Saturday, 21 April 2012

Hatch sent to primary


Sen. Orrin Hatch came a handful of votes short of claiming his party’s nomination at Saturday’s state GOP convention and will now face a June 26 primary election against former state Sen. Dan Liljenquist.

After two rounds of balloting, Hatch received 2,313 votes or 59.1 percent of the delegate vote. He needed the support of 32 more people to hit the 60 percent threshold and claim the nomination outright.

  Join the Discussion
Post a Comment
Eight other challengers, including state Rep. Chris Herrod, were eliminated on the first round of balloting at Sandy’s South Towne Expo Center on Saturday. Herrod and four others threw their support to Liljenquist between rounds, helping him jump from 28 percent of the vote to just over 40 percent. He left energized.

"It is the time for a new generation of leaders. We know it to our bones," said Liljenquist, 37. "We have two more months. We feel good about our chances."

Hatch will begin the next phase with the momentum from convention and far more financial support, but it’s not unheard of for a newcomer to topple an incumbent in a primary. Jason Chaffetz beat Rep. Chris Cannon in 2008.

The senator says he’s confident he will come out ahead this time.

"We’re going to win it," he said, calling the vote "a tremendous victory" even if he didn’t win the nomination outright.

"We’re pretty darn happy about what did happen. It sent a message. It says that this tough old bird isn’t someone you can just trample on."

The race has received widespread national attention, with tea party groups such as FreedomWorks targeting Hatch and spending more than $700,000 in a campaign to defeat him and boost Liljenquist.

The senator has spent millions of dollars and amassed a campaign staff of more than two dozen to recruit delegates and fight the tea party wave that consumed former Sen. Bob Bennett at the state convention two years ago.

No comments:

Post a Comment