Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming just dropped a political bombshell by announcing she won’t run for a second term in 2026, Breitbart reported.
After serving in the U.S. House and then the Senate since 2021, Lummis revealed on Friday her decision to step away, citing the grueling demands of recent Senate sessions while pledging to push key legislation and Republican unity until her term ends.
Having cut her teeth in Congress before moving to the Senate, Lummis has been a steadfast voice for Wyoming’s interests.
She admitted the relentless pace of the job has taken its toll, stating she lacks the stamina for another full term.
“I am a devout legislator, but I feel like a sprinter in a marathon,” Lummis wrote, acknowledging her shift in perspective on reelection.
That’s a candid confession—Senate work isn’t for the faint-hearted, and her honesty about burnout is a rare glimpse behind the curtain of political life.
Throughout her tenure, Lummis has been a fierce advocate for energy policy, particularly during the Trump administration’s drive for American energy independence.
She celebrated milestones like the opening of the Brook Mine, describing it as a “triumph” for curbing U.S. reliance on China for critical minerals.
Wyoming, as she often highlighted, exports far more energy than it uses, playing a pivotal role in national priorities like powering artificial intelligence advancements.
Lummis expressed deep appreciation for colleagues like Senator John Barrasso and Representative Harriet Hageman, crediting their shared focus on Wyoming’s needs.
She’s not coasting to the finish line either, vowing to collaborate with President Trump on significant legislation in 2026.
Her commitment to maintaining Republican control of the Senate shows she’s still in the fight, even if it’s her final round.
Beyond energy, Lummis has been vocal about government overreach, especially after learning the FBI accessed her phone records in 2023 under the Biden administration’s Department of Justice.
She didn’t mince words, calling it an assault on constitutional rights and pushing for investigations alongside Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley.
Her warnings about encrypted FBI systems hiding further abuses add a chilling layer to her critique of federal overreach—clearly, she’s not bowing out quietly on issues of liberty.
