opposition to the original bill and focus on revenue-neutral reforms in his own proposals.[83] This stance reflects a preference for targeted relief to spur growth while addressing fiscal imbalances, contrasting with party orthodoxy that often prioritizes revenue increases over pro-growth incentives. In his 2026 Colorado gubernatorial campaign, launched in 2025, Bennet emphasized housing affordability through supply-side measures, pledging a 30% increase in state-supported units via streamlined permitting, reduced bureaucratic hurdles, and lower construction costs rather than expansive subsidies alone, targeting Colorado's documented shortage of approximately 106,000 housing units as of 2023 driven by population growth outpacing construction.[84] [85] Empirical analyses indicate that regulatory barriers contribute significantly to this deficit, with annual new permits falling short of demand by tens of thousands in metro areas like Denver.[86] Despite these emphases on growth and restraint, Bennet voted in favor of the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022, which allocated over $700 billion in new spending on energy and health initiatives offset by tax hikes and IRS funding, even as critics highlighted potential inflationary pressures from deficit-financed outlays amid post-pandemic supply constraints and elevated consumer prices.[87] [88] This decision underscores tensions between his deficit warnings and adherence to Democratic priorities, where causal links between expanded spending and sustained inflation—evident in 2022's 9.1% peak CPI—were downplayed in favor of projected long-term savings projected by the Congressional Budget Office.Foreign policy and national security
Bennet has advocated for an assertive U.S. role in global affairs, emphasizing diplomatic, economic, and military leadership to counter threats from adversaries like China and Russia while avoiding isolationist retreats. As a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence since 2017, he has drawn on classified briefings to argue for realistic assessments of geopolitical risks, prioritizing empirical intelligence over ideological withdrawals.[89][90] On China, Bennet has taken a firm stance against human rights abuses and strategic competition, co-sponsoring the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020, which imposed sanctions on officials responsible for the detention of over one million Uyghurs in Xinjiang and mandated reports on forced labor in supply chains. This legislation, signed into law on June 17, 2020, reflected his view that Beijing's actions pose a direct challenge to U.S. interests, requiring coordinated responses beyond rhetoric.[91][92] Regarding Ukraine, Bennet supported multiple aid packages, including the $95 billion National Security Supplemental in April 2024, which provided $61 billion for Kyiv amid Russia's invasion, and introduced amendments in the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act to ensure ongoing intelligence sharing. He has questioned indefinite commitments without clear endgames, stressing in February 2025 statements that U.S. assistance must pair military support with tough diplomacy to deter Putin without escalating to direct confrontation.[93][94][95] Bennet has been a consistent ally to Israel, criticizing the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement as economically discriminatory and supportive of provisions in the 2016 Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act to penalize BDS compliance by U.S. firms. In a February 25, 2016, statement, he endorsed these anti-boycott measures as essential to counter efforts undermining Israel's security.[96][97] In 2025, as a Trump administration took office, Bennet clashed publicly with intelligence officials over security protocols. During a March 25 Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, he engaged in a heated exchange with CIA Director John Ratcliffe, decrying the use of unsecured Signal group chats by Trump appointees—including discussions of war plans—as "sloppiness" and a breach risking national secrets, after a journalist was inadvertently added to the thread. This incident underscored Bennet's insistence on rigorous protocols informed by committee oversight.[98][99] Bennet has also prioritized evidence-based public health measures in national security contexts, confronting Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a September 4, 2025, Senate Finance Committee hearing over vaccine skepticism. He challenged Kennedy's endorsement of unsubstantiated claims by advisory panel members, arguing that dismissing peer-reviewed data on vaccine efficacy—such as the 95% reduction in severe COVID-19 outcomes from mRNA shots—undermines biodefense readiness against pandemics or engineered threats, favoring empirical outcomes over anecdotal doubts.[100][101]Social and cultural issues
Bennet has consistently supported abortion rights, voting against measures to protect infants born alive after failed abortions and earning a 0% score from pro-life organizations on related legislation.[102] In April 2023, he co-sponsored and reintroduced the Ensuring Women's Access to Safe Abortion Act to guarantee private health insurance coverage for abortion services, underscoring his position that federal policy should facilitate access without restrictions tied to employer objections.[103] Prior to the 2022 Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Bennet defended the Senate filibuster as a tool for bipartisan compromise, arguing against its elimination despite Democratic frustrations over stalled abortion protections; he voted against cloture on the Women's Health Protection Act in May 2022, which failed 49-51 amid the 60-vote threshold.[104] Post-Dobbs, he campaigned on codifying abortion rights federally but emphasized pragmatic legislative paths over unilateral rule changes.[105] On LGBTQ+ issues, Bennet has backed expansive nondiscrimination protections, co-sponsoring reintroduction of the Equality Act in June 2023 to amend civil rights laws explicitly barring discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in areas like employment, housing, and public accommodations.[106] His Senate record earned a 94% score from the Human Rights Campaign in 2022 for votes supporting the Respect for Marriage Act and opposition to religious exemptions in nondiscrimination bills, reflecting alignment with advocacy groups prioritizing federal overrides of state-level variations.[107] While endorsing these measures, Bennet has critiqued broader Democratic messaging on cultural matters, describing the party's brand as "problematic" in a March 2025 interview and calling for focus on working-class priorities over identity-driven rhetoric that alienates moderates.[108] Bennet advocates stricter gun regulations, including universal background checks and an assault weapons ban, citing Colorado's 2013 state-level checks as a model that reduced gun trafficking without infringing rural ownership rights.[109] In June 2022, he urged Senate passage of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act following mass shootings, which expanded checks for buyers under 21 and funded red-flag laws, while acknowledging Second Amendment concerns in Colorado's rural counties by opposing outright confiscation proposals.[110] State data post-2013 reforms show a 15% drop in gun suicides but mixed violent crime trends, with homicides rising 30% from 2019 to 2021 amid urban-rural divides, prompting Bennet to frame reforms as targeted enforcement rather than blanket restrictions.[111] Regarding immigration, Bennet supports a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants meeting criteria like background checks and tax payments, as in the 2013 Gang of Eight bill he helped negotiate, which paired legalization with 700 miles of border fencing and mandatory E-Verify employment verification.[112] He has voted for border security enhancements, including the February 2024 bipartisan package allocating $20 billion for enforcement and 1,500 additional agents, rejecting characterizations of Democratic policy as open borders by emphasizing causal links between lax enforcement and strained state resources in Colorado, where migrant arrivals surged 500% from 2022 to 2023.[113] In 2025, he co-sponsored limits on ICE arrests at schools and churches to prioritize public safety threats, while criticizing administrative "chaos" for undermining legal inflows and economic contributions from vetted immigrants.[114][115]Environmental and regulatory policy
Bennet supports addressing climate change through a "responsible, rational transition to a clean energy economy," prioritizing innovation and market mechanisms over sweeping mandates.[116] He has co-sponsored measures to regulate hydraulic fracturing, including scrutiny of diesel-containing fluids injected underground, which exceeded 1.3 million gallons in some cases according to federal reports.[117] At the same time, he has defended Colorado's oil and gas jobs, opposing fracking bans and voting to block federal restrictions on the practice in 2021 alongside six other Democrats.[118] In 2024, Bennet criticized the Biden administration's pause on liquefied natural gas exports, arguing it undermined domestic energy production vital to the state's economy.[119] He endorsed fracking executive Chris Wright for U.S. Energy Secretary in January 2025, highlighting bipartisan support for leveraging Colorado's fossil fuel expertise amid energy demands.[120] Bennet has rejected the full scope of the Green New Deal, proposing instead his "Real Deal" plan in 2019, which emphasizes carbon capture, nuclear energy, and voluntary incentives rather than prohibitions on fossil fuels or large-scale government overhauls.[121] [122] This pragmatic stance reflects Colorado's reliance on energy exports, where empirical data indicate that aggressive subsidies for renewables have not curbed global CO2 emissions—rising 1.1% annually from 2019 to 2023 despite trillions in U.S. investments—due to surging demand and production in China and India offsetting Western reductions. Critics, drawing from economic first-principles, contend such subsidies distort market price signals, favoring politically connected firms over genuine innovation and exacerbating fiscal deficits without proportional environmental gains. In October 2025, Bennet voted against advancing the bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act in the Senate Agriculture Committee, citing inadequate fiscal safeguards and insufficient focus on cost-benefit analyses for wildfire mitigation projects that could impact water supplies, agriculture, and recreation.[123] [79] He advocated for targeted investments, such as $2.6 million secured in 2025 for the Headwaters of the Colorado Initiative to restore watersheds supporting agricultural productivity amid the ongoing megadrought.[124] Bennet co-sponsored the 2023 Water for Agriculture Act to update tax rules enabling irrigation infrastructure upgrades, aiming to sustain farming in water-scarce regions without broad regulatory overreach.[125] These efforts underscore a preference for localized, agriculture-oriented solutions over national mandates, though detractors argue they still rely on federal funding that crowds out private investment and ignores how regulatory hurdles, rather than funding alone, hinder adaptive land management.[126]2020 presidential campaign
Campaign launch and primary challenges
Michael Bennet formally announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination on May 2, 2019, entering a field already crowded with over 20 contenders.[127][128] He positioned himself as a pragmatic problem-solver focused on restoring bipartisan functionality in Washington, drawing from his experience managing Denver's schools and his Senate work on fiscal issues, amid a primary dominated by candidates advocating expansive progressive agendas.[129][130] Bennet's campaign emphasized the national debt as an overlooked crisis, arguing that rivals' proposals for large-scale spending programs exacerbated fiscal imbalances without sufficient offsets, a stance that differentiated him but struggled for traction in a field prioritizing voter mobilization through bold reforms.[131] National polling reflected limited appeal, with Bennet consistently registering below 1% in aggregates through late 2019, as progressive figures like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders captured enthusiasm among the Democratic base.[132] Fundraising efforts yielded modest results, including $2.8 million in the second quarter of 2019, far short of frontrunners like Pete Buttigieg who raised over $24 million in the same period, constraining advertising and staff expansion.[133] Participation in early debates, such as the June 27, 2019, NBC event and the August CNN forum, highlighted Bennet's centrist isolation, where defenses of incrementalism and critiques of single-payer health care elicited minimal audience response and failed to boost visibility.[134][135] Data from campaign finance reports indicated donor retention challenges post-debates, with small-dollar contributions stagnating as supporters shifted to higher-polling alternatives, underscoring strategic difficulties in a primary favoring ideological purity over deficit-focused realism.[136]
Policy platform and debates
Bennet's 2020 policy platform emphasized pragmatic, fiscally responsible reforms aimed at addressing economic inequality, education, and healthcare access without disrupting existing systems or incurring unfunded liabilities. Central to his domestic agenda was expanding access to universal pre-kindergarten for all four-year-olds, estimated to cost approximately $110 billion annually if fully implemented, funded through progressive tax reforms including higher rates on capital gains and a financial transaction tax. Unlike proposals from Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, which projected trillions in new spending without equivalent offsets, Bennet insisted on "pay-fors" to cap deficits, arguing that unchecked borrowing would exacerbate inflation and crowd out private investment, a causal chain evidenced by historical U.S. debt spikes correlating with higher long-term interest rates.[137][138][139] On healthcare, Bennet advocated a "Medicare X" public option allowing individuals to buy into Medicare, projected to cover an additional 30 million uninsured over a decade at a net cost of $1.5 trillion after premiums and savings from competition, rather than abolishing private insurance as in Medicare for All. He critiqued Sanders' plan for potentially displacing 180 million employer-sponsored policies, many favored by recipients, warning that such disruption could lead to administrative chaos and higher effective costs due to transition frictions, drawing on empirical data from employer plan satisfaction surveys showing 80% approval rates. Feasibility assessments, including those from independent models, highlighted that buy-in mechanisms preserve market incentives for innovation while gradually expanding coverage, avoiding the single-payer model's estimated $32 trillion price tag over ten years.[140][141] In foreign policy, Bennet prioritized strengthening NATO alliances and economic decoupling from China to counter technological and military threats, advocating increased U.S. defense spending to 4% of GDP and restrictions on sensitive exports, informed by his Senate Intelligence Committee role. He argued for realistic engagement over ideological retrenchment, emphasizing that alliance commitments deter aggression more effectively than unilateralism, as demonstrated by post-Cold War stability in Europe. During debates, Bennet leveraged his Senate experience to differentiate from ideological rivals, critiquing left-wing emphases on domestic redistribution over governance competence, asserting that unrealistic promises alienated moderates and foreshadowed electoral defeats akin to Democrats' 2024 losses under similar dynamics.[90][142][143]Withdrawal and aftermath
Bennet suspended his presidential campaign on February 11, 2020, following a sixth-place finish in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, where he received fewer than 1% of the vote.[144][145] In announcing the decision during a speech to supporters in New Hampshire, he cited the Democratic field's leftward shift as incompatible with his centrist approach, stating that the party was "unlikely to beat Donald Trump" under prevailing dynamics.[146][147] The campaign, which had struggled with low polling and fundraising—raising about $7.8 million by late 2019—failed to qualify for most debates after December 2019, limiting visibility. On April 8, 2020, shortly after Bernie Sanders suspended his campaign, Bennet endorsed Joe Biden as the presumptive Democratic nominee, praising Biden's ability to unify the party and appeal to moderates.[148][149] This endorsement contributed to the rapid consolidation of moderate support behind Biden, as several other former candidates followed suit in the ensuing days.[149] Bennet was not included on Biden's vice presidential shortlist, which focused on figures like Kamala Harris, and he returned to his Senate responsibilities, including key committee work on finance and intelligence. In the years following, Bennet reflected critically on the Democratic Party's trajectory, warning in 2025 interviews that its brand had become "really problematic" and associated with "educated elites," hindering electoral success.[108][150] He expressed fury at party leadership for failing to address these issues, linking the brand's toxicity to Donald Trump's 2024 victory and broader Democratic losses in down-ballot races.[151][152] These comments echoed Bennet's earlier 2020 concerns about ideological overreach, underscoring his view that the party's post-campaign evolution had validated his warnings rather than prompting reform.[151]2026 Colorado gubernatorial campaign
Announcement and Democratic primary
On April 11, 2025, U.S. Senator Michael Bennet announced his candidacy for the 2026 Colorado gubernatorial election at an event in Denver's City Park, positioning his bid to succeed term-limited Democratic Governor Jared Polis amid Democratic Party introspection following the 2024 presidential election loss.[153][154] Bennet emphasized his intent to address national dysfunction from the state level, drawing on his Senate tenure to advocate for practical governance over partisan gridlock.[155] The Democratic primary pits Bennet against Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, who entered the race earlier with a focus on his enforcement record, including lawsuits against the federal government on issues like consumer protection and environmental regulations.[156] Bennet leverages his two decades of elected experience, including his time as Denver mayor and U.S. senator, to highlight executive and legislative expertise, while Weiser counters with his statewide prosecutorial background and appeals to voters seeking aggressive state-level defenses against potential federal policy shifts.[157] An internal poll conducted in June 2025 showed Bennet leading Weiser by 31 points in the primary matchup, though the race remains fluid with the June 30, 2026, primary date approaching.[157][158] Bennet stated he would remain in the Senate through the November 2026 general election and resign only if victorious, prompting discussions on vacancy procedures under Colorado law, where the governor appoints a temporary replacement pending a special election.[159] This approach drew criticism from some outlets arguing it delays filling the seat and allows Bennet to maintain influence over potential appointees, though supporters viewed it as pragmatic given the mid-term vacancy's logistical challenges.[160][161] If elected governor, Bennet's resignation would occur before his January 2027 inauguration, leaving outgoing Governor Polis to select an interim senator.[160]Platform priorities and fundraising
Bennet identified housing affordability as his top priority for a potential governorship, announcing on September 22, 2025, a plan to address Colorado's housing crisis through increased supply and reduced regulatory barriers.[162] [84] The proposal pledges a 30% increase in state-supported housing production, incentives for first-time homebuyers, streamlined permitting processes to cut bureaucracy, and measures to lower construction costs, emphasizing deregulation to boost housing supply amid data showing Colorado's median home price exceeding $550,000 in 2025 and a shortage of over 100,000 units.[163] [164] He argued that excessive local regulations and federal policies have exacerbated shortages, advocating state-level incentives for denser development and workforce housing near job centers to enhance economic mobility.[165] On economic opportunity, Bennet's platform critiques federal overreach in areas like energy and land use, proposing to prioritize Colorado-specific growth strategies such as expanding apprenticeships and reducing state taxes on small businesses to foster job creation without relying on expansive federal mandates.[166] This aligns with his broader campaign theme of building intergenerational opportunity, drawing from Colorado's post-pandemic economic data indicating stagnant wage growth relative to housing costs.[167] Fundraising efforts have been robust, with Bennet raising over $1.7 million in the initial three months after his April 2025 entry into the race, ending the second quarter with significant cash on hand.[168] By October 2025, his campaign had amassed millions in total contributions, bolstered by a $500,000 donation from former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg on October 21, aimed at supporting Bennet in the Democratic primary against competitors like Attorney General Phil Weiser.[169] [170] These funds, including out-of-state support, have enabled extensive advertising on housing and economic issues, though Bennet trails Weiser in overall primary fundraising totals as of mid-October.[171]Endorsements and polling
In June 2025, Bennet's gubernatorial campaign announced endorsements from more than 180 Colorado leaders, including current and former elected officials, business executives, and community figures such as Boulder Mayor Aaron Brockett and former state representative Adrienne Benavidez.[172] These endorsements highlighted support from business-oriented donors, with billionaire Michael Bloomberg contributing $500,000 to a super PAC aiding Bennet's primary challenge against Attorney General Phil Weiser.[171] This financial backing from high-profile business interests contrasted with Weiser's endorsements from Democratic governors like Massachusetts' Maura Healey and North Carolina's Josh Stein, which appealed more to progressive and institutional party networks.[173] U.S. Representative Brittany Pettersen endorsed Bennet on October 9, 2025, praising his long-term collaboration on Colorado issues dating back to her time as a 2010 campaign organizer for him, which bolstered his credentials among suburban Democratic voters.[174] Additional endorsements from over 100 new supporters in June, including business leaders, underscored Bennet's appeal to pragmatists seeking fiscal discipline amid national Democratic frustrations.[175] Bennet's May 2025 public expressions of being "furious" at the Democratic Party for repeated losses to Donald Trump and failure to address voter priorities positioned him as an intra-party critic, enhancing his outsider image in the primary.[151][176] Early polling in June 2025 showed Bennet holding a commanding lead in the Democratic primary, with an internal survey indicating a 31-point advantage over Weiser among likely voters and over 50% support for Bennet.[157][177] This edge was attributed to independents' preference for Bennet's pragmatic record on deficits and education reform, though a September 2025 poll revealed broader voter dissatisfaction with Bennet's approval ratings amid statewide Democratic fatigue.[178] Fundraising data through July 2025 reinforced Bennet's momentum, with over $1.7 million raised since his April announcement, outpacing early Republican contenders but trailing Weiser's union-aligned contributions in some cycles.[168][169]Controversies and criticisms
Intra-party tensions and deficit advocacy
Bennet has advocated for fiscal restraint since his appointment to the Senate in January 2009, urging early attention to mounting deficits amid post-financial crisis recovery efforts. In a July 2009 Senate Banking Committee hearing, he pressed Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on the need to prioritize deficit reduction to avoid long-term economic risks, emphasizing that unchecked borrowing could undermine future stability.[179] As co-chair of the Senate Fiscal Responsibility Working Group, Bennet has consistently highlighted the national debt's threat to security, cosponsoring resolutions like S.Res.600 in 2023 to formally recognize it as such.[180] [181] His positions have included support for the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, which imposed spending caps to avert default, though he has critiqued both parties' tax policies—such as the 2017 Republican cuts and prior Bush-era measures—for adding trillions to the debt without offsets.[182] These efforts have placed Bennet at odds with Democratic spending priorities, as party-led initiatives like the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act expanded outlays despite his deficit concerns, which he argued were sidelined in favor of short-term political gains.[180] In September 2024 testimony before the Senate Finance Committee, Bennet reiterated the urgency of tackling deficits to safeguard investments in children and economic growth, voting against unchecked Republican spending bills in 2025 that he viewed as fiscally irresponsible.[183] [184] Following Democratic setbacks in the 2024 elections, Bennet expressed frustration with his party's fiscal and messaging orthodoxy. In a March 30, 2025, NBC "Meet the Press" interview, he described the Democratic brand as "really problematic," linking it to perceptions of alignment with "educated elites" over working-class needs and calling for greater "imagination" in policy to rebuild trust.[108] By May 25, 2025, on CNN, he voiced being "furious" at the party's failure to adapt post-losses, arguing its brand offered little electoral advantage nationwide and blaming a lack of innovative governing for repeated defeats.[151] Bennet's moderate fiscal stance has drawn rebukes from the Democratic left, who view him as insufficiently progressive on spending for social programs. Online progressive forums, including Reddit discussions in 2025, have criticized him as "too centrist," favoring alternatives like Attorney General Phil Weiser for his 2026 gubernatorial bid due to perceived reluctance to embrace expansive left-wing agendas.[185] This tension underscores Bennet's divergence from party progressives, who prioritize deficit-financed investments over restraint, even as empirical debt trajectories—projected to exceed 120% of GDP by 2030—bolster his warnings of unsustainable paths.[180]Public confrontations and town hall incidents
On March 19, 2025, during a town hall in Golden, Colorado, co-hosted with Representative Brittany Pettersen, Senator Michael Bennet faced disruptions from hecklers who shouted accusations of insufficient opposition to President Trump's policies, leading to police escorting several attendees out of the venue.[186][187] The incident stemmed from constituent frustration over perceived Democratic inaction amid early Trump administration moves, with shouts focusing on the officials' failure to counter executive overreach effectively.[188] Local police involvement included removing at least three individuals without arrests, as reported by event security, highlighting tensions in Bennet's outreach amid policy gridlock complaints.[187] Similar constituent pressures surfaced in subsequent town halls, such as on April 24, 2025, in Grand Junction, where attendees repeatedly questioned Bennet on Democratic strategies to combat Trump-era policies, expressing exasperation over legislative stalemates on issues like immigration and federal spending.[189] Bennet responded by defending ongoing resistance efforts but acknowledged the challenges of minority-party leverage, with no further ejections reported.[190] In Senate proceedings, Bennet engaged in a heated exchange on March 25, 2025, during an Intelligence Committee hearing, where he shouted at CIA Director John Ratcliffe over a security breach involving unsecured Signal app group chats among Trump officials discussing sensitive military matters.[191] Bennet labeled the lapses as "sloppiness" and an "embarrassment," demanding accountability for endangering national security through improper communications protocols.[192] The confrontation, captured on video, arose from revelations of a journalist accessing the chats, underscoring Bennet's critique of administrative incompetence in intelligence handling.[193] On September 4, 2025, Bennet confronted Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a Senate Finance Committee hearing, pressing him on past false claims regarding vaccine safety and the appointment of panel members with anti-vaccine histories.[100] Bennet reiterated calls for Kennedy's removal, citing empirical data on vaccine efficacy contradicted by the secretary's rhetoric, which he argued eroded public health trust amid ongoing disease threats.[101] The exchange escalated into a tense back-and-forth, with Kennedy defending his positions, but Bennet emphasized peer-reviewed studies affirming vaccine benefits over anecdotal skepticism.[194][195]Policy reversals and business ties scrutiny
In 2019, during his brief presidential campaign, Senator Bennet faced criticism from progressive Democratic groups for confirming 67% of President Donald Trump's federal judicial nominees, a rate higher than many Senate Democrats, which opponents argued enabled the entrenchment of conservative judges insufficiently scrutinized for ideological alignment. Demand Justice, a left-leaning judicial advocacy organization, aired television advertisements in New Hampshire spotlighting this record and accusing Bennet of failing to mount a robust opposition to the Republican judicial agenda.[196] [197] Bennet's environmental advocacy has similarly drawn scrutiny for apparent inconsistencies, notably his October 21, 2025, vote against advancing the bipartisan Fix Our Forests Act out of the Senate Agriculture Committee, despite the bill's focus on expediting forest thinning and logging in fire-prone national forest areas to reduce catastrophic wildfire risks—measures aligned with empirical data linking overgrown fuels to intensified blazes. Sponsored by Colorado colleague Senator John Hickenlooper, the legislation sought to streamline environmental reviews and limit protracted legal challenges, yet Bennet opposed it, citing concerns over insufficient protections for water supplies and habitats, even as he has long championed climate action and clean energy transitions in other contexts.[79] [123] This stance contrasted with his broader record, including support for the Inflation Reduction Act's clean energy provisions, prompting questions about selective application of precautionary environmental principles.[116] Bennet's pre-political career as managing director at Anschutz Investment Company from 1997 to 2003, where the firm oversaw diverse assets including energy sector holdings tied to parent Philip Anschutz's oil and gas explorations, has fueled perceptions of tension with his subsequent legislative pushes for green energy policies, such as carbon pricing and renewable incentives. While no ethics investigations have found violations—Bennet divested from such conflicts upon entering public service—the optics of his multimillion-dollar exit from private equity, amid votes favoring fossil fuel phase-outs, have invited critique from transparency advocates regarding influence and consistency in energy policy realism.[198] As superintendent of Denver Public Schools from 2005 to 2009, Bennet drove reforms like closing underperforming schools, expanding charters, and tying principal pay to performance metrics, yielding measurable gains: graduation rates rose from 45% upon his arrival to 68% by 2012 and over 75% by 2023, with recent analyses attributing 0.2 to 0.4 years of additional learning per student compared to national urban peers. However, long-term outcomes reveal mixed efficacy, as racial and socioeconomic achievement gaps endure—Black and Latino student proficiency in reading and math trails white counterparts by 30-40 percentage points in 2023 state assessments, underscoring causal challenges in scaling equity amid demographic disparities despite initial progress.[23] [25] [199]Personal life
Family and marriages
Michael Bennet married Susan Daggett, an environmental lawyer and executive director of the Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, on October 26, 1997, in a ceremony in Arkansas.[200][201] The couple marked their 28th wedding anniversary in 2025.[202] Bennet and Daggett have three daughters: Caroline (born circa 1999), Halina (born circa 2001), and Anne.[203][204][205] The family resides in Denver, Colorado, where they prioritize privacy amid Bennet's public career.[206]Interests and affiliations
Bennet's mother, Susanne Klejman Bennet, was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1938 to Jewish parents and survived the Holocaust after being hidden separately from her family during the Nazi occupation.[7] [6] This maternal Jewish heritage shapes aspects of his family background, though Bennet maintains a secular outlook, identifying as an unaffiliated theist without regular participation in organized religious worship or affiliation with a congregation.[207] [208] He and his wife were married by an Episcopal priest.[208] Bennet has voiced consistent support for Israel, including statements affirming U.S. backing for its security amid conflicts with Hamas and criticism of disruptions by anti-Israel protesters at public events.[209] [210] In April 2019, Bennet disclosed a diagnosis of prostate cancer and underwent successful robotic surgery later that month to remove his prostate, with no recurrence reported in subsequent updates.[211] [212] No other significant health conditions have been publicly noted.Electoral history
Senate election results
Michael Bennet was first elected to the U.S. Senate from Colorado in the 2010 midterm elections, securing a narrow victory over Republican Ken Buck by a margin of 4.7 percentage points, with voter turnout at approximately 55% statewide.[38] In 2016, during a presidential election year with turnout exceeding 74%, Bennet defeated Republican Darryl Glenn by 5.7 points, maintaining a competitive edge in a state shifting toward Democrats.[213] His 2022 reelection against Republican Joe O'Dea produced a wider 14.2-point margin amid midterm turnout around 60%, reflecting strengthened Democratic performance in the state.[214] The following table summarizes Bennet's general election results:| Year | Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Michael Bennet | Democratic | 1,150,347 | 50.7% |
| Ken Buck | Republican | 1,043,408 | 46.0% | |
| Others | - | 83,592 | 3.3% | |
| Total | - | 2,277,347 | 100% | |
| 2016 | Michael Bennet | Democratic | 1,370,710 | 50.0% |
| Darryl Glenn | Republican | 1,215,318 | 44.3% | |
| Others | - | 349,260 | 5.7% | |
| Total | - | 2,746,288 | 100% | |
| 2022 | Michael Bennet | Democratic | 1,422,935 | 55.9% |
| Joe O'Dea | Republican | 1,062,927 | 41.7% | |
| Others | - | 111,396 | 2.4% | |
| Total | - | 2,597,258 | 100% |