CODY â The fighting spirt is alive in Wyoming when it comes to outsiders messing with coal and the livelihoods of people who draw paychecks from digging up the ore.
The top politicians in the Cowboy State say the Biden administration and others in Washington, D.C., pushing those policies have created an emergency in Wyoming and are cruisin' for a bruisinâ.
Gov. Mark Gordon and U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, both Wyoming Republicans, drew a red line with Washington, D.C.âs ever-expansive powers that it possesses through the Bureau of Land Management and Environmental Protection Agency to shut down the coal industry in Wyoming on Friday.
The pair gave a hand-slapping series of speeches to close out the Wyoming Mining Associationâs annual convention in Cody.
If the liberal bastions of America want a world with no fossil fuels, let them step up and lead by example, Hageman said in her fiery speech. She suggested Boulder, Colorado, could become a test city for being cut off from all fossil fuels and see how well that works for that liberal city she says is living âin la-la land.â
Let Boulder Lead The Way
âI absolutely refuse to buy into the idea of global warming and climate change,â Hageman said.
âWhen they talk about transitioning to [wind and solar], when they talk about stopping coal production in the Powder River Basin by 2041, when they talk about no longer doing any more oil and gas leases in [the BLMâs] Rock Springs Field Office, when they talk about those things, itâs not hard to figure out what the future holds for us,â she said. âWe all know that there are certain things that we absolutely need in a civilized society, and most of those things donât exist unless we have access to oil and gas and coal.â
Hageman mockingly suggested that the city of Boulder, Colorado, step up as a pilot project among urban cities in the U.S. to see how it gets along without fossil fuels.
âI actually suggest that we start demanding something as an industry and as citizens who want a better life for our children and our grandchildren, or at least maintaining the American Dream that we have. And I donât think this is out of line,â she said. âIf they want to transition 330 million people to a non-fossil fuel future, how about it starts small? How about we start with a pilot project like Boulder, Colorado? Letâs take out all their gas stations, letâs take out all their gas stoves, all their water heaters, all the pavement and return them to dirt roads, right?â
Unicorns And Fairy Dust
Boulder is viewed in Colorado as ground zero for decarbonization efforts led by that stateâs governor, Jared Polis, who has embraced a roadmap to cut greenhouse gases in half by 2030. The stateâs utilities are behind efforts to reduce emissions by 85% by 2040.
âLetâs imagine Boulder is just absolutely the perfect place in the world. They have a lot of sun. They have a lot of wind. Theyâve got all this open space. I think we ought to fill it with wind turbines and solar panels, and letâs see how well they do in five years,â she said. âThey wouldnât survive more than two-and-a-half months.
She labeled Boulder as a place living in a kind of Bizarro world where everything operates in reverse reality.
"Weâre living in a la-la land. Weâre with unicorns and fairy dust. That doesnât make sense,â she said.
On Saturday, Boulder Mayor Aaron Brockett, a self-described liberal Democrat, declined to respond to Hagemanâs mockery of his Colorado city.
âWe are choosing not to engage in this discourse at this time,â said Sarah Huntley, a spokeswoman for Brockett.Â
âWyoming is being targeted by this (Biden) administration. Our conservatives are being targeted by this administration. Our industries are being targeted by this administration,â Hageman continued in her comments Friday. âWhen you start thinking about the rules and regulations and things theyâve adopted, it starts opening your eyes to the fact that we are going to have to fight back with everything that we have."

Riled Up
Gordonâs administration earlier Friday got things going with taking the first step to find a high-powered law firm to go on the attack with the EPA over its proposed rule that could result in the retirement of Wyoming-based power plants. The EPA rule could derail the stateâs efforts to push investment in carbon capture equipment on power plants to lower toxic emissions into the air. The equipment is needed to extend the life of the electricity-generating plants.
âThis [Biden] administration has an objective and theyâve missed it. They've completely missed it,â Gordon said. âTheir objective is to figure out how this country is going to move forward, and theyâve made all these decisions about what weâre going to do to get there that has landed well short of what it's going to take to get us to the destination of making this country as strong and independent as we have always been.â
Gordon said heâs prepared to fight in court over the Biden administrationâs decarbonization strategy.
At the beginning of 2024, Wyoming was involved in about 33 lawsuits to fight the administrationâs efforts to rid the world of fossil fuels, Gordon said.
âThis administration has ramped up and thrown everything it can at the wall, hoping that some of it sticks,â he said. âWe are now approaching 60 lawsuits that weâre either participating in or leading to make sure our country can stand on its own two feet.â
Gordon said he recently spoke with BLM Director Tracy Stone-Manning about land policies flowing out of Washington that are negatively impacting Wyoming.
âShe said, âMark, I think you can relax. I think weâve done about everything,ââ said Gordon, who paraphrased her conversation that all of the âbig, major things are out of the way for Wyoming.â
Jaw-Dropping
He said his jaw dropped in her cavalier observation that things are working out.
âI said, âWell, maybe what you meant to say was that youâve done everything you can to Wyoming, and you canât think of anything more to throw at us,ââ he said. "Where this leaves us at this juncture is we are going to continue whatever way we can to help advance Wyomingâs interests that are tied entirely to what the mining industry can bring to the state."
Pat Maio can be reached at pat@cowboystatedaily.com.