State Sen. Wendy Schuler, R-Evanston, isnât known for being one of the Wyoming Legislatureâs rabble-rousers.
The mild-mannered second-term senator from Uinta County is usually a voice of compromise and reason inside a chamber that has shown an increasing propensity for divisiveness and infighting.
And Schulerâs had about enough of the infighting and posturing, telling Cowboy State Daily that she âjust kind of had itâ when she wrote a critical column summarizing the recently completed legislative session for the Wednesday Uinta County Herald, calling out some of her fellow legislators for their âlack of professionalism and integrity.â
âIt was a frustrating situation, it really was,â she said about the recently completed 2024 session. âWe killed a lot of things we shouldnât have.â
Listen To Constituents, Not Out-Of-Staters
Second Amendment advocacy group Wyoming Gun Owners went after Schuler during the session for opposing House Bill 125, legislation that would repeal gun-free zones in Wyoming.
âWyoming Gun Owners, theyâll go after me, I donât care,â Schuler said. âPeople here in Wyoming are the people that are most important. Some of these guys from out-of-state show up once a year at the Capitol, I could care less.â
Although founded by Sen. Anthony Bouchard, R-Cheyenne, WyGO is now run by Aaron Dorr, a lobbyist who lives in Iowa. WyGO members have been accused in the past of using aggressive tactics and badgering lawmakers with inappropriate messages on bills.
Dorr said he found Schulerâs comments a source of âgreat amusement.â
âWyGO apologizes for nothing,â Dorr said. âOur unrelenting grassroots pressure is the reason why WyGO has passed a stand-your-ground law, why our members have thrown dozens of RINOs into the dustbin of Wyoming political history and how we were able to put two landmark gun bills on Governor Gordonâs desk this session.
âWe look forward to continuing the fight for freedom and exposing RINOs like Schuler in elections for years to come.â
No Backing Down
Schuler unsuccessfully attempted to bring an amendment to the bill requiring anyone who intends to carry a concealed weapon into a public school to notify the school districtâs superintendent in writing. Her amendment failed on a 24-6 vote.
âSchuler is whining because WyGO opposed her terrible amendment to HB-125, which would have created a de facto gun registry here in Wyoming,â Dorr said.
Schuler stands by her vote against the bill and said she made it based on the input of her constituents, as she does without almost all her votes. She said she keeps tallies of the input she receives from constituents to guide her votes.
âI literally had hundreds of emails saying âdonât vote for (HB) 125, we have school security already, we spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to make our schools secure and we donât need this,ââ she said. âSo, I listened to them.â
She believes certain members of the Legislature have become too responsive to outside influences and posturing for elections.
âI think we donât need have somebody from Washington, D.C., wherever they get their notes to say how to vote,â Schuler said. âMy constituents, theyâre the ones that matter.â
Other Disappointments
Schuler was also disappointed that the Joint Travel, Recreation, Wildlife & Cultural Resources Interim Committeeâs bill to increase nonresident fishing license fees died on introduction, as did her individual bill requiring children to attend school by the age 6 in Wyoming.
âIt didnât matter if they needed money or not,â Schuler said of her fellow legislatorâs votes on the first day of the session.
A two-thirds vote is required to introduce any non-budget bill during a budget session.
In conversation with her fellow lawmakers, Schuler said she came to the conclusion that many were either being told how to vote by outside organizations or voting blindly against anything that resulted in an increase in government revenue or spending.
âI just couldnât get answers that I thought were sufficient in my mind,â she said.
Party Politics?
Schuler believes there is an inordinate amount of Republican Party politics being played in the Legislature. She said her biggest priority is representing the wishes of her constituents, not adhering to a party platform.
A commitment to vote with the Republican Party platform on at least 80% of votes has become a popular litmus test for loyalty to the party in GOP circles.
âMost of the folks that I talk to here are good with that,â she said. âThe party platform doesnât mean to me as much as what my people mean.â
âSilent Majorityâ
She believes âextremistâ voices that fail to represent the majority of Wyoming residents are waging an undue amount of political influence against what she sees as the âsilent majorityâ represented by the rest of the state.
Schuler said sheâs willing to knock on doors and campaign for other candidates during the upcoming election season to combat this and is optimistic the Legislature can improve in the future. She mentioned how more traditional Republicans took back the Uinta County Republican Party from far-right leadership last year as a similar âtransformationalâ effort.
âI just think the majority of people in Wyoming, thatâs what they want,â she said. âI think thereâs such a small minority of people that are the loud extremists on either side, and they donât really represent probably 80% of our population.â
Her preference is for long-term residents to âstep up to the plateâ and run for office.
âI think we kind of fell asleep at the wheel a little bit out here in our beautiful state and didnât get involved as much as we should have,â she said.
Out-Of-State Mentality
Schuler said Wyoming politics has changed significantly since she first entered the legislative fray in 2018. She sees less collaboration and compromise occurring on bills, and a general fragmentation of the body.
âI hope in the elections coming up that we continue to try and find people that are common sense, reasonable sense people, whether theyâre Republicans or Democrats,â she said. âListening to their constituents and not some other stuff that comes into play.â
Schuler, a fifth-generation Wyomingite, said sheâs concerned with how many new residents are running for office in Wyoming. She believes most of these people havenât made an effort to understand Wyoming culture or their neighborâs beliefs.
âIâm not saying those folks that have moved in the last two or three years canât assimilate and figure out what the Wyoming way is, but I donât think they always do,â Schuler said.
She wants to see people serve on local boards and councils before they run for a position in the legislature or higher.
âI donât think they (voters) want somebody they hardly know that just spews the right thing,â Schuler said. âIâm not a big fan of extremists.â
Schuler has won both her Republican primary elections by comfortable margins. If she chooses to run again, sheâll be up for reelection in 2026.
âThey get to have me for two years and some of them may not like that,â she said. âBut Iâm around for two more years with my happy cheery face.â
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.





