2010 election in 2011 In 2010, Mead won the Republican gubernatorial primary with 30,272 votes, defeating State Auditor
Rita Meyer, who polled 29,558 votes, despite Meyer's endorsement by former
Alaska governor Sarah Palin.
Fort Bridger rancher
Ron Micheli finished third (27,592 votes) and
State House Speaker Colin M. Simpson was fourth (16,673 votes). With Freudenthal not running for a third term, because of term limits, Mead was a heavy favorite in the
general election; Wyoming is heavily Republican. Mead's campaign emphasized his support for gun rights. He opposed
gay marriage and abortion, but stated that there should be exceptions to allow an abortion when the woman's health or life is at stake and in cases of rape and incest. On November 2, 2010, Mead easily defeated
Leslie Petersen, the former chairwoman of the
Wyoming Democratic Party, receiving 65.68% of the vote to Petersen's 22.94%.
2014 election In late January 2013, Wyoming Superintendent of Public Instruction
Cindy Hill, a Republican, announced that she would be a candidate in Wyoming's 2014 governor's race. A
Tea Party favorite, Hill would face Mead in the Republican primary on August 19, 2014. Earlier in January, Mead had signed legislation sharply reducing the responsibilities of Hill's office, making the position largely ceremonial. Mead handily won re-nomination in the 2014 Republican primary, with 53,626 votes (55 percent), compared to Dr. Taylor Haynes' 31,490 (32 percent), and Hill's 12,443 (13 percent). In the November 4
general election, Mead handily defeated
Pete Gosar, the former Democratic Party state chairman and the brother of a Republican U.S. representative from Arizona,
Paul Gosar. In the same election, Republican
Jillian Balow, backed by Mead, won election to succeed Hill as the education superintendent.
Administration On October 26, 2012, Mead named
Buffalo, Wyoming, businessman and rancher
Mark Gordon as the
state treasurer, to succeed
Joseph B. Meyer, who died in office. On February 17, 2015, Mead vetoed legislation intended to prevent the state from permanently confiscating an individual's property through civil forfeiture until after a felony conviction had been attained. The legislation, Senate File 14, gained strong popular support and passed through the Wyoming Legislature, with majorities in excess of 2/3 in both houses. An attempt to override the veto failed. ==Personal life==