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Appointed legislator challenged |
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Calling Chris Herrod's House seat undeserved, Claralyn Hill enters raceSalt Lake Tribune, February 27, 2008 Donald W. Meyers PROVO - For Provo attorney Claralyn Hill, the final straw was seeing Republican Chris Herrod appointed to fill a vacant House seat even though he earned fewer votes in a GOP runoff.
However, instead of merely complaining about the secret process that allowed Herrod to take Jeff Alexander's seat last year without standing for election, Hill has decided to challenge Herrod this year.
"We need to get a little more balance," Hill said Tuesday after announcing her Democratic candidacy at the Provo City Library.
Hill, a lawyer who has previously worked as a guardian ad litem and a member of the United Way of Utah County's executive committee, said the GOP's dominance in Utah has made it less willing to listen not only to opposing voices but also to loyal constituents.
She pointed to the way Herrod became a representative.
Herrod was one of several candidates who filed to replace Alexander when the latter resigned in late 2006. When neither Herrod nor John Curtis could garner 60 percent of GOP delegate votes, their names were submitted to then-state Republican Party Chairwoman Enid Greene, who chose Herrod even though he got fewer delegate votes than Curtis.
Herrod defends his appointment. "Those were the rules," he said, noting Democrats follow a similar process.
Herrod also challenges Hill's assertion that he does not represent the views of northeast Provo's District 62, noting that it was one of the few places in Utah where voters supported school vouchers. Hill vows to promote affordable health care, fight substance abuse, improve education and transportation, and sponsor ethics reform.
"We expect Utah to have the most ethical government in the nation," said Hill, wife of Ned Hill, dean of Brigham Young University's Marriott School of Management. |