The three contenders for the Wyoming Senate seat vacated this month by Darin Smith are all pro-life, pro-ICE, and pro-restriction of sexual content in childrenās libraries.
But they differ in how theyād approach those issues with the weighty hammer of state law.
A group of Wyoming Republican Party precinct committee members from Laramie and Platte Counties on Monday chose Taft Love, Roy Birt and Jeff Barnes as three nominees to fill Senate District 6.
That district spans parts of Laramie County and all of Platte County.
Smith, a Republican freshman legislator from the Cheyenne area, resigned from that seat Aug. 11 so he could lead the U.S. Attorneyās Office for Wyoming as the stateās top federal prosecutor.
The Laramie and Platte County Commissions are scheduled to choose one of the three nominees for the position on Friday.
Love
Love is 50 and lives in Cheyenne.
Heās lived in Wyoming since 1994, when he was recruited out of high school by the National Finals Rodeo to compete for Laramie County Community College, Love told Cowboy State Daily Thursday.
He graduated with a degree in wildlife biology and range management from the University of Wyoming, then worked in field research and environmental assessment for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department of Tourism.
He started an outdoor recreation company and later leased out agricultural lands ā until āWyoming started to be consumed by five-acre lotsā in the southeast corner.
Love said he and his wife had to change course at that point.
He joined the Laramie County School District 2 board in 2012, later became chair, and oversaw what he called an 18% increase student achievement.
Birt
Birt is 63 and lives in Wheatland.
Heās lived in Wyoming his entire life, and was born in Cheyenne, he told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday.
Birt has been retired since 2011 from a 31-year career in the United Parcel Service.
He serves as a Platte County Election Judge, has been active in the Platte County GOP since 2016, now serves as precinct 1-1 committeeman, and helped with Smithās 2024 campaign, says his bio.
Heās served as an elder in the Cheyenne Alliance Church and deacon in the Wheatland Memorial Baptist Church and Wheatland Bible Church and has led childrenās ministries, the document says.
Barnes
Barnes is 67 and lives north of Cheyenne.
Heās lived in Wyoming for nearly nine years, after working as a police commander for the St. Louis, Missouri, Police Department. He retired from the Air Force and the Missouri Air National Guard after 32 years in the latter, and with the rank of Chief Master Sergeant.
Heās managed mission support contingency activities at Major Command level HG Air Mobility Command at the Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, says his bio. Ā
Barnes has both firefighter and police experience and performed more than two years of law enforcement work while embedded with the 82ndĀ Airborne and 101stĀ Airborne in Iraq and Afghanistan, he said Wednesday.
Barnes unsuccessfully challenged Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak in the 2022 election, as an independent. Though heās a Republican and a precinct committeeman in the party, he said he ran as an independent because he felt that office should be nonpartisan.
First Up, Abortion
Abortion is a tortured issue in Wyoming.
Lawmakers have passed multiple bans and restrictions of the practice since Roe vs. Wade was overturned in 2022, only to find those same laws paused or blocked altogether by court orders.
Now the Wyoming Supreme Court is reviewing one of those orders, and whether the Wyoming Constitutionās promise of health care autonomy equates to an abortion access right.
The question for state legislators going into the 2025 session is whether they want to try to find other, unique ways to restrict abortion access, or leave the issue alone while the courts contemplate it.
All three candidates for Senate District 6 are pro-life, they said.
Love wants to watch the courts.
āI think we need to see where the courts play out with this before we just start throwing more bills at it,ā he said. Yet, he added, āLife is extremely sensitive, and we also need to protect it.ā
Birt said heās passionate about this issue and doesnāt believe in exemptions for rape or incest, which has been a point of contention in the legislature.
Birt would like to watch the courts also, he said, adding the caveat: as long as the executive branch is defending the stateās abortion bans well.
āAnd I think that, given the right situation with the attorney general and governor, we could get this fixed in the courts,ā said Birt.
Barnes, who said heās pro-life but would consider āa lot of discussionā about incest, rape, or hazardous health situations, said heād like to keep considering state restrictions while the courts contemplate abortionās constitutionality.
āI think we have to look at options while the Wyoming Supreme Court is making its decision,ā he said.
Nuclear
Two nominees theyāre pro-nuclear development but want to vet, cautiously, legislative authorizations of nuclear waste storage in Wyoming.
A third, Roy Birt, said itās not worth expanding the industry at all if Wyoming has to store more waste. Ā
Itās a tricky point: proponents of expanding the stateās authorizations of nuclear spent fuel storage sites say waste storage is necessary to other parts of the industry, such as operating nuclear reactors.
Itās not one or the other, nuclear expansion proponents say.Ā
Opponents of storing spent fuel, conversely, voice fears about the security of waste storage and transportation systems.
Birt said heād consider nuclear-friendly policies āvery carefullyā and only if Wyoming didnāt have to store more spent fuel than itās already authorized. Ā
āI wouldnāt want have anything to do with the byproduct of it ā storing that in Wyoming,ā he said.
Love called nuclear āa super clean energy (with) a great future.ā
It could help the power grids in Wyomingās rural communities ādrasticallyā and boost the state in other ways, he said.
As for greenlighting more waste storage permissions in Wyoming, Love said he couldnāt commit to that without reading the proposed legislation himself ā and following it to its final version this session. Ā
Barnes gave a similar viewpoint to Loveās, saying heās pro-nuclear and familiar with the energy, from seeing it used to power military submarines and aircraft carriers.
āBut the federal government nor anyone else has figured out what to do with what we call the waste product, and no state wants any of that in their backyard,ā said Barnes.
He disagreed with proponents of the current legislation, saying heās heard āsome expertsā say Wyoming wouldnāt have to bring waste back for refueling or storage to edge in on the generation/reaction market.
But, added Barnes, āI still have a lot of research to do.ā
Kidsā Sex Books
All three nominees said they find some materials in school libraries and kidsā sections of public libraries sexually inappropriate for kids.
They differ on whether state law is the place to handle that.
Barnes indicated that it is.
He wasnāt sure Wednesday how that legislation would look, saying the civil fines currently being contemplated would only hurt the taxpayers.
Birt, conversely, said heād ālove to seeā libraries keep sexually graphic books away from kids. But itās a ālocal controlā issue thatās up to local library and school boards.
In Wyoming, school board members are elected, and library board members are appointed by elected county commissioners.
County library system directors are not elected.
āPart of the Republican platform is civic duty,ā said Birt. āWe need to have people step up and fill in those library board positions.ā
Love agreed that itās a local control issue, and said local school boards āare a lot of times your best resource to protect those kids. But, Love said, heād consider putting āsome sideboards on it at a state level.ā Ā
āOur kids need to be protected against things that theyāre just not ready for. We need to allow kids to be kids,ā Love said.
This is just one area where Wyoming will find itself with more power and more accountability as the Trump administration shifts towards defederalizing education, Love added.
All three men are in favor of school choice.
Property Taxes
Barnes āstood out in the Wyoming weather helping to collect signaturesā to put a property tax reduction on a Wyoming ballot initiative, he said.
Heās glad the legislature was able this year to enact a 25% property tax reduction on home values up to the first $1 million, added Barnes.
He said heād review a consumption tax to make up for the lost local funding, but with caution in light of research showing that consumption taxes can hurt lower-income families.
Barnes said heād emphasize cutting the state budget ā including Gov. Mark Gordon-backed investments in carbon capture. He also questioned whether Wyoming public schools āneed all these administrators?ā
Wyoming funds school districts via a block-grant system. Some schools pull money recommended for non-administration categories to pay administrators and superintendents more ā saying they must do that to attract good administrators.
Birt said heād like to see āeither/orā ā property or consumption taxes. Not both.
The 25% property tax cut is enough āfor now,ā said Birt, adding āI do want efficient and responsible government.ā The state can draw from its ārainy day fundā until it experiences a revival in traditional energy economies as well, he said.
Love said Wyoming should be cautious about this issue.
He doesnāt want to see an injured person call for an ambulance and find āthe ambulance not able to show up.ā
āHealth and safety in our communities are super important,ā continued Love. āWe have to make sure those are adequately funded ā and thatās going to come through some sort of tax generation.ā
Love spoke of diversifying Wyomingās economy, saying, āweāve really taxed minerals and petroleum quite a lot: to try to put more on their plate might be difficult.ā
ICE
Wyoming's sheriffs disagreed last year with state lawmakers, some of whom attempted to require every sheriff's agency in the state to make agreements with federal immigration authorities.
While a good idea in theory to the state's conservative-leaning sheriffs (who comprise the majority), they opposed the move because they said it would take away their negotiating power with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); and disregarded the limitations of the smallest offices, who may have fewer than five deputies.
All three nominees say they support ICE and immigration enforcement.
Love said he would like to ensure that local sheriffs agencies retain their "flexibility" in these matters; and if the state is going to promote working with ICE, it shouldn't do so via an unfunded mandate.
Birt gave a similar answer, saying the state should seek "partnerships" but be mindful of limited resources in counties like Platte.
Barnes voiced general support for legislation that passed this year, banning local communities from passing policies to thwart ICE. Ā
Your Top Three
Birtās top three issues are the utilization of Wyomingās coal, oil and gas; election integrity; and school choice.
He voiced strong support for traditional-energy sectors.
Birt also called a case of election mismanagement in Weston County āhorrendousā and said heād like to keep that āembarrassmentā from happening in Wyoming again.
And heās a ābig proponentā of school choice and wants to review the Hathaway scholarship and other post-high-school education incentives.
Barnesā top three issues are Wyomingās role in the energy sector nationally; its support of its own energy industries; and is protection of water resources.
āWe are in a drought. People are extremely concerned,ā said Barnes. āWe need to (identify) and maintain these water sourcesā especially as huge industries settle in Wyoming and bring thousands of workers with them.
Loveās big three are education; safety and health infrastructures; and reviews of taxation and budgeting.
He said he wouldnāt go so far as to change the section of the Wyoming Constitution that underpins a series of court decisions requiring high-level funding for public schools.
But he does believe the legislature can find more ways to pursue āefficiencyā even within that court-imposed framework.
As for his infrastructure goals, Love said his priority is āmaking sure we have good fire and police and safety systems.ā
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.