Becky Lockhart served in the
Utah House of Representatives for sixteen years. She announced in 2014 that she would not be seeking reelection that year, and pundits claimed that she may have been focusing her efforts on running in the
2016 Utah gubernatorial election. During the 2013 and 2014 legislative sessions, Lockhart served on a variety of committees, including the Executive Appropriations Committee, the House Legislative Expense Oversight Committee, the Administrative Rules Review Committee, the Legislative Management Committee, and the Legislative Audit Subcommittee. She also served on the Commission on Federalism, the Education Task Force, the Subcommittee on Oversight, and the Utah Constitutional Revision Commission.
Pivotal legislation HB 131S03, the Public Education Modernization Act, was particularly controversial. The proposed legislation called for $200–$300 million in state funds to replace textbooks with tablet computers in the state's classrooms. The bill was essentially killed in budget negotiations. Among other projects while in the state legislature, Lockhart pushed for a radar at
Provo Municipal Airport. She also proposed a revised tax system that would greatly increase the amount of taxes levied by Utah on chewing tobacco.
HB477 Republican leadership controversy At the close of the 2011 Utah legislative session, there was open concern expressed by one representative that, under Republican Party Leadership (who had a large majority in both houses), legislators were pressured to vote for HB477, which denied the public access to certain forms of government communication. There was vast public outcry over the bill which was hurriedly presented and passed under her, and other Republican leaders' oversight. ==Death==