Disagree Better. That’s the name of an interesting initiative at the National Governors Association this year, spearheaded by the organization’s current chair, Utah Republican Gov. Spencer Cox. The idea, in
Disagree Better. That’s the name of an interesting initiative at the National Governors Association this year, spearheaded by the organization’s current chair, Utah Republican Gov. Spencer Cox. The idea, in
During an event Wednesday, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore joined religious and political leaders as they cut through today’s political divisiveness. Read more about how they’re trying to bring Americans together
Although they're from different parties, Cox and Moore have also struck up a friendship, and it was what led the two governors to come together to speak side by side, where they praised each other, and sought shared connection despite their differences — Cox, a self-described farm boy from Utah, and Moore, the first Black governor of Maryland — and all but pleaded with Americans to do better. They spoke at a forum held at the soaring National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., filled with more than 800 people, while another 1,800 attendees watched online.