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Letter: Scouting is so last century

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When I was a Boy Scout, I learned that a Scout is “trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent.” And a Scout leader would sometimes effuse, “Why, if you live up to all that, who knows, maybe, just maybe someday you could become president of the United States!”

Now I see that the current occupant of the White House has few, if any, of these qualities.

Perhaps those contemplating a replacement program for the 21st century could adopt a shorter list. A (potential future president) is rich, famous, loud and obnoxious.

Go, young men, go.

Kraig Johnson, South Jordan

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Letter: No tithing, no ticket

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In his letter to The Public Forum on Dec. 31, Bill Inglesby stated:

“The LDS Church does not demand tithing payments. They strongly encourage tithing payments. There are many members of the church who are not active, do not pay tithing and are not in fear of losing the church membership. And no member of the church is ever threatened with excommunication for failing to pay tithing.”

This may be true, but he left out one major item for not paying their tithing. Those not paying their tithing cannot get a temple recommend, or the golden ticket, so to speak, that allows them into their temple.

So in my eyes, that is sort of a demand that you pay your tithing or be a Mormon who will not reach the main goal of the Celestial Kingdom.

Paul Jerominski, Salt Lake City

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A New York Times column on ‘Jewish genius’ draws criticism for linking to a debunked University of Utah study

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When it was first published last week, a controversial New York Times column about “the secrets of Jewish genius” linked to a 2005 study from a researcher labeled “an extremist,” revered by white supremacists and discredited by scientists — and who, for years, worked as a distinguished professor at the University of Utah.

Citing the late U. anthropologist Henry Harpending, expectedly, touched off criticism. Hours after it appeared online, The Times’ commentary was updated with an editor’s note saying it had been a mistake to mention the study, which has been widely questioned and long seen as an argument of racial superiority.

The note suggests that conservative columnist Bret Stephens did not know that Harpending promoted racist ideas. It also says Stephens “was not endorsing the study or its authors’ views” but acknowledges that his reference to the research, nevertheless, left “an impression with many readers that Mr. Stephens was arguing that Jews are genetically superior. That was not his intent.”

The paragraph Stephens wrote about Harpending’s research has since been deleted online. And on Friday, the University of Utah deleted a complimentary memorial post from its Department of Anthropology that had said Harpending’s “scholarly and personal footprint will be long lasting in the field.”

The U. also noted in response to the column that none of the three authors of the paper — Harpending, Gregory Cochran or then-student Jason Hardy — work at the school any longer. Harpending was there from 1997 until he died of a stroke in 2016.

“Statements attributed to Henry Harpending that promote ideas in line with white nationalist ideology stand in direct opposition to the University of Utah’s values of equity, diversity and inclusion ... " said Annalisa Purser, the university’s spokeswoman.

“As such, we will meet these words with ours: Racist views and rhetoric that position one race as superior to another are inaccurate and harmful," she said. "The University of Utah is bolstered by its diversity, which allows individuals from different backgrounds and perspectives to come together to address challenges in new and creative ways.”

Neither Cochran nor Hardy could not be reached by The Salt Lake Tribune for comment. It’s unclear why none of the researchers faced censure while at the university for publishing the piece, though Purser added, “Speech — even when it is racist — is protected by the U.S. Constitution and is necessary for the free exchange of ideas.”

Meanwhile, the citation has reignited a debate about the genetics of race at a time when anti-Semitism is on the rise across the nation. It was posted shortly before several people were stabbed at a rabbi’s home in New York on the seventh day of Hanukkah.

“This has been a very painful time already for Jews in the United States,” said Amy Spiro, a Jewish journalist whose work has been published in Variety, Jewish Insider and The Jerusalem Post. “And then this column came out,” she told The Tribune in a phone interview. “It’s just generated a lot of controversy. It doesn’t seem like this is helpful in any way.”

In their disputed study, the U. researchers focused on Ashkenazi Jews, or those who settled in central and Eastern Europe (as opposed to Spain or the Middle East). Among supremacists, the group is often seen as “pure” because many are white.

Harpending, Cochran and Hardy argue that Ashkenazi Jews have higher IQs, on average, than the general public (including other “non-Ashkenazi Jews”). Their theory is that in medieval times, individuals in the faith group in Europe were pushed into finance jobs “because of the Christian prohibition of usury,” or lending money for interest. Over time, many became rich and had more surviving children than poorer families who worked on farms. They also married within the community and stayed fairly isolated.

“This is a multi-step argument that could be questioned at virtually every turn,” commented Matthew Yglesias, a writer for Vox who criticized Stephens for citing the study.

The University of Utah has long been known as an expert in genetic research, but this paper — “Natural History of Ashkenazi Intelligence” — is typically seen as a low point in that expertise. The authors created their own algorithm for determining genetic makeup and cited several scientists also viewed as racist.

The researchers have been criticized on and off since the study came out in 2005 and was published in The Journal of Biosocial Science the next year; that publication was previously called The Eugenics Review up until the 1970s. Eugenics is the controversial pseudo-science popular among Nazis for improving the human race by forced sterilization of poor people.

In a 2005 piece on the professors’ Ashkenazi Jewish intelligence study in The Times, a former colleague of Harpending and a researcher at Harvard said: “It would be hard to overstate how politically incorrect this paper is.” Harpending responded: “Absolutely anything in human biology that is interesting is going to be controversial.”

The Times’ piece on the study was largely uncritical beyond that; it was written by reporter Nicholas Wade, who later wrote his own book on genetics that shares some ideas with Harpending and Cochran. (Cochran had previously written about incorrect claims that being gay was caused by an infectious disease.)

A story in New York Magazine was much more condemning of the hypotheses brought up in the 2005 research. “I’d actually call the study bull----,” said one quoted historian at Emory University, “if I didn’t feel its ideas were so insulting.”

The head of New York University’s human-genetics program said: “It’s bad science — not because it’s provocative, but because it’s bad genetics and bad epidemiology.”

In a 2007 press release about later research by Harpending, the school acknowledged his 2005 paper had “created a stir” and that critics had questioned “the quality of the science.”

Harpending continued to speak, though, including at white supremacist conferences, about his also inaccurate ideas that black people are genetically prone to be lazy. His profile on the Southern Poverty Law Center’s page lists him as a white nationalist and an extremist who believed in eugenics.

“In other words, as an anthropologist looking around the world,” he said in 2009 at the “Preserving Western Civilization” conference, “what I see is that men work and produce things when they’re forced into it, and when they’re not, they quit. And I’m thinking about, you know tribes in central Africa, but you know it’s true in Baltimore too, right?”

His obituary noted he came to Utah from Pennsylvania State University after earning his doctorate at Harvard.

Stephens, who is Jewish, ultimately argues in his column that there’s a cultural — not genetic — explanation for Jewish genius, stemming from Judaism’s religious tradition of encouraging believers to “not only observe and obey but also discuss and disagree.” He also believes group members became more innovative and creative by typically being in the minority wherever they’ve lived.

Bret Stephens | The New York Times,  (Tony Cenicola/The New York Times)
Bret Stephens | The New York Times, (Tony Cenicola/The New York Times) (Tony Cenicola/)

His original mention of the study read: “The common answer is that Jews are, or tend to be, smart. When it comes to Ashkenazi Jews, it’s true. ‘Ashkenazi Jews have the highest average I.Q. of any ethnic group for which there are reliable data,’ noted one 2005 paper. ‘During the 20th century, they made up about 3 percent of the U.S. population but won 27 percent of the U.S. Nobel science prizes and 25 percent of the ACM Turing awards. They account for more than half of world chess champions.’”

That data on awards is not technically wrong, though it broadly counts anyone as Jewish who has a grandparent with ancestry in the faith.

Stephens mentioned Albert Einstein and Franz Kafka and Karl Marx as prime examples of Jewish intelligence, before asking: “How is it that a people who never amounted to even one-third of 1 percent of the world’s population contributed so seminally to so many of its most pathbreaking ideas and innovations?”

Then he brought up the U. research as proof. Dan Kennedy, an associate professor at Northeastern’s School of Journalism in Massachusetts, questions how Stephens even found the study, noting it is 15 years old and has been debunked.

His use of the paper is “just stunning,” Kennedy told The Tribune, saying the study was obviously a main tenet of Stephens’ argument, and not a minor point, like the editor’s note suggests. “I think it should have been killed before it ever got published.”

In the later edits, all references to Ashkenazi Jews (which also appeared in two other places in the column) were removed. Many have questioned why Stephens referred to Ashkenazi Jews at all if he didn’t agree with the paper and was generally talking about Jewish culture, and not superiority.

“What was even the point of the column?” Spiro asked. “It’s confusing.”

Stephens joined The Times in 2017, after winning a Pulitzer Prize for his work at The Wall Street Journal in 2013 and serving as editor in chief of The Jerusalem Post. He has previously come under fire for bullying a professor who called him a “bedbug.

Some have called for his resignation, particularly liberal readers who disagree with his more conservative pieces, but Kennedy believes the “Jewish genius” piece is a new low. The associate professor, who teaches ethics in journalism at Northeastern, said the commentary needed more than an editor’s note about the concerns raised.

Letter: You work for me, Sen. Lee

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An open letter to Sen. Mike Lee:

I would like a specific response to my concerns. This is from your Facebook page:

"President Trump has done nothing wrong. All he did was ask the Ukrainian government to investigate a corrupt Ukrainian energy company. There was nothing wrong with that request. In fact, the Obama administration tried to get Ukraine to investigate the exact same energy company."

So I looked at the memorandum of the call to verify your claim.

The first thing he mentioned was “Crowdstrike” and wealthy people. That doesn’t seem to be about a corrupt energy company. Then he mentioned a “very good prosecutor” who was shut down. Does that not refer to Victor Shokin? According to Shokin’s deputy, the investigation into Burisma was dormant through 2015. Further, Shokin testified under oath in support of Dmytro Firtash, who is an organized crime figure.

There is nothing in this memorandum about investigating an energy company, unless that is what you call this action: President Trump praising someone who both stymied the investigation into Burisma and testified to the good character of a mob figure. Am I missing something?

Please be specific. And remember, if you were working for President Trump as his attorney, it would be appropriate for you to reiterate his innocence loud and long. But you are working for me, and it will be appropriate, once you take that Senate oath in the trial of President Trump, to be impartial in your consideration of the facts of the case.

Gail L. Hanson, Logan

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Letter: Why does anyone still support Trump?

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After reading Bill Press’ op-ed in the Dec. 29 Tribune, titled “A few of the things I hate about Trump” and watching “Meet the Press” Sunday morning about all the lies Donald Trump has told (over 15,000, at last count), I can’t help but wonder why people still support him.

Yes, the economy is good and unemployment is low. But, if I remember right, all these things started happening in the last few years of Barack Obama’s presidency, and he didn’t have to brag about it.

Some wise person said once, “If you tell the same lies over and over, people will come to believe you.” And that is what Trump is doing.

He is sly like a fox. And I don’t want anything to do with foxes.

He has separated the nation, and some families, like no other president in the history of these United States.

And in The Salt Lake Tribune Monday, the cartoon shows Father Time holding his stick while little Trump figures have banners showing 2020, 2022, 2022 and 2023. My only consolation is that at my age (94), I probably won’t live long enough to see this come to pass.

Otherwise, Happy New Year to everyone.

Luana Chapman, Holladay

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Salt Lake City’s new 26-story convention hotel to begin construction soon

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Salt Lake County officials and developer Portman Holdings said work will begin next Friday on a long-sought 26-story convention center hotel downtown.

The new 700-room tower is going up at the northwest corner of 200 South and West Temple in Utah’s capital and will be operated by Hyatt Hotels, they said.

The $377 million skyscraper — one of a half-dozen new high-rises now being pursued in the city’s central business district — will be called the Hyatt Regency Salt Lake City.

“This convention center hotel will change the urban landscape of Salt Lake City and help strengthen the local economy,” Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson said as officials announced the Jan. 10 groundbreaking.

Ambrish Baisiwala, CEO of Atlanta-based Portman Holdings, said in a statement the real estate development firm was “delighted” to have complete financing for the project and to start construction, which is expected to be done in September 2022.

The news comes after nearly a decade of work by elected officials and business leaders to entice the construction of a sizable hotel in Utah’s urban core, believing that its large number of rooms and spacious meeting places will solidify the city as a convention destination.

(Photo courtesy of Salt Lake City) The new Salt Lake City convention center hotel would be located at the northwest corner of 200 South and West Temple, built into the existing Salt Palace Convention Center.
(Photo courtesy of Salt Lake City) The new Salt Lake City convention center hotel would be located at the northwest corner of 200 South and West Temple, built into the existing Salt Palace Convention Center.

According to details and renderings released this week, the southern end of the glass and textured aluminum tower that Portman plans to build will have a striking curved exterior, rising above a substantial lobby facing 200 South.

Salt Lake City tweaked its zoning ordinances about two years ago to allow high-rises up to 375 feet tall in that part of the city’s central business district, in anticipation of the hotel project.

The new tower is expected to offer nearly 60,000 square feet of meeting spaces, including a grand ballroom, a lobby bar, first- and sixth-floor restaurants and an outdoor terrace with a pool, garden and other amenities.

But plans have apparently been scrapped for the hotel to also feature two immense street-facing digital displays on either side of the lobby along 200 South, as Portman had previously indicated.

Those screens — reminiscent of huge displays in the lobby of 111 Main and on the clock tower at The Gateway shopping center — were part of renderings of the hotel released in late 2018 but are not included in the latest hotel images from Portman.

(Photo courtesy of John Portman & Associates, via Salt Lake City) An initial rendition released in 2019 of the street view of the new Hyatt Regency Salt Lake City convention center hotel, to be built at the northwest corner of 200 South and West Temple, adjacent to the Salt Palace Convention Center. In this rendering, the hotel features two digital screen arrays projecting images toward 200 South that are not part of subsequent drawings of the hotel.
(Photo courtesy of John Portman & Associates, via Salt Lake City) An initial rendition released in 2019 of the street view of the new Hyatt Regency Salt Lake City convention center hotel, to be built at the northwest corner of 200 South and West Temple, adjacent to the Salt Palace Convention Center. In this rendering, the hotel features two digital screen arrays projecting images toward 200 South that are not part of subsequent drawings of the hotel.

Officials with Portman said those changes to the building’s lower facade were required by Salt Lake City’s planning department, as part of advanced design work on the project.

The Hyatt Regency Salt Lake City will rise above and be fully connected to the Salt Lake Palace Convention Center for what county officials said would be “seamless access to convention attendees staying at the hotel or using its offerings.”

Hyatt Hotels, based in Chicago, operates nearly 770 hotels worldwide, including nine in Utah.

After extensive negotiations behind the scenes, Utah and Salt Lake County officials voted in late 2018 to approve up to $75 million in post-performance tax rebates for Portman Holdings and its partner in the project, Ivins-based DDRM, in exchange for building the new hotel.

That followed the 2015 collapse of prior talks between the county and Dallas-based Omni Hotels & Resorts to construct the tower, after the parties failed to agree on key parts of the public financing package.

The incentives approved in November 2018 involve state sales- and property-tax rebates to be given out once the hotel is up and running, including conveying the county-owned parcel of land beneath the hotel site to Portman and its partners.

A county official said $54.7 million of the hotel’s $377 million price tag was being financed through a new program that lets commercial building owners borrow money long-term for energy-efficient projects and improvements.

Known as C-PACE, the program, authorized in 2013 by the Utah Legislature, then lets the borrower pay those funds back over time through a kind of self-imposed property tax assessment.

County spokesman Gabe Moreno said the C-PACE loan would have no impact on other taxpayers.

Utahns didn’t win, but ‘America’s Got Talent’ changed their lives. They’re back on the show on Monday.

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Utahns Tyce Nielsen and Mary Ellen Wolfe made the finals of “America’s Got Talent” in 2018, but they didn’t take home the title or the $1 million prize. Yet the trapeze artists/acrobats who perform as Duo Transcend turned out to be huge winners after all.

“It changed our lives,” Nielsen told The Salt Lake Tribune — first, in a way they had hoped, and then in a way doctors had told Nielsen to never expect.

The married couple almost decided not to audition for the NBC talent competition nearly two years ago.

“We had so many things that were getting in the way and kind of telling us not to go on the show,” said Nielsen. “We had been traveling a lot and we hadn’t seen our son [then-2-year-old Jaxx] in a month and a half. We flew to L.A. to do the first round, and the whole time we were there, we were just, like, ‘Why are we doing this? What if it goes wrong?’”

As it turned out, however, their run on the show carried them to the finals that season and won them an invitation to compete in “America’s Got Talent: Champions,” which begins Monday at 7 p.m. on Ch. 5.

(Photo courtesy of Tyce Nielsen and Mary Wolfe) Mary Wolfe, Jaxx and Tyce Nielsen recently celebrated Christmas in Utah.
(Photo courtesy of Tyce Nielsen and Mary Wolfe) Mary Wolfe, Jaxx and Tyce Nielsen recently celebrated Christmas in Utah.

Nielsen and Wolfe travel the country, performing at a variety of venues. Before they appeared on “AGT,” they’d have to leave Jaxx behind with family members when they were on the road “because there wasn’t money in the budget to have a babysitter or pay for him to fly with us. That was a bummer.”

They went on “AGT” hoping that the exposure would help their careers and make it possible for them to bring their son with them. And work picked up. They’ve performed with Cirque du Soleil and at a variety of corporate functions.

“People saw our story on ‘AGT’ and they liked it. And so they wanted us to come perform for their parties,” he said. “It opened the doors for us to continue to succeed and grow in our performing.”

And it definitely benefited the family finances. Now, “there’s a much bigger budget for us, so we can fly our son with us. We can have a babysitter with us,” Nielsen said. “It means so much to us that we get to have Jaxx travel with us.”

And Jaxx, who’s about to turn 4, is loving it. “Airplanes are his favorite thing. He just thinks it’s great,” Nielsen said. “The stuff that he sees on a daily basis, I mean, most most people don’t ever get to see in their whole lifetime.”

(Photo courtesy of Trae Patton/NBC) Utahns Mary Ellen Wolfe and Tyce Nielsen — aka Duo Transcend — perform on "Americas Got Talent."(Photo courtesy of Trae Patton/NBC) Tyce Nielsen and Mary Ellen Wolfe — aka Duo Transcend — perform in Monday's season premiere of “America's Got Talent: Champions.”(Photo courtesy of Trae Patton/NBC) Tyce Nielsen and Mary Ellen Wolfe — aka Duo Transcend — perform in Monday's season premiere of “America's Got Talent: Champions.”(Photo courtesy of Trae Patton/NBC) Tyce Nielsen and Mary Ellen Wolfe — aka Duo Transcend — perform in Monday's season premiere of “America's Got Talent: Champions.”(Photo by: Trae Patton/NBC) Duo Transcend performs for the judges on "America's Got Talent."(Photo courtesy of Chris Haston/NBC) Some great things came out of their first season on “America's Got Talent” for Tyce Nielsen and Mary Ellen Wolfe — aka Duo Transcend.

That’s the “America’s Got Talent” bonus they were hoping for. The other one came as a complete surprise — a doctor who treats Nielsen’s rare genetic disorder, keratoconus, contacted them and offered his services.

“It’s a disease where your body attacks your corneas,” Nielsen said, eventually causing blindness. He’s legally blind in his right eye and has limited vision in his left, which makes the stunts Duo Transcend performs that much more astonishing.

The Los Angeles eye specialist “reached out to us and said, ‘Hey, I saw you on the show and I’m a doctor that helps correct these things,’” Nielsen said. “I had no idea that this doctor was out there. I had been to multiple doctors throughout the country. I’ve spoken to many of them. And every single one of the doctors told me that there’s nothing they could do.”

The L.A. doctor performed a procedure that “stopped the progression of the disease.” It didn’t improve Nielsen’s vision, but it stopped it from getting worse.

“My whole life I’ve grown up with the understanding that it will progress until the point where I no longer can see, and then I would have to get a full cornea transplant,” he said. And that, he added, is “very risky. Most of the time your body will reject it. There’s a lot of scarring. There’s a ton of healing. So it’s just something that I didn’t want to do.”

And the L.A. doctor offers another procedure “that would actually help correct my vision,” Nielsen said. But he’s waiting for “when we have a little bit of down time” because that procedure “is a little bit more invasive and it takes more time to heal.” And with Duo Transcend’s career taking off — with a return trip to “America’s Got Talent” on the table — he’s been willing to postpone that.

Wolfe and Nielsen are returning for the “Champions” edition of “AGT,” which features winners, finalists and “fan-favorite acts” from past seasons, as well as winners and finalists from other editions of the show in other countries.

Executive producer Simon Cowell is joined on the judging panel by Howie Mandel, Heidi Klum and Alesha Dixon, a longtime judge on “Britain’s Got Talent.” Terry Crews hosts.

When they’re not performing, Wolfe and Nielsen are getting ready to move to Las Vegas, where there’s more work — and less need for them to travel. “We’ve had our feelers out about where we want to be in Vegas, and we’re in the process of making that happen,” Nielsen said. And they took time to ramp up their act for their return to “America’s Got Talent.”

Yes, they will be wearing blindfolds for part of the act as they perform high above the stage floor.

If you saw them perform on “AGT” in 2018, it’s difficult to believe they could possibly be any more fit. And it’s all but impossible to believe they could come up with stunts that could top what they did in their first go-round — including when Wolfe slipped from Nielsen’s grasp as they were high above the stage on the trapeze, falling frighteningly to the floor.

She was not seriously injured — just bruised — and Wolfe told the judges she wanted to immediately try the stunt again.

“It means so much to us,” Wolfe told them. “It’s been such a long road to get here.” The judges, however, weren’t having it.

“We actually both felt even more nervous going back to ‘Champions’ just ’cause we knew what that meant,” Nielsen said — competing with top acts not just from the United States, but other countries.

“We knew it would be much more competitive. It was actually really, really nerve-wracking, and we were super nervous but really excited. These opportunities are really cool to have.”

“We’re just going to do our best,” Wolfe said, “and hope that it goes well.”

Kurt Kragthorpe: A football coach’s kid who wound up as a sportswriter would never happen now, but it worked out all right for me

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On the second-to-last day of my full-time work in the newspaper business, Utah football coach Kyle Whittingham publicly, and graciously, mentioned our slice of shared history as teenagers whose fathers coached together. That's when it hit me again: This whole thing never should have happened.

In what universe could a college football coach's son become a sportswriter, chronicling and critiquing the performances of … coaches?

Whatever minor distinction I may have carved out in 42 years and eight months of having stories appear in four daily papers in Utah, my family background forever will make me the youngest member of an unusual group. It consists of two people.

The only person who matches my description is Terry Frei, a longtime sports columnist and author. His father, Jerry, was Oregon's football coach from 1967-71.

My father, Dave, coached Oregon State's football team in the late '80s. Terry and I happily would accept new members, but we're not expecting anyone to apply. In the modern climate of relationships between coaches and the media, there's absolutely no way a coach's kid would go to the other side.

Somehow, in a bygone era, our dads allowed it to happen.

Good thing for me, because I never imagined doing anything else during a career that ended with Tuesday’s Alamo Bowl — except for occasional Utah golf coverage I’ll continue to do for The Salt Lake Tribune and Fairways Media.

Being a coach’s kid in this business has created a weird dynamic, considering I would end up covering my dad’s former boss (LaVell Edwards), a player he recruited to OSU (Bronco Mendenhall) and my high school baseball teammate (Whittingham). More on them later. Back to my story.

Kyle Whittingham is second row, far right. Kurt Kragthorpe is first row, third from left.
Kyle Whittingham is second row, far right. Kurt Kragthorpe is first row, third from left.

In the University of Montana’s kindergarten lab school, I remember being assigned to draw a picture and dictate a story to a student teacher. Other kids were creating tales of fire trucks responding to calls; I was drawing a scoreboard and previewing the Grizzlies’ basketball game.

And then in high school, due to my father’s friendship with the sports editor — again, a strange phenomenon, looking back — I got a job in The Daily Herald newsroom, taking wire copy off the teletype every morning and regularly writing stories. After being sent to cover a Provo-Orem high school soccer game (2-0, Tigers) and seeing the story in print, I was hooked.

What other job could provide such immediate results of your efforts? Other than, you know, coaching?

And so it continued for four-plus decades, in Provo, Logan and two stops in Salt Lake City, ending with 29 years at The Tribune, the publication I was pictured reading in my high school yearbook. After I posted that photo recently, someone suggested my life would have been altered if I had been reading The New York Times.

It also crossed my mind that I could have worn a green jacket in the golf team picture. I'm just happy to have walked Augusta National, from outside the ropes.

In any case, none of those Utah newspapers’ headquarters is in the location where I started working, as just one example of an evolving business. I often joke that I wish I had been born much later into a coaching family, considering Gary Andersen made about 25 times more money as Oregon State’s coach than my father did, with fewer wins. But I’m lucky to have lasted this long in my own profession, blessed to have a wife (Sandra) who took care of everything while all I thought about was the next story, and to have done it all in Utah.

That's how I came to cover Edwards, Mendenhall and Whittingham, with every case resulting in what I would describe as very professional dealings. Working with Whittingham has been especially interesting.

He was quite angry for a few months about my criticism of his famous onside kick in 2007 with a 43-0 lead over Wyoming, accusing me of using a “Bully Pulpit” as a columnist. He eventually got over that grudge; it helped that Utah went 13-0 the following season.

I never did explain to him that he was misusing “bully” in that context, but I've helped him the past two seasons while being assigned to the Utah athletics beat. Our dozens of interactions have consisted almost strictly of formal questions and answers, with hardly any joking or small talk. Somehow, though, I became his “vocabulary guy.” About every other week, he would say something in a news conference and immediately check with me, out loud: “Is that the right word?” Or sometimes, “Is that a word?”

I always nodded in approval, until the day in November when he tried to use “immersement.” No. Not a word.

The weirdest part of my career, then, is the nine years I spent as The Tribune's sports editor. That experience ultimately helped me in many ways, yet the job description meant that I was in the office on many nights when cool stuff was happening elsewhere. While I covered some unforgettable Jazz playoff games, none of them involved Michael Jordan. I attended seven Olympics, but Salt Lake City's Winter Games were not included.

I also missed Utah's trip to the NCAA Final Four in San Antonio. So even though Ute fans would rather not remember what happened against Texas, I liked being in the Alamodome for my last event.

I'm realizing why these farewell columns always include a disclaimer about having too many people to thank. I'll mention one person. My first Jazz trip as the Deseret News' beat writer was to San Antonio in 1985, when I was 24 years old and feeling overwhelmed by the assignment. Jerry Sloan, then an assistant coach, offered this advice: Just take it a week at a time.

That suggestion has stuck with me during the demanding weeks of the Olympics, the too-short weeks of the Masters and everything else I've done.

Even some events of the last two or three years seem to me like they happened long ago. So I won't say these 42 years and eight months since that soccer game have flown by, as most columns like this conclude. But I've loved the nature of newspaper work. Being part of a daily product meant there always was the hope of doing it better the next day.

That’s what I’ll miss, besides Whittingham’s word checks.


TV reviews: New ‘Party of Five’ tackles immigration; musical ‘Zoey’ is (sort of) fun

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The producers of “Party of Five” insist they’re not courting controversy despite the fact that their rebooted series is smack in the middle of the debate over illegal immigration.

From 1994-2000, the original “Party of Five” was about the five Salinger siblings — one in his 20s, the other four minors — after they lost their parents in a car accident. The new “Party of Five” (Wednesday, 7 p.m., Freeform) is about the five Acosta siblings, who are left without parents when their mother and father are deported to Mexico.

Original creators/executive producers Amy Lippman and Chris Keyser are back to run the reboot of the show, which they’d been urged to revive for years.

“We waited until there was good reason to do it,” Lippman said — and that turned out to be the “political climate” surrounding immigration. However, she insisted, there is no “strong political agenda” behind the reboot.

It’s about a family separated by immigration laws, it’s not about immigration laws. “You can judge for yourself whether [the parents’ deportation] is unfair,” Lippman said.

“We sure did not make a coherent, large-scale argument about what American immigration policy should be,” Keyser said. “But it does say, ‘Here’s what it feels like to be in this position.’”

They haven’t exactly broken the mold and started over. As was the case in the original, the oldest brother (Brandon Larracuente as Emilio) is the least responsible; the second-oldest brother (Niko Guardado as Beto) is the most nurturing; the older sister (Emily Tosta as Lucia) is dramatic; and the younger sister (Elle Paris Lagaspi as Valentina) is the smartest. And baby brother Rafa ties them all together.

“I think it will be enough for our original fans to recognize the show,” Lippman said. “But we’re not interested in doing the same thing again.”

The parents aren’t altogether gone. They video chat with the kids in every episode. And that changes the “Party of Five” dynamic — as does the fact that Emilio was born in Mexico and his DACA protection could end.

But both shows are about “a group of kids who, at this point in their lives, ought to be thinking about themselves [and] end up having to think about each other and the way families work,” Keyser said.

This is a family drama, not a documentary about immigration. But it may open a few eyes. Lippman said that she was shocked when test audiences questioned why the father didn’t seek citizenship when he crossed the border decades earlier.

“It was such an interesting thing to arise, because there is no path to citizenship when you are illegal,” she said. “I was a little horrified that people didn’t know that, and I was also sort of excited by an opportunity to tell people, ‘This is what it’s like.’

“The opportunity to involve people in a family story and, at the same time, educate them as to what the process is, is really kind of thrilling.”

(Photo courtesy of Sergei Bachlakov/NBC) John Clarence Stewart, Jane Levy and Skylar Astin star in “Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist.”
(Photo courtesy of Sergei Bachlakov/NBC) John Clarence Stewart, Jane Levy and Skylar Astin star in “Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist.” (NBC/)

“Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist” (Tuesday, 9 p.m., NBC/Ch. 5) wants to be the next “Glee.” Or “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.” And I wish I could tell you it is, but … it’s not.

Jane Levy (“Suburgatory”) stars as Zoey Clarke, a San Francisco computer coder who is having unexplained headaches. During an MRI, there’s an earthquake, and Jane emerges with the ability to hear people’s inner thoughts expressed in song and dance — in imaginary production numbers. (Covers of old songs; there’s no original music.) She uses this information to help people with their problems.

Levy is engaging and adorable. The cast — which includes Lauren Graham (“Gilmore Girls”) as Zoey’s boss; Peter Gallagher and Mary Steenburgen as her parents; Skylar Astin (“Crazy Ex-Girlfriend”) as a co-worker; and Alex Newell (“Glee”) as a neighbor — is great. The San Francisco locations are beautiful. And the musical numbers are fun and highly entertaining.

But when the music stops, the show is … just OK. Unless the writing gets a whole lot better than in the first four episodes previewed for critics, this will be a show to just fast-forward through until the production numbers.

Weirdly enough, after a “preview” on Tuesday, “Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist” disappears until Sunday, Feb. 16, at 8 p.m., when the first episode repeats in the show’s regular time slot.

Utah’s unaffiliated voters need to act quickly to participate in Super Tuesday

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More than one of every three Utah voters — 619,000 of them — are unaffiliated with any political party. They may not receive a by-mail ballot for the quickly approaching Super Tuesday presidential primary on March 3 unless they take some action soon.

Salt Lake County Clerk Sherrie Swensen sent letters to unaffiliated voters this week warning that they will not receive by-mail ballots unless they do one of three things.

If they want to vote by mail in the Republican primary, its party rules require that they register as members of the GOP by Feb. 3. President Donald Trump faces only token opposition from six other lesser known Republicans in Utah’s primary

.

If unaffiliated voters want to vote in the far more competitive Democratic primary, they have two options. They could affiliate as Democrats by Feb. 3. Or, because Democrats allow unaffiliated voters to cast ballots in their primary, such voters may merely request a Democratic ballot by Feb. 25 without formally affiliating.

Swensen enclosed a form in her letters to allow voters to take any step they choose. Justin Lee, state elections director for Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox, said other counties are sending out similar letters.

Lee notes that people who want to check how they are registered — or change it, or even register for the first time — may do so online at vote.utah.gov.

Of course, unaffiliated voters who fail to act by deadlines could still vote in person on March 3 by taking one of the same three possible steps at physical voting locations.

“We prefer, however, that they do try to get their ballot by mail,” Swensen said. “There are about 212,000 unaffiliated voters in Salt Lake County. It would be a mess if they all show up to polling locations instead of voting by mail.”

A mess is exactly what occurred with the last presidential primaries in 2016. County clerks did not run that election. Instead, the Republican and Democratic parties chose to run them themselves with volunteers at their normal political caucus meetings.

Some voters waited in lines that stretched multiple city blocks, and many gave up and went home. Some polling locations ran out of ballots. An attempt by the Republican Party to allow some of its voters to cast ballots online did not work properly. Other locations ran out of parking, so the elderly or disabled complained they could not vote.

(Leah Hogsten  |  Tribune file photo) This photo shows long lines and wait times at the Democratic caucus at Clayton Middle School as both registered party members and unaffiliated voters cast their ballots, March 22, 2016.
(Leah Hogsten | Tribune file photo) This photo shows long lines and wait times at the Democratic caucus at Clayton Middle School as both registered party members and unaffiliated voters cast their ballots, March 22, 2016. (Leah Hogsten/)

It was enough of a disaster that the Legislature mandated that the county clerks run the presidential primaries this year and provided funding for it.

Lawmakers also moved up the Utah presidential primaries — which had occurred as late as June in some recent elections, after nominees were essentially chosen by others — to the early Super Tuesday, when a total of 14 states are voting and likely will eliminate many candidates.

“Our voters are excited about voting on Super Tuesday,” which is early enough that their votes will truly matter, said Utah Democratic Party Chairman Jeff Merchant. He added, “That may still seem like a long way away, but ballots will be mailed out beginning Feb. 11 — so it’s coming fast.”

He said the large Democratic field this year also is creating interest.

“We have a lot of supporters of [former Vice President Joe] Biden here, and we have a lot of Pete Buttigieg supporters, a lot of Bernie [Sanders] supporters and a lot of [Elizabeth] Warren supporters,” Merchant said. “So I think it’s going to drive up turnout.”

Other Democrats on the Utah ballot include former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, Utahn Nathan Bloxham, Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, Roque De La Fuente III (son of a similarly named GOP candidate), Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, billionaire Tom Steyer, author Marianne Williamson, and entrepreneur Andrew Yang.

{Chris Carlson | AP file photo) Democratic presidential candidates former Vice President Joe Biden, left, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speak during a Democratic presidential primary debate on Dec. 19, 2019, in Los Angeles.
{Chris Carlson | AP file photo) Democratic presidential candidates former Vice President Joe Biden, left, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speak during a Democratic presidential primary debate on Dec. 19, 2019, in Los Angeles. (Chris Carlson/)

Merchant said the Democratic Party allows unaffiliated voters to participate in its primary with hopes that they will continue to vote Democratic in later elections. (Only 12.9% of Utah voters are registered as Democrats, compared to 36.9% who are unaffiliated and 45.4% who are Republican).

“As we encourage people to vote, they may recognize that the values our party has to offer are things they themselves align with. With that, they may begin to vote for Democrats,” he said.

Utah Republican Party Chairman Derek Brown says his party uses a closed primary because for an election “that binds a political party, it makes sense to require that the people making that decision actually be a member of that political party.”

He expects a large turnout on the Republican side, even though Trump is facing only relatively token opposition.

“This will be the first time we’ve been part of Super Tuesday. Also, you will have mail-in ballots in almost all the counties. We anticipate really high turnout compared to previous years simply because of that dynamic,” he said.

Brown added, “We’re confident, of course, that Republicans will select President Trump to be the nominee over the other six individuals [on the GOP ballot]. Notwithstanding that likely outcome, I think there will still be a really high turnout this year.”

The other Republicans on the ballot in Utah for Super Tuesday are businessman Robert Ardini, perennial candidate Roque De La Fuente II (who ran four years ago as a Democrat, then switched to become an independent), businessman Bob Ely (who ran in 2012 as a Democrat), lawyer Matthew John Matern, former Illinois Rep. Joe Walsh and former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld.

(Mark Humprey | AP file photo) Republican presidential candidates Bill Weld, left, Mark Sanford and Joe Walsh, right, take part in a forum at Politicon on Oct. 26, 2019, in Nashville, Tenn.
(Mark Humprey | AP file photo) Republican presidential candidates Bill Weld, left, Mark Sanford and Joe Walsh, right, take part in a forum at Politicon on Oct. 26, 2019, in Nashville, Tenn. (Mark Humphrey/)


Gordon Monson: Bronco Mendenhall did some strange things at BYU. He’s doing something stranger at Virginia. Winning.

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There was the clunky verbiage. The awkward demeanor. The reliance on principles of modern management. The mixing of scripture with the playbook, the Stripling Warriors with the tackles and tight ends. The spoken-but-silly aim for a national championship. There was Honor, Spirit, Tradition. The insistence on his players lying on the field, way back at the beginning, allowing visions of by-gone triumphs to dance in their heads, stirring their souls and stoking their motivation. There was the band of brothers, the quest for perfection.

Bronco Mendenhall did some weird things at BYU.

But he’s doing something even weirder now — he’s winning at Virginia.

Turns out, Mendenhall is one helluva football coach.

There were indications of competence with the Cougars. The man’s teams won 99 games and lost just 43 during his time in Provo. He loaded pride back into a program that had lost it via the decline under LaVell’s replacement, Gary Crowton. He restored the winning.

But what he’s done since taking over in Charlottesville — the biggest challenge, he’s called it, that he’s ever faced — along with a staff made up largely of former BYU assistants, has some people’s mouths agape, their minds blown.

And Mendenhall loves it.

Just like half the football-playing free world, he’s said: “We’re establishing a culture here.”

In his first season (2016), Virginia went 2-10. The next year, it was 6-7. The next, 8-5. This season, 9-5, one of those wins coming against Virginia Tech, for the first time in 15 tries.

Not bad for Thomas Jefferson’s nerdy basketball school.

The ACC is a basketball conference, too, right? Clemson has other ideas. And the closest thing in that league to the Tigers now is … wow, lookee here, Bronco’s Cavaliers. The gap is still wide, but the Cavs are stretching and clawing to close it.

This past season, the one in which Clemson continues to carry the ACC’s flag into the national championship game against LSU, UVA won the league’s Coastal division, while the Tigers took care of the other half. They met for the conference championship, with the Wahoos losing, 62-17.

Still, the fact that Virginia was even at that level, having qualified for the Orange Bowl, where it lost to Florida in a valid, worthy match, is a testament to Mendenhall’s capacities as a head coach.

Nobody does that at Virginia.

Cavaliers football is where coaches go to collect paychecks — Mendenhall is making $3.4 million, more than double what he made at BYU — and die.

Not anymore.

“Thinking about all the years coach Mendenhall has been here, and I was here for two of them, every year the unbroken growth of this team and this spirit, and the bond with this team is unmatched, and the relations we’ve built,” senior quarterback Bryce Perkins recently told reporters. “You can see it on the field just how hard we fight for each other.”

Much like what he did at BYU, Bronco has poured new life into a sagging program. The difference, as mentioned, is that Virginia didn’t have much of a tradition to begin with. If Mendenhall had repeated at Scott Stadium what he did at LaVell Edwards Stadium just over a decade earlier when he took over as head coach — the stunt where he had padded-up players lie down on the field and think about the legacy they were called to continue — there wouldn’t have been much to reflect upon.

The best thing the Cavs could do with their past is forget it.

And form a new foundation.

Mendenhall rightfully has gotten much of the credit for the transformation.

When he left Provo, he told some of his players that he craved the challenge of building something out of situations that are “unique.” And Virginia, with its academic standards and general lack of football tradition, provided that, just as academic and honor code hurdles did at BYU.

The same characteristics he used with the Cougars are working for him now. He has high expectations, made more real for his players by his own relentless work. His defensive prowess, with complex schemes, is evident. He runs the same tight ship he did at BYU, managing his captaincy of the program as much as barking from it. He embraces the role of the gritty, plucky underdog, looking to shock the world.

Or at least to capture its imagination.

And so he has.

It was just a year-and-a-half ago when Mendenhall said Virginia football had a mere 27 ACC-caliber athletes on its roster. Remember that blunt bit of honesty? And he also said he was looking to schedule the weakest P5 non-conference opposition he could find.

“I want to play the worst power-five team(s) that we can play,” he said.

Seventeen wins later, Mendenhall likely has more confidence in his outfit’s ability to compete.

After losing to Florida, 36-28, in the bowl game, he said:

“I’m really proud of my team, the culture that we’ve established, the competitive spirit, the intensity and the camaraderie that’s displayed from beginning to end. We’re on a mission to just simply establish that you can have world-class academics and be at the top tier of college football, as well. That’s what’s happening at the University of Virginia. We were a few plays short today in our execution to win the game, but it was not because of a lack of belief or confidence or ability.”

With Mendenhall, it always comes down to execution, a higher level of it.

A level he and his team are reaching 2,000 miles away from Provo, at a place that used to be all about basketball, on ground Thomas Jefferson called home.

GORDON MONSON hosts “The Big Show” with Jake Scott weekdays from 3-7 p.m. on 97.5 FM and 1280 AM The Zone.

Terry Marasco: State liquor stores are a loss by our leaders

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The Utah Legislature is a misguided business operator. While the Utah state-controlled liquor stores have been high earners, the Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control (created and regulated by Legislature) has a knack for losing money, and more importantly, preventing making serious money.

The change to 5.0 beer caused the DABC to dump $10,500 worth of beer into the landfill as a result of state law. The loss was wholesale cost. However, the retail value was over $15,000 if sold in the market. And, furthermore, the state lost the sales tax revenue by tossing the beer. Glasses down.

State control of pricing is a loser. The Pappy Van Winkle bourbon, by state law, must sell for about $100 a bottle. Other free market states, even with some state control, saw this selling for $300 a bottle and higher. And, again, sales tax revenues are lost.

Utah’s high controlled prices are driving business to Nevada and Wyoming. Lee’s Discount liquor store in West Wendover, Nevada, is doing a booming business from Utahns.

State control of licensing is a loss by our leaders. There were zero bar licenses available a few weeks ago. Liquor stores are overcrowded, fewer than the growing population needs, inconvenient and misplaced. They stock inconsistent inventories (you can buy X at one store, but not another).

Utah state law quotas allow 4,900 population per liquor store yet has 20,000 population per liquor store, a highly underserved market. The downtown store at 400 South and 200 West, the most accessible for affluent city visitors and convention goers, has the lowest quality selections. The store at 1700 South and 300 West has one of the highest quality inventories, furthest from affluent visitors and in an industrial corridor. Go figure.

State control of product limitations in liquor stores is a loser. Utah state-controlled stores prevent anything else sold except the alcoholic beverage. Free-market stores sell mixers, accessories, glassware, foods like fine cheeses and more and rake in profits that rival alcoholic beverages in some stores. More sales tax losses.

Free-market wine shops make good money in what’s called “pre-releases,” For example, a great vintage Bordeaux estate does not hit the market for a few years, but buyers pay (cost plus sales tax) upfront years in advance for a retailer to reserve cases. The state collects the sales tax immediately.

Free-market stores have highly trained staff and highly motivated owners. Utah DABC employees are not trained to be product knowledgeable. Free market stores have trained employees who can convince consumers to trade up, that is buy a better wine ($35 instead of $20), for example if they are convinced that the staff is knowledgeable. Higher sales tax revenue here.

What’s more, regarding whether the consumer can trust state-controlled stores, I conducted a survey of shelf talkers (short descriptions of wines) that are supposed to inform consumers, but found over 50% of the talkers had the incorrect vintages for wines. If there is anything to know about better wines from any county it is “vintage matters.” Zero consumer confidence to trade up in state stores.

Turning the alcoholic beverage business to the free market will earn much more revenue for the state if it:

1. Collects yearly licensing fees based on the current market value of a license based on sales and type of license, and fees for transferring a license;

2. Allows free-market stores to sell products in addition to alcoholic beverages;

3. Allows more store, bar and restaurant licenses;

4. Allows free-market pricing (which generates higher sales tax income); and,

5. Gets out of the employment business.

The state can also gain income by collecting an additional fee based on the profitability of a store.

There are ways even with free-market stores that the state can have some control over the beverage business. For example, New Jersey prevents liquor (e.g., whiskey) to be sold in grocery stores. Other controls are purchase limits on age, prevent tobacco and cannabis products sold in liquor stores and DUI limits. And free-market store owners will be very careful to not sell to underagers because they can lose their right to sell in the state.

There is no sound business rationale for a state to control a free-market business. The state’s rationale has much to do with something else.

Scott Sommerdorf | The Salt Lake Tribune

Terry Marasco
Scott Sommerdorf | The Salt Lake Tribune Terry Marasco (Scott Sommerdorf/)

Terry Marasco, Salt Lake City, has owned wine and liquor stores, restaurants and bars in California, Nevada, Montana and Florida.

Thousands in Baghdad mourn Iranian general killed by U.S.

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Baghdad • Thousands of mourners chanting “America is the Great Satan” marched in a funeral procession Saturday through Baghdad for Iran’s top general and Iraqi militant leaders, who were killed in a U.S. airstrike.

Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds force and mastermind of its regional security strategy, was killed in an airstrike early Friday near the Iraqi capital’s international airport. The attack has caused regional tensions to soar.

Iran has vowed harsh retaliation, raising fears of an all-out war. U.S. President Donald Trump says he ordered the strike to prevent a conflict. His administration says Soleimani was plotting a series of attacks that endangered American troops and officials, without providing evidence.

An official with the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq said it has scaled back operations and boosted “security and defensive measures” at bases hosting coalition forces in the country. The official spoke on condition of anonymity according to regulations.

Washington has dispatched another 3,000 troops to neighboring Kuwait.

Soleimani was the architect of Iran's regional policy of mobilizing militias across Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, including in the war against the Islamic State group. He was also blamed for attacks on U.S. troops and American allies going back to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

The mourners, mostly men in black military fatigues, carried Iraqi flags and the flags of Iran-backed militias that are fiercely loyal to Soleimani. They were also mourning Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a senior Iraqi militia commander who was killed in the same strike.

The mourners, many of them in tears, chanted: "No, No, America," and “Death to America, death to Israel.” Mohammed Fadl, a mourner dressed in black, said the funeral is an expression of loyalty to the slain leaders. “It is a painful strike, but it will not shake us,” he said.

Two helicopters hovered over the procession, which was attended by Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi and leaders of Iran-backed militias. The procession later made its way to the Shiite holy city of Karbala, in central Iraq.

The gates to Baghdad's Green Zone, which houses government offices and foreign embassies, including the U.S. Embassy, were closed.

Iraq, which is closely allied with both Washington and Tehran, condemned the airstrike that killed Soleimani and called it an attack on its national sovereignty. Parliament is to meet for an emergency session on Sunday, and the government has come under mounting pressure to expel the 5,200 American troops based in the country, who are there to help prevent a resurgence of the Islamic State group.

Hadi al-Amiri, who heads a large parliamentary bloc and is expected to replace al-Muhandis as deputy commander of the Popular Mobilization Forces, an umbrella group of mostly Iran-backed militias, was among those paying their final respects.

“Rest assured,” he said before al-Muhandis' coffin in a video circulated on social media. “The price of your pure blood will be the exit of U.S. forces from Iraq forever.”

The U.S. has ordered all citizens to leave Iraq and closed its embassy in Baghdad, where Iran-backed militiamen and their supporters staged two days of violent protests earlier this week in which they breached the compound.

Britain and France also warned their citizens to avoid or strictly limit travel in Iraq.

No one was hurt in the embassy protests, which came in response to U.S. airstrikes that killed 25 Iran-backed militiamen in Iraq and Syria. The U.S. said the strikes were in response to a rocket attack that killed a U.S. contractor in northern Iraq, which Washington blamed on the militias.

Tensions between the U.S. and Iran have steadily intensified since Trump's decision to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal and restore crippling sanctions.

The administration's “maximum pressure” campaign has led Iran to openly abandon commitments under the deal. The U.S. has also blamed Iran for a wave of increasingly provocative attacks in the region, including the sabotage of oil tankers in the Persian Gulf and an attack on Saudi Arabia's oil infrastructure in September that temporarily halved its production.

Iran denied involvement in those attacks, but admitted to shooting down a U.S. surveillance drone in June that it said had strayed into its airspace.

On Saturday, billboards appeared on major streets in Iran showing Soleimani and carrying the warning from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that “harsh revenge” awaits the US.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani visited Soleimani’s home in Tehran to express his condolences.

“The Americans did not realize what a great mistake they made,” Rouhani said. “They will see the effects of this criminal act, not only today but for years to come.”

On the streets of Tehran, many said they mourned Soleimani and some demanded revenge.

“I don’t think there will be a war, but we must get his revenge,” said Hojjat Sanieefar. America “can’t hit and run anymore," he added.

Another man, who only identified himself as Amir, was worried.

“If there is a war, I am 100% sure it will not be to our betterment. The situation will certainly get worse,” he said.

Global powers had warned Friday that the killing of Soleimani could spark a dangerous new escalation, with many calling for restraint.

Iran’s state TV reported that Qatar’s foreign minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, made an unplanned trip to Iran where he met with his counterpart, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. The Qatari diplomat was also set to meet with Rouhani.

Qatar hosts American forces at the Al-Udeid Air Base and shares a massive offshore oil and gas field with Tehran. It has often served as a regional mediator.

Adel al-Jubeir, the Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs, took to Twitter to reiterate the kingdom's call for "self-restraint" to avoid “unbearable consequences.”

Another Saudi official confirmed to The Associated Press that the U.S. did not give a heads-up to Saudi Arabia or its other Gulf allies before carrying out the strike that killed Soleimani. The official was not authorized to discuss security matters and so spoke on condition of anonymity.

Italy's Foreign Minister meanwhile condemned the strike that killed Soleimani, in a rare criticism of the U.S. strike from a Western ally.

In a Facebook post, Luigi Di Maio said the use of violence threatens to bring "destabilization and devastating humanitarian and migratory effects.”

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El Deeb reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Joseph Krauss in Jerusalem, Jon Gambrell and Aya Batrawy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Amir Vahdat in Tehran, Iran, Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed.

Eric Walden: It’s the silly season. Pay no attention to those NBA fans voting for the All-Star starters.

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The outrage is both inevitable and predictable.

Ah yes, it’s time for the annual initial NBA All-Star fan vote tallies.

Nothing inspires more vitriolic disappointment from a passionate fan base … except maybe for 21st century Star Wars movies.

Still, the hysterics parade is honestly amusing at this point. Seriously, why bother?

Lest you think I don’t understand, actually, I understand completely.

In Thursday’s first returns, Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell (you know, the guy averaging 24.9 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 4.3 steals) was a mere seventh among Western Conference backcourt vote-getters — three spots behind the Warriors’ Stephen Curry (who has played all of four games this season due to a broken hand), and just one spot ahead of the Lakers’ Alex Caruso (a reserve averaging 5.4 ppg).

Meanwhile, center Rudy Gobert (14.9 points, 14.2 boards, 1.9 blocks, 68.4 FG%) didn’t even make the top 10 of the West’s frontcourt options, coming in behind Portland’s Carmelo Anthony (who’s played but 20 games) and — even more galling to Jazz fans — Lakers reserve center Dwight Howard (who’s averaging 7.1 points and 6.8 rebounds).

Meanwhile, over in the Eastern Conference, in less-related but no-less-befuddling examples, Nets guard Kyrie Irving (who’s been out since November) is second among the guards while Pistons reserve Derrick Rose is fourth, and Tacko Fall — yes, that, Tacko Fall, the 7-foot-6 cult hero who’s made four crowd-pleasing mop-up appearances for the Celtics, averaging 4.3 points and 2.3 rebounds — is sixth among the frontcourt candidates.

And much harrumphing and finger-wagging and Twitter raging ensued.

See, I get it!

But again, why bother?

Because a process resembling a high school popularity contest doesn’t wind up anaccurate portrayal of actual skill and impact and merit in picking participants for an exhibition game that typically features less physical contact than a church dance?

Because it’s (I can’t believe I actually have to write this) … not fair?!

Why would you ever believe that a fan vote for an All-Star Game would produce anything approaching fair and legitimate results? This is how AC Green started over Karl Malone back in the day. This is why the league had to reduce the fan vote to being only 50% responsible for determining the lineups (looking at you Zaza Pachulia fans).

I recognize that right now you probably think I’m being flippant toward and dismissive of something that warrants at least some level of seriousness. After all, we know that an All-Star honor indeed can be quite significant to some players.

Fair enough. But you don’t have to tell me. It was my video, after all, of Rudy Gobert breaking down into tears last year upon recalling how upset his mom was at his being snubbed that went viral on Twitter, that got picked up by ESPN and broadcast on SportsCenter.

I’m not saying that, in an ideal world, in a vacuum, in a whatever metaphor you want to use, All-Star voting doesn’t warrant some level of seriousness.

But that’s simply not reality, and getting bent about it probably doesn’t change anything.

Look, if you’re among the people casting legitimate votes — and clearly there are a lot of such people, given the high totals for deserving players such as Giannis, Luka, LeBron, Harden, AD, et cetera — good on ya. And if you’re the type to vote for Dwight and Caruso ’cause you’re a Lakers fan, well, ummmmm … [extremely serious voice] Shame. On. You.

Better now?

I suppose that, maybe if there is an egregious enough example, or a big enough outcry, the league might change things. Actually though, do you foresee the NBA getting rid of the fan vote? Nope. Not gonna happen. This is the league that coined the phrase “Fan-tastic,” after all. And so long as that’s a component of it, it’s always bound to be controversial and, frankly, probably wrong.

Then again, what were you expecting? Donovan and Rudy, for all their talent and deservedness, were never going to be among the leading vote-getters. They don’t have that kind of national juice. Their pathway to inclusion was always going to be in the coaches’ vote for the reserves.

I guess I shouldn’t be so presumptuous as to tell you that going off about this is a waste of time and pointless — who am I to tell you how to feel or how to react? That said, here’s how to feel and react about this … You wanna be annoyed? Sweet. Go ahead and do it. Rage at the unfairness of it all. Maybe even tweet something witheringly sarcastic.

And a minute later … let it go. ’Cause it’ll do about as much good as casting a vote for Tacko Fall.

Small cracks have appeared in GOP unity on impeachment trial

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Washington • The Senate seems certain to keep President Donald Trump in office thanks to the overwhelming GOP support expected in his impeachment trial. But how that trial will proceed — and when it will begin — remains to be seen.

Democrats are pushing for the Senate to issue subpoenas for witnesses and documents, pointing to reports that they say have raised new questions about Trump's decision to withhold military aid from Ukraine.

Once the House transmits the articles of impeachment, decisions about how to conduct the trial will require 51 votes. With Republicans controlling the Senate 53-47, Democrats cannot force subpoenas on their own.

For now, Republicans are holding the line behind Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's position that they should start the trial and hear arguments from House prosecutors and Trump's defense team before deciding what to do.

But small cracks in GOP unity have appeared, with two Republican senators criticizing McConnell's pledge of “total coordination” with the White House during the impeachment trial.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski said she was “disturbed” by the GOP leader's comments, adding that there should be distance between the White House and the Senate on how the trial is conducted. Maine Sen. Susan Collins, meanwhile, called the pledge by McConnell, R-Ky., inappropriate and said she is open to seeking testimony.

Democrats could find their own unity tested if and when the Senate reaches a final vote on the two House-approved impeachment charges — abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

It would take 67 votes to convict Trump on either charge and remove him from office, a high bar unlikely to be reached. It's also far from certain that all 47 Democrats will find Trump guilty.

Democratic Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama said he's undecided on how he might vote and suggested he sees merits in the arguments both for and against conviction.

A look at senators to watch once the impeachment trial begins:

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Lisa Murkowski

In her fourth term representing Alaska, Murkowski is considered a key Senate moderate. She has voted against GOP leadership on multiple occasions and opposed Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court in 2018.

Murkowski told an Alaska TV station last month there should be distance between the White House and the GOP-controlled Senate in how the trial is conducted.

“To me it means that we have to take that step back from being hand in glove with the defense, and so I heard what leader McConnell had said, I happened to think that that has further confused the process,” she said.

Murkowski says the Senate is being asked to cure deficiencies in the House impeachment effort, particularly when it comes to whether key witnesses should be brought forward to testify, including White House acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and former national security adviser John Bolton.

“How we will deal with witnesses remains to be seen,” she said, adding that House leaders should have gone to court if witnesses refused to appear before Congress.

___

Susan Collins

The four-term senator said she is open to calling witnesses as part of the impeachment trial but calls it “premature” to decide who should be called until evidence is presented.

"It is inappropriate, in my judgment, for senators on either side of the aisle to prejudge the evidence before they have heard what is presented to us,'' Collins told Maine Public Radio.

Senators take an oath to render impartial justice during impeachment — an oath lawmakers should take seriously, Collins said.

Collins, who is running for reelection and is considered one of the nation's most vulnerable GOP senators, also faulted Democrats for saying Trump should be found guilty and removed from office. "There are senators on both sides of the aisle, who, to me, are not giving the appearance of and the reality of judging that's in an impartial way,'' she said.

____

Doug Jones

Jones, a freshman seeking reelection in staunchly pro-Trump Alabama, is considered the Democrat most likely to side with Republicans in a Senate trial. In a Washington Post op-ed column, Jones said that for Americans to have confidence in the impeachment process, "the Senate must conduct a full, fair and complete trial with all relevant evidence regarding the president’s conduct.''

He said he fears that senators "are headed toward a trial that is not intended to find the whole truth. For the sake of the country, this must change.''

Unlike what happened during the investigation of President Bill Clinton, “Trump has blocked both the production of virtually all relevant documents and the testimony of witnesses who have firsthand knowledge of the facts,'' Jones said. "The evidence we do have may be sufficient to make a judgment, but it is clearly incomplete,'' he added.

Jones and other Democrats are seeking testimony from Mulvaney and other key White House officials to help fill in the gaps.

___

Mitt Romney, R-Utah.

Romney, a freshman senator and on-again, off-again Trump critic, has criticized Trump for his comments urging Ukraine and China to investigate Democrat Joe Biden, but has not spoken directly about he thinks impeachment should proceed.

Romney is overwhelmingly popular in a conservative state where Trump is not beloved, a status that gives Romney leverage to buck the president or at least speak out about rules and procedures of a Senate trial.

___

Cory Gardner, R-Colo.

Gardner, like Collins is a vulnerable senator up for reelection in a state where Trump is not popular. Gardner has criticized the House impeachment effort as overly partisan and fretted that it will sharply divide the country.

While Trump is under water in Colorado, a GOP strategist says Gardner and other Republicans could benefit from an energized GOP base if the Senate, as expected, acquits Trump of the two articles of impeachment approved by the House. An acquittal "may have a substantial impact on other races in Colorado, up to and including Sen. Cory Gardner's re-election," Ryan Lynch told Colorado Public Radio.

___

Martha McSally, R-Ariz.

McSally, who was appointed to her seat after losing a Senate bid in 2018, is another vulnerable Republican seeking election this fall. She calls impeachment a serious matter and said she hopes her constituents would want her to examine the facts without partisanship. The American people "want us to take a serious look at this and not have it be just partisan bickering going on,” she told The Arizona Republic.

___

Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.

A three-term senator and former governor, Alexander is retiring next year. A moderate who's respected by both parties as an old-school defender of Senate prerogatives, Alexander has called Trump’s conduct “inappropriate,” but says he views impeachment as a “mistake.''

An election, which “is just around the corner, is the right way to decide who should be president,'' Alexander said last fall. "Impeachment has never removed a president. It will only divide the country further.”


Deborah Gatrell: Voters can put the breaks on this regressive tax overhaul

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In physics, you oversimplify objects by reducing them to a single point in space or a simple shape. A cow is reduced to a uniform sphere of milk. (That’s the running joke.)

This is what Utah legislators pushing the SB2001 tax reform package have done: reduced a complex 238-page tax overhaul to broad statements detached from the realities of life.

There is a seven-page summary of the law available. The scheme has three components: an income tax cut (reducing Education Fund revenue), new sales taxes (increasing unrestricted General Fund revenue), new credits and exemptions (intended to reduce hardships). Blend it and bill boosters tell you this is the largest tax cut in Utah’s history.

Actually, it’s more like that uniform sphere of milk. Dig deeper and you’ll find you’ve been served a load of bull.

Michelle Quist reminded us legislators knew they should have implemented changes when the 2017 Federal Tax overhaul resulted in higher state income tax collections. They didn’t. Now they want praise for fixing a problem entirely of their own making.

Educators also watched tax reform closely. This plan cuts the Education Fund dramatically, “transferring” higher education back to the General Fund to “hold harmless” K-12 education — for one year. It gives legislators flexibility to shove higher education back into the Education Fund, freeing sales tax revenue for other projects and limiting desperately needed future K-12 education funding.

You probably haven’t heard the plan being floated by legislators to make up the difference through property tax increases at the local district level. It will primarily harm the poor and those on fixed incomes through higher rents and taxes.

The elephant in the room is increasing food and gas taxes. Cutting the tax on unprepared food was a hard fought victory that took years before coming to fruition. People have to eat, so we buy food regardless of how good or bad the economy is — making this a stable source of tax revenue. I don’t recall the public clamoring to bring back the full sales tax on groceries in tax reform town halls.

The public didn’t ask for an increase in the gas tax either. In 2018, non-binding opinion Question 1 asked if the public would support an increase in fuel taxes of 10 cents per gallon. It was resoundingly rejected. The original premise of this tax reform process envisioned “broadening the base” and “reducing the rate” of sales taxes to stabilize sales tax revenue. This plan expands sales taxes to a small number of additional services but organizations with effective lobbyists remain exempted and sales tax rates remain unchanged. Except for food and fuel.

There are some good changes in the credits and exemptions. Increasing the income tax exemption for dependents is an overdue correction. Exempting menstrual products from taxation is positive. Benefits for those collecting social security and those experiencing intergenerational poverty are to be praised. However, grocery tax credits do not align with spending habits and there is nothing to mitigate the harm of drastically increased fuel taxes.

Make no mistake: This tax proposal is a long-term redistribution of tax revenue collection from the wealthy to the working class and poor. Sponsors of this bill acknowledge the maximum benefit of this tax overhaul flows to the wealthy. The wealthy don’t want this income tax cut and reject cutting the Education fund. The grocery tax is regressive and credits don’t change that fact when for those living paycheck to paycheck. Rural residents of Utah traveling long distances will be disproportionately harmed by the increased fuel taxes.

When 68% of Utahns oppose this law, those organizing a referendum vote of the people shouldn’t be pejoratively labelled as “Fringe.” Don’t be fooled by emotionally charged misinformation presented by the Utah Taxpayers Association either: opposing this law is not a vote to increase taxes.

Let’s ensure our legislators don’t just “listen” to hours of public comment. They need to hear us. Join us in putting the brakes on this tax overhaul. Go to eventbrite to find Utah 2019 Tax Referendum petition signing events near you. Let’s put this to a vote of the people on the same November 2020 ballot as the legislators who gave it to us.

Deborah Gatrell
Deborah Gatrell

Deborah Gatrell is a National Board Certified Teacher in Granite School District and a Utah Teacher Fellow alumna. She is deeply concerned about the potential impact of this tax policy on her students and their families. You can follow Deborah on Twitter @DeborahGatrell1 and the Fellows @HSG_UT.

Gary Andersen wants his Utah State football team to be more physical on both sides of the ball next season

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Utah State football coach Gary Andersen described his Christmas and New Year holidays as “anticlimactic.” But that doesn’t mean he’s been chill about assessing what he wants to see from the Aggies in 2020.

Two weeks after USU lost to Kent State in the Frisco Bowl — a game that saw quarterback Jordan Love say goodbye to the Aggies and left the team shy of eight total wins — Andersen spoke earnestly about what was lacking with his team last season, and how to address those issues.

One of his takeaways from 2019 was there wasn’t enough physicality at the line of scrimmage on offense and defense. And if the Aggies want to reach the heights they always talk about — namely, a Mountain West Conference title — that’s an area of their game that needs a quick turnaround.

“Our mentality and our strength and everything that comes around that in this program needs to get better if we’re going to have a chance to knock off the best of the best,” Andersen told The Salt Lake Tribune. “That’s exactly what we’re striving to do.”

Utah State struggled with inconsistency in their offensive and defensive lines in 2019 for various reasons. On the offensive side, many of those players were young and inexperienced, forced to learn on the fly with a new coaching staff.

The defense had seniors on it, but many of its linebackers lacked experience, Andersen said. Plus, that side of the ball was led by star junior linebacker David Woodward, who suffered a season-ending injury about midway into the season.

USU’s defense had to adjust and at times played well, Andersen said, but it wasn’t consistent enough throughout the season. He said the Aggies need to improve in technique, fundamentals and tackling.

“We didn’t do a good enough job on any of those areas,” Andersen said. “And that’s core defense. I don’t care what you drop on the board. I don’t care what your scheme is. It doesn’t matter to me. If you don’t do those things on defense, you have no chance to be successful.”

Andersen said he anticipates changing the scheme next season to fit his defensive personnel, and the efficacy of that strategy will be something to watch as early as spring. But with the new recruits that came to Utah State during the early signing period, the coach feels he’s on his way to solving some of what went wrong last season.

Five of the seven players that recently signed with the Aggies work on the defensive side of the ball. Andersen said most of those recruits, including the running back and punter, will arrive at the school early.

Andersen likes the pieces he got, and anticipates getting five more by the next signing period. In an ideal world, he said, those positions would be a defensive tackle, one more defensive back — either cornerback or safety — a tight end, a running back and a wide receiver.

“Those are critical needs,” Andersen said, adding that his staff will look at high school players, junior college transfers and players in the transfer portal.

What isn’t on Andersen’s list of needs is quarterback, even though Jordan Love left the program with one year of eligibility remaining to declare for the NFL Draft. But he expects a battle for the position between Henry Colombi and Andrew Peasley, who is rehabbing from an injury and is on track to return next season.

Utah State quarterback Henry Colombi (3) escapes the grasp of Hawaii defensive back Donovan Dalton (29) in the second half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2018, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)
Utah State quarterback Henry Colombi (3) escapes the grasp of Hawaii defensive back Donovan Dalton (29) in the second half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2018, in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner) (Eugene Tanner/)

For the moment, Colombi is the the frontrunner for the starting spot due to Peasley’s injury, Andersen said. But no matter who ends up with the job, he feels a change in offense will help his quarterbacks.

Andersen said he wants 2020’s offense to look more like what it did in 2012, the final season of his first stint at Utah State. That means, for instance, his quarterbacks will run the ball more often.

Love’s main weapon was his arm. In 2018 and 2019 combined, he massed 437 rushing yards. Former Aggies quarterback Chuckie Keaton, who played for Andersen, ran 619 yards in 2012 alone.

“We want to have a physical mindset to us,” Andersen said. "We want to put, at times, more on the quarterback’s plate to give us an opportunity to get in runs [so] we’re not outnumbered in the run game. The quarterback can help us do that with the identification of the box.”

USU averaged 152.2 rushing yards per game and allowed 201.9.

Andersen also wants to utilize different tempos on offense. For the last two years, the Aggies have been known for their breakneck pace, often scoring touchdowns on drives lasting more than a minute.

While Andersen still wants to play fast sometimes and said USU will “have that identity” with it, he also wants to have his team use huddles and take a more methodical approach.

In regards to how he’ll use his personnel on the field, Andersen said he’ll use his base setup with a running back, tight end and three wide receivers. But he also wants the option to have two, maybe even three tight ends on the field together.

That flexibility, Andersen believes, could help the Aggies on multiple fronts next season.

“I think that’s when we’ve been at our best,” Andersen said. “It allows our run game to be effective, it allows our play action game to be effective, it allows our throw game to be effective. And it gives you an opportunity to, I think, recruit all positions at a high level because all positions to have an opportunity to be productive.”

State Rep. Kim Coleman makes it official: She’s challenging Democrat Ben McAdams for Utah’s 4th Congressional seat

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West Jordan • Three-term Republican state legislator Kim Coleman officially announced Saturday morning that she’s running for the 4th Congressional District, hoping to unseat Ben McAdams — who is currently the only Utah Democrat in Congress.

In announcing her campaign, Coleman came out critical of McAdams’ vote to impeach President Donald Trump and aligned herself as someone who is a full-fledged Trump supporter. Those who came to her West Jordan campaign headquarters on Saturday morning were greeted with a full-size cardboard cutout of Trump posing with two thumbs up, donning a cap that read “Kim cares.”

(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  A cutout of President Donald Trump with a hat from the Kim Coleman campaign as Coleman announces her candidacy to represent Utah’s 4th Congressional District, in West Jordan on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A cutout of President Donald Trump with a hat from the Kim Coleman campaign as Coleman announces her candidacy to represent Utah’s 4th Congressional District, in West Jordan on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020. (Trent Nelson/)

In her speech, Coleman praised Trump’s plans to slash business regulations and cut taxes, his push to increase border security and his picks for federal judges and the U.S. Supreme Court — accomplishments that drew cheers from the 40 or so supporters that packed her campaign offices Saturday.

Coleman also applauded Trump’s decision to order the U.S. strike that killed a top Iranian general Friday, which has increased tensions in that region.

The Utah lawmaker said she didn’t believe that the current Democratic presidential candidates who hope to challenge Trump in next year’s election would have made the right decisions to keep the country safe.

“I’m glad that Trump was in office when that intel came through,” she told her supporters Saturday. “And I’m glad that we have a president who does not apologize for protecting Americans’ lives.”

(Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Kim Coleman announces her candidacy to represent Utah’s 4th Congressional District, in West Jordan on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Kim Coleman announces her candidacy to represent Utah’s 4th Congressional District, in West Jordan on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020. (Trent Nelson/)

Coleman accused Democrats and McAdams of voting to impeach Trump in a near party-line vote because their party can’t win against him when he runs for reelection next November.

“He had a choice,” Coleman said of McAdams. “He had the choice between representing this district and the swamp. And he chose the swamp.”

But when asked whether she believes it was improper for Trump to ask Ukraine’s president to announce an investigation into a political rival, Coleman said it was a difficult question to answer because the impeachment process has been “corrupted.”

“I’ve long been a proponent of due process,” she said. “Due process matters. If there is not integrity in the process, it’s hard to know what the result is. It’s hard to know what any of the outcomes are when the process itself is tainted from the onset.”

While Utah is a Republican-dominated state, it isn’t entirely Trump territory — and he’s more unpopular in the 4th District than in any other district in the Beehive State. The president garnered less than half the state’s vote in 2016 and in the 4th District, Trump earned less than 40%.

McAdams won the congressional seat in 2018 by the barest of margins — less than 700 votes — and is considered a top target by the national Republican party.

Utah Rep. Ben McAdams speaks during a news conference announcing he will vote to impeach President Donald Trump Monday, Dec. 16, 2019, in Murray, Utah. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Utah Rep. Ben McAdams speaks during a news conference announcing he will vote to impeach President Donald Trump Monday, Dec. 16, 2019, in Murray, Utah. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) (Rick Bowmer/)

Coleman emerged as a top challenger to McAdams when state Sen. Dan Hemmert, who had raised $400,000 in his campaign account and won backing of the National Republican Congressional Commission, dropped out of the race in mid-December.

Coleman’s interest in civic engagement, she said Saturday, began with a start-up of a neighborhood watch program after she spotted a drug house nearby. She then served as a planning commissioner in West Valley City, and supported her husband, Joel, as he served two terms as a West Valley City councilman. The couple also founded Monticello Academy, a charter school in West Valley.

She is the mother of five children, and said that it was their futures that motivated her to run for Congress.

Coleman on Saturday described herself as someone with “westside pride,” and said she gets upset when people like McAdams — who lives on the east side of the Salt Lake Valley — try to weigh in on how their communities should be built and run.

She criticized McAdams’ policies when he served as Salt Lake County’s mayor prior to his election to Congress, saying it rarely benefited those on the west side of the county.

“I don’t just live here,” she told her supporters. “I’m from here. I look out at you and you’re my friends and you’re my neighbors. And Ben McAdams still lives somewhere else in some other district.”

An unabashed conservative, Coleman has represented West Jordan in the Utah House since her election in 2014. Among the prominent bills she has sponsored is a controversial plan aimed at making it easier for counties to split. Her HB93 failed in a House vote last year after opposition from the Utah Association of Counties. But it was enthusiastically supported by Rep. Phil Lyman, R-Blanding, who saw it as a possible solution to the political tension in San Juan County that has intensified since a court-ordered special election led to Navajo and Democratic control of the County Commission in 2018.

Another controversial piece of legislation championed by Coleman was one that would have authorized university authorities to report sexual assaults of victims to police even over the objections of victims.

Opponents, including BYU professor and sexual assault researcher Julie Valentine, warned that such a law would discourage victims from reporting assaults. HB254, narrowly passed the House but failed in the Senate during the 2018 legislative session.

In the most recent special session, she was among a handful of Republicans who voted against the tax reform legislation.

She voted for the medical marijuana repeal-and-replace bill and for the Medicaid expansion repeal-and-replace bill, along with the vast majority of her Republican colleagues.

Tribune Editorial: Lower driver alcohol limit? Fears of apocalypse were all wet

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A year into the nation’s strictest limit on alcohol in drivers, the most noticeable thing is how unnoticeable it’s been.

“Come for vacation. Leave on probation,” was the headline the beverage industry used in full-page ads three years ago in its campaign against reducing Utah’s legal blood alcohol limit from 0.08% to 0.05%. Critics in the hospitality business joined the chorus, claiming the law would damage Utah’s multi-billion-dollar tourism stake.

Members of the 2017 Utah Legislature didn’t back down, but they were spooked enough to delay implementation until late 2018.

This week Utah Highway Patrol Col. Michael S. Rapich said the number of DUI arrests in 2019, when the legal limit was 0.05%, were roughly what they were in 2018, when it was 0.08%.

There also appears to be a small decrease in alcohol-related crashes and fatalities last year, although that data is still being compiled.

Correlation is not causation, but this move may have saved some lives — not by arrests but by greater awareness from those who otherwise might be tempted to drive when they shouldn’t.

Meanwhile, it doesn’t appear the law has had any effect on Utah’s alcohol consumption, which continues to climb faster than the population. There’s also no sign of a hit on Utah’s tourism and convention business.

Despite one dry church’s domination, Utah’s identity is not monocultural. That is better understood outside our state than many Utahns think.

People know they can get a drink here. If we’re facing a competitive disadvantage with the Colorado ski industry, it’s probably more about cannabis than alcohol. That one really spooks the legislators.

This law does put more pressure on us to mature our transportation infrastructure. Most European nations have been at 0.05% for years, even though the average European drinks more than the rest of the world. They’ve had the advantage of more trains, buses and bikes. We need more of that. The emergence of ride sharing services are another key component.

Rep. Norm Thurston, the bill’s sponsor, said it would be three to five years to know the full effects of this. That’s true, but we already know the dire predictions about Utah’s hospitality industry were overblown.

In reality, we’re so much weirder than our blood alcohol limit. Outsiders know it, and they are undeterred.

Come, come, ye tourists, no toil nor labor fear;

But with joy wend your way.

We’ll drive.

Joanne Slotnik: Romney is free to do the right thing

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It’s hard to get a one-on-one with a U.S. senator but, if our paths happened to cross — say, at Hires Big H — here’s what I’d say to Mitt Romney over a burger and fries.

You and I could not be more different, yet we are on the same page when it comes to the character of the president and the havoc he is wreaking on the American soul.

We were, I learned recently, born three weeks apart. We grew up in the same era, absorbing the same American spirit. We both became lawyers. You became a political conservative, while I leaned progressive. When you salvaged the troubled 2002 Olympics, I worked in a secured building downtown, monitoring security for the games. I was among your biggest fans.

Later, when you served as governor of Massachusetts, I marveled that a conservative won this historically liberal state, my birthplace.

Now, decades later, you’re my senator. I appreciate that you distinguish your support for many of the president’s policies from your concerns about his character. We agree that his words, conduct, relationships and values profoundly harm the American spirit. The man’s character and his presidency are inextricably connected, to the nation’s detriment.

Most others in your party who agree have become “homeless Republicans.” The party no longer welcomes people of good will who believe in conservative values but cannot condone the president’s relentless attacks on people and on democratic institutions and norms.

And now we’re at a crossroads. The president’s trial for abuse of power and obstruction of justice looms before the U.S. Senate. How do we isolate this trial from the ongoing media circus? How do we maintain the integrity of the constitutional impeachment clause?

The answer, I think, is to return to first principles. Alexander Hamilton enshrined the crucial role of the senate in the Federalist Papers: “What other body would be likely to feel confidence enough in its own situation, to preserve, unawed and uninfluenced, the necessary impartiality between an individual accused, and the representatives of the people, his accusers?”

You maintain you can do this. “I will act as a juror and will be unbiased in evaluating the cases that are presented,” you told The Tribune.

Kudos to you. What a dramatic departure from Sens. Mitch McConnell and Lindsay Graham, who make no pretense of dispensing the “impartial justice” mandated by the impeachment oath.

In 2020, for a senator to remain open-minded, unbiased and committed only to actual facts is a tall order. But a fair trial is pivotal to public acceptance of the verdict, whatever it may be. To stay true to our Constitution and reclaim an ethical America, the Senate trial must lay bare the full story. If we simply devolve into tribal allegiances protecting or condemning the president, we’ve eroded our democracy.

Four days after the House impeachment vote, The Center for Public Integrity received a trove of governmental documents exploring the legality of the president’s order to withhold congressionally authorized aid to Ukraine. Multiple staffers had first-hand knowledge of the president’s intent. Eight days later, The New York Times detailed exactly what happened in the White House during this time.

We need to hear from these people closest to the president. If the House failed to get their testimony, create a Senate rule to rectify the error. Two wrongs do not make a right. Four senators plus the minority party could adopt this rule.

Sen. Romney, I am not asking you to remove the president from office.

I am asking you to take two actions before the impeachment trial. First, vote for trial rules that ensure all relevant facts come before the senate and the American people. Then, examine the evidence — and vote your conscience.

Second, other senators have expressed reservations about the president’s character. Work with them to adopt these rules. You’ve committed to speaking out against “statements or actions that are ... dishonest or destructive to democratic institutions.” Inspire your colleagues to join you in courageously standing up for our country’s foundational values.

You’ve nothing to lose by supporting an impeachment trial structured to learn the truth. The president has already attacked you, demeaning and belittling you for your candor. If you want another Senate term, the people of Utah will re-elect you.

Sen. Romney, we know the kind of nation we want to leave for the generations to come. You are a free man. Do the right thing.

Joanne Slotnik
Joanne Slotnik

Joanne Slotnik served the state of Utah for 33 years. Upon her retirement, she co-founded Salt Lake Indivisible.

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