Wyoming Politics
THE COWBOY STATE CAUCUSES SATURDAY
Obama and Clinton Woo WyomingNormally, members of the Wyoming Democratic Party can grimly joke about holding party meetings in phone booths. Here, in the reddest of fire-engine-red Republican states, Democrats are still the minority party by a 2.3:1 ratio. But today, party officials and members are being courted by the Hillary Clinton and the Barack Obama campaigns, prior to Wyoming's Democratic caucuses on Saturday.
Although Wyoming has only 12 national delegates up for grabs, those dozen delegates are hyper-critical to both the Clinton and Obama campaigns that are running neck and neck for the party’s nomination.
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A CONSERVATIONIST LOOKS BACK AT LOBOS
Celebrate Wolf Recovery, Delisting, And Stop Slinging ArrowsTwenty years ago, conservationist Whitney Tilt worked to build "a popular consensus" for bringing wolves back to the northern Rockies. Today, frustrated by squabbling amongst environmentalists and other groups, he believes it is important to take stock of how far the region has come with wolf recovery. He believes success and taking the animals off the federal protection list is a cause for celebration, not acrimony. [more]
Introducing...
A New Magazine: The New WestThe best way to check out The New West magazine is to subscribe. We want to know who’s interested in The New West, so we have made the magazine available free to qualified subscribers who answer a short questionnaire.
In the Spring Issue and online here:
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- Montana’s Cash Cowboy
- Real Ranch Living: Not Everyone is Selling Out
- Essay: The Family Farm, Version 2.0
- Essay: Tracks Across A Landscape
- Have Your Ranch & Develop It, Too
- Design Showcase: The Big and Little of Western Building
- Stuff It: Can Wolf Hunting Help Conserve the Species?
- Traffic Perplexes New Western Communities
- Boise in Its Own Little Bubble
- Revenge of the Resource Economy
- Spotlight North Idaho: On the Agenda: Youth, Growth & Silver
- Spotlight North Idaho: Players of the Panhandle
- Spotlight North Idaho: Coeur d’Alene Tribe Rides the Idaho Boom
GOVERNOR'S GROWTH CONFERENCE
In Wyoming, Saying the Words “Planning” and “Zoning”Something highly unusual happened Thursday morning in Casper, where Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal convened his two-day “Building the Wyoming We Want” conference at Casper College.
No one was shot, tarred ‘n feathered or invited to attend a Western necktie party.
And numerous people -- including the governor -- repeatedly uttered that communistic word “zoning” without being struck by lightning.
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Old and Faithful Debate
Yellowstone Opens for Winter SeasonThe interior of Yellowstone National Park opens for the winter season today amid--surprise--much controversy surrounding the limits on snowmobiles allowed in the park per day. The Park Service's Final Rule implements a long-term winter use plan for Yellowstone, which will allow up to 720 commercially guided Best Available Technology (BAT) snowmobiles per day this season and 540 per day next season. The Wyoming attorney general office filed a petition for review of the winter-use plan soon after its release.
Wyoming officials say, even though the average number of snowmobiles in Yellowstone per day averaged 250 for the last three years, next season's cap of 540 is still too low. Environmentalists say the cap should be reduced even further. Yellowstone's wildlife denizens are largely silent on the issue.
In their petition, Wyoming officials decried requiring commercial guides for all snowmobile trips and also requested a "reasoned analysis" for changes made to management of avalanche-prone Sylvan Pass, which--thanks to helicopters and howitzers--will remain open to motorized oversnow travel this winter, presumably to the delight of Wyoming residents.
More on the most peaceful season to explore Yellowstone National Park after the jump.
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Guest Opinion: George Wuerthner's On the Range
NREPA: Local Interests and Conservation HistoryWhat do the Grand Teton National Park, Yellowstone National Park, Glacier National Park, Grand Canyon National Park, and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument all have in common? Besides their common designation as national parks and monuments, all these conservation areas were initially opposed by local people.
After the creation of Yellowstone NP in 1872, the Helena Gazette opined “We regard the passage of the act as a great blow to the prosperity of the towns of Bozeman and Virginia City….” Montana’s Congressional representatives were so opposed to the park that they introduced bills into Congress every session for twenty years to undesignate the park.
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“We cannot let Gary Trauner win"
Wyoming Rep. Barbara Cubin Will Not Seek Eighth TermRepresentative Barbara Cubin, R-WY, announced Saturday morning that she won’t run for another term in the U.S. House of Representatives -- but not before she got one last zing at the news media, with which she has had a famously testy relationship during her political career.
After a blistering attack on the Democratic majority in Congress and Democratic candidate Gary Trauner, and a lengthy list of her accomplishments in Washington, Cubin noted the recent spate of news reports that predicted she would announce today that she’s not going to run for her eighth term.
“I am going to run again,” she said to a suddenly quiet roomful of Republican Central Committee members and assorted reporters. “I’m going to get this cast off my foot and get through physical therapy, and then I’m going to get in good shape again,” she said to rising giggles and laughs in the audience as they got the “gotcha” joke at the expense of the press.
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NewWest.Net/Politics
Lynne Cheney’s Memoir Halts Before Turbulent ‘60sCasper’s hometown girl Lynne Vincent Cheney has penned a love letter to the past in Blue Skies, No Fences: A Memoir of Childhood and Family, which covers the pioneer histories of both families that ultimately produced the “Second Family” in the Bush-Cheney administration.
Yet because the memoir stops in 1959 with high school graduation for Lynne and Dick Cheney, there’s only tantalizing clues and some irony in their 1950’s coming-of-age story, and silence about how they were shaped by the 1960s to become the iconic conservative couple of Wyoming and ultimately national politics.
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NewWest.Net/Politics
Rep. Cubin Voting Again, Misses Two of Five Voting SessionsAccording to the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives, Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyoming, voted six times today – her third day of voting since she resumed voting on Wednesday of last week.
Cubin had missed about 46 percent of all votes in the House this year, before she resumed voting on Wednesday and Thursday last week, when one of her nine votes helped uphold President Bush’s veto of an expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program.
While there were no House votes on Friday, there were 12 roll call votes on Monday and Tuesday of this week – all of which Rep. Cubin missed.
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NewWest.Net/Politics
Trauner Announces Bid for Wyoming’s At-Large House SeatGary Trauner, a Wilson businessman who lost a squeaker of a race last year against Representative Barbara Cubin, R-Wyoming, announced Monday he was going to run again for Wyoming’s at-large seat in the House of Representatives.
Trauner lost last year’s race by a mere 1,012 votes. He distinguished himself through his approach to campaigning, going door-to-door across Wyoming to 15,000 homes -- a style that was in marked contrast to Cubin’s campaign style. Cubin once famously said she’d “rather eat roadkill” than go door-to-door.
At his announcement today in Casper, Trauner said he’d been mulling over whether he should run again as the Democratic candidate when a recent incident pushed him into running again.
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