Utahns will vote in the elections for U.S. president and vice president, U.S. Senate, U.S. House District (one of 4 districts depending on where you live), Utah governor and lieutenant governor, Utah attorney general, state auditor and state treasurer.
The latest filing with the state by Utahns for Student Success, the political issues committee formed to oppose Amendment A, shows a $380,110 contribution from the Washington, D.C.-based National Education Association. Total contributions through the Sept. 30 reporting date add up to $428,165.
The results are relatively clear: while Utah’s Latter-day Saints consider themselves to be overwhelmingly Republican, its non-Latter-day Saints don’t. This likely will not stun you. Indeed, non-Latter-day Saints are more Democratic than the national average.
Sen. Mike Lee and Rep. John Curtis are involved in ongoing conversations with candidates for top GOP leadership position.
The Summit County Attorney's Office has filed a felony charge against four Park City residents, accusing them of casting both GOP and Democratic ballots during June's primary election.
The two faced off in a livestreamed, hour-long debate co-produced by PBS Utah and KUER ahead of the Nov. 5 general election. Wilson, who is seeking a second full term, became Salt
Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson and challenger Erin Rider will debate Thursday night ahead of the Salt Lake County mayoral election.
Threats against election officials have become so common they are “almost unremarkable,” Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson said. She is asking for Utahns' help in protecting the institutions that run elections — and their right to vote.
Utah's Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson spoke at the University of Utah's Hinckley Institute of Politics on Thursday regarding election security and election-worker safety ahead of the general election.
We are five weeks away from the 2024 general election and the election both statewide and across the country is entering the home stretch. So, with five weeks to go, how has Utah historically done with voter turnout?
Candidates were asked how they would approach public lands issues, social media litigation and restoring trust in the office.