
For the second time in a month, President Donald Trump is changing horses in Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District.
In a Friday, Trump announced that he was re-endorsing U.S. Rep. Jeff Hurd to hold the Western Slope seat he won two years ago. Trump also said he was going to hire Hurd’s conservative primary challenger, Hope Scheppelman, whom the president had endorsed just last month after Hurd opposed some of Trump’s tariffs.
Trump said he would bring Scheppelman and her husband into his administration, “in a capacity to be determined.”
“Together with (Scheppleman and her husband), we decided that Congressman Jeff Hurd, of Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District, should in no way, shape, or form, be impeded from winning the District in that the Democrat alternative is a DISASTER for our Country,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Scheppelman, a former Colorado Republican Party official who had accused Hurd of being too liberal and siding with Democrats, said in a statement Friday afternoon that she was suspending her campaign after deciding to “put America First and do all I can to help ensure that the radical leaders in the Democrat Party do not take this seat.”
, Hurd thanked Trump for his support.
“I’m grateful for President Trump’s support and appreciate his efforts to unify Republicans in Colorado’s Third District,” he wrote. “The President and I share the same goals: securing the border, American energy dominance, and helping working families.”
Scheppelman included a dig at Hurd in her statement: “Jeff Hurd now has the opportunity to correct his naive voting record and support President Trump, and our slim Republican majority in the U.S. House, in our shared battle to save the country we love. If he does not, I will run again in 2028 and defeat him in order to give the citizens of Colorado’s 3rd district, and all of America, the representation we deserve.”
The Republican president had Hurd in October, only to yank back his support in February.
Earlier that month, Hurd joined several other House Republicans in opposing tariffs on Canada in a floor vote, prompting Trump to throw his support behind Scheppelman and call Hurd a “RINO,” or Republican in name only.
The president had previously warned that any Republican who opposed his tariffs would “seriously suffer the consequences come Election time, and that includes Primaries.”
Trump’s re-endorsement comes as House Republicans cling to a bare majority, while polling ahead of November’s midterms show Democrats leading Republicans on a generic ballot by . Republicans are comfortably favored in the 3rd Congressional District, but the seat’s red hue is not guaranteed: Colorado Democrats put a scare into Western Slope Republicans in 2022, when Adam Frisch came fewer than 550 votes shy of beating U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert.
The close call prompted Boebert to switch to the even more conservative 4th Congressional District on the state’s Eastern Plains, making way for the more moderate Hurd to march to a 5-point win in 2024.
This time, with Scheppelman’s withdrawal, Hurd is set to win an uncontested Republican primary in June. Two Democrats — Alex Kelloff and Dwayne Romero — are set to compete in that election for the chance to face Hurd in November.



