Utah GOP to begin public campaign
Program to promote party comes as they ready for convention
The new program comes as Republicans meet in their state convention Saturday in Orem. There, thousands of state delegates will talk about immigration and other political issues, as well as cast ballots for intra-party contests in the 2nd and 3rd Congressional Districts.
Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, has two tough challengers in the 3rd District David Leavitt, former Juab County attorney and younger brother of former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt; and Jason Chaffetz, former chief of staff to GOP Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. Also in the 3rd District race are Republicans Stone Fonua and Joe "NPC" Ferguson.
And in the 2nd District GOP homebuilder Bill Dew faces former Republican U.S. House member Merrill Cook. Also in the 2nd District race are Republicans Don Ferguson, Kenneth Gray, Brian Jenkins and Chris Jacobs. The GOP winner faces Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah.
Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. does have a challenger, Chuck Smith, although the governor is heavily favored to be the nominee.
If any one of those GOP candidates gets 60 percent of their delegate votes, they are the GOP nominee. If not, then the top two vote-getters face off in a late June closed GOP primary election.
One race seemingly without a contender the Republican nominee for president could become a convention fight, however. While Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is the expected nominee, Mitt Romney won Utah's winner-take-all Republican primary, which meant all of Utah's GOP national delegates were pledged to him.
But after Romney dropped out of the presidential race and endorsed McCain, he sent a letter to the Utah Republican Party asking that his delegates be released to vote for McCain.
At Saturday's convention, the GOP will consider a bylaw change that would release the delegates from voting for Romney, and a resolution from McCain supporter and Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff that those delegates vote for Romney.
But the resolution isn't binding, which means it's possible delegates Romney intended to go to McCain could vote for someone else, like Ron Paul. In other states, Paul supporters have been able to slot delegates that were freed up by Romney. The tactic even led the Nevada Republican Party to suspend the completion of their convention, held in April, indefinitely.
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