Colorado and Virginia laws have suppressed unions for decades. Now it’s up to Governors Polis and Spanberger to change course.

At a moment of relentless Trump administration attacks on workers and their unions, state lawmakers across the country are taking action to shore up workers’ rights to unionize and collectively bargain. Yet two of this year’s biggest opportunities for states to remove obstacles to unionization remain in limbo, awaiting action from Governor Jared Polis in Colorado and Governor Abigail Spanberger in Virginia. 

Strengthening collective bargaining rights is one of the most powerful policy levers states have available to confront primary economic challenges facing all workers today: an affordability crisis driven by the long-term suppression of workers’ pay, growing income inequality, and persistent racial and gender labor market disparities. It’s widely recognized that in today’s wildly unequal economy, millions of workers wish they had a union contract but face daunting obstacles to exercising their legal rights to get one. Moreover, many workers have never been protected by federal labor law at all due to Jim Crow-era exclusions.  

For the second year in a row, Colorado and Virginia state legislators have passed landmark legislation to remove barriers to unionization:  

Both pieces of legislation would correct historical wrongs—restoring rights that Colorado and Virginia workers have been denied since the 1940s, when past state lawmakers adopted anti-union policies amid a wave of white supremacist, big business backlash to multiracial union organizing. Yet both pieces of legislation were vetoed by their states’ respective governors in 2025 and are now once again awaiting governors’ signatures in 2026. 

In Colorado, Governor Polis has already indicated intent to once again veto the Worker Protection Act, but it’s not too late for Polis to seize his second chance to sign the bill.  

In Virginia, Governor Glenn Youngkin vetoed the collective bargaining legislation in 2025 and was ineligible to run for reelection because of term limits. This year, when the legislation was first sent to newly elected Virginia Governor Spanberger, she proposed extensive, damaging amendments to weaken the bill instead of signing it. The General Assembly has since rejected those amendments, and now Spanberger has her own “second chance” to sign this transformative legislation into law. 

Meanwhile, scores of anti-worker actions from the Trump administration are continuing to accelerate a decades-long trend of weakening workers’ rights, suppressing wages, and eroding bargaining power. This year, state lawmakers have handed both Governor Polis and Governor Spanberger historic opportunities to rebalance unequal power in their states’ economies and remove major obstacles Coloradans and Virginians face to exercising their rights to unionize and collectively bargain. And the choices Polis and Spanberger make in the next few weeks will shape economic outcomes in their states for years to come.