Rural Colorado voices are being drowned out by the ever-growing influence of the Front Range, and no amount of political gaslighting is going to change that. In Colorado Politics, reporter Marianne Goodland lays out the raw numbers and real frustrations behind this urban-rural power imbalance. From agriculture to energy to water rights, rural interests are being overridden by metro-driven legislation that’s heavy on ideology and light on understanding. Meanwhile, lawmakers from Denver, Boulder, and their orbit keep legislating like everyone in Colorado lives next door to a Whole Foods.
The Bullet Point Brief
- Population = Power (Unless You’re Planting It)
The more people jam into Denver and Boulder, the louder their voice gets under the Gold Dome. Rural Colorado? They grow your food and power your state—but apparently, that doesn’t buy you much respect. - Water Wars and Windbags
Water rights? Urban lawmakers treat them like Monopoly properties. Rural folks understand water is life—not a bargaining chip for your next green virtue signal. - Ag Gets Rolled—Again
Agricultural interests keep getting steamrolled by people who couldn’t tell you the difference between a combine and a compost bin. Urban lawmakers vote “green” and call it progress while rural livelihoods go up in regulatory flames. - Weld County: The Rural Urban Unicorn
Weld is a unique beast—rural at heart but Front Range by geography. It grows more food than anywhere else in the state, ranks top ten in the nation, and yet gets treated like a policy afterthought. - Common Sense Lives in the Cornfields
The further you get from the Denver/Boulder bubble, the more common sense you find. That’s not an accident—it’s the result of being connected to the land, not Twitter.
My Bottom Line
Anyone who says the urban/rural divide in Colorado is a myth deserves a slow clap and a one-way trip to Julesburg to learn what life looks like outside their artisanal oat milk echo chamber. The truth is, this divide is real—and growing. And it’s not just about politics. It’s about values. Urban Colorado worships the gods of central planning and government knows best. Rural Colorado still believes in neighbors, hard work, family, and the idea that freedom isn’t something you legislate from a committee—it’s something you live.
In Weld County, we’ve got dirt under our nails and spreadsheets in our boardrooms. We’re rural producers and regional influencers. We’ve got boots on the ground and a bullhorn at the Capitol. That gives us a moral obligation: to speak up and stick up for rural Colorado—the farmers, the ranchers, the energy workers, and the water stewards who keep this state running while the Front Range dazzles itself with vanity policies.
Rural Colorado is where the backbone lives. It’s where common sense still survives. And if we don’t fight to preserve it, no one else will. That’s not just a belief—it’s a mission. And in Weld, we’re all in.
