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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Simone Pathe

Liz Cheney is likely Wyoming's next congresswoman

Liz Cheney, the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, has won the GOP primary for Wyoming's at-large congressional district, setting her up for an easy November election in this safe Republican seat.

When the Associated Press called the race, she carried 40 percent of the vote in the nine-way primary for the seat her father once held.

Cheney's victory will likely make her one of the few female freshmen in the House GOP conference next year. Republicans are losing several prominent female lawmakers to retirement at the end of this term, including current Wyoming Rep. Cynthia Lummis, the only female member of the House Freedom Caucus.

Cheney has not ruled out joining the House Freedom Caucus when she gets to Washington. But her campaign coffers are lined with checks from big-name establishment Republicans who served in the two Bush administrations. Cheney, herself, served in the State Department during the George W. Bush administration.

But she has the support of at least one of the Freedom Caucus' favorite incoming freshmen: Indiana Republican Jim Banks, who benefited from the House Freedom Fund's help in his 3rd District primary, donated to Cheney.

Cheney also feels differently about the GOP presidential nominee than many of her establishment backers from her father's era. Like her father, she supports Donald Trump. But many of her father's peers from the Bush administration do not. Notably, both former presidents Bush declined to attend this year's Republican National Convention.

In an interview with the Washington Post's Paul Kane, Cheney spoke of herself as a "Liz Cheney Republican," and refused to be identified as either a "Trump Republican" or "Dick Cheney Republican."

"You know, a Liz Cheney Republican is somebody who is a strong constitutional conservative, believes in limited government," she said, noting to Kane that she disagrees with some of Trump's foreign policy positions.

For the daughter of a vice president, Cheney's rise to elected office hasn't exactly been smooth. Many Republicans felt she overstepped her bounds when, soon after moving to the state, she tried to challenge Wyoming's senior Sen. Michael B. Enzi in the 2014 primary.

Her primary bid caused a spat between the Cheney family and former Sen. Alan Simpson, a Cheney family friend who stuck with Enzi over the vice president's daughter. Cheney dropped that primary bid six months after launching it.

Simpson has been a strong Cheney supporter this year, and Republicans in the state say Cheney has acted on her political aspirations the right way this time by running for an open House seat and making her way around the state.

There's still resentment toward her in the Cowboy State, with some Republicans painting her as a carpetbagger, but her high name recognition and her superior fundraising easily put her over the edge in this primary.

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