07-04-09  »  Most Views: Top of Utah's Fourth of July... (812 views)  |  Most Comments: Guilty plea in Ponzi case (7 Comments)


Home » News RSS Icon » Story View
Bookmark and Share...



Add News Feed to...

AddThis Feed Button

Tuesday, November 4, 2008  |  1 Comment [ View ]

Utah last voted for a Democratic president in ’64

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — When it comes to presidential politics, Utah voters rarely surprise on Election Day.

They last backed a Democrat in 1964, the same year The Beatles were singing “Can’t Buy Me Love.”

Since then, it’s been more like “Love Me Do” for Republicans.

The state holds fast to its staunch Republican reputation. In 2004, nearly 3 out of 4 Utahns voted for President Bush, delivering his biggest margin of victory.

The question Tuesday is whether Utah voters — most of whom wanted Mitt Romney as the Republican nominee — will deliver those same kinds of numbers for Sen. John McCain.

McCain has polled well in Utah, opening an early lead over Democratic Sen. Barack Obama. But was a different story in February, when McCain drew a lackluster response, finishing a distant second to Romney, who received 90 percent in the Republican presidential primary.

Still, McCain’s lock on the state’s five electoral votes has been considered so firm that both campaign offices in the state exported their volunteers to nearby battleground states. Neither McCain nor Obama made a public appearance or significant investment in local advertising in Utah after becoming the nominee.

Brigham Young University political scientist Quin Monson said he expects Utah voters to give McCain an easy win, if for no other reason than its long-held fidelity for Republican presidential candidates.

Much of the focus is on Salt Lake County, Utah’s most metropolitan county. Salt Lake City has a growing reputation for leaning Democratic. In the county, where 40 percent of the statewide ballots were cast in 2004, 60 percent voted in favor of Bush. And in Utah County and much of the rest of the western portion of the state, Bush got a whopping 84 percent.

Bush’s popularity has dipped since then, though Utahns have tended to take a more favorable view of him than most parts of the country.




 1 Comment

By: Web Smith @ 11/04/2008, 11:00 AM

You are responsible.

You are about to elect a President and a legislature who will give you a bigger government and more spending. Your new President will give amnesty to millions of illegal aliens, drastically increase the number of H-1B visas, and eliminate E-verify at a time when millions of American Citizens are out of work. Your new Commander in Chief will keep American soldiers in Iraq against your will. Your new Chief Executive will borrow, spend, give away, and waste billions of dollars when the national debt is passing $12 trillion. Against your wishes, your new President helped Bush give $1 trillion to the banks as his parting gift. No matter how much you object, neither Public Servant Number One nor the legislature will listen and will continue to implement their own agenda. It doesn't matter if it's Democrat or Republican.

You are responsible for what you're going to get so, no whining later.

http://ewebsmith.com/Finance/notlistening.html

Report Abuse


Add Your Comment


Name:
Comment:
Security Code:
Type the characters to the left in the box exactly as they appear.
Before posting you must check the box to agree to our posting guidelines.
Utah Find It

Utah Find It