Two Wyoming lawmakers asserted this week that their colleagues were being fed scripts that steered their actions in committee meetings.
The legislator accused of distributing the scripts conceded heâd done so, but said it was so that he could run his own budget tweaks through other lawmakers while he was confined to the stricter mediator role of committee meeting chairman that tradition generally upholds.
More controversy followed, during which House Appropriations Chair John Bear, R-Gillette, called Sen. Ogden Driskill, R-Devils Tower, a âdoofus,â and Driskill pushing back on the timeline of Bear's explanation. Â
But First, Jake
It was halfway through a four-day budget-planning marathon the legislative Joint Appropriations Committee undertook this week when Driskill appeared on Cowboy State Dailyâs "Morning Show With Jake" and said he was âhanded a scriptâ Sunday at the state Capitol.
â(It dictated) hereâs who makes the motions to do the cuts, and hereâs what they are,â Driskill said. As the week unfolded, the committee majority voted to cut or deny hundreds of millions from Gov. Mark Gordonâs proposed $11.13 billion budget for the upcoming two-year cycle.
âIf you go back and watch the (meeting video) for yesterday,â said Driskill, âyouâll see people getting prompted by the chair â âOh are you going to make this motion?â â and they make it.â
Driskill indicated that House Appropriations Committee members were using the script when making budget tweaks, but the Senate doesnât âgo by scripts.â
He said Mondayâs and Tuesdayâs meeting yielded âno honest debate on anything.â
Sen. Mike Gierau, D-Jackson, confirmed in a Friday phone interview that the scripts appeared Sunday, and said they were from House Appropriations Chair John Bear, R-Gillette.
â(He) wanted me to make motions too,â said Gierau.
Gierau added a caveat: scripts are not unheard-of in the Wyoming Legislature.
For example, chamber leaders may use scripts during the rigid procedural statements that drive a debate phase called âcommittee of the whole.â
Gierau will also ask legislative staffers to help him with the wording of his own motions if theyâre highly technical, he said.
To Gierau, however, this weekâs effort seemed different.
â(There were times) you know it was a script because when asked the question, âWhat are you talking about?â they couldnât answer it,â he said. He specifically referenced an incident in which Rep. Scott Smith, R-Lingle, made a motion to deny a $170,480 increase meant to fund an inflationary increase to the K-12 schoolsâ phone bill. Â
Rep. Trey Sherwood, D-Laramie, pressed her Republican House colleagues all week for explanations on their more controversial budget motions. She did so to Smith that Tuesday afternoon.
âCan I phone a friend?â asked Smith, who then asked Sherwood to let him review her budget-tracking spreadsheet.
Smithâs motion died on a tie vote.
Republican Reps. Jeremy Haroldson (of Wheatland) and Ken Pendergraft (of Sheridan) delivered their motions with much more understanding than Smith and Republican Rep. Bill Allemand (of Midwest), said Gierau.
Nope
Thatâs because Allemand and Smith are relatively new to the Legislature and still need the occasional help, Haroldson countered in his own Friday interview.
Allemand and Smith are both in their second terms.
So is Pendergraft.
Haroldson, conversely, is in his third term, having been elected in 2020.
Pendergraft, Allemand and Smith did not respond by publication to phone requests for comment.
For Rep. Abby Angelos, R-Gillette, Bear paused the meeting Tuesday when she said she did not know whether a funding request she was making to cover trades education was to be one-time or perpetual.
The timeout was because she wanted guidance from the other legislators â including Sherwood, the House sideâs lone Democrat â on which funding mechanism would be best, Angelos said in a Friday text message.
âNo, we are not scripted,â wrote Angelos. âIf I had a script I would have known how to respond to (the) question and not requested a timeout to confirm with all members what the agencyâs intention was in the funding.â
Haroldson also said he doesnât receive directives from a script and was never given one.
He did refer to notes in the âtraveling documentâ spreadsheet all committee members use to craft the budget, Haroldson added in a Friday phone interview.
Yes, But
Bear confirmed to Cowboy State Daily on Friday that he distributed scripts to legislators â but said it was because he was chairing the meeting all week, and tradition confines the chair to a mediator role.
So he chose to run his numerous motions through other members since he couldnât himself, he said.
âItâs a nothingburger,â Bear said, adding that the Senate Committee Chair, Tim Salazar, R-Riverton, had asked him to chair that week, as had others.
Salazar did not respond to a request for comment.
As to Driskillâs state of alarm Wednesday on the "Morning Show With Jake," thatâs âbecause Senator Driskill is a doofus,â answered Bear, adding that Bear and Driskill may be trying to explain the many votes they lost this week, against significant budget denials and cuts.
Confronted with a text message containing Bearâs insult, Driskill replied, âI would expect no less from John Bear. I will not lower myself to name calling. Disparagement and name calling are classic Freedom Caucus.â
The Wyoming Freedom Caucus is a coalition of Republican House legislators. At least five members sit on the House Appropriations Committee: Bear, Pendergraft, Allemand, Haroldson and Smith.
Here Driskill volleyed a round back at Bear:
âBy the way â the script was handed out a full day before it was agreed that he would chair all days.â
Bear parried yet again, saying he only wrote a script for Monday.
âI Donât Have Any Scriptsâ
Confronted with Bearâs acknowledgement that he had distributed scripts, Haroldson maintained that he had not received one, and pointed to his own independence.
For example, Haroldson broke from other Freedom Caucus members and urged them not to deny $6 million the University of Wyoming had requested to catch its athletics program up to the new NIL landscape and other factors.
âThereâs not a paper in my desk you canât look at,â said Haroldson. âI donât have any scripts, nor have I been told how to vote.â
In a follow-up interview, Bear said he wouldnât know whether Haroldson had received a script, and said he, Bear, had technically given the scripts to Pendergraft, who physically handed them out for Bear. Â
Pendergraft did not respond to a voicemail request for comment.Â
A Back-And-Forth About The Website
The script controversy wasnât the only Bear-Driskill clash this week.
During one of his three impassioned requests for a $16 million grant for the rare earths industry, Driskill said even the Wyoming Freedom Caucus website supports the concept of energy âgrants.â
âIâll read to you off your own website⌠this is your energy policy folks,â said Driskill on Tuesday, reading aloud from his phone. âProvide supportive government policy, favorable tax strategies, grants, and loan programs to encourage investment in energy projects.â
Moments later, Bear countered, âOur website â I donât know if thereâs some fake news out there, some AI thatâs doing something different.â
He then read the same sentence from his phone, but without the word âgrants.â
âNothing about grants in there,â said Bear.
Cowboy State Daily has obtained an undated screenshot of the earlier webpage and the phrase that Driskill read.
Bear in his Friday interview acknowledged the word âgrantsâ was in the site narrative prior but said he didnât know when it was purged. He said he urged its deletion a year ago, because âwe donât believe in grants.â
Senate Appropriations Committee members Tim French, R-Ralston, and Dan Laursen, R-Powell, did not respond by publication to requests for comment. Â
Sherwood told Cowboy State Daily she didnât have a script, and she used her own notes from committee testimony to drive her debate.
She also said pauses like the one Angelos took to confirm a detail on a motion arenât unheard-of.
And she said sheâs grateful to all the media attention toward the committee this week.
âIt doesnât matter what party or which politician is making a motion the public likes or dislikes,â said Sherwood, âItâs so important for us to be held to task and be called out in the media.â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





