GOBLIN HOUSE
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Area: Full Workup (one official, all sections) (eo_full_workup)
Filed: 2026-04-27T07:08:42.639Z
Source: External LLM via /handoff/congress (attempt #56393)
Resolved official: Cynthia M. Lummis (entity #10751)
Ingest result: 48 facts · 49 sources · 2 silences · 4 contradictions · 10 voting_records · 5 skipped
Single super-prompt covering every per-official research area in one LLM call: donor mapping, silences, contradictions, telling votes, and constituency baseline. The LLM returns ONE JSON object; the ingest pipeline dispatches each section to its typed table independently, so a malformed or no-data section never blocks the rest.
{
"target_official": {
"name": "Cynthia M. Lummis",
"bioguide_id": "L000571"
},
"donor_mapping": {
"facts": [
{
"fact_text": "Lummis raised $3,581,540 in the 2019–2024 election cycle. Large individual contributions accounted for 40.82% ($1,462,297), PAC contributions for 36.80% ($1,318,028), small individual contributions (<$200) for 15.66% ($561,158), candidate self-financing for 3.92% ($140,500), and other for 2.78% ($99,558).",
"date_occurred": "2024-12-31",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/person/summary?cid=N00029788"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis' top contributing industry in 2019–2024 was Leadership PACs at $482,000, followed by Republican/Conservative at $379,107, Securities & Investment at $294,322, Retired at $218,870, and Oil & Gas at $217,821.",
"date_occurred": "2024-12-31",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/person/summary?cid=N00029788"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis' top contributors in 2019–2024 were Senate Conservatives Fund at $146,748 (all individuals), Club for Growth at $139,288 (all individuals), Sinclair Companies at $33,900, Multicoin Capital at $21,900, and Bluegrass Committee at $20,000 (all PAC). Crypto-connected donors like Andreessen Horowitz ($11,600) and Payward Inc/Kraken ($11,600) also ranked among top contributors.",
"date_occurred": "2024-12-31",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/cynthia-lummis/contributors?cid=N00029788&cycle=2022&type=I"
},
{
"fact_text": "In Q1 2025, Lummis raised approximately $420,000 between her campaign and Steer PAC, bringing her cash-on-hand to over $1.5 million. Donors included Comcast, Walmart, AT&T, Toyota, American Express, Thrivent Financial, and Nuclear Energy Institute. After Trump's endorsement in late March 2025, she received $114,145 over four days.",
"date_occurred": "2025-03-31",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://montananewsroom.com/lummis-has-more-than-1-5m-so-far-for-2026-race/"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis' estimated net worth is $14.9–$15.5 million as of 2025, ranking approximately 70th–84th in Congress. Much of her wealth stems from family cattle ranching operations (Arp and Hammond Company, Lummis Livestock Company, Old Horse Pasture Inc.) and a solid investment portfolio. She purchased her first Bitcoin in 2013 for $330 per token and held five bitcoins as of mid-2021.",
"date_occurred": "2025-09-14",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Senator+Cynthia+M.+Lummis+has+filed+a+new+financial+disclosure+-+here%E2%80%99s+what+we+see"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis violated the STOCK Act in 2021 by disclosing a Bitcoin purchase of $50,001–$100,000 outside the 45-day reporting window. A spokesperson attributed the delay to 'a filing error' and 'an honest mistake,' and the issue was resolved without penalty. She had previously failed to list her Bitcoin holdings on her annual financial disclosure, filing an amended report a week later.",
"date_occurred": "2021-10-07",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/07/senator-cynthia-lummis-discloses-a-bitcoin-purchase-worth-up-to-100000.html"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis chairs the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets. Her son-in-law Will Cole is Chief Product Officer at Unchained Capital, a Bitcoin-only custody and lending company. Cole is a Bitcoin maximalist who criticizes competing cryptocurrencies like Ripple's XRP. Lummis canceled a meeting with Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse in 2025, raising conflict-of-interest concerns.",
"date_occurred": "2025-05-30",
"confidence": "secondary",
"source_url": "https://thefederalnewswire.com/stories/671798726-crypto-sleuth-on-sen-lummis-s-canceled-ripple-meeting-now-we-know-why-lummis-won-t-meet-with-you-her-family-is-deep-in-bitcoin"
},
{
"fact_text": "Lummis operates the leadership PAC 'Steer PAC' (FEC Committee ID: C00762682). Steer PAC has made donations to other Senate incumbents including Sens. Jim Risch, Roger Marshall, Pete Ricketts, Steve Daines, and Tom Cotton, and gave $5,000 to Mitch McConnell's PAC.",
"date_occurred": "2025-03-31",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://montananewsroom.com/lummis-has-more-than-1-5m-so-far-for-2026-race/"
}
],
"connections": [
{
"donor_entity_name": "Club for Growth",
"relationship_type": "major_donor",
"description": "2019–2024: $139,288 via individuals. A fiscally conservative PAC that has been one of Lummis' top career supporters.",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/cynthia-lummis/contributors?cid=N00029788&cycle=2022&type=I"
},
{
"donor_entity_name": "Senate Conservatives Fund",
"relationship_type": "major_donor",
"description": "2019–2024: $146,748 via individuals. Lummis' top career contributor.",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/cynthia-lummis/contributors?cid=N00029788&cycle=2022&type=I"
},
{
"donor_entity_name": "Sinclair Companies",
"relationship_type": "donor",
"description": "2019–2024: $33,900 via individuals. Wyoming-based energy company, reflecting Lummis' consistent support for oil and gas interests.",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/person/summary?cid=N00029788"
},
{
"donor_entity_name": "Exxon Mobil",
"relationship_type": "major_donor",
"description": "2017–2022: $10,600 via individuals and PAC. Part of $217,821 from the Oil & Gas industry sector that heavily supports Lummis.",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/cynthia-lummis/contributors?cid=N00029788&cycle=2022&type=I"
},
{
"donor_entity_name": "Payward Inc",
"relationship_type": "donor",
"description": "2017–2022: $11,600 via individuals. The parent company of cryptocurrency exchange Kraken. Lummis serves as chair of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets.",
"confidence": "primary",
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/cynthia-lummis/contributors?cid=N00029788&cycle=2022&type=I"
}
]
},
"silences": [
{
"topic": "Reliance on tele-town halls and avoidance of open in-person town halls",
"expected_position": "As Wyoming's first female senator representing a rural and dispersed constituency, Lummis would be expected to hold open, in-person town halls accessible to all constituents.",
"window_start": "2025-02-10",
"window_end": "2025-11-29",
"evidence_summary": "Lummis held a joint tele-townhall with Barrasso and Hageman on February 10, 2025, where participants 'answered questions about how they are working with President Trump.' In November 2025, the Circle of Cheyenne Citizen Warriors invited all three Wyoming delegation members to an in-person town hall; staff members for all three declined. While Lummis was active on social media, in Senate hearings, and at Bitcoin conferences during this period, no in-person town halls were publicly announced or held. The tele-townhall format has been criticized for allowing curated questions and limited participation.",
"primary_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/icymi-lummis-barrasso-hageman-hold-tele-townhall/"
},
{
"topic": "Conflicts of interest between family Bitcoin ties and chairing the Senate Digital Assets Subcommittee",
"expected_position": "As chair of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Lummis would be expected to address how her son-in-law Will Cole's role at a Bitcoin-only custody company and her personal Bitcoin holdings influence her regulatory approach toward competing cryptocurrencies.",
"window_start": "2025-05-28",
"window_end": "2025-12-01",
"evidence_summary": "Lummis canceled a meeting with Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse in May 2025 without rescheduling. Crypto sleuth 'Cowboy Crypto' noted her son-in-law 'is Head of Product for a $BTC payments company and hates seeing Ripple do well.' CoinDesk reported this perceived bias has led to conflict-of-interest concerns. Lummis has not publicly addressed the potential conflict between her family's financial stake in Bitcoin and her role as the chief Senate regulator of all digital assets — including Bitcoin competitors. She has been active on social media pushing Bitcoin-centric legislation throughout this period.",
"primary_url": "https://thefederalnewswire.com/stories/671798726-crypto-sleuth-on-sen-lummis-s-canceled-ripple-meeting-now-we-know-why-lummis-won-t-meet-with-you-her-family-is-deep-in-bitcoin"
}
],
"contradictions": {
"claims": [
{
"claim_text": "In mid-December 2020, Lummis said she would respect the final result of the Electoral College in favor of Biden, saying 'the electoral college works, just as the Founding Fathers intended.'",
"claim_date": "2020-12-15",
"claim_type": "statement",
"source_url": "https://trib.com/news/state-regional/article_e4441540-233a-5175-9a10-9de1237cb8f8.html"
},
{
"claim_text": "Weeks later, Lummis joined 10 other conservative senators pledging to vote against certifying election results. On January 6, 2021, she voted to certify Arizona's results after the Capitol attack, but later objected to Pennsylvania's, stating she was 'deeply concerned that the electoral votes of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania were not regularly given.' Republican Accountability gave her an 'F' democracy score.",
"claim_date": "2021-01-06",
"claim_type": "vote",
"source_url": "https://accountability.gop/profile/sen-cynthia-lummis/"
},
{
"claim_text": "Lummis had a long-standing record opposing same-sex marriage, aligning with conservative Wyoming Republican Party platform positions.",
"claim_date": "2020-11-03",
"claim_type": "platform",
"source_url": "https://www.wyomingnews.com/news/local_news/wyoming-gop-passes-resolution-condemning-lummis-for-same-sex-marriage-vote/article_f0675ac0-acc8-11ed-9095-77053cfa0e7e.html"
},
{
"claim_text": "In November 2022, Lummis was one of only 12 Senate Republicans to vote for the Respect for Marriage Act, codifying federal protections for same-sex and interracial marriages. The Wyoming GOP passed a formal resolution condemning her. Lummis said: 'For the sake of our nation today and its survival, we do well by taking this step, not embracing or validating each other's devoutly held views, but by the simple act of tolerating them.'",
"claim_date": "2022-11-29",
"claim_type": "vote",
"source_url": "https://www.wyomingnews.com/news/local_news/wyoming-gop-passes-resolution-condemning-lummis-for-same-sex-marriage-vote/article_f0675ac0-acc8-11ed-9095-77053cfa0e7e.html"
},
{
"claim_text": "Lummis has championed the BITCOIN Act of 2025, which would direct the U.S. Treasury to purchase 1 million Bitcoin over five years with a 20-year holding period, and has been hailed as the 'Crypto Queen' of the Senate. She co-sponsored the GENIUS Act for stablecoin regulation and the CLARITY Act for crypto market structure.",
"claim_date": "2025-03-12",
"claim_type": "statement",
"source_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/lummis-leads-digital-asset-subcommittee-hearing/"
},
{
"claim_text": "MSNBC's Chris Hayes and other critics have noted that the BITCOIN Act could transfer $100 billion from taxpayers to Bitcoin owners — a category that includes Lummis herself, who has held Bitcoin since 2013 and personally benefits from price increases resulting from government purchases.",
"claim_date": "2024-12-08",
"claim_type": "disclosure",
"source_url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/07/senator-cynthia-lummis-discloses-a-bitcoin-purchase-worth-up-to-100000.html"
},
{
"claim_text": "Lummis voted against the bipartisan $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021.",
"claim_date": "2021-11-05",
"claim_type": "vote",
"source_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/lummis-votes-to-secure-huge-wins-for-wyoming-in-one-big-beautiful-bill/"
},
{
"claim_text": "Lummis voted against the $95 billion foreign aid package for Ukraine, Israel, Palestine, and Taiwan in April 2024, citing it was not paid for. She also voted against an earlier version that included $20.2 billion in border security measures.",
"claim_date": "2024-04-24",
"claim_type": "vote",
"source_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/lummis-votes-against-foreign-aid-package/"
}
],
"contradictions": [
{
"claim_a_idx": 0,
"claim_b_idx": 1,
"type": "reversal",
"severity": "high",
"narrative": "Lummis pledged to respect the Electoral College results in December 2020, but weeks later joined senators pledging to object, then voted to object to Pennsylvania's certification on January 6, 2021. The Casper Star-Tribune called her first Senate vote 'a flip-flop on a flip-flop.' Republican Accountability gave her an 'F' democracy score."
},
{
"claim_a_idx": 2,
"claim_b_idx": 3,
"type": "reversal",
"severity": "high",
"narrative": "Lummis broke from her long-standing opposition to same-sex marriage by voting for the Respect for Marriage Act, becoming one of only 12 Senate Republicans to support it. The Wyoming GOP passed a formal resolution condemning her vote, and multiple county-level censure attempts followed. She justified the reversal as an act of 'tolerating' others' views."
},
{
"claim_a_idx": 4,
"claim_b_idx": 5,
"type": "statement_vs_disclosure",
"severity": "high",
"narrative": "Lummis champions Bitcoin legislation that could directly enrich her personally. MSNBC's Chris Hayes warned the BITCOIN Act could transfer $100 billion from taxpayers to Bitcoin owners — a group that includes Lummis, who first bought Bitcoin at $330 and has held the asset while writing laws that boost its price."
},
{
"claim_a_idx": 6,
"claim_b_idx": 7,
"type": "statement_vs_disclosure",
"severity": "medium",
"narrative": "Lummis voted against the bipartisan infrastructure bill and foreign aid packages citing fiscal concerns, yet she championed the One Big Beautiful Bill which independent analyses projected would add trillions to the deficit. She also pushed a failed Bitcoin tax exemption amendment to that same bill."
}
]
},
"telling_votes": [
{
"bill_id": "Electoral College Certification (2021)",
"title": "Certification of 2020 presidential election results — Objection to Pennsylvania's electoral votes",
"vote": "yea",
"vote_date": "2021-01-06",
"roll_call_url": "https://trib.com/news/state-regional/article_e4441540-233a-5175-9a10-9de1237cb8f8.html",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis' first vote as senator was a 'flip-flop on a flip-flop': she voted to certify Arizona but objected to Pennsylvania. The vote came hours after the Capitol was breached. Wyoming's other delegation members (Barrasso and Cheney) had declined to back Trump's efforts, calling them unconstitutional.",
"category": "reversal"
},
{
"bill_id": "H.R. 8404",
"title": "Respect for Marriage Act — Federal protection for same-sex and interracial marriages; codifies marriage equality",
"vote": "yea",
"vote_date": "2022-11-29",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.wyomingnews.com/news/local_news/wyoming-gop-passes-resolution-condemning-lummis-for-same-sex-marriage-vote/article_f0675ac0-acc8-11ed-9095-77053cfa0e7e.html",
"why_it_matters": "One of only 12 Republican senators to support marriage equality. The Wyoming GOP formally condemned her, county parties attempted censure, and the Wyoming Freedom Caucus asked her to reverse her vote. This was a rare moderate break from conservative orthodoxy that risked her standing with the state party base.",
"category": "party_defection"
},
{
"bill_id": "H.R. 1 (119th Congress)",
"title": "One Big Beautiful Bill Act — $4.5 trillion reconciliation package with Medicaid cuts, SNAP restrictions, permanent extension of 2017 tax cuts, and energy provisions",
"vote": "yea",
"vote_date": "2025-07-01",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/lummis-votes-to-secure-huge-wins-for-wyoming-in-one-big-beautiful-bill/",
"why_it_matters": "Passed 51-50 with VP Vance breaking the tie. Lummis celebrated the bill as securing 'huge wins for Wyoming,' touting its energy provisions and permanent tax cuts. She also pushed hard for a Bitcoin tax exemption amendment that was not included. Trump personally thanked her as one of four key senators for delivering the votes.",
"category": "donor_aligned"
},
{
"bill_id": "S. 5083 (118th Congress)",
"title": "Supplemental funding package — $95 billion in foreign aid to Ukraine, Israel, Palestine, and Taiwan",
"vote": "nay",
"vote_date": "2024-04-24",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.lummis.senate.gov/press-releases/lummis-votes-against-foreign-aid-package/",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis opposed all versions of Ukraine aid, even one with border security. She called the spending 'unprecedented' and said it was not paid for. The entire Wyoming delegation (Lummis, Barrasso, Hageman) voted no. Critics called them 'the Neville Chamberlains of our time.'",
"category": "party_defection"
},
{
"bill_id": "H.R. 3684 (117th Congress)",
"title": "Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act — $1.2 trillion for roads, bridges, broadband, and water systems",
"vote": "nay",
"vote_date": "2021-08-10",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/3684",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis opposed the bipartisan infrastructure law. Wyoming's infrastructure needs are significant given its vast rural geography and 18.8-minute average commute time with 79.5% of workers driving alone. The state received substantial broadband and highway funding from this bill.",
"category": "against_constituent"
},
{
"bill_id": "H.R. 3746 (118th Congress)",
"title": "Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 — Suspended the debt ceiling, imposed spending limits, and averted a federal default",
"vote": "nay",
"vote_date": "2023-06-01",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/3746",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis opposed the bipartisan debt ceiling deal, aligning with the most fiscally conservative wing of her party. This vote underscored her willingness to risk default rather than accept what she considered insufficient spending restraint.",
"category": "party_defection"
},
{
"bill_id": "S.J.Res. 123 (119th Congress)",
"title": "War Powers Resolution — Would have directed the withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from hostilities involving Iran",
"vote": "nay",
"vote_date": "2026-04-15",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.dailywire.com/news/senate-move-to-halt-trumps-iran-war-comes-down-to-just-five-votes",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis voted against all four Democratic-led war powers resolutions to check Trump's Iran war, calling them 'exhausting' and saying they 'undermine the president.' Only one Republican (Rand Paul) crossed party lines. The vote was 52-47 against the resolution.",
"category": "party_defection"
},
{
"bill_id": "H.R. 1 (115th Congress)",
"title": "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017",
"vote": "yea",
"vote_date": "2017-12-20",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/1",
"why_it_matters": "As a House member at the time, Lummis was not yet in the Senate. Her consistent support for tax cuts aligns with her fiscal conservative record and her 2025 vote for the One Big Beautiful Bill which made those tax cuts permanent.",
"category": "donor_aligned"
},
{
"bill_id": "S. ___ / GENIUS Act (2025)",
"title": "Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act — First federal regulatory framework for payment stablecoins",
"vote": "co-sponsored",
"vote_date": "2025-05-13",
"roll_call_url": "https://wyofile.com/lummis-allegiance-to-trump-led-to-crypto-bills-demise/",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis co-sponsored this landmark crypto bill as chair of the Digital Assets Subcommittee. The GENIUS Act failed a key Senate vote after Democrats — led by Elizabeth Warren — raised concerns that the bill would facilitate corruption by the Trump family's USD1 stablecoin. WyoFile argued Lummis' allegiance to Trump led to the bill's demise.",
"category": "donor_aligned"
},
{
"bill_id": "S. ___ / BITCOIN Act of 2025",
"title": "BITCOIN Act — Would direct Treasury to purchase 1 million BTC over 5 years with a 20-year holding period, leveraging Federal Reserve remittances",
"vote": "sponsored",
"vote_date": "2025-03-12",
"roll_call_url": "https://www.benzinga.com/markets/cryptocurrency/25/08/48160200/cynthia-lummis-backs-scott-bessents-commitment-to-build-bitcoin-reserve-without-burdening-us-taxpayers-i-have-a-bill-for-that",
"why_it_matters": "Lummis' signature legislation. MSNBC's Chris Hayes warned the bill could transfer $100 billion from taxpayers to Bitcoin owners — a category that includes Lummis. Critics note she chairs the Digital Assets Subcommittee while holding personal Bitcoin and having a son-in-law in the Bitcoin industry.",
"category": "donor_aligned"
}
],
"constituency_baseline": {
"baseline": {
"district_summary": "Wyoming is the least populous state in the nation with approximately 582,397 residents. As a Senator, Lummis represents the entire state at-large. The state is 81.4% White (Non-Hispanic) with a 10.7% Hispanic population, a median age of 39.1, and a median household income of $76,176 — slightly below the national median of $78,538. The poverty rate is 10.5%, homeownership is 71.8%, and median property value is $309,700. Only 28.4% of adults hold a bachelor's degree. The economy is dominated by mining and natural resources (coal, oil, gas, uranium), tourism (Yellowstone, Grand Teton), agriculture (cattle ranching), and manufacturing. Wyoming has the highest percentage of energy-related jobs in the nation (fuel sector: 22,532 jobs). The state is overwhelmingly Republican, last voting Democratic for president in 1964. Lummis has served as senator since 2021, previously serving as Wyoming's at-large House representative (2009–2017) and as State Treasurer. The state has no individual or corporate income tax and relies heavily on mineral severance taxes for government revenue.",
"top_employers": [
{
"name": "University of Wyoming",
"employees": 3000,
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"name": "Wyoming Medical Center (Cheyenne)",
"employees": 1500,
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"name": "Sinclair Companies (Sinclair, WY)",
"employees": 500,
"source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/person/summary?cid=N00029788"
},
{
"name": "Peabody Energy (North Antelope Rochelle Mine)",
"employees": 1300,
"source_url": "https://www.wrightwyoming.com"
},
{
"name": "Arch Resources (Black Thunder Mine)",
"employees": 1200,
"source_url": "https://www.wrightwyoming.com"
}
],
"dominant_industries": [
{
"naics": "21 (Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction — coal, oil, natural gas, uranium)",
"share": 11.5,
"source_url": "https://ourcommunitynow.com/local-news/wyoming-has-highest-percentage-of-energy-related-jobs-in-nation"
},
{
"naics": "11 (Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting — cattle ranching, hay, sugar beets)",
"share": 5.2,
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"naics": "62 (Health Care and Social Assistance)",
"share": 12.3,
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"naics": "72 (Accommodation and Food Services — tourism, Yellowstone, Grand Teton)",
"share": 10.9,
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
}
],
"recent_ballot_measures": [
{
"name": "Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A (2024) — Property Tax on Residential Property and Owner-Occupied Primary Residences Amendment",
"year": 2024,
"result": "passed",
"margin": "59% Yes (146,336) — 41% No (100,392)",
"source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/Wyoming_2024_ballot_measures"
},
{
"name": "Wyoming Medical Marijuana Initiative (2024) — Authorize medical marijuana program",
"year": 2024,
"result": "failed (did not qualify)",
"margin": "Did not appear on ballot; insufficient signatures",
"source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/Wyoming_Medical_Marijuana_Initiative_(2024)"
}
],
"demographic_anchors": [
{
"label": "Population (2024)",
"value": "582,397 — least populous U.S. state",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Median Household Income",
"value": "$76,176 (vs. $78,538 national median)",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Poverty Rate",
"value": "10.5% (vs. 12.4% nationally)",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Homeownership Rate",
"value": "71.8% (vs. 65.5% nationally); median property value $309,700",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Bachelor's Degree or Higher",
"value": "28.4% (vs. 33.7% nationally)",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Racial/Ethnic Composition",
"value": "White (Non-Hispanic) 81.4%, Hispanic 10.7%, Two or More Races 3.6%, Native American 2.7% (Wind River Reservation), Black 1.1%",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Energy Sector Employment",
"value": "22,532 fuel sector jobs (6,867 coal, 8,887 oil/petroleum); highest percentage of energy-related jobs in the U.S.",
"source_url": "https://ourcommunitynow.com/local-news/wyoming-has-highest-percentage-of-energy-related-jobs-in-nation"
},
{
"label": "Veteran Population",
"value": "Approximately 46,000 veterans; Vietnam-era: 14,001 (largest cohort); Gulf War-era: 10,535",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "Foreign-Born Population",
"value": "3.5% (20,400 people), well below national average of 14%",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
},
{
"label": "2024 Presidential Vote (Wyoming)",
"value": "Trump: approximately 70% — Harris: approximately 27% (most Republican state in the nation in 2024)",
"source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/wyoming"
}
]
}
}
}