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Budget balanced (for now), AI decisions punted, relationships ruptured: What went down during special session

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LEGISLATURE SPECIAL SESSION 20250821
Hart Van Denburg/CPR News
Republican Sen. John Carson pulls on a party hat as his Senate colleagues prepare to sing “Happy Birthday” to him as the Senate convenes for a special legislative session, Aug. 21, 2025.

The giant tax-cuts-and-spending package passed by Congressional Republicans will have major ramifications for every state in the country, but Colorado is one of the first place it's really being felt. Thanks to the state's unusual way of handling its finances, the federal tax cuts immediately threw Colorado's finances way out of whack.

That was the main reason lawmakers recently came back to the Capitol in August for a high temperature, high stakes special session. But grueling fights over AI regulations and a painful public confrontation between House leaders at times made the budget debates feel like a secondary concern.

CPR’s Bente BirkelandThe Colorado Sun’s Jesse Paul and KUNC’s Lucas Brady Woodsdiscuss the bills that did, and did not, make it past the finish line over the six-day special legislative session. They also dig into the growing chasm between the two caucuses in the House, and what it could mean for the regular session in the new year.

Read CCNA special session coverage:

Purplish is produced by CPR News and the Capitol News Alliance, a collaboration between KUNC News, Colorado Public Radio, Rocky Mountain PBS, and The Colorado Sun, and shared with Rocky Mountain Community Radio and other news organizations across the state. Funding for the Alliance is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Purplish’s producer is Stephanie Wolf and its editor is Megan Verlee, sound designed and engineered by Shane Rumsey. The theme music is by Brad Turner.