- Breaking News Three hurt in Rodeo gas explosion
- Breaking News Anne Marie Fuller:
- Breaking News Salwan: Swine flu: The saga continues
- Breaking News Food and wine events
Incumbent knocked out of county's GOP races
0 Comments | Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Apr 27, 2008 | by Tad Walch Deseret News
OREM -- Saturday was a great day for eight of the nine incumbents running for re-election at the Utah County Republican Convention -- but just barely for two of them.
And for Rep. Aaron Tilton, R-Springville, the day couldn't have been worse -- but again, just barely.
Tilton lost his seat in the Utah House when delegates in District 65 gave upstart challenger Francis Gibson 70 of 115 votes, or 60.8 percent. That gave Gibson a supermajority and earned him the Republican nomination, ousting Tilton from the Legislature.
If two more delegates had switched their votes to Tilton, Gibson wouldn't have reached the magical 60 percent threshold and the candidates would have battled to a June primary.
Most Popular Articles
Most Recent Articles
Most Popular Publications
Most Recent Publications
Instead, Gibson will face Democrat Doug Baxter in the November general election, and Tilton will try to decide whether his vote for school vouchers or his controversial effort to build a nuclear power plant in Utah caused his downfall.
The other eight GOP incumbents who faced re-election challenges at the convention all won easily, and all by supermajorities like Gibson. That meant no primaries for any legislator whose entire district is in Utah County.
Two of those incumbents reached 60 percent by the skin of their teeth -- Rep. Brad Daw with 60.4 percent and Rep. Keith Grover with 60.8 percent.
With one more vote, Linda Housekeeper would have forced Daw into a primary. Lisa Shepherd needed two more votes to take Grover to a primary.
Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, easily won the nomination over Jackie deGaston, whose high-profile accusations that party leadership was stacking the deck in his favor gained little hold with delegates in Senate District 16.
"I think misrepresentations and negative campaigning were proven to once again be an unsuccessful strategy," Bramble said.
DeGaston expressed satisfaction that she brought attention to the Utah County Republican Party's practice of allowing elected officials to be delegates. She called them automatic delegates. Party leaders say they are ex-officio delegates, a common practice.
"Is there a person alive who doesn't know there is a problem with automatic delegates?" deGaston said.
Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert attended the convention and said ex- officio delegates are beneficial because they can educate other voters about the political process. He indicated willingness to review how replacement and discretionary delegates are assigned, but signaled that he believes local control is better than state control.
The convention's most famous delegate was 17-year-old Hannah Lockhart. The daughter of Utah Republican Party Chairman Stan Lockhart and Rep. Becky Lockhart, R-Provo, found herself embroiled in controversy last week when deGaston tried to have her delegate credentials revoked.
Hannah Lockhart graduated from the Utah County Academy of Sciences on Friday and is enrolled at Brigham Young University. She won election as a delegate from the precinct where she lives now, not the one where she lived at the time of that election, but she did so on the advice of Utah County Republican Chairwoman Marian Monnahan.
DeGaston filed a complaint but didn't pursue it at a hearing Friday afternoon, and Lockhart was seated. Lockhart plans to major in political science and chuckled at the idea that the whole experience might make a good term paper.
"It felt really good to be finally involved myself and to cast a vote and make a difference," she said, adding she was shocked and frustrated by the attention drawn to her case. "I know what I did was on the advice of people who knew what they were doing. I just tried to follow the rules."
Rep. Mike Morley, R-Spanish Fork, also cruised to victory against Chance Williams, whose effort to question Morley's ethics drew only 18 percent of the vote in House District 66. Williams was warned not to discuss at a candidates' night event a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit seeking the return of $3 million Morley got from a hedge fund investment before it went sour.
Williams was again warned before his speech Saturday that "mudslinging" would bring an end to his time.
Williams responded by pointing out that candidates pledge when they file to criticize their opponents where they differ "without fear or favor."
Other winners, by highest vote percentage, were Rep. Kenneth Sumsion, House District 56; Rep. Craig Frank, House District 57; Rep. Chris Herrod, House District 62; and Rep. Stephen Sandstrom, House District 58.
Tilton owns Transition Power, which is seeking to build a $3 billion nuclear power plant in Utah while Tilton has been serving as vice chairman of an interim legislative committee considering legislation that would help utilities build nuclear power plants.
He didn't blame media coverage of that issue for his loss. Instead, Tilton said he may be a victim of voucher backlash. He voted in favor of school vouchers last year, when the Legislature approved a vouchers bill that later was rejected by Utah voters in a referendum. Many candidates this year, especially Democrats, are running in an attempt to oust voucher supporters.
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- How Sources, Reporters View Math Errors in News
- Halo Debt Solutions, Inc. Supports Push Toward Industry Regulation
- Traction Named #1 Interactive Agency for 2009 by BtoB Magazine
- Halo Debt Solutions, Inc. Gives Debt Settlement a Face-Lift
- Banking technology, technological learning and competition: comparative case studies in Thai banking
- Why fly solo when an executive assistant can accelerate your CLNC® business?