The usual CMOS switches and MUX (e.g. DG201B, DG408 ) are quite good in the DC way. They have very low offset voltages and for the modern versions also low leakage. Like with mechanical switches there can be thermal EMF if there are temperature gradients. As the CMOS switches are low power the internal gradients are small.
Just keep in mind the limitation that the voltage at all pins must be within he supplies. It can become tricky if a part is fully isolated with no defined common mode voltage.
For the references the TL431 is really low quality, more like ok for a power supply but hardly for a measurement. It could still be interesting to measure a few for learning, but don't expect too much.
Trimmers are notorious for drift and high TC. So if used at all try to limit the effect they can have, e.g with series / parallel resistors.