The FBI intercepted a threatening letter intended for Utah Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson’s staff office on Friday morning, according to a statement released by the Lieutenant Governor’s Office.
A state legislative committee declined to hear complaints about the Utah Republican Party’s caucus-night presidential poll for the second time on Wednesday, citing biased presentations, the independence of party organizations and an alleged conflict of interest with the committee chair.
Amendment B would increase the cap on distributions from Utah's Permanent State School Fund endowment from 4% to 5%, increasing annual distributions by $14 million.
In front of a room packed with Utah Republican Party leaders, many of whom voted last year to forgo a presidential primary in favor of a poll at local caucus meetings, GOP lawmakers voted to cancel a hearing on Utah’s disorderly Super Tuesday for a second time.
The Utah County clerk — who has been a vocal critic of voting by mail — is facing calls from state election officials to improve his office’s election processes after a state review of the 2024 primary found some of his staff were “too strict” during ballot signature verification,
A new report from the state elections office found discrepancies with the number of votes cast and a high rate of rejected signatures on mail-in ballots in Utah County during June's election.
In its review of Utah County's election process, the Office of the Lieutenant Governor found that 19 extra ballots were counted -- in addition to finding issues with the "fast cast" voting system implemented in the county and issues regarding signature verification.
The FBI found what it called a “suspicious letter” containing white powder addressed to Utah Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson’s office on Friday, adding Utah to a list of at least 20 states where elections officials have been targeted.
The envelope, containing white powder and signed by the so-called “United States Traitor Elimination Army,” was intercepted in Reno, Nevada, Lt. Gov. Henderson’s office said.
Utah’s largest teacher union and the other plaintiffs suing the Utah Legislature over the state’s new “school choice” voucher program are taking a page out of the Amendment D playbook. As part of their lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Utah Fits All Scholarship Program,
The Utah Education Association (UEA) filed a motion in court on Wednesday asking a judge to throw out constitutional Amendment A, slated for the November ballot, one week after a judge granted an injunction that voided Amendment D.
A former FBI agent commented following a suspicious letter containing white powder addressed to Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson’s staff office, claiming to be from a