Politics Kaycee Clark Politics Kaycee Clark

Liz Cheney Inches Closer to Presidential Bid: ‘Not Going to Rule it Out’

Former Wyoming congresswoman turned anti-Trump crusader Liz Cheney inched closer to announcing a run for president on Thursday, refusing to rule out a third-party bid in 2024 and decrying top GOP candidates — and her political party more broadly — for what she described as promoting revisionist history in their characterization of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

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Politics Kaycee Clark Politics Kaycee Clark

Hageman to Break With McCarthy, Oppose Debt Deal

WASHINGTON — Despite having deftly navigated intra-party tensions throughout her tenure in Washington, Rep. Harriet Hageman (R.-Wyo.) intends to break with House leadership and oppose a bipartisan measure to raise the debt limit during a crucial vote on Wednesday evening, the Wyoming Truth has learned.

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Politics Ashton Hacke Politics Ashton Hacke

In Fits and Starts, DeSantis Officially Launches Presidential Campaign

After months of speculation, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis officially announced a campaign for the 2024 Republican nomination for president on Wednesday, but his supporters were forced to endure yet one more delay as his scheduled 6 p.m. Eastern launch was repeatedly disrupted.

Though DeSantis planned to announce his campaign in an audio-only Twitter “Space” with the site’s owner, Elon Musk, the event was plagued by glitches: users were kicked off the app several times as audio cut in and out, such that the 600,000-plus audience that had assembled to hear his speech had dwindled to fewer than 200,000 listeners by the time the candidate was finally able to be heard a little after 6:20pm.

The DeSantis campaign team — and Musk, by extension — sought to explain away the issues as evidence for the enthusiasm behind the candidate: “It seems we broke the internet with so much excitement,” the official “Team DeSantis” Twitter account wrote.

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Politics Ashton Hacke Politics Ashton Hacke

Casper Woman Indicted For Abortion Clinic Arson One Year Later

A Casper woman has been indicted for allegedly setting fire to an abortion clinic in the same city, almost one year to the day after the crime was committed.

Lorna Roxanne Green was indicted by a grand jury, which found that she “maliciously damaged and destroyed, and attempted to damage and destroy, by means of fire a building…which building, contents and property were used in affecting interstate commerce and were used in activities affecting interstate commerce,” according to the May 19 indictment.

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Politics Kaycee Clark Politics Kaycee Clark

Wyoming Leaders Denounce New EPA Power Plant Rules

WASHINGTON — New rules released Thursday by President Joe Biden’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that aim to cut down on pollution from fossil fuel–fired power plants are sparking outrage in Wyoming, a state with deep ties to the coal, oil and gas industries.

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Politics Ashton Hacke Politics Ashton Hacke

To Launch a New Digital Dollar, Wyoming Must Clear a Host of Hurdles

By launching its own digital version of the U.S. dollar, the State of Wyoming could help lower the cost of processing payments, offer an alternative to a central bank digital currency from the federal reserve and potentially earn billions of dollars, state leaders were told Monday. But before the state’s new cryptocurrency can become a reality, they’ll have to sort through a host of logistical and regulatory hurdles — including figuring out whether it’s even legal to issue a so-called stable token.

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Politics Kaycee Clark Politics Kaycee Clark

Harriet Hageman’s First 100 Days on Capitol Hill (Part 3)

WASHINGTON — Towards the end of my hour-long, exclusive sit down with Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.) late last month — after I’d asked about her transition to Washington, her policy priorities and her thoughts on contemporary political debates — there was one question I knew I couldn’t leave without addressing.

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Politics Kaycee Clark Politics Kaycee Clark

Harriet Hageman’s First 100 Days on Capitol Hill (Part 2)

WASHINGTON — To understand Wyoming Rep. Harriet Hageman’s policy priorities, one needs to look no further than at the decor of her Capitol Hill office.

Her large wooden desk is piled high with papers: notes and documents from recent hearings and research into upcoming bills to be introduced, she said.

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