2020 Voter’s Guide

2020 Voter’s Guide

Here, you will find interviews with state and federal candidates for the 2020 election. All interviews were hosted by Utah Statesman journalists and questions came from Utah State University students. Candidates are listed in the order they will appear on the ballot.

Utah Governor

Chris Peterson

Utah gubernatorial candidate Chris PetersonChris Peterson

Party: Democrat from Salt Lake City, Utah
Twitter Handle: @PetersonUtah

Campaign Website: petersonforutah.com

Peterson is a professor of business and law at the University of Utah. He has served in the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and worked as a special advisor in the U.S. Department of Defense. Peterson was born and raised in West Valley City and is a fifth generation Utahn.

What motivated you to run for office?

Well, you know, as I look around the state, I feel that too many Utahns are being left behind and that our policies are oftentimes directed towards the benefit of privileged insiders and party elites, and that we need to refocus our government on listening to ordinary working people across the state on things like access to health care, affordable education and public school funding. Also, affordable housing and creating good jobs that are not just jobs, but are actually careers that people can build on and also reasonable consumer protections and safeguards in the marketplace.

And more recently, I think it’s very important that we get this coronavirus crisis under control, get the virus to stop spreading and get our economy back on track.

How well did Utah respond to Covid-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

Sadly, our government has not done a great job, the public is doing a bit better. We have relatively low fatality rates because our population is pretty young in comparison to many other states and we’re a little bit more fit and healthy than some states. So that’s serving us well. But I see some real challenges in the response of the federal and the state government at the federal level.

There was some misleading information. There was denial that it was a problem. The federal government pretended that it was just going to go away. And of course, it hasn’t. Now the virus has now killed nearly two hundred thousand people. That’s more Americans than died in WWI and more Americans that have died in every combat operation since WWII, including the Korean War, the Vietnamese War and all the Middle Eastern wars combined.

It’s not the most dangerous virus we’ve ever seen, but it is a dangerous virus for many people. It’s not just whether or not people die. It’s also is leaving many people with long term scarring in their lungs and heart damage. And that that may go on forever. It may change people’s lives even if they survive for the rest of their life. So, it’s very important that we do everything that we reasonably can to get the virus under control.

How will you represent Utah college students?

So first off I would like to say, that I’m a university professor, I teach law school and I’ve dedicated my life, most of my life, to try and be a mentor and a good teacher, and to try to help launch young law students on their careers as attorneys. I’m really proud of my track record on that. I want your listeners to know at Utah State, that I care about their university and their future, and that I want to support public higher education as well as k-12 education with the resources that you need to succeed. Some of the things I want to focus on are decreasing tuition and costs to make sure that our young students aren’t going too far into student loan debt. I also am particularly concerned not just about public school, there are lots of private-for-profit schools. I’m not talking about private schools like Brigham young or Westminster, I’m worried about for profit schools that have extremely high tuition. I believe we need to have some more consumer safeguards and consumer protection for folks that go into those kind of schools, to make sure they are getting a good deal and they’re not getting low quality education that doesn’t provide them with satisfactory credentials and that saddles them with years of student loan debt. Another thing I would like to mention, specifically with Utah State, Utah State has a long history as our states agricultural school I think is something to be really proud of. And I really believe in family farms and ranches, they are an important part of our state. I’m a guy that wants to fight for the little guy and gal. So, if I’m elected, I’m going to try and pursue a Future Farmer’s Success act. That would create student loan forgiveness for people that go to school, get a degree, then go take those skills back to a family farm or ranch. Just like right now the federal government has a program that forgives student loans for people who get public service jobs, like teaching firefighting, some attorney jobs. Some public defenders or prosecutors can get that student loan debt forgiveness too. You know the people who are growing our food. They are working every day to raise cattle or to grow our crops and they’re doing a real public service too; I want to make sure they have the same kind of student loan debt forgiveness that other public servants have. I think we can really pull it off, and that can be done across party lines, we can get bipartisan support for that. That’s something I would like to lead on.


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Richard Whitney

Utah gubernotarial candidate Richard WhitneyRichard Whitney

Party: Independent from Utah
Twitter Handle: None listed

Campaign Website: None listed

Whitney is a United States Marine Corps veteran and University of Utah graduate. He has dedicated his life to working with at-risk youth and those in special education. He is from Murray.

What motivated you to run for office?

Well, the big thing, it’s more of the whole party system that’s going on and playing that party game. I didn’t want to be part of that, because I see everything that’s going on as a people issue and not a party issue. People are so diametrically opposed to each other just because of the whole party situation. I think it pretty much fouls up politics as a whole here in Utah. If you’re not Republican, pretty much you’re not going to really get in and be able to do a whole lot, but if you’re a Democrat, then you’ve got the Republicans that don’t like you just because you’re a Democrat and will vote against you, just because you’re a Democrat, regardless of the legislation. Plus, I’m big on the voice of the people and through the last bunch of propositions that we’ve had, we voted for every single one of them, and yet the legislature decides that the people really don’t know what they want. They are going to propose and institute their own answer to those without any kind of cooperative, collaboration with the people.

How well did Utah respond to Covid-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I don’t think we responded well enough and fast enough. A lot of places went through the whole two-week period, you know other countries, and they were able to start ramping up their economies and get to a relative normal place. Whereas we haven’t even gone through the first wave of this and being in Utah, we’re kind of slower to get hit by this, but now it’s starting to spread even more, especially in places that were against wearing masks and against social distancing. I mean, even on the first warnings we were told to social distance and wear masks. Even the very next night when we were asked to do that, you had people in huge meetings at the airport just standing there altogether, waiting for their loved ones to come home and ignoring any of those warnings. So now we are where we’re at now and we still haven’t gotten through the first wave, and the second wave’s about to commence.

How will you represent Utah college students?

Oh, college population. Well I am huge on education, that’s a big thing for me. And it can be worked and done, if we’re not giving away all the taxes and subsidies to big businesses, I’m sure we can find a way to cut down the costs of college. We need to cut that down. Not only that, but feeding into college, there needs to be more preparatory coursework through the high school system. We need to institute that all the way down to pre-k so that we can finance that and reeducate, well not reeducate, but kind of like reimagine the education system so it’s a feeder into college. I also want to add in different tracks like technical schools and trade schools, so there’s high schools that concentrate on trade schools and technical. So, schools that actually feed into the various areas in society of the jobs that we need to fill.


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Greg Duerden

Utah gubernatorial candidate Greg DuerdenGreg Duerden

Party: Independent from Provo, Utah
Twitter Handle: None listed

Campaign Website: gregorycduerden.us

Duerden is a retired newspaperman and U.S. Air Force veteran. He covered Utah politics for 40 years. He lives in Provo.

What motivated you to run for office?

Well, I am the father of 18 children after three marriages. I buried two wives. I have 73 grandchildren, and five great-grands, so my main motivation is to make Utah a better place for my grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and then COVID hit. The unconstitutional nature of the COVID response had added more vim and vigor to my campaign. I want to correct the unconstitutional actions of Gov. Herbert and Spencer Cox, who I tag as “COVID Cox,” because the constitution doesn’t allow for emergencies or exceptions. We have the right, the first amendment right, for peaceful assembly in any size groups. We have the right of freedom of worship at any time, and the closing of the churches, the closing of the businesses, which is actually a violation of the fifth amendment, of the US constitution and the Utah State constitution. Article 1, section 1 provides both religious liberty and freedom of assembly. So, it’s important that they uphold their oath of office to protect and defend the constitution of both the US constitution and the state constitution. So that’s why I am running.

How well did Utah respond to Covid-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

Well I would like to see, I live in Utah County, so we’ve just gone from the yellow phase back to the orange phase and have a county wide mask mandate. The whole concept of government “doing things for our good,” is a false narrative. Government is supposed to protect our rights and our liberties. Not restrict our rights and our liberties. Government is supposed to, if it was a proper government, find the solution that would enable everyone to still function in their business, still function in their daily lives, but not shut them down. I’ve mentioned that we need to isolate the people who are ill. You can quarantine them for two weeks or put them in hospitals. But you can’t quarantine healthy people. That’s not medically indicated and that’s not good public health policy. That is wrong, its unconstitutional. The problem is, its an easy fix; tell the people they are individually responsible for their own lives, that it’s a matter of choice.

How will you represent Utah college students?

Well, I would like to see more junior colleges, more JC’s represented in the state. Right now, we only have Snow College, down in Ephraim, as a junior college. There was one, it used to be called Trade-Tech in Provo, and then it became Utah Community College and then it became UVU, Utah Valley University. Which is actually the largest state-run university in the state right now. I think there is like, I don’t know, if you count all of the part-time students there may be as many as 50 or 60,000 students attending UVU, at one time or another. But we need more junior colleges. I would like to see one up in Tremonton, maybe following the Trade-Tech kind of model, using it as a trade school as well as a junior college. I would like to see one in Parowan or changing the CEU campus in Blanding to a full junior college of its own. There’s a lot of opportunities.


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Daniel Cottam

Utah gubernatorial candidate Daniel CottamDaniel Cottam

Party: Libertarian from Salt Lake City, Utah
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: cottamforutah.org

Dr. Daniel Cottam is a Houston, Texas native. He attended BYU before completing medical school in Texas. He has performed hundreds of bariatric surgeries. A strong advocate for the use of medical marijuana, Cottam lives in the North Salt Lake area with his family.

What motivated your decision to run for office?

I’m choosing to run on right now [because] I really felt that the state’s response to the COVID pandemic was really anemic. Even though I’m not at an academic institution, I’m very active in academic practice, so I’ve published a lot of papers with these models and I realized that the state has done a really poor job [with] this and a poor job of representing freedom and education and I said, “I need to get into this and let my voice be heard”.

How well did Utah respond to Covid-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

We’ve performed very well, but here’s the point: we don’t really control COVID -COVID controls us. I think the biggest problem people have missed with the pandemic, is that the state government actions and the federal government actions all across the entire world have had no impact on COVID. We have been blaming the Republicans or blaming the Democrats, but they really have not changed the curves anywhere, and you can go look at the curves. “They did this intervention, they did that intervention”, the only thing that could possibly change the curve is to get a vaccine. Maybe we’re close to that and maybe we’re not, but beyond the vaccine -and you don’t know if it’s going to work or not, or work very well – the state government has had no impact; masks have had no impact, social distancing has had no impact, and lock downs have had no impact. I think we have overestimated our power to control this virus and because of that we’ve been running around, pointing fingers wrongly instead of just focusing on learning better ways to treat people who are infected. The government could [be] spreading that information around: what they’re doing, how they’re doing it, and [disseminating it] so we do a better job of treating the people who can get it instead of focusing on stopping it, which no one has been able to do.

How will you represent Utah college students?

Here’s the thing: college students are getting screwed by the federal government in both ways. First what we’ve seen is when the federal government has been shoveling money into these schools, what happens is that tuition and fees have skyrocketed. All the people your age are coming out with horrible debt. Why are they doing it? Because they know that when you show up on campus and you’re like, “I can’t afford the tuition”, the government will sign a loan for you. They’ll guarantee [it] — you just have to pay [the loan] off. If universities were forced to create a product that students could afford, there would be products that students could afford without loans. If you take solar panels and say, [for example] the government will give you $2500 per solar panel on your roof, well guess what? The price goes up by $2500 dollars and they assume you’re taking out a loan. So, what has happened is the federal government is borrowing and giving you large debts in college that your generation has to pay off in the future and this is creating a horrible structure for you. Your taxes have to be high to pay off the debt the government’s taking, and your personal expenses are hurt because they’ve been subsidizing college education. Where else can you have a system where once you reach a certain path in life, like in the university, you can never be fired regardless of what you say or what you do? If I show up one day and start killing people at my job, guess what? I’m going to get sued out of my business, and I deserved to be sued out of my business. But if you’re a university professor and you stop teaching well and you stop performing well, the professor can just say, “I’m not interested; you can’t fire me; you can go to hell”. This is wrong. It’s why I would stop giving support to the universities. Then, they would be forced to compete for you. Your tuition would be cheaper, and you would come out with less loans, and guess what? There would be more people that actually get degrees that actually pay something and not these crazy degrees that are out there that don’t serve any useful purpose. I really feel bad for people who don’t have any concept of what happens after [college] because they go and get these degrees and they’re like, “Oh, I can’t do anything with it.” So, the biggest thing I’d like to do with these universities is privatize them because all they are [doing] is loading you up with debt. If they had to compete for your business, it would be cheaper.


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Spencer Cox

Utah gubernatorial candidate Spencer Cox

Party: Republican from Fairview, Utah
Twitter Handle: @SpencerJCox

Campaign Website: votecox.com

Cox is the Lt. Gov. of Utah and has served in Gov. Gary Herbert’s administration since 2013. Cox also served as a member of the Utah House of Representatives representing District 58. Cox, who graduated from Utah State University before going to law school, worked as a clerk for Federal District Judge Ted Stewart. When Cox left Salt Lake City to move back to Fairview, he became vice president of CentraCom, a rural telecommunications company. Cox served on the Sanpete County Commission before being elected to the Utah House of Representatives in 2012. He currently lives in Fairview with his wife Abby and their children.

Due to some scheduling conflicts, the Statesman was unable to interview the lieutenant governor. However, information about his campaign can be found at his website, votecox.com.

U.S. House District 1

Darren Parry

U.S. House candidate Darren ParryDarren Parry

Party: Democrat from Providence, Utah
Twitter Handle:
@DarrenforUtah

Campaign Website: parryforutah.com

Parry serves as a Tribal Leader of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation, sits on the Board of Directors for the American West Heritage Center and teaches American Indian History at Utah State University.

Utah is known for its soda shops, so what is your go-to drink?

I’m not a big soda shop guy, but I love a cherry and Dr. Pepper. Yeah, that’s a vice for me.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19? What do we need to do in the future?

I thought the response at first was good. They established a task force, got people in there who know what they’re doing. And let me tell you, to me, science matters. My wife is a nurse of 34 years, and she’s a research nurse. And lately, she’s been working on COVID studies. So I’ve always trusted science. Don’t trust the politicians, trust science. I thought we started out well with a plan. What really got me down, though, is seeing the economy not doing as well. And rightfully so, if you can’t go out because of a pandemic, places are going to close. But I think lately, decisions are being made more from the political side, and not so much the science side.

I think we started out well, but I don’t think we’re doing as well now. And we saw places that are anti-mask. Look, I wear a mask to protect you. I love the people I see. That’s why I wear a mask. The people that say, “Well, the government’s not telling me what to do.” Well, the government tells us all the time what we can do. I can’t go into a restaurant and smoke if I smoke. I can’t drive drunk. I just think it’s common courtesy and decency. And I think we’re failing today in some ways, like when I see a political leader not setting the example and wearing a mask when we’re asked to. I think that’s the fastest way to open things back up. I think we’re getting a failing grade lately.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

When the founding fathers came up with the Declaration of Independence and our Constitution, they said, “all men are created equal.” And then I go well, wait a minute, “all men”? Because in 1776 Black people weren’t “all.” Native Americans weren’t included in “all.” And when I do the Pledge of Allegiance, “and justice for all” we’ve been saying that all our lives, but [then] I think about what it really says. Is there really justice for all? And there’s not. The country started out already excluding Black people, already excluding people of color. And they’re still, to some extent, excluding those two groups. And not only those two groups but other marginalized groups.

I had somebody say to me the other day, “Well, you know, Black Lives Matter makes me crazy. All lives matter.” And I just said, “All lives will never matter until Black lives matter.” It’d be like if you broke your arm, went to the doctor and said, “Doctor, I’ve got a broken arm, will you fix my broken arm?” And he said, “Well, yeah, I see your broken arm but, you know what, all your bones are important. So I don’t want to hear about that. All your bones are important.” And I’d say, “Well, I know. But this is what needs attention. This is what is hurting.” And so all lives will never matter until Black lives matter and we start getting away from the systemic racism that has permeated our culture from 1776 to today. We’re doing better, absolutely, we’re doing better. But there is still a lot of work to do. And to fight all the racial biases that we have — even I probably have a few — and until we recognize them and are willing to have conversations about it and call people out, the change is going to be slow coming. So that is such an important topic to me, and I am one that will always be inclusive. And I am always going to fight for the person that’s never had a voice. And that’s who I am. And that’s what I’ll fight for in congress.

If you had to condense your platform into a tweet, what would the tweet be?

I’m on Twitter all the time. I would say what I just said, about all lives matter. And I would just say this, all lives will never matter until Black lives matter. Give those communities who have never had a voice, and give them a seat at the table. And so that’s what I’m all about. That’s what my tweet would say. I better go tweet that now, right?


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Blake Moore

U.S. House candidate Blake MooreBlake Moore

Party: Republican from Ogden, Utah
Twitter Handle:
@ElectBlakeMoore

Campaign Website: electmoore.com

Moore is a principal with Cicero Group, a management consulting firm. He has also worked as a Foreign Service Officer for the U.S. Department of State.

Utah is known for its soda shops. What is your go-to drink?

I think it’s Fresca with a lime. And not many people add the lime, so there’s some uniqueness to it. It may be considered a little boring — my wife likes the “dirty” sodas and all of that.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19 and what do you think we need to do going forward?

I feel like Utah has done an exceptional job. There’s been a lot of communication, and in a time like this, I think we need to rely on our government for communication. Our politicians do not need to be experts, but we need to be able to communicate direction as much as possible.

We’ve held off on the enticement to do a full shut down like some other states. I’m proud we were able to balance that, and maintain a strong economy coming out of this. We’re not out of the woods, but we have the lowest unemployment in the country, and that’s because of the way we plan and prepare for things.

An area I think we need to improve in is making sure we come together and recognizing that people have different opinions. Masks became very politicized and I wish we could have gotten out ahead of that. I want people back at work. I want our kids back in school. And masks can be helpful in that regard. We need to encourage their use when appropriate. We don’t need to go overboard, but it doesn’t need to become some pretentious issue. Ensuring public health, we can be smart about whatever it takes to get our economy roaring again.

There’s a balance there and I think we’ve done as good as any state.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

I’ve been a consultant for every issue across the board: education, healthcare, transportation — you name it. I have never met a professional who did not want to improve. So, we have to recognize that our police force is no different. I believe in a re-investment in our police forces’ training. We need improved funding and additional body cameras.

There is reform that needs to take place and we need to be open to it. As far as accountability, transparency would be key. I can talk about transparency in every industry. If we had better transparency in pricing and healthcare, we’d be able to solve a lot of problems. Transparency, in my opinion, is never something to shy away from, but we have to be able to recognize the facts.

I think if all sides can have an openness to improvement, then we’ll see a lot of progress. But this might be the most important part: right now, we’re addressing the symptoms and not the root cause. I was heartbroken about George Floyd. I’m heartbroken at any one of these situations that ever comes to this point — but too high of a percentage of Black Americans live in intergenerational poverty. That is a correlation to crime. That is a correlation to more instances with police officers. If we can target that with better education, with criminal justice reform and by ensuring all Americans can identify the cause of intergenerational poverty. And that’s teen pregnancy. That’s single-parent homes. If we can shore that up we can help people move out of that income situation because there is a direct correlation between socioeconomic status and crime.

If you had to condense your platform into a tweet, what would it be?

We need to ensure Congress can mimic Utah values. Balance budget. Strong economy.

That’s the key to success: a strong economy, philanthropy, and the great work of our social organizations. We care. We have church organizations that do good, we have companies that are doing good. Utah excels in having companies and people who are really mission-driven. That’s what I want to be able to represent.

Utah Senate District 25

Chris Wilson

Utah Senate candidate Chris WilsonChris Wilson

Party: Republican from Logan, Utah
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: chriswilsonutah.com

Wilson is a member of the Cache Valley Chamber of Commerce Board of Governors. He is the owner of Wilson Motor Company in downtown Logan and president of the New Car Dealers of Utah.

Utah is known for its soda shops. What is your go-to drink?

Fortunately, or unfortunately, my son and many employees here got me on Swig. I have been a half and half guy for probably 15 or 20 years. I go with half Coke and half Diet Coke and I’ve been doing that type of percentage for a number of years.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I think that mistakes were made. We have to do a better job of being held accountable for the money that is spent. We’ve got to be efficient and effective and there’s a lot of ways we weren’t, but then again, with what they’re up against, I always hate to look back and criticize. It was something nobody saw coming and I gotta give them credit for a lot of areas that they were able to secure. Another thing we need to start doing is having any supply chains in Utah. We can’t rely on China, we can’t rely on Russia or other countries for these necessary supplies of personal protection equipment. We’ve got some amazing small businesses in Utah that could handle that. I think we would be much better prepared. Like I said, I started that conversation with a number of industries. The Senate leadership, I talked with them probably in the last couple months, and the Republican leadership about some different things that we can do better.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

Well, you know, that’s the issue that’s affected our society. It’s really sad. I think one of my big strong points is I’ll be able to bring people together. Being at Wilson Motor Company, I have some wonderful customers and just wonderful people I look up to. Many don’t agree with everything I do on political policy and stuff, and I may not agree with them, but we’re going to agree to disagree. I think the thing we need to do is bring people together and work on these issues. Inequality is a big thing and it’s something that I’m going to work on. I’ve been fortunate if you’ve been watching my campaign. I’ve been able to help people immigrate here from Africa and sponsor them coming over to this country. They end up graduating. Just stating that it has been a huge success story, one that I was fortunate to be involved with. You know equality is a big important issue and one that I’m going to be working on. I think public safety is a very important thing across our country, and I appreciate those who serve in law enforcement and also the firefighters and paramedics.  I think they do a wonderful job. We need to do a better job of trying to eliminate those individuals that are giving their industry a bad name. I spent time talking with our county sheriff about these issues. Some issues they understand they can improve on. Boy, now is not the time to start defunding our Police Department. They work extremely hard, and the overall majority of them are great individuals and do a great job. We need to recognize them, and I am looking forward to working on actually increasing funding for our public safety officers.

If you had to condense your platform into a tweet, what would it be?

“It’s time to bring people together.”

That’s what I would try and do in solving complex problems. Yes, it’s disturbing. Stop looking at what’s going across our country. We have got to come together and really respect each others political views and understand that it doesn’t make somebody a bad person if they think differently. They might be a different skin color or different religion or different sexual orientation. You know, they’re still good people.

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Nancy Huntly

Utah Senate candidate Nancy Huntly

Party: Democrat from River Heights, Utah
Twitter Handle:
@NancyUTSenate25

Campaign Website: nancyhuntly.com

Huntly is a professor and scientist in the USU Dept. of Biology and has managed several large university projects. She has lived in the western U.S. since 1977 and Utah since 2011.

Utah is known for its soda shops. What is your go-to drink?

Well, I’m going to disappoint you, I must have really simple taste. I like fizzy water. Just plain old water, just plain old — maybe with a little lemon flavor or lime flavor — and some fizz. That works for me.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I think there have been both highs and lows. But we haven’t done as well as we need to do. At the initial response, I thought it was pretty good, when we didn’t know what was really coming at us and how it worked. We had a pretty rapid slowdown and shutdown. Let’s see what’s really goint to happen here and use good guidance to avoid it. There have been ups and downs since then, not all of which are the fault of Utah or the State of Utah. But, I don’t think we have successfully overcome this. The hydroxychloroquine purchase was a low point, an early low point. The arguing about health versus economy was not good. The evolution of the argument to be more about an acceptable balance, with sort of health costs seen as coming from both of those was better. I think the biggest problem we have had is the failure to cleave to good information when elected leaders at various levels are speaking. There are lots of things you don’t know about a new disease or epidemic, but there are lots of things we do know. We have very good general guidance from public health about pandemics, and we have allowed too much bad information to be released by leaders, which is really confusing, because the people we are supposed to be able to trust tell us very different things. I’m not criticizing the change in what we know or the change in the details of guidance, I am criticizing saying things like, “COVID is a hoax,” or “Rural areas don’t have to be concerned at all about pandemic diseases,” or, “We know COVID is no worse than the flu, it’s just the flu, it’ll be gone in the Spring, we’ll have a vaccine tomorrow.” So, if you look at actual literature or presentations by people with good medical knowledge of what’s going on, or good public health knowledge, you know immediately that those things are false. So, we should not be putting false ideas on the table. If we don’t know, we should let people who do know speak.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

Racial justice is so hard, isn’t it? It’s just so disappointing that 150 years after the Civil War ends, 50 years after the Civil Rights Movement and the Civil Rights Act in the 60’s, that we haven’t come farther than we have. I am among the many that were shocked by some of the things we saw earlier this summer by a cold, calloused, calculated, observed killing of a person, which was dreadful and seemed to be related to race and poverty. I’m going to step to the second issue first because I think we’re in a place where we can really make progress rapidly on that, and that was police reform. So, I don’t think that defunding the police, getting rid of the police is the right thing to do. Some people doing bad things in one field does not mean that everyone else does that. That was an unfair overgeneralization. Which was the same thing that caused the problems that keep racial bigotry with us, I think. But there seems to be enormous political will in Utah right now, and actually in America, to do something to stop the incidences of police violence that we have. Some of them — what we saw in June, in Minneapolis, was the worst example of what can happen. The ugliest side imaginable.

If you had to condense your platform into a tweet, what would it be?

Well, I’ve done that a bunch of times. I’ve got a Twitter account that you can see what I’ve said before. I think I’m @NancyUTSenate25 on Twitter. But, you would find it if you looked around. I have said super short things, like “for strong, healthy communities and governance you can believe in.” And I have talked some about listening and learning. And — maybe I could read you one. I had one recent one, “I will work for balanced approaches that support strong, healthy communities, for abundant and honest civic dialogue, and support well-informed planning for growth.” I also said something about balance — “A vote for Nancy, is a vote for balance and fairness and justice in Utah government,” or something of that sort. You run on more than a single thing for a platform. And I like short, short is good, but it’s also more than a single thing.

Utah House District 4

Mary DaSilva

Utah house candidarte Mary DaSilvaMary DaSilva

Party: Democrat from Logan, Utah
Twitter Handle:
@Maryforutahhd4

Campaign Website: dasilva4utah.com

Dasilva was born and raised in Cache Valley and attended Utah State University. After graduating from the Weber State College Nursing Program, she became a registered nurse.

How well do you think Utah’s done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

In the beginning I think that, luckily, we did quite well. I think everyone really came together and was very glad to stay home and to follow the guidelines. But as time went on, people have gotten very, very fatigued with the issue. It impacted so many people’s jobs. Small businesses have been affected tremendously. And unfortunately, it’s become a very political issue and it seems like people are not really listening to what the medical experts are saying. Our leaders are not modeling the right behavior, either. They’re not willing to make the hard decisions. This is a very unusual outbreak. We have got to get it under control. If we just keep doing these half measures — a little bit here and a little bit there but not the whole community — we’re gonna still be dealing with this at Christmas time and next spring break.

Utah has done their best but this required a national response. In the past, we’ve put lots of money into the CDC and health departments and we were ready for novel flu viruses. Unfortunately, in the last few years, this administration did not think that was worthwhile and they eliminated a lot of that infrastructure. They cut money to the CDC, they trashed the pandemic response plans and they fired a lot of people in the CDC and other organizations that were ready to respond. How unprepared we were as a nation has been one of the great tragedies of the 21st century.

I think Utahns have done well. Except that it’s become politicized now. It’s going to be extraordinarily difficult now because there’s a lot of people who just don’t believe authority.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

That’s a very important issue. Unfortunately, there has been a lot of bias in all segments of society where people make a lot of judgments in advance based on the way people look or the way they speak. There’s a lot of fear of people who look and sound different from yourself and, unfortunately, the police tend to overreact sometimes. So, we absolutely have to address that with training from day one and a lot of retraining of our police departments.

We also need to have diversity in our police forces. They need to have very assertive recruitment for people from all the communities. Every segment of our communities need to be represented in the police, in the fire and the legislature, in the local governments, everywhere. We need to be more inclusive and more colorblind.

It’s pretty obvious that the laws are sometimes applied differently to different groups of people, like in the case of Breonna Taylor. I don’t think the no-knock warrants, where they bust into the wrong address and kill the people inside, would have happened in a different zip code, in a wealthier part of town.

People have responded tremendously to that. There’s a lot of hurt feelings. The reason it has brought out such a tremendous response is because our communities of color say this is not new. This is very painful for them because they have lived for generations being prejudged and not accepted. I think this is an extremely important issue and we definitely need to address it.

If you’re elected, how are you going to help preserve natural spaces and lands and combat climate change within Utah?

Preserving and protecting Utah’s public lands is absolutely one of my goals. I will not agree to any projects or proposals that will sell or privatize our public lands. There’s a lot of industries and developers that would like to sell off our public lands. They’re going to use the economy as an excuse to sell our public lands saying “we need the money.” The public lands, in addition to being a very important resource for our economy like tourism, is also a great reservoir for wildlife, wilderness, clean air, and clean water that we definitely need to preserve.

I would also like to see mass transit increase between here and Salt Lake City. Private automobile traffic is one of the great contributors to dirty air. Also, I would like to really see the decrease in use of single plastics. Logan was the third city in the state of Utah to pass a plastic bag ban, which was a very forward-thinking thing to do.


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Dan Johnson

Utah House candidate Dan Johnson

Party: Republican from Logan, Utah
Twitter Handle:
@djohnsonhouse4

Campaign Website: votedanjohnson.com

Johnson has been the District 4 representative since Jan. 2019. He was previously the director of the Edith Bowen Laboratory School and administrator in other school districts.

How well do you think Utah has done responding to COVID-19 and what do you think we need to do in the future?

I will tell you that I think Utah is has been a leader in the country, to be honest with you, because we still have the lowest (sic: highest) unemployment rate. We were able to work in the legislature and maintain a balanced budget. We were able to move ahead and protect all of our citizens by not taxing our way out of this problem. We did it by cutting the budget. That doesn’t happen everywhere. And so I think that that’s a great example of what you need to do. And I think everyone, families, everybody’s done it. They’ve had to back up, rethink how they do things and then move forward in a different way. And that’s what our state has done and I think it’s been remarkable, because we were able to maintain a 1.8% increase with all that happening for education. We funded money into higher education. And we developed some special programs using money. And in the legislation they’re providing for healthcare, those are really important things. How do you protect and care for people through help? And then how do you protect and care for the kids? It’s through getting educated. So those are the only two things that received a bulk of whatever money we had available for more money, everything else that we had passed in the 2020 legislative session from January to March was put on hold. But those two areas got additional money and were able to have what they had before, plus some extra funds. So, I think the state of Utah has done great. When I look at it nationally, though, … Do you know what we found out? That we were relying on all these foreign markets. And guess what, we didn’t have supplies. We didn’t have PPE, we didn’t have ventilators, we had new stockpile of those sort of things, and I think nationally everybody learned a lesson. You cannot outsource all of the prescriptions that people need for medication when something like this happens, you’ve got to be able to manufacture that stuff right in your own country. And that’s why I think bringing jobs back to America and creating those supply chains and supply lines of vital essentials. We’ve got to have those things made right here in our state, right here in our nation, and that people have access to them, so that when something goes caput over in England or Germany or China, where a lot of these markets were, we were just doomed. And so we had to start fast to create those things and our government did a really really good job of doing that. But I think that’s why a lot of people sort of felt like the government’s national response wasn’t really good. Well, the reason was there was no stockpile. That’s my opinion. I think that’s a big deal going forward.

So, how do you think that relates to Utah the state specifically?

Of course it does, doesn’t it because we have access to all of those things, that’s a great question. We have access to all of those things, our citizens, you know, Utah State University needed stuff, local city schools district needed stuff. No, little preschool kids needed stuff, it goes right down to the lowest level. Mom and Dad needed stuff at their house. I don’t I mean, honestly, why don’t we just talk about toilet paper for a minute. Remember that? Yeah, I mean you just you go, yeah. So, everything, everything comes down to what happens to you locally. And so, and that filters from the federal government, to the state government, down to us, because it is all about us, right here. And that’s why I’ve tried to serve the way. That’s why I go back to that thing service. Well, what happened, what do we need. So that’s how it applies to us. Sometimes we have some of the manufacturing right here and there in our own state, but in our own state, you take like a look at emergency medical services. Emergency Planning for any catastrophe or whatever we learn from that. So at the state level, we have very important groups of people running those organizations. At the state level, and they have taken stockpiling, they don’t guarantee that I’ve checked on it and they have. So that’s how it comes down to us.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues that we have seen in the recent past?

You know, to tell you the truth, I think there’s three things. There’s three areas right now that have come to the forefront for me, that are at the front of my mind. And it really deals with recruitment and retention.

When you look at COVID, and the issues that have been caused, would you want to go into teaching right now? I wonder. All right. If, because of COVID and all these issues confronting it, would you want to be a healthcare worker? Here’s the third one, with all the bashing that’s gone on nationally, would you want to be in public safety, be a police officer? You know, I would like people to have good health. I want people to get educated, and I want to be safe. It’s simple. We better pay attention to this or we’re going to have a mess.

And you can say whatever you want to say, whatever about that because I am very serious about this. So, when it comes to racial justice that’s incredibly important. And it goes across for all people. You know, I mean, for crying out loud, I’m first generation American. My father emigrated from Sweden, and then, he was 54 when I was born.

He can ship from Liverpool left, Sweden, went to where he was fine. He was born in 93, he immigrated in 1898 he immigrated through Ellis Island, he was, he was part of the immigrants that walked up the, the avenues of Manhattan, back in the day with their suitcases. And they got on a train for whatever reason, and landed in Nebraska. You see what I mean?

You have Germans you had Italians, you had people from Latin America, everywhere and they’re still coming. And, and I look at this and I go, we have got to have really good immigration laws. We have to have really good naturalization laws. We have to promote racial justice for all the people that come from all over the world. We have a lot of black people that come to the United States, they don’t know anything about slavery. They weren’t ever here. You see what I mean. But they get clumped into a group. So when you have somebody from Libya, that just recently comes to the United States. They don’t know anything about America and, but they get lumped in with white might be just like a slavery movement or black people, and they get looked at that way, that that’s not right. They have no, they have no idea of it.

If you’re elected, how are you going to help preserve natural spaces and lands and combat climate change within Utah?

Yeah. Do you know what that, that is, I believe in it so I just want to tell you that. And I want to tell you this. I don’t think there’s a difference between a Republican and a Democrat or an unaffiliated everybody likes clean air. Who doesn’t want that? We need to do things that promote that. When we’re talking about infrastructure, you know, like right here in Logan for example, our mayor, our Holly Daines. And then also, like say, Todd Peter who runs Cache Valley Transit. And then UDOT with David Archer who runs the planning for UDOT, and then the Metropolitan Planning Commission, all of those different groups meet together to decide how all the streets and all the highways that run through Main Street, Logan’s highway, building things around and through it. Those are parts of plans, and they’re great plans. So that’s one thing. The other thing is that I believe that you can use conservative principles to combat carbon emissions. Why don’t we incentivize people to do the right thing and have businesses do it? Because if you have a supply and demand, it will stop the need for some of that. And I think that’s what we have to do. And so some people believe in taxing carbon products right at the well. Other people believe in taxing it or doing things with it once it’s removed and distributed. So, you have to land somewhere on policy about what you believe on that. So, I think that I’m kind of on the supply and demand side of it. But I do believe that we’ve got to do some management of carbon emissions. Well, that’s why at the legislature we have a cleaner caucus, and it’s made up of all kinds of community members. Every time we have one of those meetings, the room is jam packed full of Republicans and Democrats and independents, and then we bring in all these experts to make presentations about what’s going on to promote clean air all across the state. And so it’s a nonpartisan effort in the state right now, and I think a lot of people even know that. It’s really really cool and it’s important. So, I would just say the supply and demand side is where I am. I am a believer that we have climate change, and we need to combat it, and we need to do it in the right way. Utah State actually is a leader in, you know, testing emissions air particles we monitor what happens with our air, you know, right here in Cache Valley. We meet the EPA requirements, but that’s not enough.

You know I love public lands. I grew up in a state where, you know, I was one of these kids that I like to go pheasant hunting and, and, and on quail and we had to do that on our farm but what if there was no public lands because everybody owned it? There would be nowhere to go. Well, where would you go ride a four wheeler? Where would you go have fun? where would you go with your family to have a hike? And a lot of those places they just don’t have them. But out here in Utah we do. So that needs to be protected.

And so, you know, I don’t get caught up in this battle with presidents, using opening up lands and closing lands as a political thing. Because, not one of them have even come to the state when they did it. For Arizona, or they they did it from New Mexico or whatever. And I’m like what the heck. And the other thing is is that, I think, I think you, Emily and I think me, Dan, I think people, we’re not going to allow just, I mean it’s not going to be, if you open up public lands and, and you see that certain parts of it could be mined or, or it could drill an oil wells, something like that, It’s not like we’re going to allow everybody just to be running everywhere they want to go and just ripping it all up and. Some people say, we would be better if we got the state running this rather than the federal government because they live here. They make rules about it but they’re not here. And we sometimes we say to people while you believe in local control except for this. Well, that doesn’t really work, because you then you have you have patchwork legislation. And so, I’m one of these people that that I trust the citizen legislature to make sure that that we have state parks that are protected, that we have federal lands that are protected, and that that people have use of them and that people have access to them.

I think that just makes our state, what it is for, you know, we’ve got to do some legislation to promote tourism and get that back and make it safe because that industry in Utah is huge. So when I, I am when it comes to public lands. I believe that the state can manage public lands. I believe the federal government can be involved in that and they are. But if the federal government is going to own the land, and they’re going to manage it. And then we’re going to have people using it. Then, to the Federal Government has got to give us reimbursement for those lands’ product.

Utah House District 5

Lauren Abell

Utah House candidate Lauren Abell

Party: Democrat
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: None listed

Utah is known for its soda shops. What is your go-to drink?

Suddenly I’m feeling like I’m not a good representative of Utah. I need to find a soda-shop, dont I? What’s the best one, tell me.

I’ve been to Swig before. I like their cookies, but I don’t actually drink soda.

I’ve heard that they are wonderful. That’ll be my first stop after I pick my kid up today. That’s where I’m going and I’ll have a good answer for that.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I started off very proud of our response. I thought we did a great job of getting it under control and getting it under control very quickly. We were doing a really good job with contact tracing initially. Then, I think a lot of politics got involved. We’ve struggled from the beginning with the federal response; of course, everyone knows that. Utah did a good job of stepping up initially, and then things started to deteriorate when we reopened much too soon. We lost a lot of the progress that we had made. I think we have been extremely fortunate, in that, we have a fairly small and fairly rural population, which has served us well. In helping to control it, Cache Valley has done an exceptional job of controlling things fairly well. You know, I don’t even have to sit here and give you a playbook on how these things should be handled, because it’s out there. There’s the National Governors Association pandemic playbook, that’s a thing that pre-exists, that predated COVID. There’s the Obama-era playbook for the federal response, there’s the DHS playbook, there’s all of these response initiatives out there that tell us exactly the kinds of things that we need to do. So, from a logistical standpoint, from a practical standpoint, from a ‘what do we do’ standpoint, all of those things are very well laid out for us. The main thing that I would suggest we could do better, again, from a practical standpoint, is buttressing our supply lines. We can’t stockpile tests, because we don’t know what the next pandemic will be, but we can stockpile supplies and we can stockpile personal protective equipment. We can work with our local manufacturers, we have a number of manufacturers here in the state that can switch supply lines and help us up production of things that we need to be getting handle on. More than that, all of that, is in the practical sphere of things to do, but the thing that will differentiate this from any future pandemic, or could differentiate this from any future pandemic, is the communication. We had an absolutely horrendous mishmash of communication narratives, of belief systems, of politics, of all kinds of things that got involved this time that should not have. That should not have happened. And in the absence of a federal voice, a strong hand to guide collective response, Utah needs to have a collective, uniform message that is responsive to changing conditions, but clearly lays out a collective line of action and a collective message for the state.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

I am a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement. I was devastated to hear about the judgement and the ruling in the Breona Taylor case yesterday. I don’t have a specific plan in place at this time. It’s a little difficult not being an actual member of legislation at the moment to know what is currently in the works, what’s being discussed, that kind of thing. But I would be very much in favor of reviewing what I would call law enforcement allowances. On the other hand, I do work with law enforcement a lot when I work with CAPSA, I volunteer there. And I interact with them frequently and I have tremendous respect for law enforcement. I have worked with law enforcement up to the levels of the FBI, practically my entire career. I was a law enforcement officer when I was in the Coast Guard. So, you know, I have that background. I have those connections, I have that interaction. And yet, I still am able to see and be against overreach and police brutality. And I think we have militarized our police in this country, to the point where they have less accountability, even, than our troops overseas and that’s not okay. And that needs some significant review.

If you had to condense your platform into a tweet, what would it be?

I can’t count the characters in my head, but it would be similar to what I started with. We have drifted away from real representation in this country, voting for me is voting your voice and I will be your voice, I will be your representation. And I don’t really want to talk, I want to listen. So that’s probably as close to 140 characters as I’m capable of being.

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Casey Snider

Utah House candidate Casey Snider

Party: Republican from Paradise, Utah
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: caseysnider.com

Snider has been the District 5 representative since Jan. 2019. He operates a 300-acre Cache Valley farm and has been the chair of the Cache County Republican Party.

Utah’s known for its soda shops. What’s your go-to drink?

Well that’s a loaded question. I kind of like the old Utah standby. I’ll be honest, apple beer is a big favorite of mine. That non-alcoholic apple foam. I’d say apple beer is probably my favorite soda. If I had to guess the other one, I’ve never seen it on tap, but at C-A-L Ranch, they used to sell a butter pecan soda, which is sort of the most random soda you’ve probably ever heard of. And it was amazing. So, if I had to rank them, that’d be one and two.

How well do you think Utah’s done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I think we’ve done actually really well. I’m not saying we’ve done perfect, but if you look at where, as a state, we stack up against our neighboring states and especially some other states in this country in terms of unemployment, economic recovery, just general confidence and things, all the key indicators, which would tell you we’ve either done okay or are getting better or worse, we’re near the top, if not the top of the list. So, to me, in terms of making the best of a worst situation or of a bad situation, I’d say we’ve probably done just about as good as anybody.

Now, in terms of what we could do better, or really what we could do to prepare for the next thing, … Life is about risk and I always think there needs to be balance and reasonableness in all decisions. I think people were pretty nervous, and understandably so, when this thing first broke, and we used the tools of government that we had to sort of address those, but those tools are not a good fit. We’ve basically taken a crescent wrench, rather than having the right size of wrench to this problem. So I think, going forward, we need to look at ways to balance what we call “state emergencies.” A state of emergency and the powers directed to the executive branch, the governor specifically, were designed for things like fires and earthquakes. Sort of the short term “hurry and get in there, solve the problem and get people back to life” sort of disasters. We’ve got now a state of emergency in this state that’s gone on for almost six months, if not a hair longer. I just don’t think the tools that have been used, that are available to our governor, were ever meant to do that. I think we need to go back and look at that. I’d like to see some questions regarding civil liberties, individual freedoms and a balance against this collective good. I think we all need to make responsible decisions and hopefully take care of our neighbors. That’s the the moral imperative here.

I’ve got concerns even up at USU. I haven’t seen the final report, so I’d be willing to change my opinion if data made me do so otherwise. They locked down students for four days on on-campus buildings because there was a spike in COVID numbers in some of the sewer systems. I think that should cause concern, just as a general notion of, “What’s the process when you put people under quarantine or house arrest? What’s the general balance against individual choice in freedom and public health?” I have some concerns that decision was made in the first place. I think going forward, there needs to just be a very rigorous, clearly noted standard when we respond to what are definitely emergencies. I’m not saying COVID is not something we should take seriously because I absolutely believe that it is and it was and still is, but I think we need to make sure that there’s good rigorous process, that we’re not just trampling over some things that are fundamental to our system in hopes of solving something before we have all of the good data and all the correct answers.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

I know it’s been a pretty controversial issue. I kind of take a step back a little bit. Now, I think any injustice in the world needs to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. To take a view of someone based solely on color or gender or orientation is abhorrent and it’s wrong, and it has no place in our society and that’s just fundamentally what I believe. But I’m also a proud supporter of law enforcement. I am. I grew up, my father was a highway patrolman. He did 33 years working for the state and so I saw through my father that job and I have maybe a different perspective than some. I see law enforcement as a service. I see the men and women that wear the blue and wear the badge as people that we should respect, and that we should really be grateful for and proud of in our society. I just do.  Now, I also believe that anyone who violates that trust and is not consistent with the creed they signed up for and embarrasses or takes away from the respect that’s owed to law enforcement, generally, should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And so, I think 98% of cops are good people doing the right thing for the right reason and when you get bad actors, I think you throw the book at them and you make an example out of them. So, I would be comfortable looking at ways to ensure that we are making sure police have adequate training, by making sure that, again, if there’s any violation at that level, any corruption that it’s fully prosecuted.  But I am completely against and couldn’t be more opposed to initiatives such as defund the police or other systems or initiatives that look at minimizing the funding that is available to those folks that are putting their lives on the line to make us safe.

What plans do you have to address racial justice and police reform issues?

How many characters is a tweet? I don’t tweet.

I think it’s like 280 now. So, pretty short.

My platform is, I guess, “The government that governs least governs best.” So, that’s what I fundamentally believe and that’s sort of my perspective. The government that governs least governs best, just because I think individual choice, individual liberty, individual accountability are the best ways to move our society and as individuals forward.

Utah Treasurer

David Damschen

Party: Republican
Twitter Handle:
@DamschenDavid

Campaign Website: None listed

Utah is known for its soda shops. What is your go-to drink?

Mostly Diet Dr. Pepper. However, each year between February and May the Republican party in many Utah counties has “Lincoln Day Dinner” fundraisers, as well as county conventions. I try to attend as many of these as possible, which often puts me (and my friend Auditor Dougall, who often carpools with me) on the road late into the night. So in preparation for this time of year, I ensure that my car is stocked with sunflower seeds (which I find are helpful towards staying alert while driving) and zero calorie Monster. I’m careful not to drink more than two Monsters a day, mind you! The Auditor meanwhile drinks….water!

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19 and what do we need to do in the future?

I think we’ve struck a strong balance. No one-size-fits-all approach will do, as the risks differ from place to place. (Rural vs urban, in particular). As a Republican I believe that the government that governs best is that which is closest to the people, so as much as possible, responsibility and control should be concentrated locally. However, in the area of public health response, coordination is needed, and I feel that going forward we’d benefit from strengthening our public health system and infrastructure, applying lessons learned from this crisis, and ensure that our efforts are better coordinated in future.

How has Utah handled the economic challenges associated with the pandemic? What would you do to help Utah financially recover?

We’ve done well because we were fiscally very sound before this crisis occurred. We limit our use of debt to fund public infrastructure, we keep a healthy rainy day fund, and we have a low-tax, business friendly environment. Key to our recovery is careful allocation of debt capital into essential public infrastructure that will support continued growth. Further, we need to focus more heavily on education and career preparation, to ensure that our rising generation is adequately prepared to lead going forward. I will continue to strengthen the state’s debt and investment management practices.

If you had to condense your platform into one tweet, what would it be?

Honored to serve as Utah’s state treasurer, working with my team to return over $140 million in lost money to Utahns, strengthening Utah’s AAA bond rating, prudently and profitably investing $18 billion in public funds, and striving to reduce the burden Utah taxpayers bear.

The following candidates did not respond to the Statesman’s questionnaire.

Richard Proctor

Richard Proctor

Party: Constitution
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website:

utahconstitutionparty.com/richard-proctor

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Joe Speciale

Joe Speciale

Party: Libertarian
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: joespeciale.me

Utah Auditor

John Dougall

John Dougall

Party: Republican
Twitter Handle:
@FrugalDougall

Campaign Website: None listed

Utah is known for its soda shops. What’s your go-to drink?

Water. But to celebrate, I like an ice-cold root beer float.

How well do you think Utah has done in responding to COVID-19?

Mixed. Utah was not as well prepared for this pandemic as it should have been. Our schools should have been better prepared for remote learning. State and local government responses have been excessive in certain circumstances. Utahns and Utah businesses have generally adapted well to changing and uncertain circumstances, helping “flatten the curve”, reducing the burden on our healthcare system while keeping much of the economy working.

Earlier this year, the auditor’s office found that some state universities, including USU, have mandatory fees that do not meet required standards. How will you help ensure that tuition dollars are responsibly used?

Thank you for recognizing the hard work of my team as we continue to shine a light and hold government accountability. I am working with Utah’s colleges and universities to fixing this abusive practice. We are also diving in to better track where your money really goes within the university, helping you better determine how well is was spent. We have a group of USU students working on part of this analysis their senior project. We are trying to empower you. Ultimately, you are paying the bills and you must demand greater accountability — of the faculty, of the administration, and the support services.

If you had to condense your platform into one tweet, what would it be?

#ConstitutionalWatchdog #accountability #transparency #GoodGovernment

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Jeff Ostler

Jeff Ostler

Party: Constitution
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: jeffostlerutahstateauditor.com

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Brian L. Fabbi

Brian L. Fabbi

Party: United Utah
Twitter Handle:
@BFabbi

Campaign Website: fabbiforutah.com

Attorney General

The following candidates did not respond to the Statesman’s questionnaire.

Rudy Bautista

Rudy Bautista

Party: Libertarian
Twitter Handle:
None listed

Campaign Website: rudybautistalawyer.com

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Greg Skordas

Utah Attorney General candidate Greg SkordasGreg Skordas

Party: Democrat
Twitter Handle:
@SkordasGreg

Campaign Website: skordasforag.com

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Sean Reyes

Sean Reyes

Party: Republican
Twitter Handle:
@SeanReyesUT

Campaign Website: seanreyes.com

Utah Constitutional Amendments