Candidates Initially, a wide field of candidates declared their intention to seek the Republican nomination. However, instead of gathering the required number of signatures to be placed on the primary ballot, Bremer and most of the other candidates sought to earn the nomination by winning the required 30% of the delegate vote at the Colorado GOP convention in April 2022. As a result of the crowded field of candidates, delegate support was divided, with only State Representative Ron Hanks crossing the 30% threshold. Debora Flora, a radio show host, missed the ballot by a single percentage point, receiving 29% of the vote. With the other candidates eliminated, State Representative
Ron Hanks and construction CEO Joe O'Dea were the only two candidates on the primary ballot. The contrast between the two Republicans was stark. Hanks supported a complete ban on abortion and echoed former president
Donald Trump's assertions of widespread voter fraud in the
2020 presidential election, while the more moderate O'Dea expressed support for
LGBTQ rights, some abortion rights, and rejected Trump's claims of widespread voter fraud. Though O'Dea was initially considered the frontrunner as a result of his fundraising advantage, Hanks was buoyed by an attempt by Democrats to influence the primary. Democratic Colorado, an entity formed in June 2022, received roughly $4 million from the Senate Majority Fund, a PAC associated with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. They ran ads characterizing Hanks as "too conservative", in order to elevate Hanks over O'Dea, who was perceived as a stronger general election candidate. This attempt to interfere in the GOP primary was denounced by numerous former Colorado Democratic officials, including former governor
Roy Romer, and former senators
Mark Udall,
Tim Wirth, and
Gary Hart, who previously mounted unsuccessful attempts to win the Democratic nomination for president in
1984 and
1988. Despite the support from Democrats and his lobbying for the endorsement of
Donald Trump, Hanks was defeated by O'Dea by a 9% margin. He performed best in rural parts of the state, while O'Dea was successful in urban areas, such as
Denver.
Nominee • Joe O'Dea, construction company owner
Eliminated in primary •
Ron Hanks,
state representative for the 60th district (2021–2023) and nominee for in
2010 • Gino Campana, former
Fort Collins council member, city developer • Juli Henry, nonprofit founder ''(became Republican nominee for
Colorado's 7th congressional district)''
Declined •
Ken Buck,
U.S. representative for
Colorado's 4th congressional district, chair of the
Colorado Republican Party, and nominee for U.S. Senate in
2010 •
Heidi Ganahl, university regent
(ran for governor) •
Cory Gardner, former
U.S. Senator (2015–2021) • Darryl Glenn, former
Colorado Springs city councilman (2005–2011), former
El Paso County commissioner (2011–2019), and nominee for U.S. Senate in
2016 (
ran for Mayor of Colorado Springs) •
Clarice Navarro, former state representative from the 47th district (2013–2017) •
Bill Owens, former
governor (1999–2007) •
Steven Reams,
Weld County sheriff
(ran for re-election) Endorsements Polling Results ==General election==