FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 22, 2024 CONTACT: Michael Pearlman, Communications Director ? Michael Coleman, Communications Director Office of Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham ? Governor Gordon and Governor Lujan Grisham Take Part in National Governors Association ?Disagree Better? Initiative CHEYENNE, Wyo. ? Governor Mark Gordon and New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham announced they have come together to participate in the National Governors Association (NGA) Disagree Better Initiative. The two Governors, who have collaborated on policy initiatives as Chairman and Vice Chair of the Western Governors Association, recently sat down to share a message of working together to get the job done. ?Wyoming and New Mexico are both Western states with similar economies, but our politics can be very different,? Governor Gordon said. ?While we may disagree on a number of issues, Governor Lujan Grisham and I have been able to find common ground in places by showing respect for one another when we approach an issue from different perspectives. We have been able to get good work done, and that?s why I look forward to discussing challenging topics with the Governor. We are both willing to listen. We are both willing to kid one another, and I believe these are qualities that have made our nation great.? ?At a time of deep partisan division in our nation, Gov. Gordon and I would like to remind our fellow Americans that the best way to resolve our differences and find common ground is by communicating respectfully with one another,? Governor Lujan Grisham said. ?Gov. Gordon and I sit on opposite sides of the political aisle, but as western governors we also share some common interests and goals. If all of us could strive to ?disagree better? it would elevate our discourse and make our country stronger.? Watch ?this short video to view the conversation between the two Governors: About the Disagree Better Initiative Disagree Better is a yearlong NGA initiative to help Americans learn the skills of healthy conflict. The effort aims to change the political behavior of both voters and elected officials, showing that the right kind of conflict often leads to better policy, can be more successful politically than negative campaigning, and is the pathway to restoring trust in our political institutions. https://www.nga.org/disagree-better/ -END- ? ?
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