Cynthia Lummis – WY

Cynthia Lummis

Summary

Current: US Senator since 2021
Affiliation: Republican

Next Election

History: Lummis’s father chaired the Laramie County Republican Party and served on the county board of commissioners. Her brother Del Lummis also chaired the Laramie County Republican Party. She graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Bachelor of Science degree in animal science in 1976 and a Bachelor of Science in biology in 1978.[6][7][8] She graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Juris Doctor in 1985, and was on the dean’s list.[9][10] She worked as a student teacher at Rock River School in 1977.

Lummis served as the U.S representative for Wyoming’s at-large congressional district from 2009 to 2017. She served in the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1979 to 1983 and from 1985 to 1993, in the Wyoming Senate from 1993 to 1995, and as the Wyoming State Treasurer from 1999 to 2007. Lummis was elected treasurer of Wyoming in 1998 and reelected without opposition in 2002. 

Featured Quote: Senator Lummis is a dedicated champion of Wyoming’s mineral and energy resources. In Washington, she fought off attacks from the environmental left while advocating for market opportunities both at home and abroad.

Featured VideoSenate Banking Hearing: “The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress”

OnAir Post: Cynthia Lummis – WY

About

Source: Government page

Cynthia Lummis 1Cynthia Lummis was sworn into the United States Senate on January 3, 2021, becoming the first woman to serve as United States Senator from the great State of Wyoming.

Born on a cattle ranch in Laramie County, Senator Lummis has spent her entire career fighting for Wyoming families, communities, businesses and values. From the halls of the Wyoming House to the halls of the U.S. House, her time in public service has always been focused on advocating for Wyoming’s future.

First elected to the U.S. House in 2008, Senator Lummis quickly earned her reputation as a no-nonsense conservative and principled policymaker. She was a founding member of the House Freedom Caucus, a group consisting of the most unflinching conservative Members of the House of Representatives. She fought throughout her tenure in Congress to rein in spending and reduce the federal deficit, working with the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget and ultimately co-sponsoring several bipartisan budget proposals.

In the House of Representatives, Senator Lummis effectively elevated western issues, pushing through the first Interior and Environment (EPA) Appropriations bill to pass the House in seven years under her chairmanship. This marked a significant milestone for the Western Caucus and the rural communities across the West they represent. She also worked to keep public lands open to the public and available for multiple use. She successfully passed the National Forest System Trails Stewardship Act in 2016, a bipartisan effort led by Cynthia to maintain over 157,000 miles of trails within our national forests.

Senator Lummis is a dedicated champion of Wyoming’s mineral and energy resources. In Washington, she fought off attacks from the environmental left while advocating for market opportunities both at home and abroad. She is the proud godmother of the ANSAC Wyoming, a commercial shipping vessel transporting trona from the U.S. to Southeast Asia and is the recipient of the lifetime achievement award from the Washington Coal Club.

Prior to serving in the House of Representatives, Senator Lummis spent eight years as Wyoming State Treasurer and 14 years as a member of the Wyoming State House and Senate. She also worked as general counsel to Wyoming Governor Jim Geringer and Director of the Office of State Lands and Investments, as well as a law clerk at the Wyoming Supreme Court.

After departing U.S. House of Representatives in 2016, Senator Lummis operated her family’s cattle ranches, and the Sweetgrass development in Laramie County, with her brother and sister. She is a three-time graduate of the University of Wyoming in animal science, biology and law. She and her late-husband, Al Wiederspahn, have one daughter, Annaliese, son-in-law Will Cole and grandsons Gus and Al.

Committees

Environment & Public Works

The Environment & Public Works Committee is of the utmost importance to Wyoming. A member of our delegation has sat on this Committee in 21 of the last 23 sessions of Congress. Here’s what I’m hoping to accomplish:

Commerce, Science, & Transportation

The Commerce Committee deals with a huge range of issues that impact Wyoming, from transportation and interstate commerce to communications and technology.

Banking, Housing, & Urban Development

The Banking Committee addresses a huge range of issues. I’m ready to work to protect community banks, champion financial innovation, and ensure safe, vibrant financial markets.

Sponsored Legislation

CONGRESS.GOV

Phone: 202-224-3424

Personal

Full Name: Cynthia M. Lummis

Gender: Female

Family: Widowed, Al Wiederspahn; 1 Child: Annaliese

Birth Date: 09/10/1954

Birth Place: Cheyenne, WY

Home City: Cheyenne, WY

Religion: Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod

Source: Vote Smart

Education

JD, University of Wyoming, 1985

BS, Biology, University of Wyoming, 1978

BS, Animal Science, University of Wyoming, 1976

Political Experience

Senator, United States Senate, Wyoming, 2021-present

Candidate, United States Senate, Wyoming, 2020

Representative, United States House of Representatives, 2009-2017

Treasurer, State of Wyoming, 1999-2007

Senator, Wyoming State Senate, 1993-1995

Representative, Wyoming State House of Representatives, 1979-1983, 1985-1993

Professional Experience

Owner, Lummis Ranch, 1976-present

Attorney

Operator, Sweetgrass Development

Served, Trump/Pence Transition Team

Interim Director, Office of State Lands and Investments, State of Wyoming, 1997-1998

General Counsel, Office of the Governor, 1995-1997

Clerk, Wyoming Supreme Court, 1985

Offices

Offices

Cody

1285 Sheridan Avenue
Suite 210
Cody, WY 82414
Phone: 307-527-9444

Casper

Dick Cheney Federal Building
100 East B Street, Suite 3201
PO Box 33201
Casper, WY 82601
Phone: 307-261-6572

Cheyenne

Federal Center
2120 Capitol Avenue
Suite 2007
Cheyenne, WY 82001
Phone: 307-772-2477

Washington, DC

Russell Senate Office Building
Suite SR-124
Washington, DC 20510

Web Links

Politics

Source: none

Election Results

To learn more, go to this wikipedia section in this post.

Finances

Source: Open Secrets

Committees

U.S. Senate Committee on Environment & Public Works

The Environment & Public Works Committee is of the utmost importance to Wyoming. A member of our delegation has sat on this committee in 21 of the last 23 sessions of Congress.

U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation

The Commerce Committee deals with a huge range of issues that impact Wyoming, from transportation and interstate commerce to communications and technology.

U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, & Urban Development

New Legislation

 Sponsored and Cosponsored

Issues

All Wyoming, All the Time

In Wyoming, we do things our way. We are proud defenders of Americans’ rights, and firm believers that we know best how to run our own lives. As your Senator, I am committed to fighting for your liberties, like the Second Amendment and the right to life. I am here to represent your views in Congress on everything from immigration and border security to choice in healthcare and education, and everything in between. I also promise to fight for our industries in trade agreements and transportation bills. As your Senator, I am ‘all Wyoming, all the time’ and laser-focused on championing our communities, businesses, and rural way of life.

Economy & Jobs

Financial Innovation & Digital Assets

Wyoming has pioneered the right way to regulate the new world of digital assets and financial innovation. On the federal level, I am working to ensure that the federal government makes financial innovation a priority and adopts sensible, bipartisan regulations that secure America’s financial future, while respecting states’ rights. I founded the Financial Innovation Caucus to educate my fellow senators about the vast potential of emerging technologies to promote financial inclusion and build new wealth for all.

Energy & Environment

Energy & Natural Resources

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Wyoming produces 15 times more energy than its residents consume, making it the biggest net energy supplier in the United States. We are proud of the incredible energy resources we have, and how we are innovating through things like carbon capture to produce energy in the cleanest manner possible.

In addition to our energy production capabilities, Wyoming’s rare earth and hard rock minerals present a huge opportunity for Wyoming and for manufacturing capabilities here in the United States. I am dedicated to ensuring that the federal government respects Wyoming’s industries and agriculture production, and am committed to fighting for Wyoming’s workers in these important sectors.

Healthcare

High healthcare costs continue to be a major concern for the people of Wyoming and are a significant challenge for our families and small businesses. I support a number of efforts to drive down costs and improve access to quality healthcare, including pricing transparency so that individuals, businesses, and health care providers can make informed decisions. I also support bringing more competition into the Wyoming and national health insurance markets, and ensuring air ambulance costs are affordable. I look forward to working with my colleagues in the Senate to secure the telehealth gains we made during the COVID-19 pandemic and build off of those advancements.

Transportation & Infrastructure

As the only Senator who sits on all three committees with jurisdiction over transportation issues – the transportation trifecta – I am committed to ensuring that we properly update our aging national infrastructure. I also know that rural states like Wyoming have vastly different needs from urban areas, but those differences don’t mean rural needs are less important. I will work hard to represent the transportation needs of rural Americans on any infrastructure-related legislation that Congress considers.

Agriculture

When I think about agriculture, I think about our state’s culture. For the farmers, ranchers, and producers in Wyoming, agriculture isn’t just our livelihood – it’s our way of life. As a rancher myself, I know how important it is to have policies in place that balance conservation for tomorrow with best uses for today. We hold ourselves to the highest levels of excellence, and I am fighting to ensure that if we produce products that are good enough for Wyoming’s standards, then they are certainly good enough for the rest of the country. I want to ensure that meat and crops produced and inspected in Wyoming can be sold across the country so the rest of the United States can enjoy the superior products we grow in Wyoming.

National Security & Veterans

The first responsibility of the U.S. government is to keep our country and citizens safe. I am grateful for the incredible work that the men and women who serve our nation in uniform do at F.E. Warren Air Force Base each and every day. I am a staunch supporter of our nuclear triad, and proud of the role that the F.E. Warren Air Force Base plays in our national defense. The transformation that has occurred at the Veterans Affairs Department in recent years has been essential to improving the quality and timeliness of services and I pledge to hold the department accountable for their actions taking care of the men and women who have given so much to keep us safe.

More Information

Services

Source: Government page

Wikipedia

Cynthia Marie Lummis Wiederspahn (/ˈlʌmɪs/ LUH-miss;[1] born September 10, 1954) is an American attorney and politician serving as the junior United States senator from Wyoming since 2021. A member of the Republican Party, Lummis served as the U.S representative for Wyoming’s at-large congressional district from 2009 to 2017. She served in the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1979 to 1983 and from 1985 to 1993, in the Wyoming Senate from 1993 to 1995, and as the Wyoming State Treasurer from 1999 to 2007.

Lummis was elected treasurer of Wyoming in 1998 and reelected without opposition in 2002. She managed the gubernatorial campaigns of Mary Mead in 1990 and Ray Hunkins in 2006. She also served on Bob Dole‘s presidential steering committee in Wyoming and chaired Mitt Romney‘s 2012 presidential campaign in Wyoming.

Lummis unsuccessfully sought to be appointed to replace Senator Craig L. Thomas in 2007. She was elected to succeed Barbara Cubin in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2008 election, defeating Democratic nominee Gary Trauner. During her tenure in the House, she was the first Wyoming representative to serve on the Agriculture Committee since 1941, chaired the Science Subcommittee on Energy, co-chaired the Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues, and was active in the Congressional Western Caucus and Freedom Caucus. She served until her retirement in 2017, and was succeeded by Liz Cheney. After her tenure in the House, Lummis sought a position in President Donald Trump‘s cabinet as Secretary of the Interior, but was not appointed. She was elected to the U.S. Senate in the 2020 election, becoming the first woman to represent Wyoming in the Senate. She voted to reject the certification of Pennsylvania’s electoral votes in the 2020 presidential election, which were narrowly won by Joe Biden.

Early life and education

Cynthia Marie Lummis was born on September 10, 1954, in Cheyenne, Wyoming, to Doran Lummis and Enid Bennett. She is descended from German immigrants and her family first came to Wyoming in 1868. Her father chaired the Laramie County Republican Party and served on the county board of commissioners. Her brother Del Lummis also chaired the Laramie County Republican Party.[2][3][4][5]

Lummis attended Cheyenne East High School, and graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Bachelor of Science degree in animal science in 1976 and a Bachelor of Science in biology in 1978.[6][7][8] She graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Juris Doctor in 1985, and was on the dean’s list.[9][10] She worked as a student teacher at Rock River School in 1977.[11]

Career

State legislature

Elections

In 1978, Lummis was elected to the Wyoming House of Representatives at age 24, the youngest woman to serve in the state legislature.[12][13] She was reelected in 1980, but chose to not seek reelection in 1982.[14][15] Lummis returned to the state house after winning the 1984 election.[16][17] She filed to run for reelection on June 19, 1986, and was reelected after placing third out of 18 candidates.[18][19][20] She was reelected in the 1988 and 1990 elections.[21][22] She was reapportioned to the 8th district in 1992.[23]

In 1990, when Republican Senator Dan Sullivan resigned from the Wyoming Senate, Senate Majority Leader Diemer True stated that Lummis was qualified to replace Sullivan in the state senate. But she could not take the position, as she was busy serving as a campaign manager in the gubernatorial election.[24] In 1992, Lummis ran for a seat in the Wyoming Senate from the 5th district, defeating Norman P. Feagler for the Republican nomination, and incumbent Democratic Senator Harriet Elizabeth Byrd in the general election.[25][26][27] During the campaign Lummis spent $11,661, making her the fifth-highest spending elected candidate in the 1992 election.[28] On June 8, 1994, she announced that she would not run for reelection, saying she had other commitments to her family. Republican nominee Don Lawler was elected to succeed her after defeating Democratic nominee Steve Freudenthal.[29][30]

Tenure

During Lummis’s tenure in the state house, she chaired the Revenue committee and served on the Judiciary and Agriculture Committees.[31][12][32] During her tenure in the state senate she served on the Judiciary Committee.[33] After leaving the state legislature, she was appointed to Jim Geringer‘s gubernatorial transition team, and served as his general counsel until 1997.[34][35][36] Geringer appointed Lummis to serve as interim director of the Office of State Lands and Investments in 1997, after he fired Jim Magagna.[37]

On February 28, 1982, Lummis was injured in a car accident while Wiederspahn was driving.[38] She attended the National Conference of State Legislatures national conference in 1982, alongside Senate President Donald Cundall and Representatives Wiederspahn, Peg Shreve, Scott Ratliff, William A. Cross, and George Salisbury.[39] In a 1982 roll-call vote in favor of legislation about the treatment of non-resident traffic offenders, a man cast Lummis’s vote while she was outside the room. Lummis changed the vote to a nay after coming back in, and Representative Ken Burns cited this as an example of why electronic voting was needed.[40]

During the 1988 Republican presidential primaries, Lummis served on Bob Dole‘s steering committee in Wyoming.[41] A 1989 survey of the financial contributors of the Wyoming Republican Party showed that Lummis was suggested as a candidate for Secretary of State of Wyoming.[42] She served as Republican candidate Mary Mead‘s campaign manager during the 1990 gubernatorial election.[43]

Treasurer

Elections

Results of the 1998 Wyoming Treasurer election
Lummis:

  Lummis—50–60%
  Lummis—60–70%
  Lummis—70–80%

Loveridge:

  Loveridge—50–60%

On November 17, 1996, incumbent Treasurer Stan Smith announced that he would not seek reelection to a fifth term in 1998. It was speculated that Lummis would replace him.[44] At the Laramie County Republican convention on March 28, 1998, she announced that she would run for treasurer, and formally announced her campaign on April 20, at a press conference alongside Smith.[45][46]

During the campaign, the Attorney General ruled that public funds could not be used to send state treasurer candidates to an investment seminar.[47] Lummis won the Republican nomination without opposition and defeated Democratic nominee Charyl Loveridge and Libertarian nominee James Blomquist.[48][49]

Lummis was considered as a possible candidate for the Republican nomination in the 2002 gubernatorial election, but declined to run.[50][51] She announced on April 30 that she would seek reelection as treasurer, and was reelected without opposition in 2002.[52][53][54] Lummis was the only statewide candidate to face no opposition in the 2002 election, as nobody had filed to run in the Democratic primary and no other candidate received the 25 write-in votes required to qualify for the nomination.[55][56] During the campaign she had raised $9,275 and spent $12,151.[57]

She was limited to two terms as treasurer and did not challenge the constitutionality of the legislation, despite the Wyoming Supreme Court having invalidated term limits on state legislators.[58] She endorsed former Speaker Fred Parady to succeed her as treasurer in the 2006 election, but Joseph Meyer won the Republican primary and the general election.[59][60][61]

Tenure

Lummis conducted an accounting change by raising the interest rate on the $100 million in Wyoming banks, which reduced Wyoming’s expected budget deficit in 1999 by over $5 million.[62] She also planned a 1% increase on the interest yield of Wyoming’s $2.6 billion permanent fund, which would raise $26 million per year.[63] She served on the Wyoming Board of Land Commissioners alongside Governor Geringer, Secretary of State Meyer, Auditor Max Maxfield, and superintendent of public instruction Judy Catchpole.[64][65] During her tenure, the Permanent Mineral Trust Fund rose to over $2 billion for the first time.[66]

In April 2001, Lummis announced a conflict of interest involving her role as treasurer of the Arp and Hammond Hardware Company, which she claimed had existed since December 2000 but had existed since April 2000.[67] She and other Republican statewide officials were accused of trying to expand their powers at the expense of Governor Dave Freudenthal, but denied the claims.[68] Lummis claimed that she was the person responsible for the increase in Wyoming’s investments during her tenure as treasurer, but Freudenthal said that no one person could take credit for the increase.[69]

As a member of the Wyoming Canvassing Board, Lummis voted unanimously alongside the three other members against a recall of the ballots cast in Natrona County during the 2002 United States House of Representatives election. Even though the results in Natrona County could not overturn the statewide results, they would determine which county was placed first on the ballot. Lummis initially supported a recount, but changed her mind after Mary Ann Collins, the Natrona County Clerk, told her that all of the ballots had been counted.[70]

Lummis and all other statewide officials in Wyoming attended the first inauguration of George W. Bush. During the 2004 presidential election, she served as one of Wyoming’s 28 delegates to the Republican National Convention. Lummis was the only statewide official from Wyoming to attended Bush’s second inauguration.[71][72] She served as the chair of Ray Hunkins’s campaign during the 2006 gubernatorial election.[73]

United States House of Representatives

Elections

Results of the 2008 United States House of Representatives election in Wyoming
Lummis:
  Lummis—50–60%
  Lummis—60–70%
  Lummis—70–80%

Trauner:

  Trauner—40–50%
  Trauner—50–60%
  Trauner—60–70%
Cynthia Lummis in 2009
Cynthia Lummis with representatives Eric Cantor and Mary Fallin

Representative Barbara Cubin, whom Lummis had supported during the 1994 election, announced that she would not run for reelection in the 2008 election.[74][75] On January 2, 2008, Lummis announced that she would run for Cubin’s seat, winning the Republican nomination against Mark Gordon, Bill Winney, and Michael Holland, having challenged them to debates held in all 23 Wyoming counties during the primaries.[76][77][78] A poll conducted from January 18 to 21 showed that Lummis had a favorability rating of 29%, unfavorability rating of 17%, a neutral rating of 24%, and 30% did not recognize her.[79] Tucker Fagan, who later served as her chief of staff, served as Lummis’s campaign manager. During the campaign Rachael Seidenschnur, her press secretary, resigned after using a fake name to ask Lummis’s opponent a question.[80][81][82] She defeated Democratic nominee Gary Trauner in the general election.[83] During the campaign Lummis raised $1,557,313 and spent $1,543,875 while Trauner raised $1,672,707 and spent $1,716,013.[84][85]

Lummis was reelected in 2010 against Democratic nominee David Wendt and Libertarian nominee John V. Love, after having raised $780,426 and spending $754,270 compared to Wendt, who had raised $65,709 and spent $68,523[86][87][88][89] Lummis announced that she would run for reelection on May 21, 2012, and was reelected in the 2012 election over Democratic nominee Chris Henrichsen after having raised $715,314 and spent $631,026.[90][91][92][93] She was reelected in the 2014 election against Democratic nominee Richard Grayson after having raised $432,666 and spent $300,949.[94][95][96]

On November 12, 2015, Lummis announced that she would not seek reelection in the 2016 election, and Liz Cheney was elected to succeed her.[97][98] Lummis’s daughter, Annaliese Wiederspahn, served as Leland Christensen‘s campaign manager during the Republican primary.[99] Lummis considered running for the Republican nomination in the 2018 gubernatorial election, but declined to run and endorsed Sam Galeotos.[100][101] She sought a position in President Donald Trump‘s cabinet by attempting to replace Ryan Zinke as United States Secretary of the Interior, but David Bernhardt was appointed instead.[102][103]

Tenure

During Lummis’s tenure in the House, she served on the Agriculture and Appropriations Committees and on the Energy and Mineral Resources, National Parks, Forests and Public Lands, and Energy and Water Development Subcommittees. She was the first representative from Wyoming to serve on the Agriculture Committee since Frank O. Horton, who served on the committee from 1939 to 1941.[104][105][106][107] In 2011, she was appointed vice chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee of the Agriculture Committee.[108] Lummis left the Appropriations Committee in 2013, saying she had requested her removal from the committee and that it was not part of a purge of radical Republicans from committee positions.[109] She was appointed chair of the Science Subcommittee on Energy in 2013.[110]

Lummis served as the communications chair and spokesperson of the Congressional Western Caucus and succeeded Dean Heller as vice chair in 2011 following Heller’s appointment to the United States Senate.[111][112][113] Lummis was elected to serve on the House Republican Steering Committee in 2010.[106] She was at one point the only female member of the Freedom Caucus and the last until the election of Debbie Lesko.[114][115] Lummis co-chaired the Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues alongside Representative Gwen Moore from 2011 to 2013.[116] She was also a member of the Tea Party Caucus.[117]

Lummis supported Speaker John Boehner while the Freedom Caucus successfully pushed to remove Boehner.[118] She praised the election of Paul Ryan as Speaker, saying, “we have ushered in thoughtful, conservative leadership, restored member-driven policy-making to the legislative process and returned regular order that will bring sunshine to back rooms making government work better”.[119]

Lummis served on the Republican whip team until she was removed from the position in 2015, for voting against giving President Barack Obama the authority to propose a trade agreement with Pacific countries. She said she knew she would be removed from her position on the whip team for her vote but did not regret it. Representatives Steve Pearce and Trent Franks were also removed from the whip team for their votes.[120]

During the 2008 presidential election, Lummis was supposed to give a speech at the Republican National Convention on the first day, but her speech was canceled due to Hurricane Gustav.[121] During the 2012 Republican presidential primaries she endorsed Mitt Romney and served as the chair of Romney’s campaign in Wyoming.[122][123] During the 2016 Republican presidential primaries, she was a campaign surrogate for Rand Paul, and later endorsed Trump in the presidential election.[124][125]

United States Senate

Elections

After Senator Craig L. Thomas died on June 4, 2007, Lummis announced on June 12 that she would seek an appointment to replace him.[126] She placed third in the final vote, making her one of the nominees submitted to the governor as a candidate for appointment, alongside John Barrasso and Tom Sansonetti.[127][128] Freudenthal selected Barrasso to replace Thomas.[129] Lummis was speculated as a possible candidate in the 2014 United States Senate election.[130]

On June 20, 2019, Lummis filed to run for a seat in the United States Senate to succeed retiring Senator Mike Enzi.[131] She won the Republican nomination and defeated Democratic nominee Merav Ben-David in the general election.[132][133] Her victory made her the first woman to represent Wyoming in the United States Senate.[134] She raised more during the campaign than all of her Republican and Democratic opponents combined.[135] During the campaign Lummis raised $3,003,788 and spent $3,037,813 while Ben-David raised $559,626 and spent $545,348.[136][137]

Tenure

During her tenure in the Senate, Lummis has served on the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, Environment and Public Works, and Commerce, Science, and Transportation committees.[138] Hans Hunt, a member of the Wyoming state House, resigned so that he could work as Lummis’s agriculture and trade policy adviser.[139]

During the counting of the electoral college vote of the 2020 presidential election Lummis voted to certify the results from Arizona, but against certifying the results from Pennsylvania.[140][141] She voted to acquit Trump during his second impeachment trial.[142]

Lummis voted against the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 but for the PPP Extension Act and the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act.[143][144][145]

In October 2021, CNBC reported that Lummis had violated the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012, a federal transparency and conflict-of-interest law, by failing to disclose within 45 days a purchase of Bitcoin worth between $50,001 and $100,000 that she made in August 2021.[146]

Political positions

Economy

Lummis supported the federal takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but said the government should avoid bailing out private companies.[147] She supported the privatization of Social Security, raising the age at which people received Social Security money, and making the Bush tax cuts permanent.[148][149][150] She voted against the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.[151]

In 2010, the House voted 228 to 192, with Lummis in favor, to prohibit federal funding for NPR.[152] She said that House Democrats had a “cocaine-like addiction” to spending.[153] Lummis voted against the Hurricane Sandy relief bill, saying that although victims of Hurricane Sandy deserved the money the federal government should cut its budget to offset the cost of the legislation.[154]

Lummis has campaigned for a regulatory framework for digital assets, a stance she reiterated after the FTX exchange collapsed.[155][156]

Lummis was among the 31 Senate Republicans who voted against final passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023.[157]

Energy and climate change

In a 2012 campaign debate, Lummis rejected the scientific consensus on climate change, claiming that climate change was “not settled science”.[110] She supports the development of nuclear power and oil drilling in Alaska.[158]

Equality

In 1979, Lummis said that it was “important to me to see Equal Rights Amendment not rescinded”.[12] In 2015, she and Representative Carolyn Maloney led another effort to pass the ERA.[159] In 2013, the House voted 286 to 138, with Lummis against, to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act.[160] She and Senator Chris Van Hollen attempted to have a federal building in Cheyenne named after Louisa Swain, the first woman to vote in the United States.[161]

LGBT rights

Lummis voted against the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, named after Matthew Shepard, who was murdered in an anti-gay hate crime, stating that she believed that hate crime legislation was “a state’s rights issue”.[162][163] She voted against the repeal of don’t ask, don’t tell and co-sponsored the State Marriage Defense Act.[164] Following the Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which found same-sex marriage bans unconstitutional, Lummis supported the First Amendment Defense Act to protect religious groups that opposed gay marriage.[165] She opposes same-sex marriage and believes that it “should be left to the states”.[166] She was given a zero percent rating from the Human Rights Campaign during her entire tenure in the House of Representatives.[167][168][169][170] She was one of 12 Republicans to vote to advance the Respect for Marriage Act, legislation that codifies same-sex marriage rights into federal law.[171] On November 29, 2022, Lummis voted for the final passage of the Respect for Marriage Act.[172][173][174] Explaining her decision, reversing her prior opposition to federal same-sex marriage recognition, she said she was “guided by two things—the Wyoming Constitution and ensuring religious liberties for all citizens and faith-based organizations were protected.”[175][176]

Foreign policy

Lummis supported continuing the United States’ occupation of Iraq, holding that soldiers should not be withdrawn until General David Petraeus said it was time to leave. She supported the surge of soldiers in Iraq.[177] Lummis was one of four Republicans on the Agriculture Committee to vote in favor of legislation that would have lifted the travel ban on Americans and agricultural products to and from Cuba.[178] Lummis opposed American involvement in the Syrian civil war, stating that the civil war “should be dealt with by the Arab world” and that she did not see how “getting involved in another open-ended and costly conflict is in the best interest of America”.[179][180]

Firearms

Lummis received an “A” rating and endorsement from the NRA Political Victory Fund during the 2008 campaign.[181][182] In 2009, the House voted 279 to 147, with Lummis in favor, to allow people to bring loaded guns into national parks and wildlife refuges.[183]

Health care legislation

Cynthia Lummis in 2011

Lummis supported the creation of federal legislation to allow private insurance companies to form interstate insurance pools.[184] She voted against passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2009,[185] and has supported subsequent efforts to defund the ACA.[186]

Lummis and 182 other Republican members of Congress filed an amicus brief asking the Supreme Court to halt a COVID-19 vaccination mandate for companies with 100 or more employees.[187] During the COVID-19 pandemic, she opposed adding unruly passengers to the “no-fly” list, saying that unruly passengers who refuse to comply with mask requirements are not the same as terrorists.[188]

Lummis co-sponsored legislation in the state house to allow state Medicaid funding to be used for abortions when the mother’s life was at risk.[189] The Wyoming “Right to Choose” political action committee reported that Lummis was pro-choice after she completed a questionnaire during the 1990 election and the organization endorsed her during the 1992 election.[190][191] Lummis said in the 1990s that abortion was a sin, but that it should not be illegal, because people can better evaluate their circumstances than the state.[192]

In 2015, Lummis cosponsored and voted for legislation in the House to defund Planned Parenthood.[193] The National Right to Life Committee endorsed her in the 2020 election and gave her a 100% anti-abortion rating during her tenure in the U.S. House of Representatives. She supported the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act.[194] Lummis was given a 0% rating by NARAL Pro-Choice America in 2016.[195]

Personal life

Lummis met Alvin Wiederspahn while both were campaigning during the 1978 election; they married on May 28, 1983. Both later served in the Wyoming House of Representatives, one of the few married couples to do so, though Lummis is a Republican and Wiederspahn was a Democrat.[196][197][198] She remained married to Wiederspahn, with whom she had one child, until his death on October 24, 2014.[199]

Lummis has a net worth of $12.26 million as of 2015, but reported a net worth between $20 million and $75 million from 2007 to 2008.[200][201] She purchased Bitcoin in 2013 on her son-in-law’s advice and became the first U.S. senator to own cryptocurrency.[202] Her enthusiasm for the technology led to her being known as Congress’s “Crypto Queen”.[203] Lummis owned at least $230,000 worth of Bitcoin in 2021.[204] She is a Lutheran and adheres to the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS).[205]

Electoral history

1986 Wyoming House of Representatives Laramie County Republican primary[19]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 6,837 15.54%
RepublicanEllen Crowley 6,521 14.82%
RepublicanBill McIlvain 6,338 14.40%
RepublicanApril Brimmer Kunz 6,173 14.03%
RepublicanGary Yordy 5,682 12.91%
RepublicanMary Jean McDowell Baker 4,480 10.18%
RepublicanRonald G. Pretty 4,128 9.38%
RepublicanLou Mandis 3,850 8.75%
Total votes44,009 100.00%
1986 Wyoming House of Representatives Laramie County election[20]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticHarriet Elizabeth Byrd (incumbent) 14,985 8.39%
DemocraticLynn Birleffi 13,849 7.75%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 12,519 7.01%
DemocraticGuy Cameron 12,416 6.95%
DemocraticSteve Freudenthal 12,103 6.78%
DemocraticShirley Humphrey 11,817 6.62%
DemocraticMary Kay Schwope 11,243 6.29%
RepublicanBill McIlvain (incumbent) 10,874 6.09%
RepublicanEllen Crowley 10,710 6.00%
RepublicanGary Yordy10,6195.95%
RepublicanApril Brimmer Kunz10,6045.94%
DemocraticRobert Larson8,3864.70%
DemocraticCarolyn G. Johnson7,9594.46%
DemocraticCharles A. Hunter6,8063.81%
RepublicanBen Zavorka6,5223.65%
RepublicanLou Mandis5,9693.34%
RepublicanRon G. Pretty5,7523.22%
RepublicanMary Jean McDowell Baker5,4753.07%
Total votes178,608 100.00%
1992 Wyoming Senate 5th Republican primary[26]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 1,720 75.64%
RepublicanNorman P. Feagler55424.36%
Total votes2,274 100.00%
1992 Wyoming Senate 5th election[27]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 3,434 52.86%
DemocraticHarriet Elizabeth Byrd (incumbent)3,06247.14%
Total votes6,496 100.00%
1998 Wyoming Treasurer election[49]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 105,332 62.69%
DemocraticCharyl Loveridge52,65531.34%
LibertarianJames Blomquist10,0245.97%
Total votes168,011 100.00%
2002 Wyoming Treasurer Republican primary[53]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 75,169 100.00%
Total votes75,169 100.00%
2002 Wyoming Treasurer election[54]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 152,583 100.00% +37.31%
Total votes152,583 100.00%
2007 United States Senate candidate selection final vote[127]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanTom Sansonetti 58 27.23%
RepublicanJohn Barrasso 56 26.29%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 44 20.66%
RepublicanMatt Mead3014.08%
RepublicanRon Micheli2511.74%
Total votes213 100.00%
2008 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[77]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 33,149 46.24%
RepublicanMark Gordon26,82737.42%
RepublicanBill Winney8,53711.91%
RepublicanMichael Holland3,1714.42%
Total votes71,684 100.00%
2008 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[83]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 131,244 52.62%
DemocraticGary Trauner106,75842.81%
LibertarianW. David Herbert11,0304.42%
IndependentWrite-ins3630.15%
Total votes249,395 100.00%
Overvotes180
Undervotes6,458
2010 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[86]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 84,063 82.82% +36.58%
RepublicanEvan Liam Slafter17,14816.89%+16.89%
RepublicanWrite-ins2890.28%+0.28%
Total votes101,500 100.00%
Overvotes49
Undervotes5,421
2010 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[87]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 131,661 70.42% +17.80%
DemocraticDavid Wendt45,76824.48%−18.33%
LibertarianJohn V. Love9,2534.95%+0.53%
IndependentWrite-ins2870.15%+0.00%
Total votes186,969 100.00%
Overvotes188
Undervotes3,665
2012 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[91]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 73,153 98.13% +15.31%
RepublicanWrite-ins1,3931.87%+1.59%
Total votes74,546 100.00%
Overvotes8
Undervotes9,862
2012 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[92]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 166,452 68.89% −1.53%
DemocraticChris Henrichsen57,57323.83%−0.65%
LibertarianRichard Brubaker8,4423.49%−1.46%
ConstitutionDaniel Clyde Cummings4,9632.05%+2.05%
Wyoming CountryDon Wills3,7751.56%+1.56%
IndependentWrite-ins4160.17%+0.02%
Total votes241,621 100.00%
Overvotes600
Undervotes8,479
2014 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[94]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 70,918 75.89% −22.24%
RepublicanJason Adam Senteney22,25123.81%+23.81%
RepublicanWrite-ins2740.29%+1.58%
Total votes93,443 100.00%
Overvotes50
Undervotes5,820
2014 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[95]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 113,038 68.47% −0.42%
DemocraticRichard Grayson37,80322.90%−0.93%
LibertarianRichard Brubaker7,1124.31%+0.82%
ConstitutionDaniel Clyde Cummings6,7494.09%+2.04%
IndependentWrite-ins3980.24%+0.07%
Total votes165,100 100.00%
Overvotes370
Undervotes5,683
2020 United States Senate Republican primary in Wyoming[132]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 63,511 59.67%
RepublicanRobert Short13,47312.66%
RepublicanBryan Miller10,94610.28%
RepublicanDonna Rice5,8815.53%
RepublicanR. Mark Armstrong3,9043.67%
RepublicanJoshua Wheeler3,7633.54
RepublicanJohn Holtz1,8201.71%
RepublicanDevon Cade1,0270.96%
RepublicanMichael Kemler9850.93%
RepublicanStar Roselli6270.59%
RepublicanWrite-ins5010.47%
Total votes106,438 100.00%
Overvotes391
Undervotes3,746
2020 United States Senate election in Wyoming[133]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 198,100 72.85%
DemocraticMerav Ben-David72,76626.76%
IndependentWrite-ins1,0710.39%
Total votes271,937 100.00%
Overvotes165
Undervotes6,401

See also

References

  1. ^ @SenLummis (January 4, 2021). ‘Loomis’ is a common mispronunciation of my name. My staff decided to have a little fun with it and start the “Hummus with Lummis” campaign here at our office. Stop by and grab a snack and remember, Lummis, it rhymes with Hummus!” (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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  3. ^ “LUMMIS, Cynthia M.” United States House of Representatives. Archived from the original on July 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
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  5. ^ “Cynthia Lummis, a Bull-Coaxing Conservative, Heads to the Senate”. The New York Times. December 5, 2020. Archived from the original on July 25, 2021.
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  7. ^ “University of Wyoming class of 1976 graduates 1,151”. Casper Star-Tribune. June 1, 1976. p. 18. Archived from the original on July 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
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  102. ^ “Leading contenders emerge to replace Zinke as Interior secretary”. The Hill. December 18, 2018. Archived from the original on July 24, 2021.
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  111. ^ “Energy solution lies right under our feet”. Casper Star-Tribune. March 24, 2010. p. 8. Archived from the original on July 24, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
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  121. ^ “Lummis takes change in stride”. Casper Star-Tribune. September 3, 2008. p. 1. Archived from the original on July 24, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  122. ^ “Rep. Lummis endorses Romney”. Wyoming Public Radio. November 14, 2011. Archived from the original on July 24, 2021.
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U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by

Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Wyoming’s at-large congressional district

2009–2017
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Chair of the Congressional Women’s Caucus
2011–2013
Succeeded by

Party political offices
Preceded by

Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Wyoming
(Class 2)

2020
Most recent
U.S. Senate
Preceded by

U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Wyoming
2021–present
Served alongside: John Barrasso
Incumbent
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded by

as United States Senator from Colorado

Order of precedence of the United States
as United States Senator from Wyoming

since January 3, 2021
Succeeded by

as United States Senator from New Mexico

Preceded by

United States senators by seniority
83rd
Succeeded by


Wikipedia

Cynthia Marie Lummis Wiederspahn (/ˈlʌmɪs/ LUH-miss;[1] born September 10, 1954) is an American attorney and politician serving as the junior United States senator from Wyoming since 2021. A member of the Republican Party, Lummis served as the U.S representative for Wyoming's at-large congressional district from 2009 to 2017. She served in the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1979 to 1983 and from 1985 to 1993, in the Wyoming Senate from 1993 to 1995, and as the Wyoming State Treasurer from 1999 to 2007.

Lummis was elected treasurer of Wyoming in 1998 and reelected without opposition in 2002. She managed the gubernatorial campaigns of Mary Mead in 1990 and Ray Hunkins in 2006. She also served on Bob Dole's presidential steering committee in Wyoming and chaired Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign in Wyoming.

Lummis unsuccessfully sought to be appointed to replace Senator Craig L. Thomas in 2007. She was elected to succeed Barbara Cubin in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2008 election, defeating Democratic nominee Gary Trauner. During her tenure in the House, she was the first Wyoming representative to serve on the Agriculture Committee since 1941, chaired the Science Subcommittee on Energy, co-chaired the Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues, and was active in the Congressional Western Caucus and Freedom Caucus. She served until her retirement in 2017, and was succeeded by Liz Cheney. After her tenure in the House, Lummis sought a position in President Donald Trump's cabinet as Secretary of the Interior, but was not appointed. She was elected to the U.S. Senate in the 2020 election, becoming the first woman to represent Wyoming in the Senate. She voted to reject the certification of Pennsylvania's electoral votes in the 2020 presidential election, which were narrowly won by Joe Biden.

Early life and education

Cynthia Marie Lummis was born on September 10, 1954, in Cheyenne, Wyoming, to Doran Lummis and Enid Bennett. She is descended from German immigrants and her family first came to Wyoming in 1868. Her father chaired the Laramie County Republican Party and served on the county board of commissioners. Her brother Del Lummis also chaired the Laramie County Republican Party.[2][3][4][5]

Lummis attended Cheyenne East High School, and graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Bachelor of Science degree in animal science in 1976 and a Bachelor of Science in biology in 1978.[6][7][8] She graduated from the University of Wyoming with a Juris Doctor in 1985, and was on the dean's list.[9][10] She worked as a student teacher at Rock River School in 1977.[11]

Career

State legislature

Elections

In 1978, Lummis was elected to the Wyoming House of Representatives at age 24, the youngest woman to serve in the state legislature.[12][13] She was reelected in 1980, but chose to not seek reelection in 1982.[14][15] Lummis returned to the state house after winning the 1984 election.[16][17] She filed to run for reelection on June 19, 1986, and was reelected after placing third out of 18 candidates.[18][19][20] She was reelected in the 1988 and 1990 elections.[21][22] She was reapportioned to the 8th district in 1992.[23]

In 1990, when Republican Senator Dan Sullivan resigned from the Wyoming Senate, Senate Majority Leader Diemer True stated that Lummis was qualified to replace Sullivan in the state senate. But she could not take the position, as she was busy serving as a campaign manager in the gubernatorial election.[24] In 1992, Lummis ran for a seat in the Wyoming Senate from the 5th district, defeating Norman P. Feagler for the Republican nomination, and incumbent Democratic Senator Harriet Elizabeth Byrd in the general election.[25][26][27] During the campaign Lummis spent $11,661, making her the fifth-highest spending elected candidate in the 1992 election.[28] On June 8, 1994, she announced that she would not run for reelection, saying she had other commitments to her family. Republican nominee Don Lawler was elected to succeed her after defeating Democratic nominee Steve Freudenthal.[29][30]

Tenure

During Lummis's tenure in the state house, she chaired the Revenue committee and served on the Judiciary and Agriculture Committees.[31][12][32] During her tenure in the state senate she served on the Judiciary Committee.[33] After leaving the state legislature, she was appointed to Jim Geringer's gubernatorial transition team, and served as his general counsel until 1997.[34][35][36] Geringer appointed Lummis to serve as interim director of the Office of State Lands and Investments in 1997, after he fired Jim Magagna.[37]

On February 28, 1982, Lummis was injured in a car accident while Wiederspahn was driving.[38] She attended the National Conference of State Legislatures national conference in 1982, alongside Senate President Donald Cundall and Representatives Wiederspahn, Peg Shreve, Scott Ratliff, William A. Cross, and George Salisbury.[39] In a 1982 roll-call vote in favor of legislation about the treatment of non-resident traffic offenders, a man cast Lummis's vote while she was outside the room. Lummis changed the vote to a nay after coming back in, and Representative Ken Burns cited this as an example of why electronic voting was needed.[40]

During the 1988 Republican presidential primaries, Lummis served on Bob Dole's steering committee in Wyoming.[41] A 1989 survey of the financial contributors of the Wyoming Republican Party showed that Lummis was suggested as a candidate for Secretary of State of Wyoming.[42] She served as Republican candidate Mary Mead's campaign manager during the 1990 gubernatorial election.[43]

Treasurer

Elections

Results of the 1998 Wyoming Treasurer election
Lummis:
  Lummis—50–60%
  Lummis—60–70%
  Lummis—70–80%

Loveridge:
  Loveridge—50–60%

On November 17, 1996, incumbent Treasurer Stan Smith announced that he would not seek reelection to a fifth term in 1998. It was speculated that Lummis would replace him.[44] At the Laramie County Republican convention on March 28, 1998, she announced that she would run for treasurer, and formally announced her campaign on April 20, at a press conference alongside Smith.[45][46]

During the campaign, the Attorney General ruled that public funds could not be used to send state treasurer candidates to an investment seminar.[47] Lummis won the Republican nomination without opposition and defeated Democratic nominee Charyl Loveridge and Libertarian nominee James Blomquist.[48][49]

Lummis was considered as a possible candidate for the Republican nomination in the 2002 gubernatorial election, but declined to run.[50][51] She announced on April 30 that she would seek reelection as treasurer, and was reelected without opposition in 2002.[52][53][54] Lummis was the only statewide candidate to face no opposition in the 2002 election, as nobody had filed to run in the Democratic primary and no other candidate received the 25 write-in votes required to qualify for the nomination.[55][56] During the campaign she had raised $9,275 and spent $12,151.[57]

She was limited to two terms as treasurer and did not challenge the constitutionality of the legislation, despite the Wyoming Supreme Court having invalidated term limits on state legislators.[58] She endorsed former Speaker Fred Parady to succeed her as treasurer in the 2006 election, but Joseph Meyer won the Republican primary and the general election.[59][60][61]

Tenure

Lummis conducted an accounting change by raising the interest rate on the $100 million in Wyoming banks, which reduced Wyoming's expected budget deficit in 1999 by over $5 million.[62] She also planned a 1% increase on the interest yield of Wyoming's $2.6 billion permanent fund, which would raise $26 million per year.[63] She served on the Wyoming Board of Land Commissioners alongside Governor Geringer, Secretary of State Meyer, Auditor Max Maxfield, and superintendent of public instruction Judy Catchpole.[64][65] During her tenure, the Permanent Mineral Trust Fund rose to over $2 billion for the first time.[66]

In April 2001, Lummis announced a conflict of interest involving her role as treasurer of the Arp and Hammond Hardware Company, which she claimed had existed since December 2000 but had existed since April 2000.[67] She and other Republican statewide officials were accused of trying to expand their powers at the expense of Governor Dave Freudenthal, but denied the claims.[68] Lummis claimed that she was the person responsible for the increase in Wyoming's investments during her tenure as treasurer, but Freudenthal said that no one person could take credit for the increase.[69]

As a member of the Wyoming Canvassing Board, Lummis voted unanimously alongside the three other members against a recall of the ballots cast in Natrona County during the 2002 United States House of Representatives election. Even though the results in Natrona County could not overturn the statewide results, they would determine which county was placed first on the ballot. Lummis initially supported a recount, but changed her mind after Mary Ann Collins, the Natrona County Clerk, told her that all of the ballots had been counted.[70]

Lummis and all other statewide officials in Wyoming attended the first inauguration of George W. Bush. During the 2004 presidential election, she served as one of Wyoming's 28 delegates to the Republican National Convention. Lummis was the only statewide official from Wyoming to attended Bush's second inauguration.[71][72] She served as the chair of Ray Hunkins's campaign during the 2006 gubernatorial election.[73]

United States House of Representatives

Elections

Results of the 2008 United States House of Representatives election in Wyoming
Lummis:
  Lummis—50–60%
  Lummis—60–70%
  Lummis—70–80%

Trauner:
  Trauner—40–50%
  Trauner—50–60%
  Trauner—60–70%
Cynthia Lummis in 2009
Cynthia Lummis with representatives Eric Cantor and Mary Fallin

Representative Barbara Cubin, whom Lummis had supported during the 1994 election, announced that she would not run for reelection in the 2008 election.[74][75] On January 2, 2008, Lummis announced that she would run for Cubin's seat, winning the Republican nomination against Mark Gordon, Bill Winney, and Michael Holland, having challenged them to debates held in all 23 Wyoming counties during the primaries.[76][77][78] A poll conducted from January 18 to 21 showed that Lummis had a favorability rating of 29%, unfavorability rating of 17%, a neutral rating of 24%, and 30% did not recognize her.[79] Tucker Fagan, who later served as her chief of staff, served as Lummis's campaign manager. During the campaign Rachael Seidenschnur, her press secretary, resigned after using a fake name to ask Lummis's opponent a question.[80][81][82] She defeated Democratic nominee Gary Trauner in the general election.[83] During the campaign Lummis raised $1,557,313 and spent $1,543,875 while Trauner raised $1,672,707 and spent $1,716,013.[84][85]

Lummis was reelected in 2010 against Democratic nominee David Wendt and Libertarian nominee John V. Love, after having raised $780,426 and spending $754,270 compared to Wendt, who had raised $65,709 and spent $68,523[86][87][88][89] Lummis announced that she would run for reelection on May 21, 2012, and was reelected in the 2012 election over Democratic nominee Chris Henrichsen after having raised $715,314 and spent $631,026.[90][91][92][93] She was reelected in the 2014 election against Democratic nominee Richard Grayson after having raised $432,666 and spent $300,949.[94][95][96]

On November 12, 2015, Lummis announced that she would not seek reelection in the 2016 election, and Liz Cheney was elected to succeed her.[97][98] Lummis's daughter, Annaliese Wiederspahn, served as Leland Christensen's campaign manager during the Republican primary.[99] Lummis considered running for the Republican nomination in the 2018 gubernatorial election, but declined to run and endorsed Sam Galeotos.[100][101] She sought a position in President Donald Trump's cabinet by attempting to replace Ryan Zinke as United States Secretary of the Interior, but David Bernhardt was appointed instead.[102][103]

Tenure

During Lummis's tenure in the House, she served on the Agriculture and Appropriations Committees and on the Energy and Mineral Resources, National Parks, Forests and Public Lands, and Energy and Water Development Subcommittees. She was the first representative from Wyoming to serve on the Agriculture Committee since Frank O. Horton, who served on the committee from 1939 to 1941.[104][105][106][107] In 2011, she was appointed vice chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee of the Agriculture Committee.[108] Lummis left the Appropriations Committee in 2013, saying she had requested her removal from the committee and that it was not part of a purge of radical Republicans from committee positions.[109] She was appointed chair of the Science Subcommittee on Energy in 2013.[110]

Lummis served as the communications chair and spokesperson of the Congressional Western Caucus and succeeded Dean Heller as vice chair in 2011 following Heller's appointment to the United States Senate.[111][112][113] Lummis was elected to serve on the House Republican Steering Committee in 2010.[106] She was at one point the only female member of the Freedom Caucus and the last until the election of Debbie Lesko.[114][115] Lummis co-chaired the Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues alongside Representative Gwen Moore from 2011 to 2013.[116] She was also a member of the Tea Party Caucus.[117]

Lummis supported Speaker John Boehner while the Freedom Caucus successfully pushed to remove Boehner.[118] She praised the election of Paul Ryan as Speaker, saying, "we have ushered in thoughtful, conservative leadership, restored member-driven policy-making to the legislative process and returned regular order that will bring sunshine to back rooms making government work better".[119]

Lummis served on the Republican whip team until she was removed from the position in 2015, for voting against giving President Barack Obama the authority to propose a trade agreement with Pacific countries. She said she knew she would be removed from her position on the whip team for her vote but did not regret it. Representatives Steve Pearce and Trent Franks were also removed from the whip team for their votes.[120]

During the 2008 presidential election, Lummis was supposed to give a speech at the Republican National Convention on the first day, but her speech was canceled due to Hurricane Gustav.[121] During the 2012 Republican presidential primaries she endorsed Mitt Romney and served as the chair of Romney's campaign in Wyoming.[122][123] During the 2016 Republican presidential primaries, she was a campaign surrogate for Rand Paul, and later endorsed Trump in the presidential election.[124][125]

United States Senate

Elections

After Senator Craig L. Thomas died on June 4, 2007, Lummis announced on June 12 that she would seek an appointment to replace him.[126] She placed third in the final vote, making her one of the nominees submitted to the governor as a candidate for appointment, alongside John Barrasso and Tom Sansonetti.[127][128] Freudenthal selected Barrasso to replace Thomas.[129] Lummis was speculated as a possible candidate in the 2014 United States Senate election.[130]

On June 20, 2019, Lummis filed to run for a seat in the United States Senate to succeed retiring Senator Mike Enzi.[131] She won the Republican nomination and defeated Democratic nominee Merav Ben-David in the general election.[132][133] Her victory made her the first woman to represent Wyoming in the United States Senate.[134] She raised more during the campaign than all of her Republican and Democratic opponents combined.[135] During the campaign Lummis raised $3,003,788 and spent $3,037,813 while Ben-David raised $559,626 and spent $545,348.[136][137]

Tenure

During her tenure in the Senate, Lummis has served on the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, Environment and Public Works, and Commerce, Science, and Transportation committees.[138] Hans Hunt, a member of the Wyoming state House, resigned so that he could work as Lummis's agriculture and trade policy adviser.[139]

During the counting of the electoral college vote of the 2020 presidential election Lummis voted to certify the results from Arizona, but against certifying the results from Pennsylvania.[140][141] She voted to acquit Trump during his second impeachment trial.[142]

Lummis voted against the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 but for the PPP Extension Act and the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act.[143][144][145]

In October 2021, CNBC reported that Lummis had violated the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012, a federal transparency and conflict-of-interest law, by failing to disclose within 45 days a purchase of Bitcoin worth between $50,001 and $100,000 that she made in August 2021.[146]

Political positions

Economy

Lummis supported the federal takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but said the government should avoid bailing out private companies.[147] She supported the privatization of Social Security, raising the age at which people received Social Security money, and making the Bush tax cuts permanent.[148][149][150] She voted against the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.[151]

In 2010, the House voted 228 to 192, with Lummis in favor, to prohibit federal funding for NPR.[152] She said that House Democrats had a "cocaine-like addiction" to spending.[153] Lummis voted against the Hurricane Sandy relief bill, saying that although victims of Hurricane Sandy deserved the money the federal government should cut its budget to offset the cost of the legislation.[154]

Lummis has campaigned for a regulatory framework for digital assets, a stance she reiterated after the FTX exchange collapsed.[155][156]

Lummis was among the 31 Senate Republicans who voted against final passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023.[157]

Energy and climate change

In a 2012 campaign debate, Lummis rejected the scientific consensus on climate change, claiming that climate change was "not settled science".[110] She supports the development of nuclear power and oil drilling in Alaska.[158]

Equality

In 1979, Lummis said that it was "important to me to see Equal Rights Amendment not rescinded".[12] In 2015, she and Representative Carolyn Maloney led another effort to pass the ERA.[159] In 2013, the House voted 286 to 138, with Lummis against, to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act.[160] She and Senator Chris Van Hollen attempted to have a federal building in Cheyenne named after Louisa Swain, the first woman to vote in the United States.[161]

LGBT rights

Lummis voted against the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, named after Matthew Shepard, who was murdered in an anti-gay hate crime, stating that she believed that hate crime legislation was "a state's rights issue".[162][163] She voted against the repeal of don't ask, don't tell and co-sponsored the State Marriage Defense Act.[164] Following the Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which found same-sex marriage bans unconstitutional, Lummis supported the First Amendment Defense Act to protect religious groups that opposed gay marriage.[165] She opposes same-sex marriage and believes that it "should be left to the states".[166] She was given a zero percent rating from the Human Rights Campaign during her entire tenure in the House of Representatives.[167][168][169][170] She was one of 12 Republicans to vote to advance the Respect for Marriage Act, legislation that codifies same-sex marriage rights into federal law.[171] On November 29, 2022, Lummis voted for the final passage of the Respect for Marriage Act.[172][173][174] Explaining her decision, reversing her prior opposition to federal same-sex marriage recognition, she said she was "guided by two things—the Wyoming Constitution and ensuring religious liberties for all citizens and faith-based organizations were protected."[175][176]

Foreign policy

Lummis supported continuing the United States' occupation of Iraq, holding that soldiers should not be withdrawn until General David Petraeus said it was time to leave. She supported the surge of soldiers in Iraq.[177] Lummis was one of four Republicans on the Agriculture Committee to vote in favor of legislation that would have lifted the travel ban on Americans and agricultural products to and from Cuba.[178] Lummis opposed American involvement in the Syrian civil war, stating that the civil war "should be dealt with by the Arab world" and that she did not see how "getting involved in another open-ended and costly conflict is in the best interest of America".[179][180]

Firearms

Lummis received an "A" rating and endorsement from the NRA Political Victory Fund during the 2008 campaign.[181][182] In 2009, the House voted 279 to 147, with Lummis in favor, to allow people to bring loaded guns into national parks and wildlife refuges.[183]

Health care legislation

Cynthia Lummis in 2011

Lummis supported the creation of federal legislation to allow private insurance companies to form interstate insurance pools.[184] She voted against passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2009,[185] and has supported subsequent efforts to defund the ACA.[186]

Lummis and 182 other Republican members of Congress filed an amicus brief asking the Supreme Court to halt a COVID-19 vaccination mandate for companies with 100 or more employees.[187] During the COVID-19 pandemic, she opposed adding unruly passengers to the "no-fly" list, saying that unruly passengers who refuse to comply with mask requirements are not the same as terrorists.[188]

Lummis co-sponsored legislation in the state house to allow state Medicaid funding to be used for abortions when the mother's life was at risk.[189] The Wyoming "Right to Choose" political action committee reported that Lummis was pro-choice after she completed a questionnaire during the 1990 election and the organization endorsed her during the 1992 election.[190][191] Lummis said in the 1990s that abortion was a sin, but that it should not be illegal, because people can better evaluate their circumstances than the state.[192]

In 2015, Lummis cosponsored and voted for legislation in the House to defund Planned Parenthood.[193] The National Right to Life Committee endorsed her in the 2020 election and gave her a 100% anti-abortion rating during her tenure in the U.S. House of Representatives. She supported the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act.[194] Lummis was given a 0% rating by NARAL Pro-Choice America in 2016.[195]

Personal life

Lummis met Alvin Wiederspahn while both were campaigning during the 1978 election; they married on May 28, 1983. Both later served in the Wyoming House of Representatives, one of the few married couples to do so, though Lummis is a Republican and Wiederspahn was a Democrat.[196][197][198] She remained married to Wiederspahn, with whom she had one child, until his death on October 24, 2014.[199]

Lummis has a net worth of $12.26 million as of 2015, but reported a net worth between $20 million and $75 million from 2007 to 2008.[200][201] She purchased Bitcoin in 2013 on her son-in-law's advice and became the first U.S. senator to own cryptocurrency.[202] Her enthusiasm for the technology led to her being known as Congress's "Crypto Queen".[203] Lummis owned at least $230,000 worth of Bitcoin in 2021.[204] She is a Lutheran and adheres to the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS).[205]

Electoral history

1986 Wyoming House of Representatives Laramie County Republican primary[19]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 6,837 15.54%
RepublicanEllen Crowley 6,521 14.82%
RepublicanBill McIlvain 6,338 14.40%
RepublicanApril Brimmer Kunz 6,173 14.03%
RepublicanGary Yordy 5,682 12.91%
RepublicanMary Jean McDowell Baker 4,480 10.18%
RepublicanRonald G. Pretty 4,128 9.38%
RepublicanLou Mandis 3,850 8.75%
Total votes44,009 100.00%
1986 Wyoming House of Representatives Laramie County election[20]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticHarriet Elizabeth Byrd (incumbent) 14,985 8.39%
DemocraticLynn Birleffi 13,849 7.75%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 12,519 7.01%
DemocraticGuy Cameron 12,416 6.95%
DemocraticSteve Freudenthal 12,103 6.78%
DemocraticShirley Humphrey 11,817 6.62%
DemocraticMary Kay Schwope 11,243 6.29%
RepublicanBill McIlvain (incumbent) 10,874 6.09%
RepublicanEllen Crowley 10,710 6.00%
RepublicanGary Yordy10,6195.95%
RepublicanApril Brimmer Kunz10,6045.94%
DemocraticRobert Larson8,3864.70%
DemocraticCarolyn G. Johnson7,9594.46%
DemocraticCharles A. Hunter6,8063.81%
RepublicanBen Zavorka6,5223.65%
RepublicanLou Mandis5,9693.34%
RepublicanRon G. Pretty5,7523.22%
RepublicanMary Jean McDowell Baker5,4753.07%
Total votes178,608 100.00%
1992 Wyoming Senate 5th Republican primary[26]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 1,720 75.64%
RepublicanNorman P. Feagler55424.36%
Total votes2,274 100.00%
1992 Wyoming Senate 5th election[27]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 3,434 52.86%
DemocraticHarriet Elizabeth Byrd (incumbent)3,06247.14%
Total votes6,496 100.00%
1998 Wyoming Treasurer election[49]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 105,332 62.69%
DemocraticCharyl Loveridge52,65531.34%
LibertarianJames Blomquist10,0245.97%
Total votes168,011 100.00%
2002 Wyoming Treasurer Republican primary[53]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 75,169 100.00%
Total votes75,169 100.00%
2002 Wyoming Treasurer election[54]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 152,583 100.00% +37.31%
Total votes152,583 100.00%
2007 United States Senate candidate selection final vote[127]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanTom Sansonetti 58 27.23%
RepublicanJohn Barrasso 56 26.29%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 44 20.66%
RepublicanMatt Mead3014.08%
RepublicanRon Micheli2511.74%
Total votes213 100.00%
2008 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[77]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 33,149 46.24%
RepublicanMark Gordon26,82737.42%
RepublicanBill Winney8,53711.91%
RepublicanMichael Holland3,1714.42%
Total votes71,684 100.00%
2008 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[83]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 131,244 52.62%
DemocraticGary Trauner106,75842.81%
LibertarianW. David Herbert11,0304.42%
IndependentWrite-ins3630.15%
Total votes249,395 100.00%
Overvotes180
Undervotes6,458
2010 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[86]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 84,063 82.82% +36.58%
RepublicanEvan Liam Slafter17,14816.89%+16.89%
RepublicanWrite-ins2890.28%+0.28%
Total votes101,500 100.00%
Overvotes49
Undervotes5,421
2010 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[87]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 131,661 70.42% +17.80%
DemocraticDavid Wendt45,76824.48%−18.33%
LibertarianJohn V. Love9,2534.95%+0.53%
IndependentWrite-ins2870.15%+0.00%
Total votes186,969 100.00%
Overvotes188
Undervotes3,665
2012 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[91]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 73,153 98.13% +15.31%
RepublicanWrite-ins1,3931.87%+1.59%
Total votes74,546 100.00%
Overvotes8
Undervotes9,862
2012 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[92]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 166,452 68.89% −1.53%
DemocraticChris Henrichsen57,57323.83%−0.65%
LibertarianRichard Brubaker8,4423.49%−1.46%
ConstitutionDaniel Clyde Cummings4,9632.05%+2.05%
Wyoming CountryDon Wills3,7751.56%+1.56%
IndependentWrite-ins4160.17%+0.02%
Total votes241,621 100.00%
Overvotes600
Undervotes8,479
2014 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district Republican primary[94]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 70,918 75.89% −22.24%
RepublicanJason Adam Senteney22,25123.81%+23.81%
RepublicanWrite-ins2740.29%+1.58%
Total votes93,443 100.00%
Overvotes50
Undervotes5,820
2014 United States House of Representatives at-large congressional district election[95]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis (incumbent) 113,038 68.47% −0.42%
DemocraticRichard Grayson37,80322.90%−0.93%
LibertarianRichard Brubaker7,1124.31%+0.82%
ConstitutionDaniel Clyde Cummings6,7494.09%+2.04%
IndependentWrite-ins3980.24%+0.07%
Total votes165,100 100.00%
Overvotes370
Undervotes5,683
2020 United States Senate Republican primary in Wyoming[132]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 63,511 59.67%
RepublicanRobert Short13,47312.66%
RepublicanBryan Miller10,94610.28%
RepublicanDonna Rice5,8815.53%
RepublicanR. Mark Armstrong3,9043.67%
RepublicanJoshua Wheeler3,7633.54
RepublicanJohn Holtz1,8201.71%
RepublicanDevon Cade1,0270.96%
RepublicanMichael Kemler9850.93%
RepublicanStar Roselli6270.59%
RepublicanWrite-ins5010.47%
Total votes106,438 100.00%
Overvotes391
Undervotes3,746
2020 United States Senate election in Wyoming[133]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanCynthia Lummis 198,100 72.85%
DemocraticMerav Ben-David72,76626.76%
IndependentWrite-ins1,0710.39%
Total votes271,937 100.00%
Overvotes165
Undervotes6,401

See also

References

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  3. ^ "LUMMIS, Cynthia M." United States House of Representatives. Archived from the original on July 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
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U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Wyoming's at-large congressional district

2009–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Congressional Women's Caucus
2011–2013
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Wyoming
(Class 2)

2020
Most recent
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Wyoming
2021–present
Served alongside: John Barrasso
Incumbent
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas United States Senator from Colorado Order of precedence of the United States
as United States Senator from Wyoming

since January 3, 2021
Succeeded byas United States Senator from New Mexico
Preceded by United States senators by seniority
83rd
Succeeded by

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