A long-serving Wyoming senator and former Senate President continues to criticize the stateâs governing Freedom Caucus.
Sen. Ogden Driskill, R-Devils Tower, spoke about the Freedom Caucus Wednesday during a Wednesday appearance on the Cowboy State Daily Show with Jake Nichols.Â
Driskill, who was first elected in 2010 and served as the Senate president from 2023-2024, said the Freedom Caucusâs governance has led to many lawsuits against the state. He pointed to Freedom Caucus-backed bills that are now facing judicial challenges.
âWeâve probably expanded the AGâs [attorney general] office,â Driskill said. âIt doesnât matter where you look, weâve got abortion lawsuits, education lawsuits, voucher lawsuits. Weâre doing a great job of feeding the legal profession.âÂ
Driskill said the lawsuits are the result of the Freedom Caucusâs rigid approach to governance.Â
âItâs just Katie, bar the door, weâre just going to go ahead and do it and then weâll deal with the fallout when it happens,â he said. âWeâre just going out there and throwing a bomb over the fence and hoping that it doesnât blow the neighborâs place up. And itâs coming to roost a little bit.âÂ
The Freedom Caucus-driven Life is a Human Right Act, which is the 2023 version of the abortion ban Wyoming enacted as soon as Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022, has been under legal challenge for years. After reviewing that law and the Wyoming Constitution, Teton County District Court Judge Melissa Owens concluded that abortion access is a fundamental right in the state.
The Wyoming Attorney Generalâs Office is challenging that ruling in the state Supreme Court.
Driskill was excused from the third-reading Senate vote on that act and so didnât cast an aye or nay.
A school choice stipend program Freedom Caucus members also touted this year and in 2024 is also under judicial scrutiny, as is a new voter residency law. Â
Driskill said he was taught that the Wyoming Legislature needs to be deliberate and that, when in doubt, Legislature should err on the side of first, do no harm.
âLeftwing Lawfareâ
âHe voted for it so why is he bitching?â House Speaker Chip Neiman told Cowboy State Daily. âItâs hard for me to get too shook up whenever Ogden starts down a road and weâre going to chew people up. People want the freedom to choose.â
Driskill voted aye on the 2025 school-choice program both as an Appropriations Committee member and a state Senator on its third reading. He also green-lit a voter residency requirement thatâs now under judicial scrutiny in its third-read Senate vote.
âCompetition breeds excellence is how I see it,â said Neiman, a Freedom Caucus member. âIf Senator Driskill truly did not want that and felt like it was bad and headed in the wrong direction to go and was going to bring on a lawsuit, then donât vote for stuff like that.
"I vote for stuff that people want and I vote for stuff that people deserve and thatâs the freedom to be able to choose.â
The stateâs in court to try to protect the interest of human life, he added. Human life begins when a personâs DNA is created because a unique individual is formed.
âOur founders got it right when they said life was first and then liberty, because without life liberty does you precious little good,â Neiman said.
Driskillâs comments were âcurious,â the Freedom Caucus said in a statement provided by Chairwoman Rachel Rodriguez-Williams.Â
Rodriguez-Williams is also a Republican state House Representative serving Cody.
âFirst, he voted for many of the WYFC-sponsored bills that are now the target of meritless leftwing lawfare,â the caucus statement countered.
âWhatâs more curious is that heâs now flip-flopped, taking the side of the woke Democrat attorneys seeking to throw out bills that passed with veto-proof majorities.âÂ
Doubling Down
The stateâs decision to cut property taxes â effective July 1 â has an impact on the local governments, Driskill said later in the interview. He said the tax cut was needed but added the Revenue Committee plans further cuts.Â
âItâs doubling down on a bad bet in my opinion,â he said. âWe did what big government does and it breaks my heart. We gave a one-size-fits-all and some of the biggest cuts went to the richest taxpayers in the state of Wyoming.â
The cuts hurt poorer counties like Niobrara, Weston and Hot Springs, Driskill said.Â
âItâs actual cuts to them,â Driskill said. âItâs not a reduction in increase. Itâs a cut to them.âÂ
A museum in Hot Springs may close and Crook Countyâs is hurt, he added. Ambulances and firefighting services could be impacted in Crook County, Driskill continued.Â
The Freedom Caucus rendered a sharp critique of Driskillâs stance:
âOgden is witnessing the power of the good old boys slipping away and heâs kicking and screaming all the while,â the Freedom Caucus statement said.Â
Driskill previously sparred with Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette, the Freedom Caucusâs former leader, over the groupâs governance.
Driskill also filed an election complaint and was successful in his effort to stop a county Republican Partyâs donation to the Freedom Caucusâs political action committee.
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Matthew Christian can be reached at matthew@cowboystatedaily.com.