The Center for Growth and Opportunity at Utah State University announced former U.S. Representative Mia Love as the research center’s national outreach director on Tuesday
The Sound of Silence. It could be the theme song of the Utah Democratic Party.
When Republicans, such as U.S. Reps. Chris Stewart or Burgess Owens, paint the Dems as socialists, or smack them with other derogatory labels, there often is no response or pushback just a very disturbing quiet.
There is no one like Jim Dabakis (the now-retired state senator from Salt Lake City) or Randy Horiuchi (the late Salt Lake County Councilman) to blast back at the GOP as cheap-shot artists whose talent for name-calling often seems to dwarf their other skills. And so, the effective Republican bumper-sticker sloganeering continues to eat its way through the Utah body politic.
Linked by culture, faith, geography and other social ties, congressional staffers help each other settle in and find new opportunities in nation’s capital
Club for Growth warns support for spending bills upending GOP s path to winning back Congress Follow Us
Question of the Day
By Ryan Lovelace - The Washington Times - Wednesday, May 19, 2021
The conservative Club for Growth is concerned that Republican lawmakers’ willingness to accept big government spending bills is imperiling the GOP‘s path to taking control of Congress in next year’s election.
The group is actively searching for conservative challengers to unseat various Republicans after their new congressional scorecard showed the grade of the average House Republican dropping 10 percentage points in one year, to 69%, The Washington Times has learned.