After just two years in Congress, Liz Cheney became the third House Republican.

Cheney became the face of the conservative wing of the GOP after she was removed from her position in May 2021.

Cheney's willingness to work with Democrats despite ideological differences has been shown by her work on the House committee. In a recent interview with The New York Times, the Wyoming lawmaker said that he preferred working with prominent female Democratic lawmakers with national security background than with controversial Republican congresswomen.

She told the newspaper that she has disagreements with the Democratic women, but that she would rather serve with them.

She said that they love this country, they do their homework, and they are trying to do the right thing for the country.

He was first elected to the House from a New Jersey district. A former Air Force officer and a former analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency were elected to congress in the same year.

Republican women who represent districts in Georgia and Colorado are some of the most high-profile GOP rookies. Both women have become national figures for railing against Democratic policies and aligning themselves with groups that support Donald Trump.

Cheney has a deep foreign policy background.

Dick Cheney served under George W. Bush while his daughter was a deputy assistant secretary of state. She was a principal deputy assistant secretary of state for the Middle East.

She has been critical of Republicans who have aligned themselves with figures sympathetic to Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling them the "Putin wing of the GOP."