Since the 1970s Colorado has been transformed beyond recognition. A state that was once on the cutting edge of innovation—see the Georgetown Loop—and the center of political evolution in the United States—it was one of the earliest places in the Western world to extend the vote to women via referendum—has been reduced to a shadow of itself.

Federal and state policies, including those of other states in the West, have reduced the pioneer population that settled Colorado to a tiny minority in the state they established for themselves and their posterity. Now even those Americans who have flooded into Colorado from other states are risking minority status as demographic change swamps Colorado and threatens to turn it into yet another Hispanic plurality state on its way to a Hispanic majority.
Colorado’s politics, priorities, and core identity have all been transformed by successive waves of immigration, a process it must fight to reverse in order to prevent its uniqueness from being permanently lost.
Pre-1965 Colorado:
Before the passage of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act and America’s dive into self-destruction Colorado was a state consolidating its Western American identity.

This population of pioneers were brought to the state by a series of gold and silver booms from the 1850s to the 1870s. This gave rise to a significant organized labor movement, civil strife, and eventually helped lead to the 8-hour work day and the prohibition of child labor in the United States. A state which has always composed a remarkably small share of the national population has had an outsized influence on the American nation, but that influence like that nation risks being snuffed out by the Great Replacement.
According to the 1900 data just 29% of the population of Colorado was born in the state and the demographic composition was 97.8% White (ethnic American). By the year 1960 the census half of Colorado’s population was born in the state while roughly 88% was of ethnic American extraction. Colorado was consolidating its identity around a core population of culturally Western Americans such as those in neighboring Wyoming, Utah, and Montana.
The total 1960 demographic distribution was:
- 0.5% Asian
- 2.3% African American
- 9% Hispanic
- 88% White American
Most importantly is the context around this data. Colorado had achieved a demographic equilibrium that had held for more than 30 years prior to the 1965 immigration act. White Americans, the pioneering population that gave rise to ethnic Americans, formed the demographic core of the state around which its identity was built. Other groups, such as Historic Black Americans, formed significant culturally related minorities that helped to reinforce this reality.
This all began to change with the passage of the 1965 Immigration Act, the Reagan Amnesty, and the general government refusal to deal with illegal immigration or limit legal immigration.
Post-1965 Colorado:
The most significant change is the demographic composition of Colorado. Ethnic Americans have been significantly reduced in their share of the population while Hispanics, Asians, and immigrant groups now make up a significant share of Colorado’s demographic pie.
According to the condescendingly named Colorado Office of New Americans roughly 570,273 foreign born immigrants make up 9.8% of Colorado’s population.

This is an incredible jump from 1970 when the foreign-born population of the state was just 2.7% and this population had been on the decline for decades under American’s formerly stringent immigration laws. A further 11% of the state’s population are second-generation immigrants born in the state to at least one immigrant parent. Roughly 34% of this immigrant population are illegal aliens while 110,600 US citizen children (anchor babies) in the state are living with an illegal alien family member, usually a parent.
This mass immigration has shifted Colorado’s demographic composition significantly, as of the 2020 census Colorado’s demographics stand as:
- 4.7% Asian
- 3.8% African American
- 21.9% Hispanic
- 65.1% White American
The White, ethnic American, population of Colorado has declined by 23 points since the 1960 census while the Hispanic population has grown by 13 points. The African American population has grown slightly from 2.3% to 3.8% but they too face replacement with more than 60,000 Black Hispanics now calling the state home, able to take advantage of any benefits and rights established for Historic Black Americans.
And the state government is facilitating this demographic replacement with eagerness. The anti-American Colorado Office of New Americans may report that immigrants paid 5.5 billion dollars in taxes in the state, but the office quite conspicuously neglects to mention the cost of this mass immigration to the people of Colorado and the United States.
The state offers a healthcare program for illegal immigrants called OmniSalud.

The state also passed a 2021 law that requires healthcare companies provide “options” for illegal aliens looking to purchase healthcare coverage. Perhaps this is one of the reasons that health insurance rates in the state have been rising at three times the rate of inflation for the past several years.
As if spitting in the faces of Coloradans the state also established a 2022 fund called the Benefit Recovery Fund that offers cash payments to illegal aliens who have lost their job in the state. The state also provides SNAP (food stamp) benefits for legal and illegal immigrants and is spending hundreds of millions to attempt and integrate the massive wave of new illegal immigrant students into its schools.
These are not spending items that the pioneers of Colorado or their descendants would support, but these are policies you would expect to see in states such as California, Oregon, or Virginia. In fact, it is people from these states whohave so radically transformed the political landscape of Colorado.
Migration of Left-Wing Americans:
Since the 1980s Colorado has been the destination for (generally White) left-wing Americans looking to escape the consequences of their radical politics in their home states. It is perhaps not surprising that 60% of the population of Colorado was born outside of the state, with more than 206,000 Californians moving to Colorado since 2009 alone and nearly 80,000 people coming from Washington state.
This massive influx of liberal and left-wing Americans (large numbers coming from my shamefully ridiculous state of California) resulted in the once slightly GOP leaning state legislature evolving into a Democratic super-majority legislature. The Democratic party controls almost all levers of state power from the governor’s office to the state court to local governments in all major populated areas. They use this power to the benefit of immigrants, both legal and illegal, and against the pioneering population of Colorado and ethnic Americans generally.
Repatriation Policy
Illegal Immigrants:
The most important step is in dealing with the 180,000 illegal aliens that official sources will acknowledge are living in Colorado (there are many more, but I are using official statistics for this piece). These undocumented immigrants would also need to take their roughly 110,000 children under the age of 18 out of the country with them, as White Papers has long had a position against family separation, one we share with incoming immigration czar Tom Homan.
All together 300,000 people currently living in Colorado of the state can and should be expelled by state and local authorities. Crucially, Colorado can expel these aliens without the aid of the Federal government. This is possible because the Supreme Court allowed Texas’ SB4 law on the detention and deportation of illegal aliens by state authorities to enter into force.
Visa Holders:
To the great relief of American nationalists more than half (52%) of immigrants in Colorado have not yet become American citizens and are potentially easily removable from the state. Canceling the visas and green cards of these non-citizens would enable the removal of some 303,000 million people, roughly 90% of whom will be non-European immigrants.
These legal immigrant deportees would also need to take their children with them regardless of child citizenship. The data indicates as many as 200,000 additional people could be repatriated under this category.
A robust 700,000-plus people could be repatriated and deported from Colorado if the United States adopted a policy of not renewing visas, green cards, and other documents granting immigrants the right to remain.
These repatriation actions would increase the ethnic American share of the population from 65.1% today to 74% post-repatriation! But, these are not the only actions that can or should be taken to reverse the Great Replacement in the state.
There are still those 48% of immigrants in the state who have gained American citizenship. The citizenship applications and histories of these 267,000 immigrants will need to be carefully scrutinized and investigated. White Papers has always maintained that anyone who gained their American citizenship fairly should be able to retain it regardless of origin, but the reality remains that millions of naturalized citizens in the United States have likely gained that citizenship by defrauding the American nation and lying to (admittedly careless) American institutions.
But one example can be found in the incredible fact that 70% of immigrants in the United States are admitted based on family ties, not for work or school. This means that a large portion of people who have acquired US citizenship are likely to have done so fraudulently through family related scams. A now famous 2008 report issued by the US State Department discovered, through DNA testing, that over 80% of individuals admitted into the US as a family member of a “refugee” were not related. The US government has since mandated DNA testing for refugees who request their family members come to the US, but this DNA testing mandate has not been made mandatory for other categories of immigrants seeking family reunification.
By simply requiring proof that immigrants are related through marriage and birth certificates, and yes DNA testing, it is likely that more than half of naturalized US citizens in Colorado, and the nation as a whole, could have their citizenship revoked on the grounds of fraud. Citizenship can also be revoked on the grounds of felonies committed before a person becomes naturalized.
Giving immigrants the benefit of the doubt and assuming fraud rate of just 50% (it is likely closer to the 80% found by the State Department) the process of reviewing grants of citizenship would still result 132,000 naturalized immigrants in Colorado losing their US citizenship and being removed from the state and the nation. They would also be required to take their underage children with them.
When All is Said and Done:
The policies outlined above could result in the removal of nearly 850,000 first and second generation immigrants from the state of Colorado. If the number of immigration frauds is significantly higher (and it likely is) and if the nation were to review policies such as the 1986 IRCA and its known fraudulent applicants the number of repatriations could exceed one million individuals.
This process would result in the ethnic American (White) population of the state increasing from 65% today to 76%. This process would alleviate pressure on Colorado’s housing crisis, reduce crime, empty prisons, open up job opportunities and return power to the people of Colorado. It would also reverse the population replacement of Historic Black Americans and native Americans in the state, both groups having been set aside for growing Hispanic and Asian racial interests.
The Great Replacement can and must be reversed and Americans must reassert our right to our nation-state.