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Utah Republican Party


FieldValue
nameUtah Republican Party
colorcode
logo[[File:Utah Republican Party logo.png200px]]
website
headquarters117 E. South Temple
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
chairmanRob Axson
leader1_titleVice Chairman
leader1_nameMelanie Monestere
leader2_titleSecretary
leader2_nameStafford Palmieri
leader3_titleTreasurer
leader3_nameMcKay Newell
leader4_titleHouse leader
leader4_nameMike Schultz
leader5_titleSenate leader
leader5_nameJ. Stuart Adams
foundation1854
predecessorWhig Party
Free Soil Party
membership_year2024
membership902,296
ideologyConservatism
seats1_titleSeats in the United States Senate
seats1
seats2_titleSeats in the United States House of Representatives
seats2
seats3_titleSeats in the Utah Senate
seats3
seats4_titleSeats in the Utah House of Representatives
seats4
nationalRepublican Party
colorsRed
stateUtah
symbol[[File:Republican Party Disc (alternate).svg100px]]

Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Free Soil Party

The Utah Republican Party is the affiliate of the Republican Party in the U.S. state of Utah. It is currently the dominant party in the state, and has been for almost all of its history. It currently holds Utah's entire congressional delegation, all statewide executive offices, and supermajorities in both state legislative chambers.

History

The state of Utah politics was reorganized after the 1890 Manifesto led by Wilford Woodruff. The 1890 Manifesto officially ended the traditionally Mormon practice of Polygamy. Many prominent polygamist Mormons were imprisoned, punished and harassed since the 1890 Manifesto prohibited plural marriage. This action granted the Utah Territory statehood in 1896 on the condition that polygamy was banned in the state constitution. The Republican Frank J. Cannon was the first delegate elected to congress by the state of Utah in 1894.

Although Utah was generally considered a Democratic-leaning area (or an area that would lean Democratic) before statehood, the state of Utah rapidly gained overwhelming support for the Republican Party after 1896. Although the Republican Party had been strongly opposed to polygamy since its inception and had played a major part in abolishing polygamy, the Republican U.S. Senator Reed Smoot rose to political power. Smoot led a political alliance of Mormons and non-Mormons that created a strong Republican party in many parts of the state.

The Republican Party is currently dominant in Utah politics: no Democrat has won statewide office since 1996, when Jan Graham was elected attorney general; and when Mia Love replaced Jim Matheson in congress in 2014, Utah's congressional delegation became all-Republican. When Love lost her seat to Ben McAdams in the 2018 election, Democrats regained one of Utah's four seats. After the 2020 election Ben McAdams lost his seat to Burgess Owens and Utah's congressional delegation became all-Republican again.

Current elected officials

The Utah Republican Party controls all five statewide offices and holds a supermajority in the Utah House of Representatives and the Utah State Senate. Republicans also hold both of the state's U.S. Senate seats and all four of the state's U.S. House seats.

Members of Congress

U.S. Senate

File:Mike Lee, official portrait (cropped).jpg|Senior U.S. Senator File:Senator John Curtis Official Portrait (cropped).jpg|Junior U.S. Senator

U.S. House of Representatives

  • UT-1st: Blake Moore
  • UT-2nd: Celeste Maloy
  • UT-3rd: Mike Kennedy
  • UT-4th: Burgess Owens

Statewide offices

  • Governor: Spencer Cox
  • Lieutenant Governor: Deidre Henderson
  • Attorney General: Derek Brown
  • State Treasurer: Marlo Oaks
  • State Auditor: Tina Cannon

State Legislature

  • President of the Senate: J. Stuart Adams
    • Senate Majority Leader: Kirk Cullimore
  • Speaker of the House: Mike Schultz
    • House Majority Leader: Casey Snider

State party organization

OfficeOffice-holder
ChairRobert Axson
Vice ChairKim Coleman
SecretaryStafford Palmieri
TreasurerMckay Newell

In off-election years the Utah Republican Party holds organizing conventions where state delegates elect a chair, vice-chair, secretary and treasurer. The state party officers are elected for a term of two (2) years.

Central Committee

The State Central Committee (SCC) has representatives from every county in Utah. Along with the automatic members, each county chair and vice-chair, counties are allocated representative based on the number of voting republicans in that county. These representatives are chosen in elections which take place in the Republican county conventions held in odd-numbered years.

Auxiliaries

The Utah Republican Party has seven (7) registered auxiliaries. This list includes: Utah Elephant Club, Utah Federation of Republican Women, Utah Young Republicans, Utah Federation of College Republicans, Utah Native American Caucus, Utah Republican Women's Liberty Caucus, and Utah Republican Veterans' Caucus.

Utah Federation of College Republicans

The Utah Federation of College Republicans (UFCR) is a state-level organization in Utah that oversees College Republican chapters at colleges and universities across the state. It is affiliated with the College Republicans of America (CRA), a national organization established in 2023, and works to promote conservative values, support Republican candidates, and engage college students in political activism. The UFCR operates as an official auxiliary of the Utah Republican Party, it collaborates closely with the state party to advance shared goals.

The UFCR holds chapters at Brigham Young University, University of Utah, Utah State University, Weber State University, and more.

Election results

Presidential

ElectionPresidential ticketVotesVote %Electoral votesResult
1896William McKinley/Garret Hobart13,49117.27%
1900William McKinley/Theodore Roosevelt47,13950.65%
1904Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks62,45261.41%
1908William Howard Taft/James S. Sherman61,16556.23%
1912William Howard Taft/Nicholas M. Butler42,01337.42%
1916Charles E. Hughes/Charles W. Fairbanks54,13737.82%
1920Warren G. Harding/Calvin Coolidge81,55555.93%
1924Calvin Coolidge/Charles G. Dawes77,32749.26%
1928Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis94,61858.58%
1932Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis84,79541.05%
1936Alf Landon/Frank Knox64,55529.79%
1940Wendell Willkie/Charles L. McNary93,15137.59%
1944Thomas E. Dewey/John W. Bricker97,89139.42%
1948Thomas E. Dewey/Earl Warren124,40245.02%
1952Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon194,19058.93%
1956Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon215,63164.56%
1960Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.205,36154.81%
1964Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller180,68245.14%
1968Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew238,72856.49%
1972Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew323,64367.64%
1976Gerald Ford/Bob Dole337,90862.44%
1980Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush439,68772.77%
1984Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush469,10574.50%
1988George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle428,44266.22%
1992George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle322,33243.36%
1996Bob Dole/Jack Kemp361,91154.37%
2000George W. Bush/Dick Cheney515,09666.83%
2004George W. Bush/Dick Cheney663,74271.54%
2008John McCain/Sarah Palin596,03062.24%
2012Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan740,60072.62%
2016Donald Trump/Mike Pence515,23145.54%
2020Donald Trump/Mike Pence865,14058.16%
2024Donald Trump/JD Vance883,81859.38%

Gubernatorial

ElectionGubernatorial candidate/ticketVotesVote %Result
1895Heber Manning Wells20,83350.32%Won
1900Heber Manning Wells40,20951.98%Won
1904John Christopher Cutler50,83749.97%Won
1908William Spry52,91347.45%Won
1912William Spry42,55238.17%Won
1916Nephi L. Morris59,52941.80%Lost
1920Charles R. Mabey81,55057.59%Won
1924Charles R. Mabey72,12747.01%Lost
1928William Henry Wattis72,30641.08%Lost
1932William W. Seegmiller85,91341.76%Lost
1936Ray E. Dillman60,11835.41%Lost
1940Don B. Colton117,71347.69%Lost
1944J. Bracken Lee122,85149.79%Lost
1948J. Bracken Lee151,25354.99%Won
1952J. Bracken Lee180,51655.09%Won
1956George Dewey Clyde127,16438.20%Won
1960George Dewey Clyde195,63452.66%Won
1964Mitchell Melich171,30043.01%Lost
1968Carl W. Buehner131,72931.29%Lost
1972Nicholas L. Strike144,44930.31%Lost
1976Vernon B. Romney248,02745.96%Lost
1980Bob Wright266,57844.43%Lost
1984Norman H. Bangerter351,79255.87%Won
1988Norman H. Bangerter260,46240.13%Won
1992Mike Leavitt/Olene Walker321,71342.19%Won
1996Mike Leavitt/Olene Walker503,69374.97%Won
2000Mike Leavitt/Olene Walker424,83755.77%Won
2004Jon Huntsman Jr./Gary Herbert531,19057.74%Won
2008Jon Huntsman Jr./Gary Herbert735,04977.63%Won
2010 (special)Gary Herbert/Greg Bell412,15164.07%Won
2012Gary Herbert/Greg Bell688,59268.41%Won
2016Gary Herbert/Spencer Cox750,85066.74%Won
2020Spencer Cox/Deidre Henderson918,75462.98%Won
2024Spencer Cox/Deidre Henderson781,43152.89%Won

County party organizations

Each of Utah's 29 counties has a party organization, which operates within that county and sends delegates to the State Central Committee.

County PartyWebsite
Cachehttp://cachegop.com/
Davishttp://www.davisgop.org/
Morganhttp://www.morganutahgop.org/
Salt Lakehttp://www.slcogop.com
Sanpetehttp://www.sanpetecountyrepublicans.com
Summithttp://www.summitcountygop.org
Utahhttp://ucrp.org
Weberhttps://www.webergop.org

References

References

  1. "Voter Registration Statistics". Utah Secretary of State.
  2. Utah Republican Party. "Utah Republican Party". Utgop.org.
  3. [http://www.sltrib.com/ci_3926949 "Money-burning Dems pamper neglected reds," The Salt Lake Tribune, June 12, 2006]
  4. "Utah Federation of College Republicans".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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