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Regional News

Top Republican in Colorado Senate resigns to take private sector job

Sen. Cleave Simpson is next in line to be minority leader
House Minority Leader Paul Lundeen, R-Monument, speaks from the dais on May 7 at the Colorado Capitol in Denver. (Jesse Paul/The Colorado Sun file)

The top Republican in the Colorado Senate announced Monday that he is resigning from the Legislature to take a job in the private sector.

Senate Minority Leader Paul Lundeen, R-Monument, is resigning effective Monday.

“Serving Colorado has been an honor and blessing,” Lundeen said in a written statement. “I am grateful to the people of Senate District 9 for the opportunity to fight for policies that empower individuals, protect our communities, and promote prosperity. As I transition to a national platform, I am eager to continue advocating for personal freedom, economic opportunity and common-sense conservative values.”

Lundeen said his new job is as the president and CEO of the American Excellence Foundation, a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., but that has a national footprint. Lundeen said he will remain in Colorado as he enters the role.

He is term-limited and couldn’t seek reelection in 2026.

Before entering the legislature in 2017 as a state representative, Lundeen was a member of the State Board of Education.

In a recent interview with Colorado Public Radio, when asked to confirm how long he’d been in the statehouse, he joked, “too long.”

“I’ve just completed my seventh session in the Senate. So what is that, 15 years on both sides of Colfax?” he said.

Senate President James Coleman said he’ll miss Lundeen. The Denver Democrat said he learned a lot from Lundeen about the legislative process, as well as how to be a good policymaker and leader.

Coleman said Lundeen was a good communicator, and helped ensure that the chamber ran smoothly and led by example.

“He had a lot of grace and patience,” Coleman said. “I think those things are signs of an individual who seeks to understand. He really wanted to better understand everybody regardless of their backgrounds, their culture, their geographical location in the state as a legislator – do that effectively and not compromise his values.”

Republicans have been in the minority during Lundeen’s tenure as GOP leader. The last time the GOP controlled the gavel in the Senate was 2018.

The Senate Republican caucus will meet Thursday evening to select a new leader.

State Sen. Byron Pelton, a Sterling Republican and the Senate GOP caucus chair, said he’s not sure who may run to replace Lundeen as minority leader.

State Sen. Cleave Simpson, R-Alamosa, is currently the Senate assistant minority leader. He is next in line to be minority leader.

Pelton said his initial reaction to the news that Lundeen was leaving was “good for him.” Pelton said he appreciated how Lundeen fought for funding for K-12 schools.

“I would describe him as a very unselfish leader, making sure that all of our voices were heard as a caucus,” Pelton said.

A Republican vacancy committee will be convened to select Lundeen’s replacement.

Lundeen’s replacement will be one of at least 23 members of the General Assembly next year who at some point were appointed to the House or Senate by or through a vacancy committee. That means that more than 1 in 5 state lawmakers in Colorado owe their legislative careers, either in whole or in part, to the vacancy process.

Lundeen’s name was in the mix as a possible 2026 gubernatorial candidate. His new job, however, likely ends that speculation.

The Colorado Sun is a reader-supported, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to covering Colorado issues. To learn more, go to coloradosun.com.