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Utah's 3rd congressional district | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Results by county | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Elections in Utah |
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After previously stating that he would not run for re-election, Jason Chaffetz announced on May 19 that he was resigning his seat in the House, effective June 30. [1] A special election was called to replace him with a filing period opening on May 19 and closing by June 30, an expected primary date of August 15, and an election day of November 7. [1]
A crowded field of candidates emerged to compete for spots in their respective parties' primaries. 15 Republicans, 4 Democrats, 2 Independent American Party members and 1 Libertarian declared their candidacy. Candidates could qualify for the primary ballot by either being nominated by delegates at their party's convention or gathering 7,000 signatures from registered voters. Those gathering signatures could also seek nomination at their party's convention. The Republican and Democratic parties held conventions June 17 to select a nominee from the declared. [2]
The primary election to determine the Republican Party's candidate for the general election was held on August 15. In addition to the partisan candidates, one unaffiliated candidate appeared on the general election ballot and two candidates ran as a write-in. [2] [3]
The general election was held on Tuesday, November 7, 2017. Republican John Curtis was declared the winner and was subsequently seated by the U.S. House for a term that ends January 3, 2019.
The Republican primary was held on Tuesday August 15, 2017. Only registered Republicans living in the 3rd congressional district were able vote in the primary, though unaffiliated voters were allowed to affiliate as Republicans at polling locations on election day. [4]
Fifteen candidates declared their candidacy for the Republican party nomination. While four candidates declared their intent to gather signatures, only two submitted signatures for verification by the required deadline. This election was the first time in Utah politics where three candidates were on the primary ballot since two candidates submitted enough signatures to qualify for the primary ballot and the party nominated a third candidate at its convention. [3] [4]
Ainge and Curtis submitted enough signatures to qualify for spots on the primary ballot. Curtis also participated in the convention process, but lost to Herrod who was nominated at the convention. Curtis would go on to win the primary.
Republican Convention | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | First ballot | Pct. | Second ballot | Pct. | Third ballot | Pct. | Fourth ballot | Pct. | Fifth ballot | Pct. |
Christopher Herrod | 200 | 25.64% | 238 | 31.23% | 264 | 34.87% | 337 | 44.81% | 415 | 55.11% |
Deidre Henderson | 202 | 25.90% | 225 | 29.53% | 271 | 35.80% | 301 | 40.03% | 338 | 44.89% |
Margaret Dayton | 145 | 18.59% | 140 | 18.37% | 113 | 14.93% | 68 | 9.04% | Eliminated | |
Stewart Peay | 74 | 9.49% | 47 | 6.17% | 45 | 5.94% | 27 | 3.59% | Eliminated | |
John Curtis | 71 | 9.10% | 52 | 6.82% | 35 | 4.62% | 19 | 2.53% | Eliminated | |
Damian Kidd | 48 | 6.15% | 39 | 5.12% | 29 | 3.83% | Eliminated | |||
Brad Daw | 19 | 2.44% | 12 | 1.57% | Eliminated | |||||
Paul Fife | 15 | 1.92% | 9 | 1.18% | Eliminated | |||||
Debbie Aldrich | 4 | 0.51% | Eliminated | |||||||
Shayne Row | 2 | 0.26% | Eliminated | |||||||
Keith Kuder | 0 | 0.00% | Eliminated |
Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size |
Margin of error |
John Curtis (R) | Chris Herrod (R) | Tanner Ainge (R) | Undecided |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dan Jones & Associates | June 23 – July 5, 2017 | 199 | 4.9% | 27% | 9% | 7% | 57% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | John Curtis | 31,481 | 43.28% | |
Republican | Chris Herrod | 23,686 | 32.57% | |
Republican | Tanner Ainge | 17,565 | 24.15% | |
Total votes | 72,732 | 100.00% |
Four candidates declared their candidacy for the Democratic party nomination. Two candidates declared their intent to gather signatures but neither submitted signatures for verification prior to the required deadline. [3] On June 17, 2017, the Democratic Party formally nominated Kathie Allen as their candidate, eliminating the need for a primary election. [17]
Democratic Convention | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | First ballot | Pct. |
Kathie Allen | 76% | |
Carl Ingwell | ||
Ben Frank |
The newly formed United Utah Party submitted the required number of signatures to be recognized as a political party in Utah on May 25, one day before the candidate filing deadline. Jim Bennett, the party's executive director, filed to run as its nominee but was rejected because the state had not yet processed the submitted signatures. [18]
The party took the issue to court, and a federal judge found that Utah had illegally violated Bennett's First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by denying him a spot on the ballot. The state elections office immediately complied with the court order and declined to appeal the decision. Jim Bennett was placed on the general election ballot as the United Utah Party candidate. [19]
Two candidates declared their intent to seek the nomination of the Independent American Party.
The special general election was held on Tuesday, November 7, 2017.
Major
The following candidates qualified to appear in the state-sponsored debates:
Minor
The following third-party or independent candidates qualified for the ballot but didn't poll high enough to currently qualify for the state-sponsored debates:
No. | Date | Host | Moderator | Link | Republican | Democratic | United Utah |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Key: P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn |
|||||||
John Curtis | Kathie Allen | Jim Bennett | |||||
1 | Oct. 20, 2017 | Utah Debate Commission | David Magleby | YouTube | P | P | P |
Source | Ranking | As of |
---|---|---|
The Cook Political Report [21] | Solid R | July 21, 2017 |
Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size |
Margin of error |
Kathie Allen (D) |
Jim Bennett (UU) |
Joe Buchman (L) |
Jason Christensen (IA) |
John Curtis (R) |
Sean Whalen (Ind.) |
Write-ins | Other | Undecided |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dan Jones & Associates | October 9–16, 2017 | 410 | ± 4.8% | 19% | 9% | 3% | 2% | 46% | 0% | 0% | 3% | 17% |
Dan Jones & Associates | September 14–20, 2017 | 600 | ± 4.0% | 16.67% | 6.00% | – | – | 54.33% | – | – | – | – |
Dan Jones & Associates | August 30 – September 5, 2017 | 607 | ± 4.0% | 19.82% | 5.59% | 2.78% | 0.99% | 50.17% | 0.99% | 0.16% | 1.82% | 17.69% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | John Curtis | 85,751 | 58.02% | |
Democratic | Kathie Allen | 37,801 | 25.58% | |
United Utah | Jim Bennett | 13,747 | 9.30% | |
Independent | Sean Whalen | 4,554 | 3.08% | |
Libertarian | Joe Buchman | 3,644 | 2.47% | |
Independent American | Jason Christensen | 2,286 | 1.55% | |
Write-in | Brendan Phillips | 8 | 0.01% | |
Write-in | Russell Paul Roesler | 5 | 0.00% | |
Total votes | 147,796 | 100.00% | ||
Republican hold |
County [29] | Curtis Votes |
Curtis % |
Allen Votes |
Allen % |
Bennett Votes |
Bennett % |
Whalen Votes |
Whalen % |
Buchman Votes |
Buchman % |
Christensen Votes |
Christensen % |
Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carbon | 1,675 | 47.36% | 1,327 | 37.52% | 304 | 8.59% | 114 | 3.22% | 68 | 1.92% | 49 | 1.39% | 3,537 |
Emery | 944 | 69.16% | 228 | 16.70% | 109 | 7.99% | 30 | 2.20% | 22 | 1.61% | 32 | 2.34% | 1,365 |
Grand | 997 | 32.24% | 1,618 | 52.33% | 172 | 5.56% | 209 | 6.76% | 55 | 1.78% | 41 | 1.33% | 3,092 |
Salt Lake | 21,857 | 43.22% | 21,135 | 41.80% | 4,913 | 9.72% | 1,011 | 2.00% | 1,073 | 2.12% | 579 | 1.14% | 50,568 |
San Juan | 1,470 | 49.07% | 1,062 | 35.45% | 180 | 6.01% | 131 | 4.37% | 73 | 2.44% | 80 | 2.67% | 2,996 |
Utah | 55,136 | 69.33% | 10,334 | 12.99% | 7,553 | 9.50% | 2,885 | 3.63% | 2,212 | 2.78% | 1,409 | 1.77% | 79,529 |
Wasatch | 3,660 | 55.00% | 2,074 | 31.17% | 514 | 7.72% | 170 | 2.55% | 140 | 2.10% | 96 | 1.44% | 6,654 |
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Utah's 3rd congressional district | |||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Results by county | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Elections in Utah |
---|
After previously stating that he would not run for re-election, Jason Chaffetz announced on May 19 that he was resigning his seat in the House, effective June 30. [1] A special election was called to replace him with a filing period opening on May 19 and closing by June 30, an expected primary date of August 15, and an election day of November 7. [1]
A crowded field of candidates emerged to compete for spots in their respective parties' primaries. 15 Republicans, 4 Democrats, 2 Independent American Party members and 1 Libertarian declared their candidacy. Candidates could qualify for the primary ballot by either being nominated by delegates at their party's convention or gathering 7,000 signatures from registered voters. Those gathering signatures could also seek nomination at their party's convention. The Republican and Democratic parties held conventions June 17 to select a nominee from the declared. [2]
The primary election to determine the Republican Party's candidate for the general election was held on August 15. In addition to the partisan candidates, one unaffiliated candidate appeared on the general election ballot and two candidates ran as a write-in. [2] [3]
The general election was held on Tuesday, November 7, 2017. Republican John Curtis was declared the winner and was subsequently seated by the U.S. House for a term that ends January 3, 2019.
The Republican primary was held on Tuesday August 15, 2017. Only registered Republicans living in the 3rd congressional district were able vote in the primary, though unaffiliated voters were allowed to affiliate as Republicans at polling locations on election day. [4]
Fifteen candidates declared their candidacy for the Republican party nomination. While four candidates declared their intent to gather signatures, only two submitted signatures for verification by the required deadline. This election was the first time in Utah politics where three candidates were on the primary ballot since two candidates submitted enough signatures to qualify for the primary ballot and the party nominated a third candidate at its convention. [3] [4]
Ainge and Curtis submitted enough signatures to qualify for spots on the primary ballot. Curtis also participated in the convention process, but lost to Herrod who was nominated at the convention. Curtis would go on to win the primary.
Republican Convention | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | First ballot | Pct. | Second ballot | Pct. | Third ballot | Pct. | Fourth ballot | Pct. | Fifth ballot | Pct. |
Christopher Herrod | 200 | 25.64% | 238 | 31.23% | 264 | 34.87% | 337 | 44.81% | 415 | 55.11% |
Deidre Henderson | 202 | 25.90% | 225 | 29.53% | 271 | 35.80% | 301 | 40.03% | 338 | 44.89% |
Margaret Dayton | 145 | 18.59% | 140 | 18.37% | 113 | 14.93% | 68 | 9.04% | Eliminated | |
Stewart Peay | 74 | 9.49% | 47 | 6.17% | 45 | 5.94% | 27 | 3.59% | Eliminated | |
John Curtis | 71 | 9.10% | 52 | 6.82% | 35 | 4.62% | 19 | 2.53% | Eliminated | |
Damian Kidd | 48 | 6.15% | 39 | 5.12% | 29 | 3.83% | Eliminated | |||
Brad Daw | 19 | 2.44% | 12 | 1.57% | Eliminated | |||||
Paul Fife | 15 | 1.92% | 9 | 1.18% | Eliminated | |||||
Debbie Aldrich | 4 | 0.51% | Eliminated | |||||||
Shayne Row | 2 | 0.26% | Eliminated | |||||||
Keith Kuder | 0 | 0.00% | Eliminated |
Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size |
Margin of error |
John Curtis (R) | Chris Herrod (R) | Tanner Ainge (R) | Undecided |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dan Jones & Associates | June 23 – July 5, 2017 | 199 | 4.9% | 27% | 9% | 7% | 57% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | John Curtis | 31,481 | 43.28% | |
Republican | Chris Herrod | 23,686 | 32.57% | |
Republican | Tanner Ainge | 17,565 | 24.15% | |
Total votes | 72,732 | 100.00% |
Four candidates declared their candidacy for the Democratic party nomination. Two candidates declared their intent to gather signatures but neither submitted signatures for verification prior to the required deadline. [3] On June 17, 2017, the Democratic Party formally nominated Kathie Allen as their candidate, eliminating the need for a primary election. [17]
Democratic Convention | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | First ballot | Pct. |
Kathie Allen | 76% | |
Carl Ingwell | ||
Ben Frank |
The newly formed United Utah Party submitted the required number of signatures to be recognized as a political party in Utah on May 25, one day before the candidate filing deadline. Jim Bennett, the party's executive director, filed to run as its nominee but was rejected because the state had not yet processed the submitted signatures. [18]
The party took the issue to court, and a federal judge found that Utah had illegally violated Bennett's First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by denying him a spot on the ballot. The state elections office immediately complied with the court order and declined to appeal the decision. Jim Bennett was placed on the general election ballot as the United Utah Party candidate. [19]
Two candidates declared their intent to seek the nomination of the Independent American Party.
The special general election was held on Tuesday, November 7, 2017.
Major
The following candidates qualified to appear in the state-sponsored debates:
Minor
The following third-party or independent candidates qualified for the ballot but didn't poll high enough to currently qualify for the state-sponsored debates:
No. | Date | Host | Moderator | Link | Republican | Democratic | United Utah |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Key: P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn |
|||||||
John Curtis | Kathie Allen | Jim Bennett | |||||
1 | Oct. 20, 2017 | Utah Debate Commission | David Magleby | YouTube | P | P | P |
Source | Ranking | As of |
---|---|---|
The Cook Political Report [21] | Solid R | July 21, 2017 |
Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size |
Margin of error |
Kathie Allen (D) |
Jim Bennett (UU) |
Joe Buchman (L) |
Jason Christensen (IA) |
John Curtis (R) |
Sean Whalen (Ind.) |
Write-ins | Other | Undecided |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dan Jones & Associates | October 9–16, 2017 | 410 | ± 4.8% | 19% | 9% | 3% | 2% | 46% | 0% | 0% | 3% | 17% |
Dan Jones & Associates | September 14–20, 2017 | 600 | ± 4.0% | 16.67% | 6.00% | – | – | 54.33% | – | – | – | – |
Dan Jones & Associates | August 30 – September 5, 2017 | 607 | ± 4.0% | 19.82% | 5.59% | 2.78% | 0.99% | 50.17% | 0.99% | 0.16% | 1.82% | 17.69% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | John Curtis | 85,751 | 58.02% | |
Democratic | Kathie Allen | 37,801 | 25.58% | |
United Utah | Jim Bennett | 13,747 | 9.30% | |
Independent | Sean Whalen | 4,554 | 3.08% | |
Libertarian | Joe Buchman | 3,644 | 2.47% | |
Independent American | Jason Christensen | 2,286 | 1.55% | |
Write-in | Brendan Phillips | 8 | 0.01% | |
Write-in | Russell Paul Roesler | 5 | 0.00% | |
Total votes | 147,796 | 100.00% | ||
Republican hold |
County [29] | Curtis Votes |
Curtis % |
Allen Votes |
Allen % |
Bennett Votes |
Bennett % |
Whalen Votes |
Whalen % |
Buchman Votes |
Buchman % |
Christensen Votes |
Christensen % |
Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carbon | 1,675 | 47.36% | 1,327 | 37.52% | 304 | 8.59% | 114 | 3.22% | 68 | 1.92% | 49 | 1.39% | 3,537 |
Emery | 944 | 69.16% | 228 | 16.70% | 109 | 7.99% | 30 | 2.20% | 22 | 1.61% | 32 | 2.34% | 1,365 |
Grand | 997 | 32.24% | 1,618 | 52.33% | 172 | 5.56% | 209 | 6.76% | 55 | 1.78% | 41 | 1.33% | 3,092 |
Salt Lake | 21,857 | 43.22% | 21,135 | 41.80% | 4,913 | 9.72% | 1,011 | 2.00% | 1,073 | 2.12% | 579 | 1.14% | 50,568 |
San Juan | 1,470 | 49.07% | 1,062 | 35.45% | 180 | 6.01% | 131 | 4.37% | 73 | 2.44% | 80 | 2.67% | 2,996 |
Utah | 55,136 | 69.33% | 10,334 | 12.99% | 7,553 | 9.50% | 2,885 | 3.63% | 2,212 | 2.78% | 1,409 | 1.77% | 79,529 |
Wasatch | 3,660 | 55.00% | 2,074 | 31.17% | 514 | 7.72% | 170 | 2.55% | 140 | 2.10% | 96 | 1.44% | 6,654 |