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Cynthia Lummis


Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Wyoming's At-large district
Incumbent
Assumed office 
January 3, 2009
Preceded by Barbara Cubin

Wyoming State Treasurer
In office
1999 – 2007

In office
1993 – 1995

In office
1979 – 1983
In office
1985 – 1993

Born September 10, 1954 (1954-09-10) (age 55)
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Alvin Wiederspahn
Residence Cheyenne, Wyoming
Alma mater University of Wyoming
Profession Attorney, Rancher
Religion Lutheran
Website http://lummis.house.gov/

Cynthia Marie Lummis Wiederspahn, known on the ballot as simply Cynthia Lummis (born September 10, 1954), is the U.S. Representative of Wyoming's At-Large Congressional District. She is a lawyer and rancher in Cheyenne and served from 1999-2007 as Wyoming State Treasurer in which capacity she managed over $8 billion in annual funds and was elected President of the Western State Treasurer's Association. Lummis is a Republican.

Contents

[edit] Education

Lummis was educated at Trinity Lutheran School and public schools in Cheyenne. She was active in the 4-H Club and raised Hereford calves every year for showing at the annual county fair in August. Lummis Livestock, located outside Cheyenne which she still manages, began in 1919 when her great-grandfather, the owner of a hardware store, bought the property from a business partner. The ranch has a stone barn built in the latter 19th century. Lummis and Wiederspahn also own ranches in Wheatland and in Lincoln County.

After high school, Lummis enrolled in the University of Wyoming in Laramie, the state's only four-year institution of higher learning. She obtained two bachelor of science degrees in animal science in 1976 and in biology in 1978. While she was a legislator, she received her Juris Doctor degree in 1985 and also clerked for the Wyoming Supreme Court.

[edit] Political career

Lummis was a member of the Wyoming Senate from 1982-1994 and the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1979-1982. At 24, she was the youngest woman to have been elected to the Wyoming House. Lummis is also the first woman to have served on the popular Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo Board. She won the title "Miss Frontier" in 1976.

In the Wyoming Legislature, Lummis concentrated on issues of taxation and natural resources. On leaving the Wyoming Senate, she served as transition director for Governor Jim Geringer and then worked for two years in Geringer's office. In that capacity she spearheaded the Governor’s Open Spaces Initiative and edited Wyoming’s Open Lands Guidebook. She also served on the Board of the Institute for Environmental and Natural Resources at the University of Wyoming. She is a former interim director of the Office of State Lands and Investments.

State revenues increased sharply during her tenure, and investment income increased. Elected State Treasurer in 1998 and unopposed in 2002, she was ineligible to seek reelection in 2006 because of Wyoming's term limits law. She was succeeded by fellow Republican Joseph B. Meyer, previously Secretary of State of Wyoming.

Lummis's affiliations include the American Women's Financial Education Foundation, the Center for the Rocky Mountain West Advisory Board, Cheyenne's Vision 2020, the Wyoming Business Alliance, and the Wyoming Stock Growers Agricultural Land Trust.

As State Treasurer, Lummis was cited by the Small Business Administration as the "Women in Business Advocate of the Year 2005." The award is given to a public official who promotes women's business ownership. That same year, Lummis was honored by the University of Wyoming (UW) College of Agriculture as one of two "Outstanding Alumni."

In 2003, Lummis was a fundraiser for the construction of Johnson Lummis Hunkins Plaza in Downtown Laramie in Albany County, where a statue has been erected in honor of Louisa Gardner Swain, the first woman ever to have voted in a general election in the United States.

On June 14, 2007, Lummis was among 31 Wyoming Republicans to file their names with the Republican State Central Committee in Cheyenne for consideration as the successor to U.S. Senator Craig Thomas, who died earlier in the month. She was chosen as one of the three nominees by the committee submitted to Governor Dave Freudenthal for final selection who, under Wyoming law, made the final selection on June 22, 2007, to appoint John Barrasso, an orthopedic surgeon and State Senator from Casper. Lummis had considered challenging Barrasso in the 2008 special election to complete the remaining four years of Thomas's term, but instead announced her candidacy for the open seat that was vacated by Barbara Cubin in the U.S. House of Representatives.

[edit] 2008 Congressional Race

Lummis, who carried the support of pro-life and economic conservative voters in Wyoming, won the November 4, 2008, general election to succeed Barbara Cubin of Casper. In the August primary election, Lummis defeated businessman and rancher Mark Gordon who outspent her four-to-one, along with other candidates Bill Winney and Michael S. Holland.

In the general election, Lummis faced Democrat Gary Trauner of Wilson in Teton County, who criticized Lummis because she has supported privatization of Social Security and has also suggested raising the retirement age for receiving such benefits; Trauner has called instead for consideration of imposing the FICA tax on income over $100,000, which is currently exempt.[1]

Lummis defeated Trauner by a relatively slim margin statewide and even lost her home county, Laramie County. Trauner had the support of Governor Dave Freudenthal, with whom Lummis has had political and personal differences.

Trauner had nearly toppled Cubin in the 2006 election.[2]

[edit] Committee Assignments

[edit] Personal life

Though she uses her maiden name, she has been married since 1983 to Cheyenne attorney and businessman Alvin Laramie "Al" Wiederspahn (born 1949), himself a former Democratic member of both houses of the Wyoming legislature. The two were House colleagues from 1979-1983, when they married.

The Wiederspahns have a daughter, Annaliese Wiederspahn, who graduated in 2007 from Haverford College in Haverford, Pennsylvania. They are members of Trinity Lutheran Church in Cheyenne. Lummis's father-in-law was former Laramie County Coroner Arling Wiederspahn (1916-2007), a Democrat and a funeral home owner.

She appeared on The Colbert Report on March 9, 2009, as part of the show's recurring Better Know a District segment, which often lampoons members of the U.S. Congress.

[edit] Election History

Wyoming At-Large Seat in the U.S. House of Representatives Election – 2008
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Cynthia Lummis 131,244 52.62%
Democratic Gary Trauner 106,758 42.81%
Libertarian W. David Herbert 11,030 4.42%

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Joyce, Matt (2008-10-10). "Trauner, Lummis camps debate Social Security". Casper Star-Tribune. http://casperstartribune.net/articles/2008/10/12/news/wyoming/c369526fa8922f64872574df000230ab.txt. 
  2. ^ Wyoming Tribune-Eagle Online

[edit] External links




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