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The Interior secretary’s house guest impersonated him. Then Park Police were called on the neighbors.

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Washington • Living next to Cabinet officials can be tough on Washingtonians. But the events that unfolded Monday night in front of Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s home were weird by any standards.

The Mercedes SUV had been idling for two hours, and was taking up three parking spots on Kentucky Avenue S.E. So Lincoln Park resident Gina Arlotto asked the driver to back up to free two parking spots, she said Tuesday. The driver refused.

Neighbor Paul Legere was coming home from work when his wife called to warn him the car had been idling for hours on the block, a notoriously difficult place to find parking.

When Legere arrived, he too asked the driver to move to create a parking space. Again, the driver refused.

"We had some words," Legere said. "I've had some parking issues in the past. This was not a government SUV. He wouldn't identify himself. He said he was waiting for his boss."

That's when a man who appeared to be about 6-feet tall, white and about 30 years old emerged from Zinke's front door.

"He said, 'I'm Ryan Zinke.' I said, 'Dude, you're not Zinke.' I asked, 'Who are you?'" Legere recounted.

He said his name was Scott. "Scott what?"

According to Legere, the man wheeled around toward the house without an answer and muttered as he walked to the front door. Within minutes, by around 9:30 p.m., U.S. Park Police arrived, and neighbors assumed the man called Scott had called them. Park Police fall under Zinke's department.

Legere, who saw the police from his house, figured they would want to speak with him so he walked over.

"They said this is all a big misunderstanding," Legere recalled. "We were all in agreement that this wasn't Zinke."

Zinke and his wife have lived in the rental home since he began serving in Congress in 2015, Arlotto said, and have not been seen in the neighborhood frequently in recent months. The guest who impersonated Zinke, along with three or four other men, all left the house and piled into the Mercedes around 10 p.m.

"I just think it's outrageous that he called the Park Police on a neighbor," Arlotto said. "I felt that he wanted to harass us."

Neither the Park Police nor the Interior Department immediately responded to a request for comment Tuesday.

Zinke has come under scrutiny in recent months for his travel practices and real estate dealings back home in Montana. A report released last month by the Interior Office of Inspector General said that Zinke had his wife accompany him in government vehicles, even though that was technically prohibited under the department's motor vehicle policy. Zinke changed the policy in July to allow for members of his family to ride with him in department vehicles when it was for official events.

Monday night's incident was all the talk of the Lincoln Park listserv by Tuesday morning, as Arlotto voiced her frustration online.

“I’m still pretty annoyed at this person pretending to be Zinke to intimidate a neighbor, and then calling the Park Police for protection, but I guess that’s just me,” she posted at 5:07 a.m. “Nothing makes sense anymore.”


Aid arrives for migrants at Mexico City stadium as US votes

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Mexico City • Humanitarian aid converged around a stadium in Mexico City where thousands of Central American migrants winding their way toward the United States were resting Tuesday after an arduous trek that has taken them through three countries in three weeks.

Mexico City Mayor Jose Ramon Amieva said 4,500 migrants have arrived at the Jesus Martinez stadium since Sunday, and city officials are bracing to attend as many as 5,500 at the site by Wednesday. Hundreds of city employees and even more volunteers were on hand to sort donations and direct migrants toward food, water, diapers and other basics.

Migrants searched through piles of donated clothes, grabbed boxes of milk for children and lined up to make quick calls home at a stand set up by the Red Cross as U.S. voters went to the polls for midterm elections in which President Donald Trump has made the migrant caravan a central issue.

Employees from the capital's human rights commission registered new arrivals with biographical data— such as age and country of origin— and placed yellow bracelets on wrists to keep count.

Rina Valenzuela wore one of the yellow bracelets as she sat attentively listening to aid workers from the nonprofit Institute for Women in Migration explain the difficulties of applying for and securing asylum in the U.S. Valenzuela, who is from El Salvador, decided she's better off applying for refuge in Mexico.

"Why go fight there, with as much effort and as much suffering as we have gone through, just for them to turn me back? Well, no," she said.

The aid workers explained that the asylum process in the U.S. could take years, with no guarantee of approval.

Honduran Antonio Perez listened to the warnings but said he remains determined to continue north.

"This is interesting but tough news," he reflected. "But neither this nor Donald Trump is going to stop me."

The atmosphere at the stadium was more institutional and organized than what migrants encountered on the road, where townspeople pushed bags of drinking water, tacos and fruit into their hands as they passed through tiny hamlets in southern Mexico.

But there were signs Tuesday that the stadium was already nearing its capacity to hold 6,000 people.

Maria Yesenia Perez, 41, said there was no space in the stadium when she and her 8-year-old daughter arrived during the night, so the two from Honduras slept on the grass outside. Migrants pitched tents in the parking lot and constructed makeshift shelters from plywood covered with blankets and tarps. Forty portable toilets were scattered across the grass.

The stadium's enclosed space and government intervention makes it difficult for aid workers to reach the migrants, said Nancy Rojas, an Oxfam charity worker who has accompanied the migrants for weeks.

Four big tents have been set up for women and children to sleep under with thin mattresses and blankets, while men were relegated Monday night to concrete bleachers. Temperatures dropped below 52 degrees Fahrenheit (11 Celsius) during the night in a city some 7,300 feet (2,240 meters) above sea level and still hundreds of miles from the U.S. border.

Several smaller groups were trailing hundreds of miles to the south. Mexico City Mayor Amieva said the city needs to "reinforce" to meet the needs of the migrants, especially vulnerable children and pregnant women.

Mexico City's central market supplied 3.5 tons of bananas and guavas to refuel the crowd, plus 600 bottles of water. The human rights commission said it planned to set up more tents and eating areas.

Many of the migrants sought treatment for blistered and aching feet, respiratory infections, diarrhea and other maladies. City officials administered vaccines for tetanus and influenza.

Trump has seized on the caravan as an election issue and portrayed it as a major threat, though such caravans have sprung up regularly over the years and largely passed unnoticed.

He ordered thousands of troops to the U.S.-Mexico border, vowed to detain asylum seekers in tents cities and insinuated without proof that there are criminals or even terrorists in the group.

In dozens of interviews since the initial caravan set out from Honduras more than three weeks ago, migrants have said they are escaping poverty and rampant violence. Many are families traveling with small children. Some say they left because they were threatened by gang members or had lost relatives to gang violence. Others say they hope to work, secure a good education for their children and send money to support relatives back home.

Walkiria Viamney, 19, said she and her husband have relatives in Tijuana and California who have promised to help them cross into the United States. The pair from Honduras hoped to soon advance northward, although they relished the opportunity to rest and wash clothes in the stadium.

Not far from Viamney, men played cards and chess while children ran between inflatable games. Others gave themselves sponge baths or lounged in the shade of improvised tents.

"I've been here for three days already, and I'm already rested. I want to move on," said Francisco Redondo, 40, a Honduran who said he worked construction for 12 years in California.

Organizers are urging members of the caravan already in Mexico City to await the arrival of stragglers and perhaps even the other caravans further back. The idea is to find strength in numbers. The outpouring of support for the caravan that first set out from Honduras on Oct. 13 has inspired thousands of others to march north from Central America.

Mexico City is more than 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) from the nearest U.S. border crossing at McAllen, Texas. A caravan last spring opted for a much longer route to Tijuana in the far northwest, across from San Diego. That caravan steadily dwindled to only about 200 people by the time it reached the border.

Edgar Corzo, an official with the National Human Rights Commission, said that based on experiences with previous migrant caravans, the group probably will begin to break up now that it is in the capital.

“Each one goes to the place that he considers best,” mainly wherever is closest to where they have relatives or friends already in the United States, he said.

Bagley Cartoon: Glued to the News

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(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon by Pat Bagley titled “Glued to the News” appears in the Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2018, edition of The Salt Lake Tribune.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon by Pat Bagley titled “A Hero's Wish” appears in the Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018, edition of The Salt Lake Tribune.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon titled "Race-Baiter-Chief" appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Sunday, Nov. 4, 2018.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  This Pat Bagley cartoon titled "Emotional Detachment" ran in The Salt Lake Tribune on Friday, Nov. 2, 2018.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  This cartoon by Pat Bagley is published in The Salt Lake Tribune on Thursday. Nov. 1, 2018.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon by Pat Bagley appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2018.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon by Pat Bagley titled “Best Health Care System in the World!” appears in the Oct. 30, 2018, edition of The Salt Lake Tribune.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) This cartoon by Pat Bagley titled "What's Driving Hate" appears in the Oct. 27, 2018, edition of The Salt Lake Tribune.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This Pat Bagley cartoon, titled “It's A Man's World,” appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Friday, Oct. 26, 2018.(Pat Bagley  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  This Pat Bagley cartoon, titled “Critiquing the Saudis,” appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Thursday, Oct. 25, 2018.(Pat Bagley | The Salt Lake Tribune) This Pat Bagley cartoon, titled “We Don't Not Need Education,” appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018.

This Pat Bagley cartoon appears in The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2018. You can check out the past 10 Bagley editorial cartoons below:

  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/news/nation-world/2018/11/06/bagley-cartoon-heros-wish/" target=_blank><u>A Hero’s Wish</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/11/03/bagley-cartoon-race/" target=_blank><u>Race-Baiter-in-Chief</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/11/02/bagley-cartoon-emotional/" target=_blank><u>Emotional Detachment</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/31/bagley-cartoon-all-best/" target=_blank><u>All the Best People</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/31/bagley-cartoon-scary/" target=_blank><u>Scary Times</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/29/bagley-cartoon-best/" target=_blank><u>Best Health Care System in the World!</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/26/bagley-cartoon-whats/" target=_blank><u>What’s Driving the Violence?</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/25/bagley-cartoon-its-mans/" target=_blank><u>It’s A Man’s World</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/25/bagley-cartoon-critiquing/" target=_blank><u>Critiquing the Saudis</u></a>
  • <a href="https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/bagley/2018/10/23/bagley-cartoon-we-dont/" target=_blank><u>We Don’t Not Need Education</u></a>

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How has one of the NBA’s best defensive teams turned into a sieve? The Jazz are trying to figure it out, too.

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Everyone knows the hallmark of the Utah Jazz is stingy defense, right? They can’t light it up like the Golden State Warriors, but they always, always make it tough for opposing teams to get baskets.

Except this year, they’re not. Through 10 games, they’re 13th in opponents’ points per game (110.2), 16th in the league in defensive rating (109.3), and an eye-popping 27th in opponents’ field-goal percentage (48.3).

After Monday’s 124-111 loss to Toronto — the team’s fourth straight defeat — some players expressed their dismay that they haven’t been able to fix the defensive woes yet.

“I wish I could say it would be easy," said Joe Ingles. "We have watched so much [film] over the last however many games, the whole year, really — even from the preseason. There’s things we need to do, things we need to get better at, the little things that made us so good last year, and we haven’t really done any of them to this point. We’ve played quarters, we’ve played minutes, but it seems like the runs that teams have against us — 20-0, 18-0, it’s not 8-0 and we can get a stop and regroup. It just kind of falls apart. We need to fix it quickly.”

Beyond the broad strokes, though, what specifically is it that needs to be fixed?

Well, for starters, per the analytics site Cleaning the Glass, the Jazz are having particular problems in allowing shots at the rim and in the midrange.

While Utah is doing a good job of limiting opponents’ opportunities at the rim — they rank seventh in the league, with just 33.7 percent of shots coming there — they haven’t been particularly good at stopping those shots. Teams are converting 65 percent of them, which ranks the Jazz 23rd.

It’s been even worse in the midrange. There, opponents are not only taking a high volume of shots (36.3 percent), they’re making 44.6 percent of them — which ranks the Jazz worst in the league.

“Teams [now] come here with the mindset of attacking us. You can feel it. We’re not the Utah Jazz of last year in their head, and they come in here trying to be aggressive,” said reigning Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert. “… So it’s on us to get past that and be aggressive. We’ve got to set the tone; when we start setting the tone defensively, things are gonna go back to how they should be.”

At least on 3-pointers, the Jazz are faring a bit better. They rank eighth league-wide in limiting opponents to taking just 30 percent of their shots from deep. However, the narrative has been that Utah is allowing open looks, and the evidence bears that out, as the team drops to 19th in the league in seeing 36.7 percent of those 3-pointers go in.

That same story plays out as well on transition attempts. While the Jazz allow the fifth-fewest transition attempts in the league (14 percent), when opponents do get out on the break vs. Utah, they’re converting their chances. The Jazz ranks 20th and 22nd, respectively, in points per 100 possessions allowed via transition play, and points scored per 100 transition plays.

Coach Quin Snyder said that particular problem was especially apparent against Toronto.

“There was just space on the floor and we were getting driven. They’re a very good team attacking in the open court. … So we needed to get back with more urgency. And we needed to keep the ball out of the paint,” Snyder said. “We were getting driven, whether it be in pick-and-roll, where we weren’t keeping the ball where we needed it, close-outs; just a lot of situations where the ball was getting in the paint. When that happens, it’s difficult to recover on a possession.”

Furthermore, the players acknowledge that they haven’t been as assignment-sound as they ought to be. Against the Raptors, they made the mistake of going under screens against good shooters like Kyle Lowry and Fred VanVleet, allowing open 3s, and going over them against the poor-shooting-but-slashing Delon Wright.

“We haven’t been a unit," Ricky Rubio said after Tuesday’s practice. "One night it’s one guy making a mistake, and another play it’s another guy making a mistake. On defense, it has to be the five guys doing the right thing at the same time. One mistake, no matter what the other four have done, and the defense doesn’t count. We gotta take that personally. … We gotta be smart, we gotta know personnel, we gotta know who we’re playing against.”

To a man, the Jazz acknowledge that even when they’re getting the details right, they’re not doing so consistently.

That, as much as anything, needs to change.

“We’ve shown patches where we can be really good and be the team we know we can be, but we’ve shown a lot more of the other side of it to this point,” Ingles acknowledged.

Snyder agrees with that much. It’s not that his players haven’t been trying — it’s that they haven’t been doing the right things often enough.

“I don’t think there’s a lack of effort defensively, there’s a lack of focus. However you want to define that, our general effort needs to be better,” Snyder said. “… I think our team cares, we’re just not caring about the right things.”

Donovan Mitchell’s status changed to probable for Wednesday’s game against Dallas

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After missing Monday night’s loss to the Toronto Raptors, Donovan Mitchell is likely to return to action against the Dallas Mavericks Wednesday.

Mitchell’s status has been changed to “probable” for Wednesday’s contest. Mitchell has missed two of the least three Jazz contests with right hamstring tightness (Friday vs. Memphis) or a left ankle sprain (Monday vs. Toronto). The Jazz lost both games.

After Tuesday’s practice, Mitchell could be seen participating in one-on-one drills with Grayson Allen, Ricky Rubio, Georges Niang, and Thabo Sefolosha. Mitchell looked relatively unencumbered by the injury, though he did vow to start taping his ankles after spraining his in the fourth quarter in Denver.

The only other player on the Jazz’s injury report is Raul Neto, who remains out due to a hamstring strain.

The U.S. House: Democrats on track to take control

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Washington • The Latest on elections to the U.S. House of Representatives (all times local to Washington D.C.):

11 p.m.

Democrat Sean Casten has defeated six-term Republican Rep. Peter Roskam to flip a suburban Chicago district the GOP has held for more than four decades.

Casten, a scientist and businessman, argued that Roskam was too conservative for a district that supported Hillary Clinton over President Donald Trump in 2016. Casten pointed to Roskam's record of opposing abortion and his record of voting along with Trump.

Casten focused his campaign on health care and has called for stricter gun control laws.

Roskam insisted he’s a moderate who opposed Trump when necessary. He criticized Casten as wanting to raise taxes and for name-calling and “embracing the politics of ridicule.”

10:35 p.m.

First-time Democratic candidate Jason Crow has defeated five-term Republican Rep. Mike Coffman in suburban Denver.

Crow, 39, is a former Army Ranger and captain who fought in Iraq. He then went to work at a politically-connected Denver law firm before taking on Coffman, who has survived repeated strong Democratic challenges in the diverse district.

Hillary Clinton won the district by nine points in 2016 while Coffman won it by eight.

Coffman is an Army and Marine veteran and is active on veterans' issues. But Crow used his own military service to neutralize Coffman's advantage. Crow also embraced the cause of gun control in a district that was home to the 2012 Aurora theater shooting that killed 12 and abuts Columbine High School, where two teen-aged gunmen killed 13 in 1999.

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10:20 p.m.

Democratic newcomer Sharice Davids has defeated incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder in Kansas to become the nation's first LGBT Native American in Congress.

The 38-year-old activist, lawyer and political newcomer already garnered national attention as part of a crop of diverse Democratic candidates.

Yoder was endorsed by President Donald Trump, but the suburban Kansas City district voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016. The district is a mix of fast-growing bedroom communities, established suburbs and poorer city neighborhoods.

Davids emerged from a six-person Democratic primary and energized voters and Democratic donors by emphasizing her biography. Her history includes mixed martial arts fights.

She’s a member of the Wisconsin-based Ho-Chunk Nation and was raised by a single mother who served in the Army and worked for the U.S. Postal Service.

10:10 p.m.

Democratic businessman Dean Phillips has defeated Republican Rep. Erik Paulsen in a suburban Minnesota district that figures heavily into Democrats' hopes for a House takeover.

Paulsen had easily won elections throughout his five terms in office even as the Minneapolis-area district trended toward Democrats.

But the district favored Hillary Clinton by nearly 10 points two years ago, and a statewide poll late in the race showed Phillips with a comfortable lead. Outside groups poured more than $10 million into the battleground race.

Phillips ran his family's liquor company and started a chain of local coffee shops. He painted Paulsen as too in-step with President Donald Trump, though Paulsen tried to distance himself from the president.

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10:05 p.m.

Newly minted Democratic Rep. Conor Lamb of Pennsylvania has defeated three-term Republican Rep. Keith Rothfus in the nation's only House race pitting two incumbents against each other.

Democrats enjoy a 71,000-voter registration edge in the suburban Pittsburgh district, and Lamb comfortably led polls over Rothfus, who has one of Pennsylvania's most conservative voting records in Congress.

Lamb won a special election in March to succeed Republican Rep. Tim Murphy, who resigned, in a district that Trump won by about 20 points.

Both men live in the new 17th District, despite living in different districts that they currently represent.

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10 p.m.

Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell has defeated Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo in Florida, the second GOP incumbent House member to fall. Curbelo, a moderate and critic of President Donald Trump, was trying to defy the political winds against Trump in the South Florida district.

Mucarsel-Powell is an immigrant from Ecuador who has worked for several nonprofit organizations in Miami-Dade County. She ran on preventing gun violence and protecting the environment, but her main focus was on health care and the Affordable Care Act, which Curbelo voted to repeal.

Mucarsel-Powell painted Curbelo as a politician who talks like a moderate but tends to vote with conservatives.

Curbelo is a leader of the bipartisan Climate Caucus and bucked GOP leadership this summer by supporting a tax on emissions of carbon dioxide, a contributor to global warming.

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9:20 p.m.

Democrat Ayanna Pressley has completed her quest to become Massachusetts' first black woman elected to Congress.

Pressley is also the first African-American to serve on the Boston City Council. She sailed through Tuesday's general election to Congress unopposed, two months after unseating 10-term Rep. Michael Capuano in a primary that was a national political stunner.

With no Republican in the race in the heavily Democratic district, her upset victory in the primary had all but assured Pressley the House seat, with only the remote possibility of a write-in campaign to potentially stop her.

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9:00 p.m.

Republican Rep. Andy Barr of Kentucky won a close-fought race that Democrats had targeted in a bid to shift the House to Democratic control.

Barr turned back a strong challenge from Democrat Amy McGrath in a district that supported President Donald Trump two years ago.

McGrath, a retired fighter pilot, gave Barr his toughest test yet as he sought a fourth term. Barr urged voters to re-elect him for his "access and influence with this administration," while McGrath countered with a message of "country over party."

Barr won by 22 points in 2016, but McGrath waged an aggressive challenge, including TV ads showing her in front of fighter jets and with her young children.

The district includes Lexington and capital Frankfort. The seat has switched parties five times since 1978.

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8:50 p.m.

In Indiana, Greg Pence, an older brother of Vice President Mike Pence, has won a heavily Republican House seat that his famous sibling once held.

The 61-year-old Pence, an owner of two antique malls, defeated Democrat Jeannine Lee Lake, who publishes a bi-monthly Muncie newspaper.

The eastern Indiana seat is open because Republican Rep. Luke Messer ran in the GOP primary for the Senate. Greg Pence is one of Mike Pence's three brothers.

Greg Pence is a Marine veteran and once ran a now-bankrupt chain of convenience stores.

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8:30 p.m.

Republican Rep. Barbara Comstock of Virginia was the first congressional incumbent to lose as voters in her Northern Virginia district expressed their continued dislike of President Donald Trump.

Democratic state Sen. Jennifer Wexton won an easy victory in the wealthy suburban district outside Washington, which Hillary Clinton won by 10 percentage points.

Comstock tried hard to emphasize her independence from Trump, but Wexton, a former prosecutor, portrayed the two-term incumbent as a Trump ally out of touch with the diverse, well-educated district.

Comstock easily beat a Democrat in 2016 when her district went for Clinton.

The national focus on the race helped Comstock and Wexton raise more than $5 million in all, while outside groups spent more than $10 million.

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8:25 p.m.

Donna Shalala has won a U.S. House seat in Florida, making her the first Democrat to flip a GOP seat on Tuesday night.

After serving in President Bill Clinton's Cabinet and running major universities, Shalala is starting a third career with her election to the House.

The 77-year-old Democrat won Tuesday in a Miami district that had long been in Republican hands. Shalala has sought to turn her age into a positive by stressing her experience with this slogan: "Ready on Day One."

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7:30 p.m.

Polls have closed in several East Coast states as voters decide control of Congress and statehouses across the nation.

A tight Kentucky congressional race in a district President Donald Trump won by double digits could be an early indicator whether the House will shift to Democratic control.

Retired fighter pilot Amy McGrath has given Republican incumbent Andy Barr his toughest test yet as he seeks a fourth term outside Lexington.

In suburban Atlanta, Republican Rep. Karen Handel faced a strong challenge from Lucy McBath, whose 17-year-old son was shot and killed at a gas station.

In Virginia, GOP. Rep. Barbara Comstock was trying to fend off political newcomer Jennifer Wexton, while one-time tea party favorite Rep. Dave Brat faced off against Democrat Abigail Spanberger, a former CIA operative.

___

2 p.m.

In the battle for control of the House, Democrats are increasingly confident they'll pick up the 23 seats needed to seize control and flip the majority.

They are counting on voter enthusiasm and the strength of their candidates to carry them to victory. More women than ever are running, along with military veterans and minorities, in districts across the country.

Republicans predict they'll lose seats but hold a slim majority based on what they say is a healthy economy.

The midterm elections are typically difficult for the party in power. This year it's become a referendum on President Donald Trump and GOP control of Congress.

House Republicans took control in 2010 during then-President Barack Obama’s first term.

On Election Day, voting problems emerge across the country

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Civil rights groups and election officials fielded thousands of reports of voting irregularities across the country Tuesday, with voters complaining of broken machines, long lines and untrained poll workers improperly challenging Americans' right to vote.

The loudest of those complaints came from Georgia, where issues of race, ballot access and election fairness have fueled an acrimoniousgovernor's contest between Democrat Stacey Abrams and Republican Brian Kemp. Abrams, a former state lawmaker, is vying to be the nation's first-ever black woman governor, while Kemp, the secretary of state who oversees elections, has faced accusations of trying to suppress the minority vote.

In one downtown Atlanta precinct, voters waited three hours to cast ballots after local election officials initially sent only three voting machines to serve more than 3,000 registered voters. In suburban Gwinnett County, the wait surpassed four hours, as election officials opened the polls only to discover that their voting machines weren't working at all, voters said.

Both locations serve predominantly African-American voters, feeding worries among some voters that specific groups were being disenfranchised amid signs of record turnout for a midterm.

"Look at the people here," said Gabe Okoye, chairman of the Gwinnett County Democratic Party, as he watched mostly black voters enter and exit the voting location. "See the demography of these voters."

"If you're going to play tricks anywhere, you're going to do it here," he added, noting the importance of the populous county to the final vote count.

The wave of complaints from voters came at the end of a campaign season dominated by concerns about ballot access and voting rights. It remained unclear Tuesday how many of the complaints were legitimate, how many voters were affected and whether the problems would affect the outcome of any races.

Some of the anxiety stemmed from a spate of restrictive voting laws passed by Republicans in recent years affecting dozens of this year's closely contested races for House, Senate and governor.

Republicans have said the tough new rules are necessary to combat voter fraud. On Monday, President Donald Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions both warned against voter fraud, although studies have found is no evidence of widespread fraud.

Voting rights activists argue that the laws disproportionately affect young Americans and minorities, who tend to vote Democratic. They accused Trump of trying to intimidate voters of color.

The spike in reports of voting problems also coincided with heightened enthusiasm across the country to participate in this year's races, with early voting tallies in dozens of states far outpacing those of 2014.

On Tuesday, elections officials in states including Texas, Alabama, North Carolina, Indiana and Georgia extended voting hours to contend with long lines outside polling locations. Some states, including North Dakota, were also contending with low supplies of ballots and voters still standing in line by Tuesday evening.

A coalition of civil rights groups reported receiving more than 17,000 complaints of voting irregularities by midafternoon - a higher call volume than in any recent midterm election - and referred many of them to state and local election officials, the groups said in a news conference in Washington.

Together, the organizations have deployed about 6,500 lawyers and monitors across 30 states to protect ballot access - more than in any previous election.

"Our goal is to make sure that every eligible American that seeks to have their voice heard is able to do so this election cycle," said Kristen Clarke, executive director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, one of the groups that teamed together to monitor elections and run a voter hotline this year. Other members of the coalition include the NAACP, Common Cause and Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

Reports of broken machines surfaced in numerous states, including New York, California and Arizona. Complaints also emerged of voting machines flipping voters' choices in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Texas and Illinois.

In New York, Corey Johnson, the speaker of the New York City Council, said the voting precincts were hampered by broken scanners in all five boroughs. Voters stood in lines with ballots in the rain - soaking the ballots and further complicating the process of using electronic scanners.

Voting rights advocates said some of the problems are the result of older equipment that hasn't been replaced in more than a decade. The machines date back to shortly after the presidential recount in Florida in 2000, when Congress sent billions of dollars to the states to replace outdated equipment. Another round of replacement is overdue, advocates said.

Across the country, reports about huge turnout were punctuated with complaints about voters who faced obstacles to casting their ballots.

Voters with limited English proficiency in the Houston area said that they were being blocked from bringing an interpreter with them to vote, as required under the Voting Rights Act, according to civil rights groups.

Hector DeLeon, a spokesman for Harris County, which includes Houston, said he was not aware of complaints from non-English speakers about bringing interpreters.

In North Dakota, a voting rights lawyer said dozens of Native American voters were being turned away because of issues with their identification. Poll workers were rejecting identification issued by tribal officials, advising voters not to initial ballots even though the law requires it and discouraging voters from casting provisional ballots when they arrived without proper identification, according to Carla Fredericks, director of the Indian Law Clinic at the University of Colorado.

"After I caught a voter who was being denied his right to vote and told him to go back in and request a set-aside ballot, the election worker told me I was interfering and need to leave," said Fredericks, a member of the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation, located in central North Dakota.

In Porter County, Ind., where Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly was trying to fend off a strong challenge from Republican Mike Braun, a judge ordered 12 polling places to stay open late after the local Democratic Party complained about tardy openings of up to three hours.

"It's a matter a fairness to the voter, without respect to partisan politics," said Monica Conrad, an attorney for the Porter County Democratic Party. Local Republicans unsuccessfully challenged the order by Superior Court Judge Robert Bradford, arguing that the Democrats had not provided enough evidence that polls opened late, said attorney Chris Buckley.

Accusations of intimidation surfaced after U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced plans to run a "crowd-control" exercise near a Hispanic neighborhood in El Paso Tuesday - the hometown of Democratic Rep. Beto O'Rourke, who is challenging Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in a closely contested race in Texas.

On Tuesday morning, the agency abruptly canceled the exercise after critics raised concerns about voter suppression.

The epicenter of voting anxiety was in Georgia, where the bitter gubernatorial contest has played out as an emotional battle over voting rights.

One voting rights group, Protect Democracy, filed a suit late Tuesday demanding that Kemp be pulled from his duties overseeing Georgia's elections.

Tensions mounted in the weeks before Election Day after the revelation that thousands of voter registration applications had been suspended, most of them for people of color or immigrants, under a new state law requiring an exact match between the application and driver or Social Security records. Separately, hundreds of absentee ballots were challenged by officials, many in the minority-heavy Gwinett County.

On Tuesday, voters at one polling location in Gwinett County reported a wait of more than four hours to cast their ballots.

"This was voter suppression at its finest," said Takeya Sneeze, an African-American truck driver who said she watched 100 voters leave a polling location at an elementary school without casting ballots after discovering the machines weren't working.

Sneeze said she went to Walmart twice to get water and snacks to encourage people to stay in line and wait.

Joe Sorenson, a spokesman for Gwinnett County, said voting at the elementary school would be extended 25 minutes, but any further extension would require a judge's order.

Sorenson said the county encountered problems at five polling locations out of 156. One had the wrong power cords and the others had issues with polling machines, but he said officials discovered the problems quickly and began issuing provisional ballots.

Brittany Herbert, 32, a lawyer, said she arrived at the Pittman Park Recreation Center in Southwest Atlanta at 8 a.m. and found the polling place in chaos. When she tried to check in, she was told she'd have to wait, so she left to go to work and returned around 4:15 pp.m. At 5:15 she estimated she had another 45 minutes to wait.

"Voting is always really important to me," she said. "I knew at the end is the day I had to. I also knew that my family and friends would shame me if I didn't."

A spokeswoman for the Fulton County elections office acknowledged that a handful of polling places encountered problems Tuesday.

"Today's election is a big one for this state and there are a lot of enthusiastic voters out there," said spokeswoman April Majors. "We're happy about that, but unfortunately the enthusiasm is what is causing the long lines."

The Washington Post’s Vanessa Williams in Atlanta, Cleve Wootson in Washington, Sonam Vashi in Snellville, Ga., Bob Moore in El Paso and Kirk Ross in Chapel Hill, N.C., contributed to this report.

Voters pack the polls in a crucial test of Trump’s tenure

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There were first-time voters and straight-ticket voters and some who, this go-around, switched sides. They went to the polls considering the caravan of migrants trudging across Mexico, their health insurance and their paychecks, an impotent Congress, and the nation's poisonous political culture that has divided even families and friends along party lines.

More than anything on this Election Day in America, in a midterm contest like no other before it, voters cast their ballots with one man in mind: President Donald Trump.

"Trump is terrifying and we need to make a change, so I've been encouraging my friends and family to vote," said Samantha Bohr, 26, casting her ballot in Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey.

Nine hundred miles away, in Nashville, Tennessee, 50-year-old Robert DuBois arrived at his polling place wearing one of Trump's signature red Make America Great Again caps. "That's why there's a line out that door," he said. "You either don't want Trump's agenda or you do want Trump's agenda."

They joined millions of Americans who turned out in droves Tuesday — some lining up before the sun rose, some standing for hours or braving pouring rain or snow — to vote in an election that will determine control of Congress and render a verdict on Trump's first two years in office. The outcome could redefine the nation's political landscape for months and years to come.

Democrats need to gain 23 seats to take control of the House of Representatives, and hope to ride the wave of liberal fury that organized after Trump's surprising victory in 2016.

"My loathing for him knows no bounds," said Kathleen Ross, 69, a retired professor voting in Olympia, Washington, who described herself as a lifelong progressive. She said she was confident the country eventually would reject Trumpism and the divisive governing it represents. "I tend to think the arc of the universe bends toward justice, so I don't become discouraged."

Trump has sought to counter some of that rage by stoking anger, fear and enthusiasm in his base. In recent weeks, he's put the spotlight on a caravan of Central American migrants that he calls "an invasion" of criminals and terrorists. He ran an advertisement about immigration so racially incendiary that all three major cable news networks, including Fox News, either refused to air it or eventually decided to stop showing it.

Among some Republican voters, that message resonated.

"What's going on right now is pretty scary to me, at the border, with all those people coming, and I don't think I'm hardhearted or anything," said Patricia Maynard, 63, a retired teacher in Skowhegan, Maine.

When she voted for Trump in 2016, the blue-collar economy was her primary concern. Now, she said, immigration tops the list. She laments that Congress has so far failed to pass legislation to build the wall Trump promised along the border. So she voted for Republicans Tuesday, with hopes they would retain control and push Trump's agenda.

In Jefferson City, Missouri, Linda Rice believes there are criminals in the caravan. Both Rice and her husband, Richard, praised Trump's time in office, particularly his focus on the economy and his work to secure the border. "I just don't think that my tax money should be taken away from me and given to a person who came across the border illegally," Richard Rice said. "Get in line. Do it correctly."

Just ahead of Election Day, Trump sent military troops to the border— a move critics called unnecessary and a political stunt, given the migrants, many of them women and children fleeing poverty and violence, are traveling mostly on foot and remain hundreds of miles away.

For those who oppose Trump, the caravan controversy singularly represents what they find unconscionable about his presidency.

"He's always used the scare tactics and found an enemy to band against," said 24-year-old Enrique Padilla of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Padilla considers his own family an example of the American dream. His father migrated from Mexico as a laborer at 18, raised his family, and now Padilla has a college degree. The president's persistent demonization of immigrants galvanized him and many of his peers to vote against Republicans, Padilla said.

In Louisville, Kentucky, Mary Cross, a 64-year-old African-American voter, said she believes Trump uses issues like immigration to distract from more important topics. "It's manufactured fear. It's uncivilized. It's just a bunch of mayhem for nothing. There's no substance to this," said Cross, who thinks the country should be talking about the Republican-led campaign to overturn the Affordable Health Care Act that protects people with pre-existing conditions.

Cross, and others, expressed a heightened sense of unease and sadness about the state of America's political climate. The election comes just days after a series of hate crimes and political attacks. Where Cross lives, a gunman tried to get into a majority-black church but found the doors locked and went instead to a nearby grocery store, where he gunned down two African-American shoppers in what police are calling a hate crime.

"Our president, with his rhetoric and vulgar language, continues to throw fuel on the fire. Racism has always been around, but since he's been in office, people feel free to express it and feel good about it," said the Rev. Kevin Nelson, the pastor of the Louisville church the gunman targeted. The congregation has received cards and calls from all over the country, from Christians and Jews and Muslims and atheists — and also a white man in Texas who said he was sorry about what happened and promised to cast his ballot against the rhetoric he believed to be igniting hate.

"You're always hoping that somehow, some way, someday, it's going to change," Nelson said before he voted Tuesday. "I'm hopeful that it could be this time."

The Simon Wiesenthal Center released a survey on the eve of the election that showed a quarter of Americans have lost friends over political disagreements and are less likely to attend social functions because of politics.

Odell White, a 60-year-old African-American conservative, described the country's tribalism as veering toward civil war.

"We are dangerously close to that type of mentality — brothers fighting brothers. That's how bad it is," said White, who supports Trump and voted for Republicans. Friends have turned away because of his political leanings. White said he doesn't like the president's aggressive rhetoric, but he's willing to overlook it because of the booming economy and the two conservatives Trump installed on the Supreme Court.

But Trumpism has proved too much for some.

In Portland, Maine, Josh Rent, 43, a small business owner and registered Republican, said he voted mostly for Democrats all the way down the ballot for the first time to protest Trump, who he believes is unnecessarily dividing Americans for his own gain. "He's just nasty," he said. "Life doesn't have to be this nasty, in my opinion."

If Democrats do win big, Tory Dibbins, a 53-year-old physical therapist from Portland, Maine, and herself a Democrat, has a warning.

"If you're going to talk about 'let's end the divisiveness and be inclusive' then you have to try to get people to be more bipartisan," she said. "You have to win people back to the center."

Also contributing were AP reporters Adam Geller in New Jersey, Sheila Burke in Tennessee, Martha Irvine in Illinois, Steve Megargee in Tennessee, Jocelyn Noveck in New York, Rachel La Corte in Washington, Margery Beck in Nebraska, Kantele Franko in Ohio, Summer Ballentine and Jim Salter in Missouri, Matt Volz in Montana, Hannah Grabenstein in Arkansas and Chris Chester in Maine.


So why did you vote that way? The Trib asks Utahns to explain their ballots.

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For many Utahns, it wasn’t about a specific candidate or even the national climate — they decided to come out to vote or return their ballots on Tuesday because they wanted to weigh in on Proposition 2, a ballot initiative that would establish a medical cannabis program in Utah. For others, it was Proposition 4 that would create an independent redistricting commission.

The Salt Lake Tribune spoke with voters at West Jordan’s Viridian Library and Salt Lake City’s Trolley Square. Here’s what they had to say:

(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tom Beckett, 63, of Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tom Beckett, 63, of Salt Lake City, Utah.

Tom Beckett, 63 of Salt Lake City, voted by mail a few weeks ago but camped out in West Jordan to see how the results came in. Beckett, who said he was a lifelong Republican before the past few years, has volunteered this election cycle for Congressional District 4 candidate Ben McAdams’ campaign. He voted for McAdams, Senate candidate Jenny Wilson, and Proposition 4, the ballot initiative that would create an independent commission to redraw the state’s political boundaries.

“I grew up Republican and learned I had disagreements with the Republican platform over time,” he said. "And then more recently, it’s been much more acute than that where I find I’m very disturbed by today’s Republican Party.”


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Daisy Alcantar, 18, of West Jordan, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Daisy Alcantar, 18, of West Jordan, Utah.

Daisy Alcantar, 18 of West Jordan, is a first time voter who said she’s been excited to cast her ballot since her birthday. She said “everyone’s voice should be heard” and that she would be voting mostly for Democratic candidates, who she said generally better represent her values, as well as for Proposition 2.

“I feel like medical marijuana helps a lot of people, obviously, and they need it," she said. “And it’s just easier for them if it’s legal.”


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Briann Granderson, 22, of West Jordan.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Briann Granderson, 22, of West Jordan.

Briann Granderson, 22 of West Jordan, brought a “cheat sheet” for what she planned to vote for on Tuesday. On her list: Sheriff Rosie Rivera and propositions 2 and 4. She also said it’s important to “vote for the future” for children, noting that she’s voting for the non-binding ballot question 1, asking voters whether the state’s gas tax should be increased by 10 cents per gallon to free up funds for education, helped bring her out.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Sandi Luckie, 50.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Sandi Luckie, 50.

Sandi Luckie, 50, said the choice of who to vote for in Congressional District 4 was “a tough one for me.” But she ultimately decided to go with incumbent Republican Rep. Mia Love based on her track record and for helping return a Utah man home earlier this year after Venezuelan police handcuffed and jailed him in 2016 on suspicion of weapons charges.

“I like both of them but I am going with Mia Love," she said. "It just tugs at my heart that she brought home the guy that was captured. She never gave up on him, you know what I’m saying? So she’s got my vote because of that. That was my deciding factor.”

Luckie also said she’s voting for Prop 2 because she thinks medical marijuana can help people who are suffering, “as long as it’s monitored.”


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Patrick Hawkins, 18, of West Jordan, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Patrick Hawkins, 18, of West Jordan, Utah.

Patrick Hawkins, 18 of West Jordan, was another first-time voter. He said he tends to be more conservative and planned to vote for Love and Prop 2. “I’m excited to get the government back a bit on that one,” he said, noting that he thinks the government spends too much time on enforcement.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Fabian Garcia, 27.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Fabian Garcia, 27.

Fabian Garcia, 27, voted for the first time on Tuesday and said Proposition 2 was the main reason.

“I’ve lost a lot of friends to opioid addiction, and I’ve struggled with it myself,” he said, and hopes passage of medical marijuana would help.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Becca Blackham, 27, of Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Becca Blackham, 27, of Salt Lake City, Utah.

Becca Blackham, 27 of Salt Lake City, said the national political landscape and particularly the importance of Utah’s representation in Congress brought her out to vote. She said she cast her ballot for Democratic Senate candidate Jenny Wilson and for Proposition 3, a campaign to expand Medicaid.

“I found that one very compelling because I think it’s important that everyone has access to health care and Medicaid," she said. "That’s a good way to go in Utah.”


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Levi Robinson, 23 of Bountiful, said he’s come out to vote yes on Props 2-4 and said the gerrymandering was a big draw. “I think it’s ridiculous our representatives draw their own districts,” he said.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Levi Robinson, 23 of Bountiful, said he’s come out to vote yes on Props 2-4 and said the gerrymandering was a big draw. “I think it’s ridiculous our representatives draw their own districts,” he said.

Levi Robinson, 23 of Bountiful, has voted in every election since he turned 18 and said he came out to vote for Wilson for the Senate and Ghorbani for the House. But the major draw for him was to cast a yes vote on Props 2, and 3 and with Prop 4 — the initiative to end gerrymandering — the most important to him personally.

“I think it’s ridiculous our representatives draw their own districts,” he said.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Rick Gregory, 69, of Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Rick Gregory, 69, of Salt Lake City, Utah.

Rick Gregory, 69 of Salt Lake City, voted for Wilson for Senate and called Republican candidate Mitt Romney “a carpetbagger.” He also voted for Shireen Ghorbani because he said it’s important for Democrats to take back the House.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tyler Brothers, 24 of Salt Lake City, says he ended up voting mostly for Democrats and for all the Propositions. He says he didn’t really understand the constitutional amendments but voted yes for A and C and no on B.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tyler Brothers, 24 of Salt Lake City, says he ended up voting mostly for Democrats and for all the Propositions. He says he didn’t really understand the constitutional amendments but voted yes for A and C and no on B.

Tyler Brothers, 24 of Salt Lake City, says he ended up voting mostly for Democrats and for all the Propositions. He said he didn’t really understand the proposed amendments to the Utah Constitution. But he voted yes for A, which deals with an adjustment to a property tax exemption for active-duty members of the military and no and B, which would create a new property tax exemption for property leased by a government entity.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Elodie Gourgeon, 24 of Salt Lake City, said she was primarily interested (again) on Prop. 2. She said she doesn’t feel her vote matters as much for the candidates, because the incumbents will likely hold their seats, but she votes in every race.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Elodie Gourgeon, 24 of Salt Lake City, said she was primarily interested (again) on Prop. 2. She said she doesn’t feel her vote matters as much for the candidates, because the incumbents will likely hold their seats, but she votes in every race.

Elodie Gourgeon, 24 of Salt Lake City, said she votes in every race but was primarily interested in Prop. 2. She said she didn’t feel her vote mattered as much for individual candidates, because she expected the incumbents would likely hold their seats.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Emily Williams, 26 of Holladay, said Prop 2 “is a big deal to me” because she has family members who would benefit from it. She voted straight Democrat even though she doesn’t necessarily identify that way because she “wants to see change.”
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Emily Williams, 26 of Holladay, said Prop 2 “is a big deal to me” because she has family members who would benefit from it. She voted straight Democrat even though she doesn’t necessarily identify that way because she “wants to see change.”

Emily Williams, 26 of Holladay, said Proposition 2 “is a big deal to me” because she has family members who would benefit from the legalization of medical marijuana. She said she voted straight Democrat even though she doesn’t necessarily identify with the party because she “wants to see change.”


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Caitie Almond, 29, of Salt Lake City, Utah.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Caitie Almond, 29, of Salt Lake City, Utah.

Caitie Almond, 29 of Salt Lake City, says that “after being disappointed in the 2016 election, I felt like it was my duty to come out." The question on the gas tax for education was especially important to her, she said, because she works as a teacher.


(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Mikhail Schork, 37, voted for Mitt Romney because “I know him.” For the rest of the ballot, he voted Democrat because that’s his typical party. Also voted for Proposition 2.
(Taylor Stevens | The Salt Lake Tribune) Mikhail Schork, 37, voted for Mitt Romney because “I know him.” For the rest of the ballot, he voted Democrat because that’s his typical party. Also voted for Proposition 2.

Mikhail Schork, 37, voted for Romney for Senate because “I know him.” For the rest of the ballot, he voted Democrat because that’s his usual party. He also voted for Proposition 2.

With tax incentives OK’d, a 29-story downtown Salt Lake City convention hotel is a go — again

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Officials have approved a package of tax incentives for private developers that clears the way for construction of a towering convention hotel in the heart of Salt Lake City.

After months of behind-the-scenes negotiations, state, county and economic-development officials voted Tuesday in support of up to $75 million in post-performance tax rebates for private firms Portman Holdings and DDRM over 20 years, in exchange for constructing a 29-story hotel with up to 750 rooms, expansive meeting spaces and a grand ballroom.

“It’s been the little-big hotel that could,” said Scott Beck, president and CEO for Visit Salt Lake, leader of Salt Lake County’s efforts to attract tourism and conventions.

The $337 million hotel is slated to rise on the southeast corner of the Calvin L. Rampton Salt Lake Palace Convention Center on 200 S. West Temple, officials said. Groundbreaking is now planned for fall 2019, they said, and the hotel is scheduled to open in spring 2022.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  Tribune file photo)  The RootsTech Conference  the Salt Palace Convention Center, as seen in February 2018. Studies indicate a new convention hotel could bring as much as $45 million in yearly visitor spending to the state's economy.
(Francisco Kjolseth | Tribune file photo) The RootsTech Conference the Salt Palace Convention Center, as seen in February 2018. Studies indicate a new convention hotel could bring as much as $45 million in yearly visitor spending to the state's economy. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

After protracted talks in recent months said to focus on the hotel’s exact location, the final package of sales and property tax rebates was approved Tuesday morning in a unanimous vote by board members of Gov. Gary Herbert’s Office of Economic Development.

“Today was the culmination of a decade or longer of work trying to put together a really meaningful convention hotel project in Salt Lake City,” said Ben Hart, GOED’s deputy director.

Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski welcomed the announcement, calling the hotel “a needed amenity in our city.”

“The proposed hotel will allow Salt Lake to attract larger conventions and future national and international events, furthering our place as a worldwide destination,” Biskupski said.

Though it has met opposition from some smaller hotel operators, multiple studies over the years have highlighted the economic potential of a sizable downtown hotel with large blocks of rooms and expansive meeting places — not least, according to Beck, as a way to maximize economic gains from the Salt Palace.

“This hotel,” Beck said, “is focused on ensuring the long-term viability of the convention center,” which he noted now operates at about 55 percent of its capacity.

The city tweaked its zoning ordinances two years ago to allow high rises up to 375 feet high in that portion of its central business district, in anticipation of the hotel project.

In addition to its 700-plus rooms and lavish amenities, the new hotel will include a 25,000-square-foot grand ballroom — considered essential for accommodating conventioneers — along with a 14,000-square-foot junior ballroom, a total of 62,000 square feet of meeting spaces and outdoor rooftop amenities.

Beck and Val Hale, executive director of GOED, said the hotel would allow Utah’s capital city to compete in new markets for the world’s biggest convention gatherings, with the potential to bring up to $45 million yearly in new direct visitor spending.

The city’s boosters have long proposed bringing such a hotel to Utah’s urban core, and studies in 2004 and 2008 documented the idea’s potential. Government officials formalized the contours of a public-private partnership to build the hotel in 2013, and two years later, the Utah Legislature approved the structure of tax incentives.

In 2015, Utah officials abandoned a prior deal to build a hotel with Dallas-based Omni Hotels & Resorts after several sticking points emerged over public financing for the project. A second request for bids went out in 2016.

Hart said lengthy attempts to assemble property for building the hotel somewhere adjacent to the Salt Palace, as earlier planned, were unsuccessful, with talks hampered by the death in October 2017 of prominent downtown real estate executive Vasilios Priskos, who was deeply involved in the project.

Building the hotel on the southeast corner of the existing Salt Palace property, Hart said, will bring some disruption to less-used areas of the convention center, but won’t lead to the closure of exhibit spaces.

The completed hotel will then be fully connected to the convention center, he said.

GOED said that hotel owners DDRM, based outside St. George, would partner with Portman Holdings and a newly formed limited liability corporation called Salt Lake City CH (convention hotel) in a joint venture to build the high-rise hotel, along with other design, construction and operating partners.

The tax incentives approved Tuesday involve special state sales and property tax rebates to be awarded after the hotel is built and operating — including conveying the land on the Salt Palace site from its current owner, Salt Lake County, to the hotel partners.

GOED estimated the incentives will add $281 million in capital investment over 20 years.

Beck, with Visit Salt Lake, said that because of the size and complexity of such projects, taxpayer subsidies were a typical feature in getting convention hotels built in most U.S. cities that have them.

“It’s very rare that a hotel in the U.S. of this size — outside of New York City or Las Vegas — gets built without some private-public partnership. They all have a form of public engagement.”

Ambrish Baisiwala, CEO of Atlanta-based hotel developer Portman Holdings, said the global company found Salt Lake City “to be both business-friendly and a strong destination market,” with special praise for the proximity of Salt Lake International Airport and recreation opportunities.

“We hope this will be the first of many projects we undertake in this market,” Baisiwala said in a statement.

The CEO of DDRM Companies, headquartered in Ivins, praised Utah’s decision to involve Portman in the project, given its industry prominence, “hotel experience, creativity and financial resources.” DDRM’s Stan Castleton said Portman “will help us create something that will make the entire state of Utah proud.”

Democrats chip away at GOP dominance in state governments

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Democrats took back the governor's offices in Illinois and Michigan on Tuesday, major steps in their nationwide strategy to reverse years of Republican gains in state capitols.

In Michigan, a perennial presidential battleground state, Democrat Gretchen Whitmer defeated Republican Bill Schuette, upending years of Republican control in the state. The former legislative leader will become the second female governor in a state where Democrats heavily targeted other statewide and legislative offices.

Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner in Illinois lost his bid for a second term to Democrat J.B. Pritzker. The billionaire appears to have capitalized not only on Rauner's lack of popularity but broader dissatisfaction with President Donald Trump.

Democrats Andrew Cuomo in New York and Tom Wolf in Pennsylvania easily won re-election.

Elsewhere, there was better news for Republicans.

They celebrated the re-election of Gov. Larry Hogan in Maryland and Charlie Baker in Massachusetts, two moderates who remain popular in deeply Democratic states.

Republicans are in control more often than not in state capitols across the country, but Democrats were trying to pull a little closer in elections Tuesday for governor and state legislature.

There were no quick victories in the closely contested open governor's races in Florida and Georgia, two Deep South states where black candidates would break barriers if they win but faced Republicans who were drawing energy from their close alignment with Trump.

Democrats were hoping enthusiasm among their voters also could flip governor's seats in Iowa and Kansas, as well as in the traditional battleground states of Michigan, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin.

In all, voters were choosing 36 governors and 6,089 state legislators in general and special elections that have attracted record amounts of spending from national Democratic and Republican groups.

The political parties are trying not only to win now, but also to put themselves in strong position for the elections two years from now that will determine which party will have the upper hand in redrawing congressional and state legislative districts.

Voters also were deciding ballot measures in four states — Colorado, Michigan, Missouri and Utah — that propose to overhaul the redistricting process and reduce the likelihood of partisan gerrymandering by either major party.

Republicans entered Tuesday's election with a sizable advantage, controlling two-thirds of the 99 state legislative chambers and 33 governors' offices. The GOP held a trifecta of power in 25 states, compared with just eight for Democrats.

Parties that fully control the legislative and executive branches can enact policies that might not pass with a divided government. For example, Missouri's Republican trifecta enacted a right-to-work law limiting union powers that was repealed in a voter referendum in August. California's Democratic-dominated Legislature, with the help of one Republican lawmaker, enacted a 12-cent gas tax hike to pay for road repairs. That law faced a referendum seeking to repeal it on Tuesday's ballot.

History suggests Democrats are likely to make gains during the first midterm election involving Trump. Some of Democrats' best chances at new trifectas were in Illinois and New Mexico, where they already control both legislative chambers and were attempting to flip the governor's office.

In New York, even a slight gain by Democrats could wrest the state Senate from Republicans and thus give Democrats a governing trifecta. Republicans were largely on defense but also were angling for gains in a few traditionally Democratic states, such Connecticut.

A large-scale reversal of state political fortunes appeared to be a long shot.

"It's a year that could be good for Dems," said Jon Thompson, a spokesman for the Republican Governors Association. "But Republicans are still in a good position to hold a large majority of governorships."

The governor's races have extra emphasis in 28 states where the winners will serve four-year terms with the potential power to approve or reject district boundaries drawn for Congress or state legislatures.

The Democratic Governors Association has focused on nine swing states — Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — where it believes the governorships could be pivotal in congressional redistricting. Republicans currently hold trifectas in Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. The rest have split partisan control.

"Those states together are majority-makers in Congress," said Jared Leopold, a spokesman for the Democratic Governors Association. "If you can elect Democrats in a good portion of those states, you can prevent Republicans from doing the same kind of gerrymandering in 2021 that they did in 2011."

As of mid-October, the Democratic Governors Association and its affiliated entities had raised $122 million during the past two years — a record outdone only by the Republican Governors Association's new high mark of at least $156 million.

The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee and Republican State Leadership Committee, which focus on state races, also set record fundraising targets. The National Democratic Redistricting Committee, led by former Obama administration Attorney General Eric Holder, has pumped additional money into state races viewed as critical in future redistricting decisions.

Although most state lawmakers responsible for redistricting will be elected in 2020, voters on Tuesday were electing more than 800 state lawmakers in about two dozen states to four-year terms where they could play a role in approving new congressional or state legislative districts.

Holladay voters defeat the big development proposed for the old Cottonwood Mall site

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Residents in Holladay rejected a controversial high-density development on the site of the old Cottonwood Mall, according to unofficial election results.

In a ballot measure that went before voters while still under challenge in the Utah Supreme Court, those early results, which included the bulk of mail-in ballots, went heavily against Proposition 14, 57 percent to 43 percent.

The vote reverses the Holladay City Council’s approval of the 57-acre residential and commercial development, essentially restarting the city’s lengthy planning process.

That is the result sought by Unite for Holladay, a group of residents opposed to the development, which has been dubbed Holladay Quarter. The group has conducted a robust campaign in recent weeks including mailers, yard signs and automated calls — while supporters of Proposition 14 stayed largely silent.

“We’re thrilled,” said lead organizer Brett Stohlton. “This sends a clear message that Holladay deserves better and it really is a referendum on elected officials finding a better project for the old mall site.”

For city officials and the developers, Tuesday’s vote was not supposed to have taken place. They challenged the measure before the Supreme Court in mid-September and, based on hints from the justices, had expected a ruling nullifying the vote well before Election Day.

But more than six weeks after hearing hastily convened oral arguments, the state’s high court still hasn’t ruled.

Holladay Mayor Rob Dahle predicted last week Proposition 14 would likely go down to defeat as a result, given that supporters of the project and developers had not campaigned in its favor while in that legal limbo.

“I’m not shocked,” Dahle said when the final result was in. “Everybody assumed the court would have weighed in at this point.”

The mayor said the issue had been divisive and that he now hoped Holladay could move forward with other pressing community issues.

For nearly two years, Utah developers Ivory Homes and Woodbury Corp. have been pushing to bring a massive housing, office tower and retail development to the former mall site near 4800 S. Highland Drive — including a 775-unit high-rise apartment complex and 210 single-family homes.

A spokesman for Ivory Homes declined to comment Tuesday evening, but said company officials would be meeting with partners on the project on Wednesday to chart its future.

In an interview last week, Ivory Homes CEO Clark Ivory called the vote “zoning by referendum” and warned the project could fall apart with further delay and a public vote in opposition — regardless of how the Supreme Court might rule.

The city held more than 20 public hearings reviewing and updating details of the massive mixed-use project. That culminated in May with city approval of a final site development plan and a contract with developers that detailed how the mall site would be built out.

Though the project is said to be worth nearly $560 million to Holladay and would contribute significantly to the 19-year-old city’s tax base, it also involves high-density housing and a series of multistory residential and office towers that have drawn concern from some residents.

Opponents with Unite for Holladay contend that Holladay Quarter is too big and too dense, threatening to snarl traffic and alter the quality of life in the suburban city on Salt Lake County’s eastern bench.

Opponents of the development filed petitions over the summer with City Clerk Stephanie Carlson seeking a public vote on the two key City Council decisions giving the project a go-ahead, the contract and the master plan.

City officials rejected the petitions, saying approval for Holladay Quarter was “administrative” and simply applied existing zoning rules, making it ineligible for a citizens referendum. But, recognizing the issue fell into a legal gray area, the city also granted Unite for Holladay a spot on the ballot while all parties took the issue to court.

Third District Judge Richard McKelvie ruled quickly that the City Council’s approval of its contract with Ivory Homes was administrative.

But the site development master plan, McKelvie said, was instead a “legislative” act, meaning that it made new, wider policy instead of simply applying existing law and could be subject to a public vote.

Both sides took the matter to the Utah Supreme Court, where the case sat undecided as of Monday.

Ben McAdams takes early lead over Mia Love, but votes from heavily GOP Utah County not yet tallied

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Democratic Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams was holding an early lead over GOP Rep. Mia Love in vote tallies Tuesday evening.

He led 53.1 percent to 46.9 percent, according to partial unofficial returns.

Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  UtahÕs 4th Congressional District Democratic challenger, Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams talks with supporters at the Utah Democratic election night headquarters at the Radisson Hotel Salt Lake City, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.
Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune UtahÕs 4th Congressional District Democratic challenger, Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams talks with supporters at the Utah Democratic election night headquarters at the Radisson Hotel Salt Lake City, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018. (Leah Hogsten/)

But most of those early votes came from Salt Lake County, where the bulk of Democrats in the 4th District live. Relatively few results had been counted in Love’s GOP stronghold in Utah County — which had reported Election Day issues with long lines.

About 85 percent of district voters live in politically mixed Salt Lake County, and 11 percent live in Utah County — which tends to vote Republican by large margins. Love in previous elections has lost Salt Lake County, but still won the election.

“Turnout seems to be good, but there are a lot of unknowns at this point,” McAdams said. “There’s a lot of enthusiasm this election. There are a lot of people who are coming out to vote in order to make their opinion heard.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The scene is set for Mia Love's election night party at the Hilton Garden Inn in Lehi on Tuesday Nov. 6, 2018.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) The scene is set for Mia Love's election night party at the Hilton Garden Inn in Lehi on Tuesday Nov. 6, 2018. (Trent Nelson/)

Love said, “It’s going to be a long night. It always is. But it’s looking really good for us,” and declined more questions at 10 p.m.

Dave Hansen, Love’s campaign manager, said, “We know there’s a big turnout. That usually plays well for her,” but added, “There’s a good chance it could go past tonight” before the winner is known.

Both campaigns are expecting eventual results to be close, and recent polls showed the race was tied. They were bracing for the possibility that a clear winner may not be known on Election Day, and that they may need to wait days for late-arriving by-mail ballots for a victor to emerge.

Also, Salt Lake County Clerk Sherrie Swensen said that up to half of the votes cast on Election Day at some voting centers there were provisional ballots from people who registered at the polls. She said it will likely take several days to verify their information and count their votes.

McAdams and Love waged one of the state’s most bitter and expensive campaigns ever — costing nearly $10.5 million. Plenty of outside money and ads poured in, showing the race has been one of the keys nationally in determining whether Republicans or Democrats will control the U.S. House.

The campaigns say the race has been close because of the big-spending, well-known candidates, the rare Utah district where Democrats are competitive — and perhaps a blue wave created by ambivalent feelings about President Donald Trump even in heavily Republican Utah.

“If Hillary Clinton had won the presidency in 2016, it wouldn’t be this close,” and district Republicans would probably be more excited to help Love and fight Clinton, Hansen said.

Andrew Roberts, McAdams’ campaign manager, said, “Utahns, of course, have a discomfort with the president. But ultimately what I think this race really is about is Ben McAdams and Mia Love.”

McAdams himself sees the races as close both because of disdain for Washington and a desire for bipartisanship.

“It’s been a close race because people are familiar with me as mayor of Salt Lake County and have seen my style of working across party lines to bring people together and get things done," he said. “I think people are ready for a change and they want to see that in Washington.”

Jason Perry, director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah, also noted that Love’s campaign claimed that electing McAdams would help make Nancy Pelosi the speaker of the House, while McAdams' supporters argued he would better help keep Trump in check.

“I don’t think those kind of attacks worked very well,” Perry said. “People don’t really believe that a vote for Mia is a vote for Donald Trump, and they don’t believe that a vote for McAdams is just a vote for Pelosi. I think people throw out those names because they are polarizing.”

And with the tight race, Perry said such attacks are just “to try to sow seeds of doubt” and sway even a few needed votes.

“It is interesting how quickly this race went negative,” Perry added. In part, he said, it is because both candidates “are very well-known [public figures] who have a record to support and attack.”

He adds, “I think it went negative so quickly because these candidates know each other so well that they know exactly how to attack each other.”

In fact, the families of McAdams and Love were close for years and went to movies, dinners and sporting events together. The friendship crashed to an end when McAdams chose to challenge Love. She said he told her he had no such plans.

“Her negative attacks started the moment I got in the race,” McAdams said. Of course, his ads also soon attacked Love.

Polls showed early that Democrats and Republicans essentially were already settled on support of their own candidate, Perry said, so focus turned largely to unaffiliated voters, and negative ads especially targeted them.

“In this case, all you’re trying to do is create some kind of doubt, take off the shine — just throw out enough seeds and hope that some of them start to sprout to create a little bit of concern about your opponent,” Perry said. “That’s what happened throughout this campaign.”

Perry said an attack that seemed to have traction against Love — and help swing some unaffiliated voters to McAdams — were hammering her for raising $1 million for a primary she never faced. The Federal Election Commission initially raised questions about the legality, but eventually gave her emails that she claimed exonerated her — and she called for McAdams to withdraw for his “unethical” ads on the issue.

That forced Love to defend her actions, “and the problem with spending time explaining is that you are not spending time campaigning. I think that was the strategy of the McAdams campaign,” Perry said.

Meanwhile, Perry said ads that seemed to help Love talked about her helping win the release of Utahn Joshua Holt from captivity in Venezuela. “I think having his mother out there saying it was because of Mia Love that he is home was very impactful, and helped show she has clout and can bring home some results.”

Meanwhile, Hansen — Love’s campaign manager — said the 4th “is a district that is not what you would call a solid red district,” contributing to the close race. “If you look at history, it is a tough district” — once held by former Democratic Rep. Jim Matheson, even though he beat Love only narrowly.

Perry added, “This is a district where there are a lot of Democrats. If there is a close district in the state, this is it.”

Because of that, Hansen said, “The national Democrats spent an awful lot of money here trying to defeat Mia, and I think it’s kind of the tenor of the times.”

This story will be updated. Reporters Cara MacDonald and Ed Collins contributed to this report.

Mr. Romney is going to Washington

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(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney makes his way to the stage to give his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, 30 minute after the polls closed, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney visit with Danny Goode and his son Russell Goode, 7, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for he polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney  greets Roxanne and Steve Shallenburger, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with Danny Goode and his son Russell Goode, 7, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney greets Greg Klekes and Jessie Li at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney greets Jeff and Jason Hadfield, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with Greg Klekes and Jessie Li at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, as they wait for the polls to close, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Gov. Gary Herbert gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt and Ann Romney leaves the Romney headquarters after Mitt gave his victory speech, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Gov. Gary Herbert gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Gov. Gary Herbert gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Gov. Gary Herbert gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt and Ann Romney leaves the Romney headquarters after Mitt gave his victory speech, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Ann and Mitt Romney pose for a photo with Gov. Gary Herbert and his wife Jeanette, and Senator Mike Lee and his wife Sharon, after giving his victory speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney gives his victory speech, at the Romney Headquarters, in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox gives a speech at the Romney headquarters in Orem, on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.

Mitt Romney will be the next U.S. senator from Utah, with unofficial election results showing the former Massachusetts governor and two-time presidential candidate easily outdistancing his Democratic opponent, Salt Lake County Councilwoman Jenny Wilson.

After vote totals late Tuesday, Romney held a 28 percentage-point lead with 61 percent of the vote, compared with 33 percent for Wilson.

At Romney’s campaign headquarters in Orem, cheers and applause erupted shortly after 8 p.m., when polls closed and national media outlets projected a win for the Republican, a former leader of Salt Lake City’s 2002 Winter Olympics.

In a victory speech, Romney praised Wilson for running a strong, positive campaign.

“I admire her," Romney said, “and I wish her and her family a great deal of success."

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters in Orem as they wait for the polls to close on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters at the Romney Headquarters in Orem as they wait for the polls to close on election night, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

Romney was considered the favorite for the seat of retiring Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, since before the formal declaration of his candidacy, as rumors had swirled for months that the nationally known Republican was considering a run for the Senate in Utah.

On Twitter, Washington Post reporter Matt Viser noted that Romney will be the first U.S. politician in 173 years to serve as governor of one state and U.S. senator from another.

“Last to accomplish the feat was Sam Houston,” Viser wrote, “who was Tennessee governor before his legendary exploits in Texas, where he also won election to U.S. Senate in 1846."

On the campaign trail, Romney repeatedly stated that his priorities include reduction of the national deficit and a return to traditional budgetary procedures. He also has advocated for immigration reform, pitching a merit-based system combined with a physical barrier along the U.S.-Mexico border and legal protections for the so-called “Dreamers,” a group of U.S. residents who were illegally brought into the country as children.

Romney reiterated those priorities in his election-night speech and described his victory as a call for greater dignity and respect in national politics.

“I will work with good men and women in both parties to serve the cause of America’s enduring greatness,” Romney said. “And I will endeavor to conduct myself in a manner that is consistent with the values of our great state and with our national character.”

In this Aug. 30, 2018, photo, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Jenny Wilson sits down for an interview in Salt Lake City to talk about her campaign and the issues affecting Utah. (Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP)
In this Aug. 30, 2018, photo, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Jenny Wilson sits down for an interview in Salt Lake City to talk about her campaign and the issues affecting Utah. (Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP) (Francisco Kjolseth/)

Wilson, speaking before a gathering of Utah Democrats at a Salt Lake City hotel, said she leaves the race proud, pleased and grateful.

“I’m proud to be part of a legacy of women leaders,” she said.

She said the two objectives of her candidacy were, first, to return a Senate seat to the people of Utah after being held for more than 40 years by a single person — Hatch — and, second, to “make a difference.”

“I wanted to provide a voice for people who felt that they had been left behind by an all-Republican delegation,” Wilson said. “While one objective was not met, the other certainly was.”

Romney’s win was part of a good night for Republican Senate candidates nationally, who retained majority control of the chamber.

The senator-elect, a leader of the “Never Trump” movement in 2016, has since become an occasional critic of President Donald Trump, including in a recent essay that criticized Trump’s attitude toward and characterizations of the media as the “enemy of the people.”

Romney has said that he will support the president when Trump and his administration are advancing the interests of Utah and the nation but is not opposed to condemning instances of racism, sexism and bigotry — if and when they occur.

Also at Romney’s victory party were Utah Gov. Gary Herbert and Sen. Mike Lee. Lee predicted that with Romney and a continued Republican majority, the Senate would accomplish great things.

“Thank you to Utah for electing this good man,” Lee said. “I look forward to working with him.”

Final and official vote totals will be released by the Utah Lieutenant Governor’s Office later this month after a canvass of county and state election results.

Cara MacDonald and Zachary Aedo contributed to this report.

Anti-gerrymandering Proposition 4 holds thin lead

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A citizen initiative seeking to end gerrymandering in Utah held a precariously thin lead Tuesday evening.

Proposition 4 led 51.2 to 48.8 percent in partial unofficial returns, as of 10:30 p.m. That lead is small enough that late arriving by-mail ballots could shift it as the vote count continues in coming days.

Prop 4 would create an independent commission appointed by the governor and legislative leaders to draw Utah’s congressional and legislative district boundaries after the census every 10 years. The Legislature could reject its recommendations, but would need to explain why to perhaps angry voters.

The bipartisan Better Boundaries group gathered 150,000 verified signatures to put the issue on the ballot, arguing that voters should pick their politicians — and that politicians should not pick their voters.

“I think that resonated with voters,” said Jeff Wright, a former GOP congressional candidate who was co-chairman of the group, along with former Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker, a Democrat.

Steve Griffin  |  The Salt Lake Tribune 


Former Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker, right, and Jeff Wright talk about the formal launch of the Better Boundaries initiative at the Cicero Group offices in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 20, 2017.
Steve Griffin | The Salt Lake Tribune Former Salt Lake City Mayor Ralph Becker, right, and Jeff Wright talk about the formal launch of the Better Boundaries initiative at the Cicero Group offices in Salt Lake City, Thursday, July 20, 2017.

Also helping, Wright said, were early ads featuring video of the late President Ronald Reagan urging creation of such independent commissions — helping to convince Utah Republicans the idea is sound, even though local Democrats long accused the Utah GOP of shaping boundaries to their advantage here.

“It made a huge difference,” Wright said. “We put out there what Ronald Reagan and many other Republicans and Democrats have long said: There needs to be reform. It was very effective.”

GOP leaders of the Utah Legislature opposed Prop 4, arguing that the Utah Constitution gives lawmakers sole responsibility to redraw districts.

They charged that Prop 4 was mostly an attempt to create a safe Democratic congressional seat in Salt Lake County (where the GOP Legislature had diluted the Democratic vote by dividing it among three mostly Republican districts).

Better Boundaries got 69 percent of the $1.9 million it raised from out of state, and many of its largest donations came from Democrats or left-leaning groups. That included nearly $1 million from the Action Now Initiative, an advocacy group founded by Democratic Texas billionaires John and Laura Arnold.

No formal group formed to campaign against Prop 4. Senate President Wayne Niederhauser said it would look self-serving for legislators to do so; Wright said it is simply “tough to campaign for gerrymandering.”

The chairmen of Prop 4 sent an email to supporters saying, “In this era of hyper-partisanship, it’s rare to see Democrats and Republicans working together on anything, especially when it comes to elections. But we all felt, as you do, that ending gerrymandering was the first step in restoring better governance for all Utahns.”

Prop 4 arose amid persistent allegations of gerrymandering by the Republican-controlled Legislature.

For example, after the last redrawing in 2011, then-Democratic Rep. Jim Matheson accused GOP legislators of splitting up his old district three ways to make re-election impossible in the district where he lives, so he chose to run in an adjacent one that included more of his former constituents.

With the unusual move, Matheson barely won re-election — by 768 votes — over challenger Mia Love in 2012. Two years, later, he chose not to seek re-election, and Love then won the seat.


D.A. Sim Gill, Sheriff Rosie Rivera, Clerk Sherrie Swensen jump to big early leads in Salt Lake County; council incumbents ahead, too

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Three Republican candidates in Salt Lake County who are running against their Democratic bosses trailed their incumbent opponents Tuesday, early unofficial election returns show.

Two-term District Attorney Sim Gill is in the the tightest of those three races, yet he still holds a 14-point edge over Republican Nathan Evershed.

Evershed has touted his experience as a career prosecutor and aimed to paint his boss as an ineffective leader who puts politics above justice. Gill, a Democrat, has positioned himself as a candidate with a proven track record of fiscal and social responsibility as well as the broader focus and vision needed to address future criminal justice challenges the office will face.

Evershed said the roughly 100 people gathered for his campaign party were waiting to see “how this whole night shakes out.”

“Obviously it’s not an ideal position to start out in," he said, “but we’ll just kind of see as the precincts come in and report.”

Gill, too, stressed that the results were unofficial but said it was a “good spot to be in.”

“It has always been about public service,” he said, noting that he sees the early results as a validation of a “lot of hard work” and his track record over the past few years.

County Sheriff Rosie Rivera, a Democrat who became Utah’s first-ever female sheriff when she was appointed last August, was ahead of her GOP rival, Justin Hoyal, by roughly 20 percentage points.

“What [voters] saw was that I was working and I work for the people and I really think that had something to do with it," she said. “Because everybody I’ve run into that has followed this race and they’ve all said, ‘You know what? We know you’re working hard. We know you’re trying to fix the issues with the UPD.’”

Rivera has focused on improving services for homeless residents, reducing recidivism among people who are convicted of crimes and keeping low-level offenders out of jail. Hoyal, a 21-year veteran of the Unified Police Department, says the department needs new leadership to face the future.

The two agree on most issues, like what needs to be done to address the ongoing jail bed crisis, which will likely be one of the biggest challenges facing the winner of the election. But they disagree about where responsibility lies for cities that have left the UPD to start their own police departments — an exodus for which Hoyal has criticized Rivera.

The 5-4 GOP edge on the County Council seemed safe in early returns. Republican incumbents Aimee Winder Newton and Steve DeBry held leads, while Democratic incumbents Jim Bradley and Ann Granato were up by hefty margins. Fellow Democratic Councilman Arlyn Bradshaw ran unopposed.

Republican County Recorder Adam Gardiner was the only county incumbent trailing his opponent. Early results showed Democrat Rashelle Hobbs with a 6-point lead.

Republican County Auditor Scott Tingley was ahead of his Democratic opponent, Garry Hrechkosy, and County Clerk Sherrie Swensen, who has served in her post since 1991, also had a huge lead — nearly 36 points — over her GOP foe, Rozan Mitchell, according to early results.

That race turned ugly late last week when Mitchell, Salt Lake County’s election director who has taken an extended leave of absence when she said the atmosphere in the office had become “toxic,” sued Swensen over late ballots. A judge dismissed the case Monday.

Mitchell has said her deep understanding of the elections office from hands-on experience has positioned her to preserve what the county does well and target other areas it could improve. Swensen said she decided to run again to see the county through the implementation of a new voting system after that date, as well as redistricting (where voting boundaries are redrawn after the census) in 2020.

The Salt Lake Tribune will update this story.

Here are the updated vote tallies in the major races in Utah

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Here are the initial results for Utah’s congressional races, ballot propositions and constitutional amendments. View more election night coverage here.

These results were last updated at 10:31 p.m. (i) indicates incumbent.

U.S. Senate

Mitt Romney, Republican • 60.74 percent • 370,698

Jenny Wilson, Democratic • 33.53 percent • 204,634

Tim Aalders, Constitution • 2.49 percent • 15,218

Craig R. Bowden, LIbertarian • 2.20 percent • 13,404

Reed C. McCandless, Independent American • 1.04 percent • 6,333

———

4th Congressional District

Ben McAdams, Democratic • 53.80 percent • 83,814

Mia Love, Republican (i) • 46.20 percent • 71,979

———

3rd Congressional District

John Curtis, Republican (i) • 63.76 percent • 61,100

James Courage Singer, Democratic • 32.16 percent • 30,817

Timothy L. Zeidner, United Utah • 2.10 percent • 2,011

Gregory C. Duerden, Independent American • 1.98 percent • 1,900

———

2nd Congressional District

Chris Stewart, Republican (i) • 55.02 percent • 93,792

Shireen Ghorbani, Democratic • 40.70 percent • 69,389

Jeffrey Whipple, Libertarian • 4.28 percent • 7,298

———

1st Congressional District

Rob Bishop, Republican (i) • 62.69 percent • 115,512

Lee Castillo, Democratic • 24.46 percent • 45,075

Eric Eliason, United Utah • 11.17 percent • 20,585

Adam Davis, Green • 1.67 percent • 3,073

———

Nonbinding Question 1 (gas tax/school funding)

Against • 65.57 percent • 408,737

For • 34.43 percent • 214,614

———

Proposition 2 (medical marijuana)

For • 54.29 percent • 341,674

Against • 45.71 percent • 287,649

———

Proposition 3 (Medicaid expansion)

For • 55.15 percent • 341,307

Against • 44.85 percent • 277,540

———

Proposition 4 (independent redistricting commission)

For • 51.39 percent • 312,056

Against • 48.61 percent • 295,148

———

Constitutional Amendment A (tax exemption for military)

For • 78.60 percent • 472,505

Against • 21.40 percent • 128,613

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Constitutional Amendment B (property taxes on government leases)

Against • 72.95 percent • 438,966

For • 27.05 percent • 162,800

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Constitutional Amendment C (special legislative sessions)

For • 63.22 percent • 377,781

Against • 36.78 percent • 219,809

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Salt Lake City: $87 million bond for roads and infrastructure

For • 68.69 percent • 33,429

Against • 31.31 percent • 15,239

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Holladay: Cottonwood Mall development plan

Against • 57.02 percent • 6,936

For • 42.98 percent • 5,229

———

Twenty counties have reported some results: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Davis, Duschene, Emery, Garfield, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, Salt Lake, Summit, Tooele, Uintah, Utah, Washington, Weber.

Ten counties have reported complete results: Beaver, Carbon, Daggett, Garfield, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, Summit, Uintah.

Nine counties have not reported any results: Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Wasatch, Wayne.

Voters favor proposed constitutional amendment empowering lawmakers to call themselves into special session

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In the balance-of-power fight between Gov. Gary Herbert and the Utah Legislature, lawmakers had the upper hand in unofficial vote results Tuesday.

Amendment C, which would change the Utah Constitution to allow lawmakers to call themselves into special session, had piled up a 63 percent to 37 percent as of 10:45 p.m.

Lawmakers had approved the proposal last March by a two-thirds margin. They said that many states have such a provision and it makes sense because giving the governor sole discretion to call a special session makes for an out-of-whack power balance.

The governor and allies countered with the argument that this provision of the constitution has worked fine for more than a century and doesn’t require adjustment.

Proponents did not campaign for the ballot measure, with lawmakers saying they did not feel it appropriate to do so, and most had re-election campaigns of their own to worry about.

Herbert did campaign against the measure, although indirectly, providing almost all of the funding of an anti-Amendment C political issues campaign run by his former spokesman and campaign manager.

Medical marijuana leaps to early lead in Utah. LDS Church, a Prop 2 foe, reaffirms backing for legislative approach.

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Early unofficial election results Tuesday night bode well for supporters of Proposition 2, with the medical cannabis initiative capturing more than 54 percent of the vote.

Prop 2 supporters cheered, clapped and shed tears as the results rolled in at a Salt Lake City watch party hosted by TRUCE Utah, one of the groups pushing for the initiative’s passage.

Christine Stenquist, TRUCE president, told the gathering of more than 100 that Utah’s decision to create a medical marijuana program will reverberate far beyond state borders.

“When Utah flips, the whole country will be watching, and you all did that,” she said, gesturing to the backers clustered around her.

To some, the vote seemed largely symbolic, since top lawmakers are busy constructing a different model for delivering medical cannabis to Utah patients. State legislators are expected to overwrite Prop 2 if it succeeds at the ballot box and approve their own cannabis act if it fails.

Others say the initiative still serves an essential purpose by pressuring the Legislature to act.

Either way, the emotionally charged decision on medical cannabis has captured the attention of Utahns and driven them to vote — in a poll released in October, 1 of 5 respondents credited the medical cannabis initiative as the primary motivation to participate in the election.

About 9 p.m. Tuesday, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a release reiterating its support for relieving human suffering and its concern for the welfare of children. The LDS Church has argued that Prop 2 fails to strike a balance between these considerations.

“Our expectation is that prompt legislative action will address the shortfalls of the initiative which have been acknowledged by advocates of Proposition 2. The legislative alternative is better public policy and has broad support among Utahns,” Marty Stephens, the church’s director of community and government relations, said in the release.

Early returns showed many of the rural and more heavily Latter-day Saint counties siding against Prop 2. Salt Lake, Weber, Tooele, Daggett and Carbon counties were embracing the measure.

Prop 2 critics have knocked it by calling it loosely written. Although its stated goal is to provide a medical cannabis program, they’ve insisted it would verge on de facto legalization of recreational pot use.

Initiative supporters have rejected this accusation, pointing out that patients could procure the medicinal plant only at a doctor’s recommendation to treat select ailments.

Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical marijuana, and Missouri voters, like Utahns, are weighing the issue this Election Day. The federal government still puts the plant in the same class of illegal substances as LSD and heroin.

In Utah, after several failed legislative attempts to bring a comprehensive medical marijuana program, advocates decided to try a different tack. Led by the Utah Patients Coalition, medical marijuana supporters collected nearly 154,000 valid signatures from across the state, well above the number they needed to put Prop 2 up for a popular vote.

But that was just the first hurdle for its proponents.

Then came the legal action that unsuccessfully attempted to block Prop 2 from the ballot. And while the initiative’s popularity numbers soared in the polls, the opposition camp grew to include some of the state’s most powerful voices.

Gov. Gary Herbert came out against the measure, saying it was flawed and would open the door to recreational use. The LDS Church also objected to Prop 2 and urged members to resist the initiative.

The Utah Medical Association helped organize opponents into the Drug Safe Utah coalition and honed the group’s message, and wealthy Utah businessmen Walter J. Plumb III and Kem Gardner stoked the anti-initiative movement with hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations.

On the other side, Utah Patients Coalition collected big checks from the Marijuana Policy Project and Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, a California-based company that uses hemp oil in its products.

House Speaker Greg Hughes, R-Draper, has said the table was set for an exceptionally ugly campaign season that would divide communities over Prop 2. To defuse the brewing battle, Hughes and representatives from the Utah Patients Coalition and Drug Safe Utah began meeting behind the scenes a few months ago to see if they could find common ground.

In early October, Herbert, state leaders, Latter-day Saint authorities and other key figures in the medical cannabis debate revealed they’d coalesced around an alternative to the Prop 2. Their plan centered on a piece of legislation — the Utah Medical Cannabis Act — that lawmakers would take up in a special session after the election.

The initiative’s critics, including the LDS Church and Utah Medical Association, were gratified that the drafted bill called for a handful of “cannabis pharmacies” and a state-run distribution system rather than the roughly 40 private dispensaries allowed under Prop 2. They were also pleased that the only edibles permitted by the legislation would be gelatinous cubes, rather than cookies or candylike gummies that might appeal to children.

For their part, members of the Utah Patients Coalition said the negotiations had eased their mind about the medical marijuana program’s long-term survival odds. They’d been worried that, even if Prop 2 passed, state lawmakers would tear it apart.

But the much-vaunted compromise was met with skepticism by some advocates who’ve spent years watching medical marijuana bills wither in the Legislature. Lawmakers in 2015 and again in 2016 introduced bills to create a medical cannabis program in Utah, but the legislation stalled both times.

Earlier this year, in the face of mounting public pressure to legalize medical cannabis, state lawmakers did take a step in that direction by allowing the substance for certain terminally ill patients. That state is still crafting regulations for this program, a spokesman for the department of agriculture and food said.

150,000 more Utahns poised to get medical coverage as voters OK Medicaid expansion

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Help is on the way for 150,000 low-income Utahns seeking health care coverage after Utah voters approved full Medicaid expansion, according to unofficial election results late Tuesday.

Proposition 3 was carrying 55 percent of the vote at press time, with 45 percent opposing the measure.

“We’re feeling good,” campaign manager RyLee Curtis said. “[The results] are indicative of voters wanting to decide what happens for health care in their state.”

The voters’ endorsement of full Medicaid expansion supersedes and directly rebuffs a partial expansion approved by state lawmakers in March.

That plan, sponsored by Rep. Robert Spendlove, R-Sandy, has not yet been approved by the federal government. But no additional government nod is needed for the implementation of Prop 3, because it complies with the requirements of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

Lawmakers, including outgoing House Speaker Greg Hughes, R-Draper, have spoken against full expansion, warning it could overwhelm the state’s budget and require cuts in other spending areas.

At least one legislator, Sen. Jake Anderegg, R-Lehi, has stated he intends to repeal Prop 3 even if voters embraced the measure.

“With the public vote, I don’t think that that’s sacrosanct,” Anderegg told The Salt Lake Tribune last month. “If we don’t [repeal Prop 3] and the numbers turn out where we think they are, I don’t know how we’re going to fund it.”

Spendlove said Tuesday that he would oppose efforts to repeal the initiative.

“The public has spoken,” he said, “and I think we all need to respect the will of the public.”

Still, Spendlove added that he continues to worry about the fiscal impact of full Medicaid expansion in Utah. He said other states that have fully expanded the program have seen enrollment and costs exceed projections.

“My concerns have never been political; my concerns are practical in nature,” Spendlove said. “I remain very concerned about our ability to fund this expansion.”

Curtis said she was not worried about a potential repeal effort by lawmakers.

“We really believe the Utah Legislature is going to respect the will of the people,” she said. “This process matters. People’s votes are their voice, and the people are speaking tonight.”

Prop 3 supporters gathered in Salt Lake City to watch the results, and Curtis said it was rewarding to see community members, including Medicaid patients, cheering the early success.

“Proposition 3 is about people,” she said. “There are people on the other end of these policy decisions.”

Enacting Prop 3 would include a 0.15 percent sales tax increase to generate roughly $90 million in state revenue. That funding would be combined with $800 million in federal tax revenue already paid by Utahns to cover the cost of new Medicaid enrollees.

Final election results will not be released until later this month.

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