Colorado is starting to look like a case study in what happens when one political ideology runs the show for too long without any real pushback. The headlines coming out of the state aren’t exactly subtle, businesses are leaving, jobs are disappearing, and the people still trying to make it work are sounding increasingly desperate.
According to reporting highlighted by CBS News, nearly 100 companies have either packed up and left Colorado, expanded operations elsewhere, or decided not to move there at all since 2019. That’s not a minor shift, that’s a trend. And it comes with a price tag, more than 13,000 lost jobs. For the people actually living and working in the state, that’s not an abstract number. That’s livelihoods.
The Colorado Chamber of Commerce has been waving red flags about this for years, pointing directly at excessive regulation and a business climate that’s becoming harder to justify. When companies start looking at other states like Texas or North Carolina and deciding those places make more sense, it tells you something is off balance.
20 years ago Colorado was a Red state and thriving.
10 years ago liberals were writing pieces about how Colorado was the next Silicon Valley.
Now it's an economic backwater. An omen for what happens when Red states go blue. https://t.co/EYkKsL829Q pic.twitter.com/sel7rTG8pf
— State Leadership Initiative (@RedStatesLead) April 10, 2026
Colorado became California, and you won’t believe what happened next! https://t.co/VGYMldGhHw
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) April 10, 2026
Even more telling is the loss of corporate headquarters. Since 2022, Colorado has seen a net loss of 34 public company HQs. Headquarters aren’t just symbolic, they bring high-paying jobs, investment, and long-term stability. When they leave, they take all of that with them.
They fled blue California for red Colorado.
But they voted blue. And turned Colorado blue.
So they will flee blue Colorado and head to red Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming.
And do it all over again. See: Connecticut. New Hampshire. Georgia. https://t.co/cWnNGYcfYc
— Daniel Turner (@DanielTurnerPTF) April 11, 2026
Now more than 200 business and civic leaders are trying to get the attention of state leadership, including Jared Polis, John Hickenlooper, and Mike Johnston. Their message isn’t complicated. Fix the environment for businesses, or expect things to get worse. Tech entrepreneur Dan Caruso didn’t sugarcoat it, warning that the consequences will hit not just now, but future generations as well.
And here’s the part that keeps repeating across states like California and now Colorado. It wasn’t always like this. These places used to attract companies, not push them away. Somewhere along the line, policy choices shifted priorities, and businesses responded the only way they can, by going somewhere else.
There’s also a broader lesson here that people don’t like to talk about. When residents leave struggling states and relocate to places where the economy is stronger and regulations are lighter, they’re often benefiting from a completely different approach to governance. The question is whether they recognize that difference or bring the same voting habits with them that helped create the problems in the first place.
Colorado is at a crossroads. The warning signs are flashing, and the people closest to the problem are practically shouting. The real question now is whether anyone in charge is actually listening, or if this is just the beginning of a much larger economic slide.


Colorado deserves what it’s getting, same as the rest of the Blue states. Vote RED this election. That’ the only way you survive. Don’t go down the toilet with the rest of the commie bastards.