Montana Freedom Caucus | |
|---|---|
| Chairman | Jerry Schillinger |
| Founded | January 2023 |
| Split from | House Republican Caucus |
| Ideology | |
| Political position | |
| National affiliation | Republican Party |
| Website | |
| https://mtfreedomcaucus.com/ | |
TheMontana Freedom Caucus is a legislativecaucus in theMontana legislature that seeks to advance conservative policies such as limited governance and a traditional social agenda on issues such as crime, immigration, public welfare, and abortion. It is affiliated with theState Freedom Caucus Network. Its members all belong to theRepublican Party.
In an effort to promote ultra-conservative policies in state legislatures, theConservative Partnership Institute launched the State Freedom Caucus Network, which provides training and resources to state lawmakers who launch or join a Freedom Caucus in their state legislature.[1] In January 2023, a group of 14 Montana lawmakers announced the creation of the Montana chapter.[2]
The founding chairwoman, SenatorTheresa Manzella, said the Caucus will "stand on the founding principles of the supremacy of individual rights, limited government, and personal responsibility" and seek to "rein in federal overreach".[2] The group also listed election reform, blocking foreign ownership of land, advancing parental rights, judicial reform, tax reform, andschool choice as core initiatives.[3] Montana U.S. representativeMatt Rosendale, a member of theHouse Freedom Caucus in the United StatesHouse of Representatives backed the group, calling it the "tip of the spear" in the state's conservative agenda and fight against "the radical left".[3]
Republicans have a supermajority in the state legislature, though Caucus members are said to be the "most conservative" in the Republican Caucus.[3]
The Caucus publicly criticizes Republican lawmakers it views as not sufficiently conservative. The Caucus published a list of Representatives that it believes are insufficiently conservative, labelling them the "Dirty Dozen."[4] In another instance, the caucus reposted recordings of robocalls that targeted Rep.Llew Jones, a member of the "Dirty Dozen", telling voters in his district that he was "gobbling up tax dollars to pay for more public spending."[4] Caucus Chairman Rep.Jerry Schillinger said Jones and other lawmakers that worked with Democrats "disrespected what their voters thought they were getting in a conservative majority in the Senate to carry out a conservative agenda." and that Jones advocated a "big government agenda"[4] Jones defended his actions, primarily his vote for a billion-dollar state trust, as advantageous for his district and in-line with conservative values.
Following GovernorGreg Gianforte's 2025 "state of the state" address, the caucus gave a rebuttal speech arguing in favor of spending reductions, a policy it claims the governor and Senate Republicans fail to advance.[5] Rep.Brad Barker accused the Freedom Caucus of advancing out-of-state interests and being disinterested in "good governance" but "in controlling" the state's legislative process and attacking "Republicans who prioritize fiscal responsibility" in the process.[6]
Manzella called the Party primaries leading up to the2024 General Assembly elections "the ugliest primary season she's gone through."[7] She defended her seat against a more mainstream opponent.
The Caucus criticized several Republican lawmakers for voting in a manner aligned with Democratic members. These Republicans have been called "the Nine", and have been accused of undermining the Republican Party's majority in the state Senate by establishing a working majority with the Chamber's 18 Democratic members.[5][8] This working majority rejected the Senate's Republican leadership's rules package, a result the caucus said handed control of the Senate to Democrats.[9]
One member of "the Nine", Sen. Shelley Vance, said the Caucus is generating "loud noise" about her beliefs, but that she supports much of what the caucus does.[8] Vance has denied the Caucus' claims that "the Nine" made a backroom deal with Democrats to seize control of the Chamber, but that she is only aligning with Democrats on an issue-by-issue basis and according to her values.
During the state Party's June 2025 convention, the Caucus encouraged delegates to vote to prohibit "the Nine" from voting in the party's leadership elections. The vote passed with a 136-to-97 margin.[10] Vance and other Senators of "the Nine", sued the state Party, arguing they weredisenfranchised because the Party's rules authorize a vote for all state legislators. The Party's leadership argued the Party has a First Amendment right "to manage its affairs as it sees fit, including censuring and expelling members".[10]
The caucus has been accused of seeking to take power of the state party, local county parties and their central committees.[11] Following changes in the Party's by-laws made during the June 2025 convention, local central committees were told to postpone local conventions and officer elections until December 2026. A non-freedom caucus Republican sued his local county's committee that followed the postponement, saying it violated state law. A state court agreed and ordered the Committee to hold an election for its officers.[11]
The caucus opposedCitizen Initiative 127, which would have required candidates for state and federal office to receive a majority share of votes, rather than a plurality.[12] The Initiative was rejected, with 60% of voters voting "no".
Members of the caucus have opposed expansion of Medicaid in the state, an effort supported by mainline Republicans. Manzella identified this issue as a splitting point between caucus members and other Republicans.[7]
In April 2025, the caucus opposed Gov. Gianforte's property tax reform, which aimed to lower property taxes for owner-occupied and long-term rentals, claiming that the bill would result in increased rates for businesses and second homes.[13] The Caucus blamed Democrats and "the Nine" for the bill's passage, which a majority of Republican opposed.[10]
During the 2023–24 legislative session, Caucus member Sen.Carl Glimm introduced a bill that would define "sex" as male and female in state law.[14] In opposition, transgender state lawmaker Rep. Zooey Zephyr accused supporters of the law, mostly Republicans, as having "blood on [their] hands".[14] In response, the speaker of the House barred Zephyr from speaking in the chamber until an apology was given. The caucus expressed support for the speaker's decision.
Caucus membership is not public, but members may disclose their association, if they wish.[2] It claimed to have fourteen members at the time of its launch in January 2023.[15]