A voter drops off their ballot at the Salt Lake County Government Center in Salt Lake City as votes are cast in Utah’s primary election on Tuesday, June 25, 2024. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch)
First results from Utah’s Republican primary election show Rep. John Curtis in the lead of a four-way race to take Mitt Romney’s seat in the U.S. Senate.
Curtis had 53% of the vote as the polls closed at 8 p.m., followed by Riverton Mayor Trent Staggs with 26%.
Former House Speaker Brad Wilson had 14%, and businessman Jason Walton had 6%.
Awaiting the winner this November is Caroline Gleich, professional mountaineer and environmental activist, who won the Democratic nomination in April. Gleich will have a steep hill to climb, however, as bright red Utah hasn’t sent a Democrat to the Senate since the ’70s.
Also on the ballot is Carlton Bowen, Independent American Party of Utah, and Democrat Laird Hamblin, who is running a write-in campaign.
Like other statewide races playing out in Utah’s primary election, the Senate contest is a tug-of-war between the establishment arm of the state’s Republican party and a more strident faction preferring former President Donald Trump’s style of politics.
At the party’s convention in April, 69% of delegates chose Trump-endorsed Staggs over Curtis after several rounds of voting. Curtis, Walton and Wilson secured their spots in the primary through signature gathering.
Curtis — who makes no secret of his belief that conservatives can care about the environment, too — presented himself in a debate earlier this month as an experienced and pragmatic leader who knows how to work with both moderates in Congress and the former president, should he return to the White House.
Meanwhile, Stags made it clear he’s ready to support Trump, including repeating unproven claims that the previous election was plagued by fraud, and promised to fight establishment politics in Washington.
Wilson and Walton also expressed support for Trump in the debate, though Wilson wants to take the “Utah Way” of respectful politics to Congress. Walton pledged to use his business acumen to rein in federal spending.
Congressional District 2
In a battle of endorsements, newcomer Rep. Celeste Maloy is fighting to hang on to her seat against veteran Colby Jenkins in Utah’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes a slice of Salt Lake and Davis counties on the Wasatch Front and stretches to the state’s western and southern borders.
Maloy held 56% of the vote as initial votes were released, to Jenkins’ 44%.
Whichever candidate secures the GOP nomination for the November ballot will face Democrat Nathaniel Woodward, Constitution Party Candidate Cassie Easley, or unaffiliated candidate Tyler Murset.
Maloy, who served as legislative counsel to former Rep. Chris Stewart, won his seat with her boss’ blessing just last November after Stewart stepped down due to illness in his family, ending 11 years in Congress.
But by April, Maloy had drawn criticism from Utah Sen. Mike Lee, apparently over her vote in support of a bipartisan $1.2 trillion spending package to fund the federal government. Though he didn’t name Maloy, Lee blasted Republicans who he said were advancing the agendas of the Biden administration and Democrats, and gave his endorsement to Jenkins on the eve of Utah’s Republican nominating convention.
Jenkins led Maloy as they split the vote, with 57% of delegates choosing Jenkins and 43% staying with Maloy, sending them both to the primary.
In their debate this month, Jenkins zeroed in on Maloy’s vote on the spending bill and pledged to be unmoving in Congress, safeguarding Republicans’ slim majority from Democratic interests.
Maloy countered that her constituents know she won’t budge on the issues that matter most to them, but that by being unbending on every issue, you lose your seat at the table.
As the primary election approached, Maloy secured the endorsements of Trump and her fellow Utahns in the House.
Congressional District 3
It’s a five-way scrum among Republicans vying for the spot Curtis is leaving in the House.
State Sen. Mike Kennedy, R-Alpine, led with 30%. He was followed by Roosevelt Mayor J.R. Bird with 26%.
Utah County entrepreneur Case Lawrence had 21%, former Utah County Republican Party chairman Stewart Peay had 13%, and Utah Auditor John Dougall had 10%.
The candidates have been in lockstep on most issues, though Dougall has unabashedly declared himself the non-MAGA candidate in the race. In particular, he has scoffed at the Utah Legislature’s move to ban transgender people from using bathrooms and facilities based on the gender they identify with in state buildings as MAGA messaging. He denounced the move to place enforcement of agencies’ compliance on the auditor’s office, making him the state’s “bathroom monitor.”
In a debate this month, the five candidates were in line on issues like drawing down the nation’s debt and supporting anti-abortion efforts, but split over continuing aid for Ukraine.
Peay, pointing to his Army experience, supports the U.S. supplying weapons to Ukraine in order to keep Russia from escalating its campaign. Lawrence joined him, calling Ukrainians “freedom fighters protecting their homeland,” but criticized President Joe Biden as appearing weak on the international stage.
Dougall and Bird both balked at the price tag on spending packages that send aid to Ukraine, but said the U.S. should support Ukraine in other ways in their stand against Russian incursion.
Kennedy couldn’t say whether he would have voted in support of aid for Ukraine, saying he would need to read through the bill before answering, but also colored his answer with opposition to Russia.
Utah’s 3rd Congressional District includes areas of Salt Lake and Utah counties, and covers eastern Utah, spreading to the south.
Kennedy was the delegates’ choice at the party’s convention with 61% of the vote, while the rest of the field qualified for the ballot through signature gathering.
Democrat Glenn J. Wright will face the winner in November.
Congressional District 1
Incumbent Republican Rep. Blake Moore holds 73% of initial results over his challenger, South Ogden electrician Paul Miller, in his first primary challenge since being elected in 2021.
Moore has spoken about the importance of building relationships in Congress in order to reach compromises, highlighting his success supporting defense agencies while saving in other areas.
Utah’s 1st Congressional District in northern Utah includes Hill Air Force Base and the communities around it, home to a number of military families.
But in their debate this month, Miller criticized Moore’s votes for bills like the bipartisan spending package that “fund Biden’s agenda.”
Miller edged Moore at the state’s GOP convention, securing 55% of delegates’ votes to Moore’s 45%, putting both candidates on the primary ballot.
In November, the winner of the primary faces Democrat Bill Campbell and Libertarian Daniel Cottam.
Congressional District 4
There are no primary races in Utah’s 4th Congressional District, located at the center of the state and including portions of Salt Lake, Utah, Juab and Sanpete counties.
On the ballot in November will be incumbent Republican Rep. Burgess Owens, facing Democrat Katrina Fallick-Wang, United Utah Party candidate Vaughn R. Cook, and unaffiliated candidate M. Evan Bullard.
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