Mark Gordon

Last updated

Sarah Hildreth Gilmore
(m. 1981;died 1993)
Jennie Muir
(m. 2000)
Mark Gordon
Mark Gordon 2022.jpg
33rd Governor of Wyoming
Assumed office
January 7, 2019
Children4
Residence Governor's Mansion
Education Middlebury College (BA)

Mark Gordon (born March 14, 1957) is an American politician serving as the 33rd governor of Wyoming since January 7, 2019. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as state treasurer; then-governor Matt Mead appointed him to that position on October 26, 2012, to fill the vacancy created by the death of Joseph Meyer.

Contents

Early life and education

Gordon was born in New York City, the son of Catherine (née Andrews) and Crawford Gordon. Gordon’s father grew up on Drumlin Farm, in Lincoln, Massachusetts. His parents married on October 27, 1945, at the First Unitarian Church of Kennebunk, Maine, before settling at their ranch in Kaycee, Wyoming, in 1947. [1]

Gordon’s paternal grandmother was the philanthropist Louise Ayer Hatheway. His paternal great-grandfather was the industrialist and mill magnate Frederick Ayer, founder of the American Woolen Company, and younger brother of the patent medicine tycoon James Cook Ayer, both of Lowell, Massachusetts.

He is a nephew of the socialite Jean Gordon. Gordon is also a great-nephew by marriage of General George S. Patton, and a first cousin once removed of General George Patton IV. [2] [3] He was raised on his family's ranch in Johnson County, Wyoming. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Middlebury College in 1979. [4]

Career

2008 congressional run

In 2008, Gordon was an unsuccessful candidate in the Republican primary for the United States House of Representatives for Wyoming's at-large congressional district seat held by Barbara Cubin, who was retiring. His main opponent was Cynthia Lummis, also a former state treasurer and the wife of a Democratic former state representative, Alvin Wiederspahn. [5] Former U.S. senator Alan K. Simpson of Cody, considered a moderate Republican, defended Gordon's candidacy but stopped short of an outright endorsement because he was also friendly with Lummis. Former U.S. senator Malcolm Wallop endorsed Gordon, as did the late Joseph B. Meyer, who was serving as state treasurer at the time. [6]

In the primary, Gordon garnered the endorsements of Wyoming's two most prominent statewide newspapers, The Casper Star-Tribune [7] and the Wyoming Tribune Eagle. [8] Though polls and the financial advantage rested with Gordon in the primary campaign, he lost the nomination to Lummis. [9]

Treasurer of Wyoming

Gordon was Treasurer of Wyoming from 2012 to 2019. He was sworn in as treasurer on November 1, 2012, by Wyoming Supreme Court Justice William Hill, [10] [11] after being selected by Governor Matt Mead. [5] [10]

Gordon was elected to a full term as treasurer in 2014. [10]

Governor of Wyoming

2018 election

Gordon declined to run for Cynthia Lummis's seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2016, the one he ran for in 2008, and instead ran for governor of Wyoming in 2018. He won the Republican primary on August 21 and the general election on November 6, defeating Democratic state representative Mary Throne. [12] Gordon was inaugurated on January 7, 2019.

2022 election

Gordon was reelected to a second term against Democratic nominee Theresa Livingston in the general election. [13]

Tenure

Gordon was sworn in on January 7, 2019.

Amid a November 2020 spike in coronavirus cases, Gordon imposed some restrictions on indoor and outdoor public gatherings. He did not implement curfews, temporarily close any businesses or initially impose a statewide mask mandate. [14] Gordon and his wife, Jennie Gordon, contracted COVID-19 later in the month. [15] In December 2020, Gordon imposed a statewide mask mandate. [16] In February 2021, he extended that order until the end of the month. [17] On March 8, 2021, he announced that he would lift the mask mandate on March 16. [18] On March 16, the mask mandate was lifted. [19] As of March 30, Gordon has no plans to reinstate the mask mandate. [20]

In November 2020, Gordon proposed $500 million in cuts to the Wyoming budget to account for declining revenue from the fossil fuel industry (particularly coal mining), which is crucial to Wyoming's economy. [21] On April 2, 2021, he signed a budget passed by the Wyoming legislature that cut $430 million instead of the $500 million Gordon proposed, [22] due to improved budget forecasts for the year of 2021 and supplemental money from the American Rescue Plan Act [23] signed by President Biden. The budget Gordon signed decreases the amount cut to the University of Wyoming and the Wyoming Department of Health.

In 2021, a New York Times investigation revealed that Gordon had been targeted by hard-right conservatives, such as Susan Gore, the heiress to the Gore-Tex fortune. Gore funded secret operatives who targeted Gordon. [24] Part of this is due to Gordon's investment in renewable energy and policy on climate change, which led to a vote of no confidence by the state party. [25] Gordon has embraced wind energy as a part of Wyoming's economic exports, such as the developing Chokecherry and Sierra Madre Wind Energy Project. [26]

As of 2022, Gordon often polls as one of the nation's most popular governors. [27] [28]

On March 7, 2024, Gordon banned Delta 8 hemp in Wyoming. [29] Sam Watt, a military veteran [30] who owns hemp stores is working with attorneys to save his business from Gordon’s measure. [31]

Personal life

Gordon met his first wife, the former Sarah Hildreth Gilmore, at Middlebury College. They married on March 7, 1981, in the Second Congregational Church in Greenfield, Massachusetts, where her parents resided. In 1993, she died in an automobile accident. [32] They had two daughters.

In 1998 Gordon met his current wife, the former Jennie Muir Young, and they married in 2000. Together they own the Merlin Ranch east of Buffalo in Johnson County, Wyoming. In 2009, their ranch received the Society for Range Management Wyoming Section "Excellence in Rangeland Stewardship" award. [33]

On November 25, 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Gordon tested positive for the virus on the same day his office was to be reopened, after an employee of his had tested positive earlier. Gordon's office remained closed temporarily for deep-cleaning after his diagnosis. [34]

Electoral history

Gordon in 2019 Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon 2019.jpg
Gordon in 2019
2008 United States House of Representatives election in Wyoming - Republican primary [35]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Cynthia Lummis 33,149 44.0
Republican Mark Gordon26,82735.7
Republican Bill Winney8,53711.4
Republican Michael Holland3,1714.2
n/a Under Votes2,8383.8
n/a Over Votes5090.7
Republican Write-ins1390.2
Total votes75,170 100.0
2014 Wyoming Treasurer - Republican primary [36]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon (incumbent) 72,095 72.6
n/a Under Votes17,06017.2
Republican Ron Redo9,94510.0
Republican Write-ins2060.2
n/a Over Votes60.0
Total votes99,312 100.0
2014 Wyoming Treasurer - General Election [37]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon (incumbent) 138,831 81.1
n/a Under Votes31,04418.1
Republican Write-ins1,2620.7
n/a Over Votes160.0
Total votes171,153 100.0
2018 Wyoming gubernatorial election - Republican primary [38]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon 38,951 33.0
Republican Foster Friess 29,84225.3
Republican Harriet Hageman 25,05221.2
Republican Sam Galeotos 14,55412.3
Republican Taylor Haynes 6,5115.5
Republican Bill Dahlin 1,7631.5
n/a Under Votes1,2691.1
Republican Write-ins1130.1
n/a Over Votes460.0
Total votes118,101 100.0
2018 Wyoming gubernatorial election - General election [39]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon 136,412 66.5
Democratic Mary Throne 55,96527.3
Constitution Rex Rammell 6,7513.3
Libertarian Lawrence Struempf3,0101.5
n/a Under Votes1,9661.0
n/a Write-ins1,1000.5
n/a Over Votes710.0
Total votes205,275 100.0
2022 Wyoming gubernatorial election - Republican primary [40]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon (incumbent) 101,140 58.8
Republican Brent Bien48,57228.2
Republican Rex Rammell 9,3785.5
n/a Under Votes7,6264.4
Republican James Scott Quick4,7282.7
Republican Write-ins5330.3
n/a Over Votes70
Total votes172,047 100.0
2022 Wyoming gubernatorial election - General election [41]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Republican Mark Gordon (incumbent) 143,696 72.5
Democratic Theresa Livingston30,68615.5
n/a Write-ins11,4615.8
Libertarian Jared Baldes8,1574.1
n/a Under Votes4,1072.1
n/a Over Votes910.0
Total votes198,198 100.0

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References

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  2. "Harvard Alumni Bulletin". December 8, 1945. Retrieved December 8, 2020 via Google Books.
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  18. "Wyoming will lift mask mandate next week". Casper Star Tribune. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
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Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of Wyoming
2012–2019
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Wyoming
2019–present
Incumbent
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Wyoming
2018, 2022
Most recent
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Vice President Order of precedence of the United States
Within Wyoming
Succeeded by
Mayor of city
in which event is held
Succeeded by
Otherwise Mike Johnson
as Speaker of the House
Preceded byas Governor of Idaho Order of precedence of the United States
Outside Wyoming
Succeeded byas Governor of Utah