



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleState Senator
PartyRepublican
Political ideologyConservative Republican
Age67 years old (Sep 15, 1958)
GenderFemale
LocationColorado
BackgroundPolitician
EducationUniversity of Colorado Boulder — B.S., Physical Education (1980)
Notable personal detailsBarbara Jean Kirkmeyer is an American politician serving in the Colorado Senate representing District 23 (parts of Weld and Larimer counties), first taking office in January 2021. She previously served as a Weld County commissioner across two stints (1993–2000 and 2009–2020) and also served as acting director of the Colorado Department of Local Affairs under Gov. Bill Owens. She earned a B.S. in physical education from the University of Colorado Boulder in 1980 and has also worked as a dairy farmer and small businesswoman.
Supports cutting property taxes and protecting the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR), opposes raising taxes, and favors balancing budgets through spending or program changes rather than new or higher taxes. Has sponsored and championed state-level property tax reduction legislation and argued against tax increases in special sessions.
Supports converting Medicaid to a block grant and reducing federal entitlement spending; has advocated looking at entitlement programs (including Medicaid) for cuts or transformation and emphasized market-oriented/fiscal restraint approaches to healthcare funding. Has opposed certain state proposals that would expand or reclassify health-provider fees aimed at increasing funding through enterprise mechanisms.
Supports strengthening border security and enforcement (including building the wall) while backing reforms to legal immigration pathways for agriculture workers and a pathway/process review for DACA recipients; frames the issue around stopping drugs like fentanyl and securing legal entry. Emphasizes securing the southern border as the first step before broader immigration reform.
Supports significant restrictions on abortion while allowing at least an exception when a pregnancy threatens the life of the mother. Previously expressed opposition to exceptions and supported personhood-related measures but has described her position as allowing a life-of-the-mother exception.
Supports Colorado oil and gas development and American energy independence, favors a “best-of-the-above” energy approach that uses cost-effective and ready-to-go sources, and opposes policies she characterizes as efforts to “destroy” the oil-and-gas economic engine; she has questioned the extent of human contribution to recent warming.
Barbara (Barb) Kirkmeyer has promoted Second Amendment protections and led her county to adopt a Second Amendment sanctuary resolution that opposed Colorado’s red-flag legislation. Her campaign messaging emphasizes defending gun rights and opposing “gun-grabbing” measures; she has portrayed expanded gun restrictions (background checks, red-flag enforcement) as unconstitutional or unwarranted.
Barbara Kirkmeyer is in the middle of Colorado’s Republican governor primary, where early results show her narrowly trailing Victor Marx. The race is still close enough that remaining ballots and curing could matter, though the reported margin may be too small to force a mandatory recount. Kirkmeyer has campaigned on affordability, rural communities, infrastructure, water policy, energy, and public safety, and she has been active in debates and fundraising during the primary.



Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
Endorsers of Barbara Kirkmeyer for Colorado Republican Governor nominee?
Elected official
George Brauchler endorsed Barbara Kirkmeyer for Colorado governor.
Elected official
The Denver Gazette endorsed Barbara Kirkmeyer for Colorado governor.
2022
2024
LatestCycle 2022
Cycle 2024
Source: FEC