Wyoming’s Carbon County Republican Party Unanimously Passes Resolution Harshly Condemning Rep. Cheney Jr.

On January 18 U.S. media outlet Gateway Pundit reported that Liz Cheney, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney (R-TX), holds the Republican House Conference Chair, the third highest Republican position in the House of Representatives. Shockingly, rumors are circulating that she was placed in the Republican House Conference Chair position by former Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) in order to continue to allow deep government Republicans to undermine President Trump‘s administration.

On Jan. 13, Rep. Cheney Jr. voted to impeach President Trump, but this impeachment went through no normal process and was based solely on false accusations that Trump sparked a riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6. Cheney Jr. announced her decision to support the impeachment as chairman of the House Republican Conference at the time.

The resolution to censure Rep. Cheney Jr. was formally adopted last Saturday (Jan. 16) at a meeting of the Carbon County (Wyoming) Republican Committee. Joey Correnti IV, chairman of the Carbon County Republican Party, who attended the meeting, said this is the first formal action taken by a Republican committee at any level across the United States against a member of the House of Representatives who supports the impeachment of President Trump.

The Carbon County Republican Committee’s resolution finds that, as chair of the House Republican Conference and a member of the Freedom Caucus, Cheney Jr. violated the rules of the caucus and the spirit and expected posture expected to be performed in those positions by disclosing to the media that she would join the Democratic Party in impeaching President Trump without any evidence of high crimes and misdemeanors to support the impeachment.

The Carbon County Republican Committee said that the vast majority of voters in Carbon County voted for President Trump, and most voters also voted for Rep. Cheney Jr. but not nearly as many votes as voted for President Trump. Representatives are supposed to represent the desires, values and preferences of the people in their districts. Rep. Cheney Jr., however, undermined the trust placed in her by her constituents, failed to faithfully represent the vast majority of voters in Carbon County, neglected her duty to represent the Republican Party, and acted against the wishes of the constituents she represented. The consequences of Cheney Jr.’s actions have caused many Republicans in Carbon County and Wyoming to say that as long as Cheney Jr. is in office, they will either not actively participate in the Republican Party, or they will step down from their constituency representative positions or change their voter registration to leave the Republican Party altogether.

Based on the above facts, the Carbon County Republican Party makes the resolution that the Carbon County Republican Party severely condemns the actions of Congressman Cheney Jr. representing Wyoming in voting for the impeachment of President Trump on January 13. The action went against the will of the vast majority of Carbon County voters, devalued Wyoming’s political influence, and voted for an impeachment without a hearing process, without evidentiary support, without witness testimony, and without cross-examination of the charges.

A further resolution made by the Carbon County Republican Party is that Rep. Cheney Jr. must appear at the next Carbon County Republican Committee meeting to explain her actions to the Wyoming Republican Party and to the voters of Carbon County, regarding her actions.

The Carbon County Republican Committee’s resolution also mentions that there is no evidence that President Trump has called for violence against political opponents; in contrast, Rep. Cheney Jr.’s new leftist political partners are constantly calling for armed insurrection, destruction of public and private property, and raising bail money for insurgents.

The resolution also specifically states that FBI sources say there is evidence that Antifa and Black Lives Matter extremists were ready to storm the Capitol weeks before President Trump’s speech on January 6.