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If I had known I’d be interviewing a future U.S. senator, I would have probably worn something a bit more formal for the occasion on that hot July afternoon in 1976.

Opinion

Then again, I couldn’t. Cowboy hat, boots, Western shirt and jeans were the required uniform for anyone who wanted a press pass to Cheyenne Frontier Days. I looked like a drugstore cowboy but didn’t mind. The beer in the press box was cold and free, which is how I, and all the others covering the biggest rodeo in the country, liked it.

Sen. Cynthia Lummis, a former Miss Frontier, dropped a bombshell last Friday that she’s not running for re-election to one of the nation’s safest Senate seats. My mind turned to our first professional encounter nearly a half-century ago. I had only been a reporter for the Wyoming State Tribune for three months.

Lummis was already on the roof above the stands, watching bulls and riders coming out of the chutes. Wearing a white buckskin outfit and braided pigtails, she definitely looked like rodeo royalty. 

Our conversation didn’t include a drop of politics, by my recollection.

We talked about her cowgirl life growing up on a large Laramie County ranch. Her father, Doran Lummis, was chairman of the Laramie County Republican Party and a county commissioner in the 1960s. While she was obviously proud of her dad, I don’t recall her expressing any aspiration to follow in his footsteps into public service. 

She did, though, beginning in 1979. Lummis, then 24, is still the youngest female legislator ever elected to the Wyoming House. In 2020, she became the first woman U.S. senator to represent the Equality State.

I don’t know if serving as Miss Frontier played much of a role in her early success, but publicity certainly didn’t hurt. Once she was in the Legislature, Lummis’ political career took off. 

Sen. Cynthia Lummis, who isn’t running for a second term, was the 1976 “Miss Frontier” at Cheyenne’s Frontier Days. She’s a member of the rodeo’s Hall of Fame. (courtesy Cheyenne Frontier Days Old West Museum)

Lummis received her law degree at the University of Wyoming in 1985, spent 14 years in the Legislature, clerked for the Wyoming Supreme Court, was elected state treasurer in 1998 and served two terms.

Then she was elected to the U.S. House and re-elected twice before taking a break from politics in 2016. But four years later, when Wyoming’s U.S. Sen. Mike Enzi retired, she was back campaigning for his open seat. Lummis raised $3 million for the GOP primary and general elections, an impressive sum for Wyoming politics, and defeated her Democratic opponent by 46%.

One of the reasons Lummis decided to leave after her term expires is that she’s tired.

“Deciding not to run for re-election does represent a change of heart for me, but in the difficult, exhausting session weeks this fall, I’ve come to accept that I do not have six more years in me,” the 71-year-old senator said in a news release. 

I can relate. I haven’t had the stress of campaigning; I’ve just covered them. While Lummis kept climbing the ladder, my career literally flatlined. I’ve done the same thing for 49 years: talk to interesting people and write it up.

But I did hang up my cowboy reporter costume in the early 1980s, and after various stints as a photographer, sportswriter, legislative reporter, film critic, entertainment editor and managing editor, I decided my true passion was reporting and commenting on Wyoming politics. 

Lummis and I live in two vastly different political worlds. Trump is one of her heroes, and I can’t wait until he’s out of office. Things were much simpler when we were younger and could enjoy watching the rodeo while she told me what life was like on her family’s ranch.

Lummis’ decision leaves many Republican candidates scurrying to see if there’s a place for them on the 2026 ballot. That only happens when a veteran politician unexpectedly retires and injects some life into what seemed like a pretty dull campaign season, except for electing a new governor to replace term-limited Gov. Mark Gordon.

For political columnists like me, this is an early Christmas present I didn’t dream of happening.

With the holiday just two days away, I’d like to say please, please, please! to Santa: Give us a U.S. House race between Gordon and Secretary of State Chuck Gray, two men who really don’t like each other.

You might be wondering why I’m talking about the House, when Lummis is in the Senate. I’m guessing Hageman will run for the upper chamber, leaving the lower chamber for the taking.  

Gordon has no state office to return to, so relocating to Washington, D.C., would be the perfect next step. He’s always had a high approval rating as a moderate governor, and he’s vetoed some of the far-right Freedom Caucus’ worst ideas.

Gray desperately wants to run for another office, as evidenced by the “Elect Gray” advertisements that ran during the Chicago Bears game Saturday. The spots didn’t say for what office, just elect him!

One thing is certain: Gray has no appetite for taking on U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, the early favorite to replace Lummis.

We’ll have to see how well the Hageman juggernaut, which began when she trounced Liz Cheney in 2022, holds up, and who will challenge her. Hageman will likely win, but Cheney’s downfall proved that no Wyoming pol is invincible.

The governor’s race could be a lightning rod for every House Freedom Caucus lawmaker and Senate ally. Non-officeholders already campaigning are Brent Bien and Joseph Kibler. Reportedly showing interest are Rep. Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, and Senate President Bo Biteman, R-Ranchester.

The more ultra-conservatives who dilute the gubernatorial candidate pool, the easier it will be for moderate Sen. Eric Barlow, R-Gillette, to win. 

The Freedom Caucus has the opportunity to see if it can retain power and grow an agenda aligned with Lummis that she no longer feels the need to lead. Lummis and I are hoping for different outcomes, but after 50 years of this, maybe we can both sit back and enjoy the show.

Veteran Wyoming journalist Kerry Drake has covered Wyoming for more than four decades, previously as a reporter and editor for the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle and Casper Star-Tribune. He lives in Cheyenne and...

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9 Comments

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  1. Stewie just did it… He officially tossed his pointy little hat in the ring for the US House seat… Good gravy…Here we go again…

  2. There’s more behind Lummis’ decision to not run in 2026 other than she just doesn’t have it in her, she’s “tired”. I don’t buy it……..remember her phone records were investigated? Whatever the true reason, I’m happy to see it.
    But, here’s a twist, anyone entertained the possibility that Lummis might throw her proverbial hat in the ring for Governor? As for ole “wood chip” Neiman, he’s busy praying about his decision, looking for guidance from God.
    Enough said there.

  3. During her tenure in the Senate, Lummis voted straight party line while attempting to pump the value of her personal hoard of corruptocurrency. She has done nothing for Wyoming. Advancing Harriet the Horrible, a Trump rubber stamp, to the Senate would be no better. Let’s see some real competition within the Republican party for both seats!

  4. Maybe some unlikely GOOD person can break the establishment grip on WY DC “representatives”. But I’m not holding my breath, especially for a US Senator.

  5. Dear Santa Drake

    I’m glad you took the high road in your opinion piece about Senator Lummis.
    You could have attacked her

    Maybe you’re in the Christmas spirit or just in a good mood. I will say that Cynthia has done a lot of good things for Wyoming but her support of the great orange one really disturbed me. It knocked her down several rungs on my ladder

    She was not a whacker right wing until Donnie showed up.. she has done a lot of good things for Wyoming and many things that were questionable. I must be in the Christmas spirit too.

    However, as I was reading your column, a news blip showed up that showed the hags is running for US Senate. In the spirit of Christmas, I won’t attack her right now but it’s a really scary thought having her as a US senator. She states she is for Wyoming but she represents herself

    Back to good things.I think it would be great if Governor Gordon ran for House of Representatives or maybe should run for Senator.

    Enough said, no more political commentary for me until the new year

    I wish everybody out there a merry Christmas, a happy holiday and a good start to the new year

    🎅🏻🌲🎄

  6. Swapping out DJT’s former Crypto-Queen with the IRL Sea-Witch from Disney’s Little Mermaid is really not an improvement; and gifting Ursula’s seat in the People’s House to SOS Stewie Griffin would be a mistake of epic proportions. We could do so much better for Wyoming than these one-dimentional cartoon-caricatures—if we would only try just a little bit harder.

  7. Has the Wyoming political pendulum reached the peak of its rightward swing into irrationality? Here’s hoping …

  8. Lummis is leaving because she knows Trump is circling the drain. The thought of Hageman or Gray winning any office makes me sick. I wouldn’t doubt that the Governor will run for a different office, that’s how the politicians roll.

  9. Drake says, “While Lummis kept climbing the ladder, my career literally flatlined. I’ve done the same thing for 49 years: talk to interesting people and write it up.” His statement is pure irony (The use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning. – Merriam Websters).

    As I read his piece, for some reason this sentence stuck with me. For decades Drake’s work has contributed the the social fabric of Wyoming. Given the lockjaw inertia in national politics and small-minded, selfish meanness alive in State politics, it is always refreshing to read how Drake sees current events. He has a steady perceptive eye, and his “flatlining” is akin to earning the trust of those who read his work. His role in Wyoming’s public sphere harkens back to journalists past when we waited for their take on things.

    I wish more people’s work would flatline as Drake’s has…