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If you thought Wyoming politics was all polite handshakes and cowboy hats… Thursday’s State Land Board meeting would like a word.
Things went off the rails fast when Mark Gordon and Chuck Gray squared off (again) over affordable housing—and whether citizenship checks should be required for people receiving state-backed housing support.
At one point, in what can only be described as a rare live mic moment, Gordon cut off Gray mid-argument with a blunt: “Stop! Shut up!” before suggesting they take the conversation outside.
Yes, really.
Gray had introduced an amendment requiring housing applicants associated with state-funded projects to be verified as U.S. citizens through a federal system. Gordon ruled the proposal out of order earlier in the meeting, which didn’t exactly cool tensions.
Gray, not one to let things simmer quietly, reportedly fired off a press release during the meeting criticizing the decision. Because of course he did.
This wasn’t a one-off disagreement; it’s the latest chapter in an increasingly public feud between two of Wyoming’s top Republicans.
The exchange happened during discussions about “attainable housing” projects across the state—one of the more pressing (and politically tricky) issues right now, especially in places like Jackson Hole where “attainable” and “housing” rarely appear in the same sentence.
But instead of policy nuance, the headline became something closer to a reality TV reunion episode.
Behind the viral moment is a real divide:
That policy clash is now spilling into very public and very human moments.
And if this is “Round 2,” it’s safe to assume we’re nowhere near the final bell.
Wyoming politics doesn’t usually come with popcorn-worthy moments… but here we are.
Between press releases mid-meeting, raised voices, and a governor telling a statewide elected official to “shut up,” it’s clear one thing is changing:
👉 The tone.
And with major elections looming and housing still a third-rail issue across the state, don’t expect things to quiet down anytime soon.
AntlersArch founder and the voice behind Teton Tattle.
The federal government has had it’s foot on Wyoming’s neck long enough. This needs to change. Let Wyoming take care of it’s own interests!