Bob Nicholas

American politician

  • 8th district (2011–2023)
  • 7th district (2023–present)
Personal detailsBorn (1957-10-14) October 14, 1957 (age 66)
Lander, Wyoming, U.S.Political partyRepublicanSpouseWidowerChildren3Alma materUniversity of Wyoming
University of Wyoming College of LawOccupationLawyer; BusinessmanWebsiteState Legislature Page

Robert A. Nicholas (born October 14, 1957) is an American Republican politician. He is currently a member of the Wyoming House of Representatives from the 7th district. A lawyer by profession, Nicholas was first elected from the 8th district in November 2010, taking office early the next year.

Early life and career

Born in Lander, Wyoming,[1] Nicholas graduated from the University of Wyoming with a bachelor's degree in political science in 1982, followed three years later with a degree from the University of Wyoming College of Law.[2]

Political career

Nicholas first ran for the 8th district in 2008 and lost to the incumbent Lori Millin, 2,438 votes to 2,271, but he succeeded two years later.[3] He was unopposed in the 2010 primary and beat Democrat Ken McCauley 1,950 votes to 1,635.[4] He is a member of the House Judiciary Committee.[5] During his campaign, he emphasized economic growth, smaller government and environmental protections as his priorities, and he also wanted to push for a pilot charter school in Laramie County.[citation needed]

On November 23, 2011, Nicholas was arrested in Boca Grande, Florida on the felony charge that he had assaulted his 19-year-old, mentally disabled son outside a restaurant.[6] The charges were subsequently dropped upon review by the Florida State Attorney's office because of "insufficient evidence".[6]

Nicholas considers himself a fiscal conservative who supports cuts in the state bureaucracy and increases in the rainy day fund to an amount equal to two years of current state spending. "There is no government agency that will not spend all that you give it, and it's hard as a legislator, if you see a pot of money there, not to spend it. So I'm a strong advocate of saving any monies that we possibly can," Nicholas told the Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Nevertheless, he indicated that he could support a small increase in the gasoline tax to fund highway projects.[7]

In 2012, Nicholas worked on a juvenile justice bill that would increase the confidentiality for young persons charged in criminal cases. He was reported as supporting changes in the educational system with less reliance on standardized testing: "We just have to do more than test-based criteria. It has to be more comprehensive than that."[7]

Nicholas was opposed in the August 2012 Republican primary by Keith Eldred and Margaret Wall. In the general election Nicholas faced Kathleen Peterson.[7]

Personal life

A widower, Nicholas has three children.[1] He is a Catholic and lives in Cheyenne.[1] State senator Phil Nicholas is his brother.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Biography: Biography Biography Representative Bob Nicholas". Project Vote Smart. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  2. ^ "Legislator Information: Representative Bob Nicholas". Wyoming State Legislature. Archived from the original on February 19, 2011. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  3. ^ Van Cassell, Michael. "Millin keeps seat, vows to work on smoking ban". Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Archived from the original on February 10, 2013. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  4. ^ "Statewide House Candidates Summary" (PDF). Secretary of State of Wyoming. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  5. ^ "Legislator Information: Committees". Wyoming State Legislature. Retrieved December 11, 2011.[dead link]
  6. ^ a b Brown, Trevor (December 15, 2011). "Charges dropped against Nicholas". Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Retrieved December 18, 2011.
  7. ^ a b c "Aerin Curtis, "Nicholas running for reelection in House District 8"". Wyoming Tribune Eagle, June 11, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  8. ^ "Editorial: Millin willing to provide leadership for House 8". Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Archived from the original on February 10, 2013. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
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67th Legislature (2023)
Speaker of the House
Albert Sommers (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Clark Stith (R)
Majority Leader
Chip Neiman (R)
Minority Leader
Mike Yin (D)
  1. Chip Neiman (R)
  2. Allen Slagle (R)
  3. Abby Angelos (R)
  4. Jeremy Haroldson (R)
  5. Scott Smith (R)
  6. Tomi Strock (R)
  7. Bob Nicholas (R)
  8. David Zwonitzer (R)
  9. Landon Brown (R)
  10. John Eklund Jr. (R)
  11. Jared Olsen (R)
  12. Clarence Styvar (R)
  13. Ken Chestek (D)
  14. Trey Sherwood (D)
  15. Donald Burkhart (R)
  16. Mike Yin (D)
  17. J.T. Larson (R)
  18. Scott Heiner (R)
  19. Jon Conrad (R)
  20. Albert Sommers (R)
  21. Lane Allred (R)
  22. Andrew Byron (R)
  23. Liz Storer (D)
  24. Sandy Newsome (R)
  25. David Northrup (R)
  26. Dalton Banks (R)
  27. Martha Lawley (R)
  28. John Winter (R)
  29. Ken Pendergraft (R)
  30. Mark Jennings (R)
  31. John Bear (R)
  32. Ken Clouston (R)
  33. Sarah Penn (R)
  34. Pepper Ottman (R)
  35. Tony Locke (R)
  36. Art Washut (R)
  37. Steve Harshman (R)
  38. Tom Walters (R)
  39. Cody Wylie (R)
  40. Barry Crago (R)
  41. Bill Henderson (R)
  42. Ben Hornok (R)
  43. Dan Zwonitzer (R)
  44. Tamara Trujillo (R)
  45. Karlee Provenza (D)
  46. Ocean Andrew (R)
  47. Bob Davis (R)
  48. Clark Stith (R)
  49. Ryan Berger (R)
  50. Rachel Rodriguez-Williams (R)
  51. Cyrus Western (R)
  52. Reuben Tarver (R)
  53. Chris Knapp (R)
  54. Lloyd Larsen (R)
  55. Ember Oakley (R)
  56. Jerry Obermueller (R)
  57. Jeanette Ward (R)
  58. Bill Allemand (R)
  59. Kevin O'Hearn (R)
  60. Tony Niemiec (R)
  61. Daniel Singh (R)
  62. Forrest Chadwick (R)