A new U.S. Department of Agriculture rule that will require all sexually intact cattle and bison moving across state lines to be tagged with electronically readable tags has raised the ire of U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming.
Hageman has long opposed the rule that was finalized Friday requiring tags to be both visually and electronically readable. It applies to intact cattle and bison 18 months or older, all dairy cattle, and show and rodeo cattle and bison of any age.
From border security to public land use to government agency overreach, U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman’s recent Fremont County town hall spanned issues important to Wyoming and provided some insight into the work she’s done during her first term.
As part of her campaign pledge to visit every county every year while serving in Congress, Hageman held a town hall in Dubois at the National Museum of Military Vehicles Wednesday, when she heard from residents both concerned about the direction of the federal government and grateful for her leadership.
Appearing in Rawlins on Tuesday evening, Wyoming’s freshman congresswoman says she’s “horrified” by the corruption of our federal government.
On Tuesday evening in Rawlins, Congresswoman Harriet Hageman addressed a crowd of over 100 people during a town hall discussion at the Jeffery Center.
Rep. Harriet Hageman R-Wyo. told Newsmax on Saturday that "the Senate is a failure. It’s Chuck Schumer. What he did is just an absolute travesty and a tragedy, but the American people are better off knowing what Biden and Mayorkas have done."
A new bill moving through Congress aims to prevent the U.S. Postal Service from removing all of a state’s big mail processing services.
Wyoming’s congressional delegation has joined forces to fight back against the Postal Service’s “Delivering for America” plan with a bipartisan bill in both the Senate and House that seeks to prevent the U.S. Postal Service from eliminating all of a state’s major processing facilities.
U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman was one of the 11 House Republicans to make the ceremonial walk across the Capitol on Tuesday to deliver articles of impeachment charges against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.
Congresswoman Harriet Hageman understands the complexities of Carbon County because she is no stranger to the area. In her earlier years, she once lived in Carbon County.
“I actually lived at Walcott Junction one summer when I was paving the highway at I-80 to Hanna,” Hageman said. “Also, for a period of time that summer, I lived on the third floor of the Hotel Wolf.”
She got to know all parts of Carbon County.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyo., told Newsmax that if the Senate doesn't hold an impeachment trial for Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, it will show the political establishment is "corrupt."
“I want to know what’s on your mind,” said U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-WY) during her annual town hall Thursday in Powell.
During the event, she was asked a question about Chinese hacking of American infrastructure.
“I think that every decision that Joe Biden makes about the Chinese Communist Party is because of the work that his son did for the Chinese Communist Party,” she said.
Hageman added, “I think that every decision that he makes about Ukraine, is because of the work his son did for Ukraine.”
Rep. Harriet Hageman in March introduced a bill that seeks to enhance protections for pilots attempting off-airport landings.
House Resolution 7660, the Backcountry Aviation Protection Act, provides protection for certified pilots performing established training and FAA-recommended safety maneuvers to prepare for off-airport landings, according to a press release from Hageman’s office.