Jason Mikesell: 2026 Colorado Governor Candidate Interview | Pyrost
Field Report
Pyrost Podcast · 2026 Colorado Gubernatorial

Republican Primary · mikesell4gov.com

Jason Mikesell
Makes His Case
For Colorado
Governor.

The Republican candidate — Teller County Sheriff, 20-year law enforcement veteran, and entrepreneur — sat down with Pyrost to discuss 287(g), SB25-003, cartel marijuana, and his vision for the state.

Guest Jason Mikesell
Current Role Elected Sheriff, Teller County — Two Terms
Background SWAT · Investigations · Intel · Entrepreneur
Race 2026 Colorado Governor — Republican Primary
3RD
Generation Colorado native. Born and raised in the state.
20+
Years in public safety, from peace officer in Park County to elected Teller County Sheriff.
6mo
Time Mikesell says it took to drive cartel marijuana operations out of Teller County after taking office.
5
Businesses currently owned alongside his wife — restaurants, apartments, commercial properties.

Jason Mikesell
On The 2026
Colorado Governor's Race

The full Pyrost conversation with Sheriff Jason Mikesell — SB25-003, 287(g), cartel marijuana, recidivism, fentanyl, housing costs, and what he says he would do differently as governor.

Pyrost Podcast · Full Episode Watch on YouTube ↗
Pyrost · Jason Mikesell

Sheriff, Veteran,
Entrepreneur:
Who Is Jason Mikesell?

Jason Mikesell is a two-term elected sheriff of Teller County, Colorado, running for the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2026. He has described his path to the race as reactive rather than planned — he came home in 2016 with a specific goal, stayed longer than intended, and eventually concluded that the problems he was seeing at the county level required a statewide solution.

When Teller County commissioners called, he was overseas building his company. His children were still in school back home. He flew 26 hours to get back. By Friday they'd hired him. By Monday he was drafting what would become his cartel enforcement strategy. Within six months, he says, those organizations had left the county. The department he inherited had 200% deputy turnover; he says he rebuilt it, brought salaries to market rate, and retained staff through two elected terms.

He's a third-generation Coloradan — grew up hunting, fishing, and camping across the state. He and his wife currently own five businesses: restaurants, apartments, and commercial properties. He describes that combination of law enforcement leadership and private-sector ownership as foundational to how he thinks about governing.

When we sat down with him on the Pyrost Podcast, a consistent theme ran through the conversation: that the consequences of policy decisions made in Denver fall on communities like Teller County, and that those making the decisions have little direct experience with the outcomes.

"I always told my boys: don't sit there and cry about something — go out and fix it. And I woke up one morning and realized I was whining and crying about all these issues. So here I am."
— Jason Mikesell

Mikesell On
Colorado Firearms
Legislation

Mikesell has been an active and vocal opponent of Colorado's recent firearms legislation, including SB25-003 — the semiautomatic permit bill — which he says passed without the support of any law enforcement organization in the state.

"There was not one law enforcement organization that went forward and said this is a great idea," he told us. "Every single one of them said this is a bad idea." He says he watched legislators respond by invoking unnamed "stakeholders" before signing it anyway. He was present for the financial testimony on SB25-003, and argued that the state had no legal mechanism to fund the bill without accessing Pittman-Robertson federal funds — which, he contends, would trigger a federal audit and the loss of Colorado's conservation funding.

A Democratic legislator asked the question publicly during testimony. Mikesell said he stood, told him he would get the answer he was looking for, and delivered it. According to Mikesell, the legislator left the room before he finished. He says this dynamic — being technically prepared while legislators proceed regardless — has characterized his experience at the Capitol.

On the 72-Hour Wait
Mikesell's Argument
Against The Wait.
Mikesell argues the 72-hour waiting period accomplishes nothing measurable. The background check happens at the counter, he says; nothing new is checked at pickup. His concerns: impulse sales migrate to online purchases; customers who drove hours to rural gun shops are stranded; and a person fleeing a domestic violence situation is left three days from legal self-protection. "Bad guys don't wait 72 hours," he said. He also states that in approximately 90% of Colorado firearm crimes, the weapon was already stolen — a figure he did not source during the interview.

He also argued that the most effective screening already happens at the counter. Trained gun shop employees can read a customer, identify intoxication or erratic behavior, and decline the sale or ask them to return another day. In Mikesell's view, the 72-hour clock adds no safety benefit over that existing judgment — it simply penalizes everyone who passed the background check.

His read on the legislative pattern: California passes a gun bill; six to eighteen months later, a version appears in Colorado. Mikesell says legislators know many of these bills are constitutionally vulnerable, and that the strategy is to pass them, hold them for three to five years of court challenges, and keep them on the books in the meantime.

"The ultimate goal of that bill was to close you down anyway. They don't care what hardships you go through. They don't care whether you stay open."
— Jason Mikesell

Mikesell On 287(g)
And Sanctuary
Policies

When Colorado's legislature effectively ended 287(g) agreements — the federal program that allows sheriff's deputies to perform immigration enforcement functions when detaining individuals who have committed crimes — Mikesell says he was the last county sheriff in Colorado still operating under one. The ACLU sued him in 2019. He says he negotiated a resolution that allowed the agreement to continue with specific operational guidelines.

He described how the program works in practice: when a deputy arrests someone for any serious offense, they ask where the person was born. That question is asked of everyone. If the answer indicates foreign origin, the deputy runs the individual through an ICE database. If there is an active federal interest — prior offenses, trafficking, illegal entry — a detainer is placed and the individual is transferred to federal custody.

Colorado's sanctuary policies block this process, Mikesell argues. The real-world result, in his account: dangerous individuals are released back into communities, ICE must then locate them at known addresses — often encountering entire households — and the state uses those subsequent enforcement actions to generate political opposition to the federal government while taking no steps to address the underlying issue.

A Case Mikesell Describes
The 68-Year-Old
Woman.
During a cartel marijuana operation, Mikesell says his deputies encountered a 68-year-old woman sewing marijuana into dog food bags. When told she wouldn't be arrested, she refused release. Her reasoning, according to Mikesell: if the cartel believed she had been released without charges, they would assume she had cooperated — and would harm her family. Her only protection, in her view, was a documented ICE deportation that proved she had not been a voluntary informant. Mikesell says he told this story to 100 Denver pastors, arguing that Colorado's sanctuary framework does not protect vulnerable immigrants — it creates conditions that keep them dependent and exploited.

Numbers
Mikesell Cites

2nd
Highest violent crime rate in the U.S., per Mikesell. Colorado's ranking varies by metric and data source.
$1.2B
State budget deficit cited by Mikesell. Colorado has faced structural budget shortfalls in recent years.
1,000+
Gun shops estimated closed across Colorado since firearms legislation began, per Mikesell. Independent figures unavailable.
600+
New laws passed by the legislature each year, as cited by Mikesell. He has proposed limiting annual legislative output.

The Issues:
What Mikesell
Says He'd Do

01
Crime & Recidivism
Mikesell contends that Colorado's crime statistics are distorted by how the state counts reoffenders. He says he has watched serial offenders cycle through the system while parole declines to re-incarcerate in order to preserve favorable metrics.
02
Fentanyl & Drugs
Mikesell estimates — based on his own field testing — that a significant portion of black market marijuana in Colorado is laced with fentanyl. He opposed safe injection sites at the Capitol and argues that enabling continued use prevents people from reaching the point of seeking treatment.
03
Local Control
He argues that the state is forcing uniform building codes onto counties where most structures predate modern standards. His position: counties should have the right to adopt codes that reflect their own circumstances, rather than being governed by uniform state mandates.
04
Housing & Cost of Living
A 1,200 sq ft starter home in Teller County averages $650,000, per Mikesell. Lumber costs he cites have risen from $35,000 to $135,000. He attributes housing unaffordability primarily to regulatory cost and energy policy, not to market demand alone.
05
Hunting & Public Lands
Mikesell says out-of-state hunters can draw once-in-a-lifetime tags on their first application while lifetime Colorado residents wait years. He wants Colorado Parks and Wildlife separated from the Division of Wildlife and restructured around resident hunter priorities.
06
Energy Independence
He argues that Colorado's power grid cannot support its growth trajectory, citing circuit breaker failures at peak demand. Wind and solar mandates, in his view, drive utility costs up while delivering a fraction of needed capacity. He says no candidate in the field is stating this plainly.

Results vs. Résumé

What other candidates offer
Day-One Promises

Mikesell is skeptical of day-one frameworks. "Day one, I'm going to do this. Day one, I'm going to do that." His argument: he has opened businesses and knows what day one actually looks like — you assess what's working, find the problems, and begin the slow work of reversing course. Anyone who promises otherwise, he says, has not run anything.

What Mikesell says he brings
A Track Record

He says he drove cartel operations out of a county with 200% deputy turnover in six months, per his account. He rebuilt the department, brought salaries to market, and retained personnel through two elected terms. He argues that running a $13 billion state budget and 5,000-person workforce requires exactly that kind of demonstrated operational record.

Third-Generation Coloradan.
Making The Case.

Mikesell launched his campaign outside the Pioneers Museum in Colorado Springs. He describes his candidacy as rooted in the state's history and his family's connection to it — he grew up hunting and fishing across Colorado and says the outdoor traditions and rural character he knew are being eroded by policy decisions made in Denver.

"I grew up here," he said at the announcement. "I'm not coming in from another state trying to bring political values here. I'm here, on the ground, telling you I see what the needs are of the people." He describes himself as a moderate Republican who will not retreat on Second Amendment issues — positioning himself as someone with both a credible law enforcement record and direct experience with the legislation he opposes.

He has testified before legislative committees, engaged ICE and federal agencies directly on 287(g), and operated businesses alongside his law enforcement career. His case to primary voters is that those experiences, not a political résumé, are the relevant qualifications for executive office in Colorado.

The Republican primary is set for June 30, 2026, with the general election to follow in November.

Pyrost conducted this interview as part of its ongoing coverage of the 2026 Colorado governor's race. Candidates' claims and statistics in this article reflect their own statements and have not all been independently verified.

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