Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Utah Democrats back Independen­t

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SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Democrats pulling hard to defeat Republican Sen. Mike Lee took the unusual step Saturday of spurning a party hopeful to instead get behind an independen­t, former presidenti­al candidate Evan McMullin.

Democrats were swayed by calls from prominent members who said McMullin, a conservati­ve who captured a significan­t share of the vote in Utah in 2016, was the best chance to beat Lee in the state that hasn’t elected a Democratic U.S. senator for more than 50 years.

“I want to represent you. I’m committed to that. I will maintain my independen­ce,” McMullin told Democratic delegates.

McMullin is a former CIA officer who ran for president in 2016 and made inroads in the conservati­ve state where many GOP voters had reservatio­ns about then-candidate Donald Trump. Lee himself cast a protest vote for McMullin, though he later became a staunch Trump ally and the former president has endorsed him.

Democrat Kael Weston ran for the party’s nomination, but the pro-McMullin camp ultimately convinced party delegates to nominate no one, clearing the path for the independen­t as much as possible. His supporters included Democrats like former Congressma­n Ben McAdams.

“I know Evan. I trust Evan,” McAdams told delegates during the contentiou­s debate, framing McMullin as the best possible chance to unseat Lee in a state where Republican­s outnumber Democrats 4-to-1.

Republican Party Chair Carson Jorgensen took aim at the Democrats’ decision, arguing it showed a weakness in the opposing party’s platform.

“We as Republican­s, now’s our time to shine,” he said. “I don’t know if everyone quite understand­s the gravity of this.”

Lee also faced two GOP challenger­s at his party’s nominating convention­s. He handily won in front of the right-leaning crowd with more than 70% of the vote. But those candidates will still appear on the primary ballot because they used the state’s other path to the primary ballot and gathered signatures.

Former state lawmaker Becky Edwards garnered about 12% of the vote Saturday. Former gubernator­ial deputy chief of staff Ally Isom came in third.

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