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What we accomplished in 2008 |
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Richard Davis
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Monday, 05 January 2009 |
Message from the Chair
Happy New Year! With the new year arriving, many of us take stock of the past and plan for the future. Let me do the same in regard to the county party. Obviously, the big event for us was the election. At the national level, Barack Obama brings a breath of fresh air to the Oval Office. Democratic gains in both the U.S. House and Senate showed Americans generally are fed up with the Republican party and are ready for change. We’re anxious to see significant changes to foreign and domestic policy that will ameliorate U.S. relations with other nations, end the war in Iraq, wage the real war on terror, boost support for education, institute real energy solutions, save the environment, and a host of other needed improvements. Utah County may seem like a world apart. Elections in Utah County were disappointing in the sense that none of our wonderful legislative candidates won a majority of the vote. However, we did not expect we could accomplish change over night. Change takes time. This is particularly true in Utah County where Democrats have received low vote totals, not to mention a lack of electoral victories, since the mid-1990s. The county party created a ten year plan in 2007 that was intended to move the party forward to electoral parity with Republicans within ten years, not within two years. Such plans can work. In Montana, the state party created a ten-year plan towards electoral victory. Now, the state has a Democratic governor (who was re-elected handily), as well as two senators. The Montana House of Representatives is controlled by Democrats. But Montana did not have that electoral status at the beginning of its ten year plan.
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Read more...
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Candidate Appreciation Dinner |
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Utah County Democratic Party
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Sunday, 04 January 2009 |
The county party will hold a candidate appreciation dinner for the state legislative candidates who ran in 2008. The dinner will be held on February 26, 2009 at 6:30 p.m. at Somewhere Inn Time, 175 N. State St., Lindon. Tickets are $40 per person ($25 for students). Tickets can be obtained by contacting Don Jarvis at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or 801-377-6133.
Please come and express your appreciation to the candidates who made significant progress in making the Democratic Party viable again in Utah County.
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County Party Executive Director Appointed |
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Utah County Democratic Party
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Sunday, 04 January 2009 |
 Don Jarvis Don Jarvis, 2008 state legislative candidate and former chair of the county party Research Committee, has been appointed executive director of the county party by the county executive committee. As executive director, Don will help the county party leadership with party organization building, administration, and public relations.
"I'm glad Don has agreed to serve in this role," Richard Davis, county party chair, said. "Don has great organizational skills as former head of the BYU Faculty Center and an LDS mission president in Russia. We're all looking forward to working with him to build the party as we prepare for the next election cycle."
Don is an emeritus professor at BYU and a consultant at UVU. He founded and directed the Faculty Center at BYU and served as chair of the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages. In the 1990s, he was called to be a mission president for the LDS Church in Russia. He and his wife, Janelle, are the parents of six children. |
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Many Thanks |
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Party Leadership
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Thursday, 06 November 2008 |
Dear Fellow Utah County Democrat: We want to thank all of you who worked diligently on the campaign that has just passed. Many people contributed in so many different ways to help bring about a positive result in this election. Thank you very much for volunteering. You made a difference. A very special thanks goes to the candidates who sacrificed so much of their time and energy to run their respective races. Please thank them personally for doing that. Even though we did not get any of our candidates elected this cycle, we can point to some important accomplishments: 1. We made significant inroads in winning over voters. In 2006, slightly more than 1 out of 5 voters (22%) in Utah County voted for the Democratic House candidates. In 2008, our candidates received 1 out of every 3 votes cast, a huge increase in just one election cycle. If we make that kind of gain again in 2010, some of our candidates will be on the upper end of that average and get elected. Our candidates cut into the previous Republican vote from north to south county and in between. 2. Three of the candidates got in the 40 percent range. Debbie Swenson got the closest with 45 percent of the vote. Other candidates got in the high 30s. That performance was the best of any group of candidates in anyone's memory. Moreover, our gains were across the county. Debbie is in south county, Claralyn (who got 42 percent) in Provo, and Steve (40 percent) in Orem. 3. We energized volunteers all over the county. They got to participate in real campaigns where candidates were actively competing. Many people got campaign experience they hadn't had before. Plus they got to interact with their neighbors and shape their thinking. We made quite a few friends to our cause. 4. The candidates learned many valuable lessons about campaigning. This is important for the future. The candidates can use what they've learned for their own future campaigns or impart information to others. 5. We created a party infrastructure handling functions such as research, fundraising, technology, candidate recruitment, etc. This is critical to future elections. We can be proud of what we have accomplished and the foundation we have built for future success. Despite the odds, we made significant inroads into the Republican vote and have set the stage to make another run at them in two years. The work starts now. We hope you'll join us. Thanks again for all your help, Richard Davis, Chair Larry Brown, Vice Chair Kathy Cook, Secretary Vaughn Cook, Treasurer |
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We desperately need YOUR help! |
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Richard Davis
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Tuesday, 21 October 2008 |
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The election is nearly upon us. Over the past 18 months, the party leadership has been working towards this day. We’ve worked on fundraising, organization, candidate recruitment, advertising, etc. in order to assist our candidates to be competitive on this day.
I can tell you that what we’ve accomplished has far exceeded my expectations. I was hopeful that we could have three or four viable candidates competing this year in select districts. We have far more than that. The quality of the candidates and the effort they’ve put forward is amazing. They’ve been walking their districts, placed thousands of signs, recruited hundreds of supporters, and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars. I estimate that the next candidate financial report will show that our candidates collectively have raised $250,000. Some of them will have outspent their incumbent opponents. You can see the results of that money in the yard signs, large signs, and billboards that are all over the county. Some areas of Utah County almost look like a swing state in a presidential election! And this effort by the candidates is bearing fruit. We’ve been conducting internal polls over the last couple of months. We found that, among those who have decided who they will vote for, two of our candidates are ahead of their opponents, three others are even with the Republicans, and three others are within ten points or so of the incumbent. Yes, you heard right. With enough help, our candidates have a decent chance to pull this off! The problem in all cases is the high number of undecided voters. An undecided voter is usually one who hasn’t paid much attention to the campaign and likely will go into the voting booth and vote Republican. That’s why the candidates are working so hard to make personal contact (either directly themselves or through volunteers) to reach all those undecided voters. An undecided voter who gets information about one of our candidates, particularly if they meet them personally, is likely to become a supporter of that candidate. And that’s why your help is so desperately needed. By helping distribute literature for the candidate, volunteering to make phone calls, or just talking to your neighbors, you can increase the amount of information that undecided voter has about our candidate. On another matter: We’ve run a vigorous and respectful campaign. We’ve challenged the incumbents on their bad policy choices, extremist views, and lack of leadership on critical issues. But it is important that we not go below that. One of our candidates reported she saw several of her opponent’s signs vandalized, including a large one that was ripped up. Even though some on the opposition side do this, we cannot do this. Please help others, particularly young people, to learn to disagree without resorting to underhanded tactics. We need to be better than that. To all of you have devoted time and energy for the party or individual candidates, I thank you. You’ve done a wonderful thing to help revitalize the Democratic party in Utah County and give these candidates a fighting chance on election day. See you at our victory party on November 4! |
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Provo Candidates Debate on Thursday, Oct 23 |
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Nathan Hadfield
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Thursday, 16 October 2008 |
Two of our candidates will debate two of the Republican candidates on
Thursday, Oct. 23rd from 7:00-9:00 PM at the home of John & Sue Curtis at 3302 N 140 W,
Provo. Our candidates will be RaDene Hatfield & Claralyn Hill.
Please come, particularly if you are in Senate District 16 or House
District 62, to support these two candidates. |
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