Utah Democrats Unite Behind Independent Evan McMullin To Defeat Coup Plotter Insurrectionist Mike Lee

Orrin G. Hatch, the longest-serving Republican senator in history and a fixture in Utah politics for more than four decades, on Saturday died at age 88. Long-serving US Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah dies at age 88:

The retired senator’s death Saturday was announced in a statement from his foundation, which did not specify a cause.

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A staunch conservative on most economic and social issues, he also teamed with Democrats several times during his long career on issues ranging from stem cell research to rights for people with disabilities to expanding children’s health insurance. He formed friendships across the aisle, particularly with the late Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

President Joe Biden, whose served with Hatch in the Senate over three decades, on Sunday described the Republican lawmaker as a fighter for the causes he believed in, but with a softer side including writing songs and poems that he shared with friends.

“To serve with Orrin, as I did for over three decades, was to see — and appreciate — both,” Biden said in a statement. “I saw that energetic, sharp-elbowed Orrin in the many battles we had over tax policy, the right of workers to join a union, and many others.”

Geezus. There is some serious glossing over the career of Orrin Hatch in this reporting. He was one of the first radical right-wing extremists in the Senate. He was a trailblazer for all the right-wing extremists who followed him. For a more accurate accounting of the too-long career of Orrin Hatch, see Erik Loomis, How former GOP Senator Orrin Hatch spent his career ‘making the country worse’. “Orrin Hatch is now dead. The nation is worse for his life.”

But this is not about him. Orrin Hatch died the same day as the Utah Republican Party Convention, where party activists nominate their candidates for the ballot (Utah has a dual candidate nominating process).

As extremist as Orrin Hatch was, he pales in comparison to the MAGA/QAnon cultists running for office in Utah this year (they give Arizona Republicans a run for their money).

I’m thinking this Utah Republican Party Convention was the actual cause of his death. Hatch’s last words should have been “My God, what have I done?

The Salt Lake Tribune is subscriber only, so here is a recap from RawStory, ‘Rock star’ Mike Lee gets standing ovations from Utah GOP — Dems do not nominate a candidate: reports:

Eight days after CNN released text messages showing Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) had supported Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the election despite telling the public the opposite, Utah Republicans provided him of a vote of confidence.

Lee dodged local reporters but eventually attempted to defend his texts.

At the Utah Republican Party nominating convention on Saturday, Lee won easily, The Salt Lake Tribune reports.

“After a nearly two-hour delay caused by problems with the electronic voting system, the convention finally got rolling with the U.S. Senate race,” the newspaper reported.

“Lee cruised to an easy victory, grabbing three-quarters of the delegate vote. Lee is the closest thing to a rock star you’ll find among the Utah Republican base. Delegates gave him a standing ovation as he took and exited the stage for his speech.”

Got that? A Coup Plotter insurrectionist who conspired with Trump and others to overturn the will of the people in the 2020 election and to install Donald Trump as the autocratic leader of a GQP authoritarian tyranny of the minority on January 6 is a “rock star” to Utah Republicans who gave him a standing ovation, rather than hold him accountable for his seditious insurrection. (Probably the exact moment Orrin Hatch died. Not even he would have found this acceptable.)

Jaw dropping hypocrisy: Lee told delegates that Republicans have much to offer because they follow the Constitution. This Coup Plotter insurrectionist conspired to burn down the Constitution!

This is the same Mike Lee who said “we’re not a democracy,” parroting John Birch Society talking points from the 1950s. Sen. Mike Lee’s tweets against “democracy,” explained: “The John Birch Society, a radical faction in the postwar conservative movement, helped popularize the “republic versus democracy” distinction in the 1950s and ’60s. According to Nicole Hemmer, a historian of the conservative movement at Columbia University, the idea really took off on the right during the conservative fight against civil rights legislation and Supreme Court rulings expanding the franchise.” “It goes back to the ‘republic, not a democracy’ chants from the 1964 [Republican] convention,” she tells me. “Conservatives rejected the one-person-one-vote standard of the Warren Court, a set of arguments deeply entangled with their opposition to the Black civil rights movement.”

Former state legislator Becky Edwards, and community and business leader Ally Isom have already qualified for the primary election through signature gathering, as had Mike Lee, in Utah’s dual candidate nominating process.

So you’re saying there’s a chance?

RawStory continues:

There was also big news at the Democratic Party convention.

ABC 4 News anchor Glen Mills reports Utah Democrats “delegates have voted not to nominate a candidate for U.S. Senate. Instead, they will back Independent Evan McMullin in the general election.”

Former Rep. Ben McAdams (D-UT), who also served as the mayor of Salt Lake City, said McMullin’s independent coalition “can win this race and defeat Mike Lee.”

How bad do Utah Democrats want Mike Lee out? Bad enough to ditch their own nominee and back Evan McMullin instead:

The Utah Democratic Party made an extraordinary decision on Saturday.

A majority of delegates decided to not put forth a Democratic candidate to face off with Republican Sen. Mike Lee and instead back independent candidate Evan McMullin.

The decision has big implications for Utah’s U.S. Senate race. It injects significant momentum into a more moderate, independent movement in Utah politics — and signals Utah Democrats are so eager to up the chances of beating Lee they’re willing to ditch their own candidate. At least for now.

During Saturday’s at times chaotic convention at Cottonwood High School in the Salt Lake County suburb of Murray, a faction of delegates put forth a motion to opt against choosing Kael Weston as the party’s Democratic U.S. Senate nominee and instead join McMullin’s coalition.

McMullin, a former Republican, ran an unsuccessful independent campaign for president against former President Donald Trump in 2016. Now he’s got Lee in his crosshairs.

“We know that Sen. Mike Lee was quite involved in the effort to overturn our democracy,” McMullin told reporters shortly after his victory was reflected in vote tallies, seizing another opportunity to blast Lee over his text messages to then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows as he explored ideas on how to overturn the 2020 presidential election before ultimately deciding to vote to certify the electoral results on Jan. 6.

“We have got to take a stand as Utahns,” McMullin said. “I don’t care if you’re a Democrat or or an independent or a Republican or a member of the United Utah Party, this is a line that cannot be crossed, our right to hold our leaders accountable and to vote for or against them and have a peaceful transition of power is essential for liberty and justice in America. We cannot compromise on that, and we must all be united to defend it.”

Despite several failed maneuvers from Democratic candidate Kael Weston’s supporters to block it from coming to a vote, the motion to back McMullin won with 782 votes to Weston’s 594 votes. It passed with 57% of the vote, according to preliminary results.

Cheers erupted from McMullin’s side of the auditorium when party officials announced the vote tallies late Saturday afternoon.

In a gaggle with reporters, Weston didn’t wear any disappointment on his face. Instead, he applauded delegates for the “important” debate, “which wouldn’t have happened if we hadn’t had a Democrat make the case.”

“Of course you want to be the candidate that walks out with a unanimous degree of support, but I knew this was always going to be an important conversation to have,” Weston said, thanking his supporters. “It was a real conversation. It was loud and unpredictable, and I accept what delegates have decided to do.”

The centrist United Utah Party, which has also joined McMullin’s coalition, applauded Democrats’ decision in a prepared statement issued after the vote.

“We applaud the courage and wisdom of the Democratic Party in setting aside party loyalty and putting the needs of Utah first,” said United Utah Party Chairwoman Hillary Stirling. “In order to win elections in our current voting system, voters need to get behind a single opposition candidate,”

‘Country over party’

The move to back an independent candidate rather than their own nominee is the first effort of its kind in Utah’s party history.

The unprecedented decision, McMullin said, shows “Utah Democrats are putting country over party.”

“We have a tremendous amount of common ground (in) this coalition of Democrats, independents, principled Republicans … who want to make a change,” McMullin said. “This idea that our differences are greater than what we have in common are just false.”

High-profile Utah Democrats including former Rep. Ben McAdams and Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson were instrumental in urging their fellow Utah Democrats to back McMullin.

They argued not putting a Democrat on the November ballot was the right move to up the chances of defeating Lee and that a Democrat would stand little chance of winning the election. They urged Utah Democrats to set aside party loyalty in order to prioritize defeating Lee above all else.

It’s been more than 50 years since a Utah Democrat last won a U.S. Senate race.

Since the late, great Frank Moss. Utah has not elected a decent statewide politician since.

Yes, McMullin “isn’t going to align with Democrats on every issue,” McAdams told the Deseret News earlier this week. “But he has a path for winning this race.”

Saturday, McAdams told delegates McMullin can heal gridlock and dysfunction in Congress. He said McMullin would bring “new, courageous leadership to break the mold” and “heal the divide.”

“Evan is the right person for this moment,” McAdams said. “I know Evan. I trust Evan.”

Wilson, who voiced the key motion in favor of McMullin, made an emotional plea to her fellow Democrats. She said she knows from her unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senate against Sen. Orrin Hatch in 2018 “our numbers don’t add up.”

“We need this coalition. It’s a practical matter,” Wilson said. “This is a good move for us.”

McMullin, who delegates decided through a series of motions would be allowed to speak during the convention, gave a rushed, one-minute speech through scattered shouts and boos from Weston’s camp.

“I want to represent you. I’m committed to that. I will maintain my independence,” McMullin told delegates. “We will show the rest of the country how we beat people like Mike Lee who try to overturn our democracy in the shadows.”

How will this impact Utah Democrats’ future?

Weston has called the pro-McMullin effort “fundamentally disenfranchising,” saying Democrats shouldn’t “give up” and render themselves irrelevant so soon in the election.

Asked if he was concerned about what impact Saturday’s decision would have on the future of the Utah Democratic Party, Weston told reporters, “Good question.”

“Today was a crossroads and a certain path was taken,” he said. “It’s a path that’s not been taken before. … I think the Utah Democratic Party will continue to have an important role. A lot of people will be licking their wounds for a while.”

Weston said he’s more concerned about ensuring Utah has a “healthy political marketplace, and that’s not going to be possible if we don’t have Democrats on the ballot.”

Asked if he’ll now support McMullin in his bid, Weston said, ‘What I’m supporting is making sure that this conversation goes forward in the way that it should so we can beat Mike Lee and make sure that we support all good candidates. … I’m not opposed to making sure that we don’t let broken glass get in the way of what’s right for Utah.”

* * *

Weston also argued choosing not to put a Democrat on the November ballot would “short-circuit” the democratic process at the expense of important policy issues that Democrats care about like housing, air quality and water.

“The Utah Democratic Party is not the unseat Mike Lee party,” Weston told the Deseret News earlier this week. “If this campaign is just about Mike Lee, Utah families lose out.”

However, in an interview while waiting for voting results to be tabulated, Weston said regardless of the outcome he felt good about how the state convention debate played out.

“This is democracy in practice,” he said.

“Whatever happens, it’s incredibly important that the Utah Democratic Party understands there are a lot of voters in this state who right now feel like their vote doesn’t matter,” Weston said.

“This election does matter. Sen. Mike Lee is beatable. And how we beat him is not going to take just some of us, but all of us.”

Other Utah Democratic Party results

Utah Republican Rep. Blake Moore’s Democratic challenger will be Rick Jones in the race for Utah’s 1st Congressional District. Jones ran unopposed for the party’s nomination.

Utah’s Republican incumbent Rep. Chris Stewart will face Democratic nominee Nick Mitchell in November for Utah’s 2nd Congressional seat.

Mitchell won the Utah Democratic Party’s nomination with over 60% of the vote to his opponent Steve Hartwick’s 39.8%.
Republican incumbent Rep. John Curtis will face Democratic nominee Glenn Wright in the bid for Utah’s 3rd Congressional seat.

Wright won delegates’ nomination handily, with over 91% of the vote to Archie Williams’ 8.8%.
Utah Republican incumbent Rep. Burgess Owens will face off with Democratic candidate Darlene McDonald for Utah’s 4th Congressional District. McDonald ran unopposed for the party’s nomination.





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