The general municipal elections are fast approaching, with mail-in ballots beginning to arrive at voters’ homes last week.
On day two of the hearing over Utah's redistricting, the Legislature put forward its own academic experts. They, predictably, presented the opposing view of what the plaintiff's experts had to say the day before.
This election, your ballot needs to be in the hands of the county clerk by 8:00 p.m. next Tuesday (Election Day), not just postmarked the day before.
Instructions for voters in Utah County are causing confusion and uncertainty just two weeks before Election Day.
The state Republican Party shifted tactics for repealing a 2018 ballot initiative on redistricting standards on Friday, as hearings continued on the newly enacted congressional maps.
Just as the second and final day of complicated map-drawing expert testimony came to an end late Friday, another twist cropped up in Utah’s court-ordered redistricting legal battle. An attorney for Utah’s top election official,
The legal battle over Utah’s redistricting process and what congressional boundaries should be used for the 2026 election is reaching a new fever pitch — with more complexity and uncertainty than ever.
Author Table of Contents Media Contact For general and media inquiries and to book our experts, please contact: [email protected] Strategic reforms would make Utah’s primary elections more competitive and representative,
Sen. Daniel Thatcher, who bucked Republicans on trans sports, dormitories, food tax and labor bills — before leaving the GOP altogether — says he is stepping down from the Utah Legislature.
The Summit County Clerk’s Office will count ballots cast for the proposed West Hills township on Election Day after all.
Utah County's municipal election ballot instructions have some inaccurate and confusing information on them, but Utah County Clerk Aaron Davidson said they were left that way to save taxpayers money.
As federal influence stretches further into areas traditionally reserved for the states, from education to energy to election law, Utah is pushing back with principle. And we’re not alone. A national movement is building around the belief that America works best when states are empowered to lead.