Under the rules of the Wyoming Legislature, lobbyists arenât allowed on the House floor. Instead, they often fill up the lobby outside the chambers or wait in the hallways leading to committee meeting rooms.Â
There are some skilled lobbyists who have found their way to the House floor, and they even cast votes on bills!Â
These lobbyist-legislator hybrids have made it clear who they represent, and itâs not the people â itâs the government. While conservatives are accused of voting according to mysterious yet undefined directives, these lobbyist-legislators vote how theyâre instructed by government associations, and even admit to doing so during debate.Â
The presence of lobbyist-legislators in the Wyoming House is a lot less pronounced since conservatives gained ground in the 2024 election cycle, but theyâre still at the Capitol.Â
This is evidenced by the proposed amendments to the supplemental budget, which combined would add $340 million in new spending while adding 35 new state employees. Itâs important to note that the purpose of a supplemental budget is to fund unforeseen emergencies.Â
One amendment to the supplemental budget seeks $25,000Â to study the construction of a government-run hotel and conference center in downtown Cheyenne adjacent to the Capitol. While a nice amenity for lobbyists, itâs not an emergencyâ nor is it the role of government.Â
Another seeks to pull $20 million from the stateâs rainy-day account to build houses.Â
Yet another tries to give the governor $100 million for âGreen New Dealâ projects with no legislative oversightâ despite President Trump making clear that in America, weâre done with subsidized woke energy projects.Â
Meanwhile, the Wyoming Freedom Caucus and our conservative allies are working hard to cut wasteful spending while maintaining the constitutional functions of government.
Why? Itâs not for sport. We can only provide real tax relief and reform if we rein in out-of-control spending.
If the Wyoming Senate is willing to adopt a can-do attitude and join us in finally requiring the government to live within its means, we can achieve lasting policy change for the better of our people.Â
John Bear, Chairman Joint Appropriations Committee
Representative, Wyoming House District 31