Utah Democrats vote to support independent Evan McMullin over a Democratic candidate in push to defeat GOP Sen. Mike Lee

OSTN Staff

Evan McMullin
Evan McMullin.

  • Utah Democrats voted to back independent Evan McMullin for Senate over one of their own party members.
  • At Saturday’s Utah Democratic Convention, McMullin received 782 votes to Kael Weston’s 594 votes
  • In supporting McMullin, Democrats are forming an alliance to defeat the likely GOP nominee — Sen. Mike Lee.

In an extraordinary decision, Utah Democrats on Saturday voted to support independent candidate Evan McMullin for Senate over Democrat Kael Weston, part of an effort to create momentum to oust Republican Sen. Mike Lee from office in November.

By declining to put forth a Democratic candidate this fall, Utah Democrats are angling themselves to have greater influence in the general election, where their party has not won a Senate race in the conservative state since 1970.

At the Utah Democratic Convention, McMullin received 782 votes to Weston’s 594 votes; the motion to opt for McMullin’s independent candidacy versus the candidacy by Weston passed with 57% of the vote, per preliminary results.

McMullin — an ex-CIA officer who unsuccessfully sought the presidency in 2016, receiving nearly 22% of the vote against former President Donald Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Utah — lauded the decision.

“Democrats are putting country over party,” McMullin said after the vote. “This is our democracy and, yes, it can be messy at times as we saw today, but it’s sure a heck of a lot better than the alternative.”

Lee on Saturday won the support of roughly 75 percent of the delegates at the Republican convention. In June, he will face former state Rep. Becky Edwards and Ally Isom — a former spokesperson for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — in a GOP primary.

Both Edwards and Isom have called for fresh leadership and chided Lee for his rhetoric, arguing that he has not helped improve the governing climate in Washington, DC.

“Utahns are tired of divisiveness, ineffectiveness, and the extreme rhetoric Lee is so often known to deploy,” Edwards wrote in Deseret News in January, adding that “politics should not be about sowing division, a cult of personality or staunch obstructionism.” 

McMullin on Saturday attacked Lee for being entangled in the debate over the 2020 presidential election, which Trump continues to say was fraudulent despite no verifiable evidence of widespread malfeasance.

“We know that Sen. Mike Lee was quite involved in the effort to overturn our democracy,” McMullin told reporters after the vote, blasting the Republican lawmaker over his text messages to then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows regarding the 2020 presidential election results.

Lee last week vehemently denied that he encouraged state legislators to submit alternate pro-Trump electors ahead of January 6, 2021, when the certification of the Electoral College results was set to take place at the US Capitol.

“We have got to take a stand as Utahns,” McMullin said on Saturday. “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.”

He emphasized: “We cannot compromise on that, and we must all be united to defend it.”

While Weston’s supporters sought to block state Democrats from backing McMullin, they were unable to stop the faction of party members who wanted a different approach.

After the vote, Weston praised delegates for the “important” debate, which he contended “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,” he said in thanking his supporters. “It was a real conversation. It was loud and unpredictable, and I accept what delegates have decided to do.”

Prominent state Democrats, including former Rep. Ben McAdams and Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson, played key roles in pushing their fellow party members to support McMullin.

The moderate United Utah Party — which has also backed McMullin — commended state Democrats for their decision.

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

Read the original article on Business Insider

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