Can Evan McMullin ride anti-Trump coalition to Senate win in Utah?
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| Alpine, Utah
Late afternoon sun glints off mountaintops dusted with the season鈥檚 first snowfall as costumed children parade up and down Alpine鈥檚 main street. They鈥檙e collecting candy and other handouts from stalls run by local businesses in an annual Halloween-related event run by the Chamber of Commerce.
Early voting is also underway in Utah. And while Halloween comes around every year, the 2022 midterms feature something rarely seen in this state: a competitive race in a general election.
The last time ruby-red Utah sent a non-Republican to the U.S. Senate was 1972, but this year two-term GOP Sen. Mike Lee is facing a close reelection race.
Why We Wrote This
America seems split into two rigid partisan camps. Is it possible, in the right place, with the right issues, to dissolve this model and form coalitions with previously antithetical groups of voters? In Utah, one candidate is trying to do just that.
His main opponent isn鈥檛 a Democrat, but an independent, Evan McMullin, who made his name in 2016 as an anti-Trump conservative presidential candidate. He lost, of course, but in Utah, where Donald Trump鈥檚 peccadillos and policies went down poorly, he received one-fifth of votes cast.
Now Mr. McMullin, a former CIA officer, is trying to unseat Mr. Lee with a coalition of Democrats, independents, and moderate Republicans. One lane is wide open: the state鈥檚 Democratic Party chose not to field a candidate and instead to support Mr. McMullin. What鈥檚 surprising, and possibly a harbinger of future intra-GOP ruptures, is the number of Republicans in suburbs like Alpine who may shun Mr. Lee, in large part because of his closeness to Trump.
That makes Mr. McMullin鈥檚 unlikely candidacy a test of how far an anti-Trump centrist coalition can go in a conservative state that puts great stock in moral character and public service. It comes at a time of rising concern about antidemocratic movements in other Western states like Arizona and Nevada where prominent Trump-endorsed election deniers are on the ballot. Mr. McMullin has sought to cast Mr. Lee as an extremist who tried to reverse Mr. Trump鈥檚 defeat in 2020; Mr. Lee, a lawyer, insists that he simply offered legal advice to the then-president.
The lack of fealty to Mr. Trump among Republicans in Utah makes its Senate race something of an outlier, says Matthew Burbank, a politics professor at the University of Utah. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 many other places where you鈥檇 have this kind of dynamic,鈥 he says. 鈥淢any [Utah] Republicans, even conservative Republicans, really never were comfortable with Trump. They wouldn鈥檛 come out and say that but privately they鈥檇 say, 鈥業 just don鈥檛 like the guy.鈥欌
Rare strategic voting
Another factor that is hard to replicate is Democratic support at the expense of their own candidate. Strategic voting, even in a race that a party has no chance of winning, remains rare in U.S. politics. Parties and candidates exist to contest for power, not stand by and watch.
Take , where Gary Buchanan, a former state official in Democratic and Republican administrations, is running as an independent against Matt Rosendale, a pro-Trump Republican. But since Democrats have their own candidate in the race, it鈥檚 proving harder for Mr. Buchanan to build a winning centrist coalition.
Mr. Lee is still favored to win reelection in Utah. by the University of Utah鈥檚 Hinckley Institute of Politics and the Deseret News put Mr. Lee ahead of Mr. McMullin by 41%-37% among likely voters, with 12% undecided. (Two other candidates are on the ballot.)
Around a quarter of those undecided voters identified as moderate Republicans, a crucial constituency in this race, says Jason Perry, who directs the Hinckley Institute. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that movable middle right now which is proving to be the battleground for these two candidates,鈥 he says.
Should Mr. McMullin pull off an upset victory, his could potentially be the decisive vote in an evenly divided chamber. He says he wouldn鈥檛 caucus with either party. But that leaves open the possibility that his vote, or non-vote, decides who becomes the Senate Majority Leader.
鈥淚f he does win and he becomes that one vote that everyone wants, then his strategy will have worked. He鈥檒l be the vote that people are seeking. [But] if the Republicans have a majority where that one vote is not needed, it changes his value proposition,鈥 says Mr. Perry, who previously worked in Republican administrations in Utah.
Mr. Lee has the support of Utah鈥檚 Republican leadership, with one notable exception: Sen. Mitt Romney. Republicans say Mr. Romney doesn鈥檛 offer endorsements so his refusal to do so this time, even after Mr. Lee asked publicly for his support, shouldn鈥檛 be overinterpreted. But Mr. McMullin鈥檚 supporters have made hay from the neutrality of Mr. Romney, who was among seven Republicans who voted to impeach Trump after the Jan. 6 attacks.
In a televised Oct. 17 debate, Mr. Lee called Mr. McMullin an 鈥渙pportunistic gadfly supported by the Democratic Party鈥 who voted in 2020 for President Biden and his expansive federal programs. He argued that Mr. McMullin can鈥檛 be trusted to resist a Democratic agenda and pointed to his own voting record in Congress against major spending bills.
Even among Republicans not totally sold on Mr. Lee, that is a potent line of attack.
鈥淚 do like Evan,鈥 says Maureen Lifton, a retiree who had joined her family at Alpine鈥檚 trick-or-treat event. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 like the fact that he鈥檚 supported by the Democratic Party.鈥
She described herself as a former Democrat who leans Republican and plans to vote for Mr. Lee so he could stand up to wasteful government spending.
But Laura, a mother of six who was taking a food break in a playground, said she would be voting against Mr. Lee. As a moderate Republican, she was disappointed that Becky Edwards, a GOP state lawmaker, failed to beat Mr. Lee in Utah鈥檚 primary in June. Ms. Edwards had attacked Mr. Lee over his efforts to overturn Trump鈥檚 election defeat.
This issue vexed Laura, who declined to give her family name. 鈥淚鈥檓 not on board with any of that, no way,鈥 she says.
Attitudes among Mormons
Another reason she cited for voting for Mr. McMullin was Mr. Lee鈥檚 praise for Mr. Trump in 2020 when he compared the president to Captain Moroni, a scriptural hero in the Book of Mormon. Like many in Alpine, 30 miles south of Salt Lake City, she belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Both Mr. Lee and Mr. McMullin are members of the church, which has long been hugely influential in the state.
Republicans admit that the Moroni controversy, which Mr. McMullin has used in attack ads, dented Mr. Lee鈥檚 image among suburban Utah soccer moms. Trump is broadly unpopular with Mormons, particularly younger voters. While he carried Utah in 2020, Mr. Trump barely won a majority nationally among Mormons under 40, (He won 80% of votes cast by Mormons over 40.)
It鈥檚 not just Mr. Trump鈥檚 character flaws that turn off Mormon voters, says Robert Saldin, a politics professor at the University of Montana and director of its Ethics and Public Affairs Program. Mr. Trump鈥檚 campaign in 2016 that targeted immigrants and Muslims also landed badly among a religious minority attuned to persecution. Mormons 鈥渉ave a shared history of how things can go really, really wrong, how they can be scapegoated and demonized,鈥 says Professor Saldin, co-author of 鈥淣ever Trump: The Revolt of the Conservative Elites.鈥 鈥淭here was always significant resistance within the Mormon community to Trump.鈥
This resistance helped propel Mr. McMullin鈥檚 presidential run in 2016. As a conservative, he got protest votes from Republicans who didn鈥檛 support Mr. Trump. Among them was Mike Lee, who was first elected to the Senate in 2010 and became known for carrying a copy of the constitution that he often brandished when he railed against excessive government power.
Mr. Lee subsequently allied himself with Mr. Trump and was active in the effort to overturn the 2020 election. In a text message sent to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows released by the House panel investigating January 6th, Mr. Lee offered to assemble a group of 鈥渞eady and loyal advocates who will go to bat鈥 for Mr. Trump. He also backed a scheme for state legislators to endorse alternate pro-Trump electors for the congressional tally of electoral votes.
In their debate, Mr. Lee claimed he never supported 鈥渇ake electors鈥 and had voted to certify Joe Biden鈥檚 victory. 鈥淚 was one of the people trying to stop this from happening,鈥 he said. Mr. McMullin accused him of working with the White House to subvert the will of voters. 鈥淲hen the barbarians were at the gate you were happy to let them in,鈥 he said.
Tactical alliance
The repeated exchanges between the two candidates over the events leading up to Jan. 6 reflect the salience of democracy, and the threats to it, in Utah鈥檚 race. To Democrats who fret about the antidemocratic strain in Republican politics, this is justification for their tactical alliance with Mr. McMullin, an anti-abortion conservative and foreign policy hawk.
鈥淭here鈥檚 too much at stake for us to do anything different,鈥 says Ben McAdams, a former Democratic congressman from Utah who supports Mr. McMullin. 鈥淗e鈥檚 not someone we鈥檙e going to agree with 100% of the time. But he鈥檚 got integrity.鈥
Mr. McAdams said he expected a strong turnout at the polls. 鈥淚 think Utah Democrats and moderate Republicans have always felt that our votes don鈥檛 matter,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople have gotten really excited and rallied behind Evan McMullin.鈥
Cole Adley is among them. He lives in Park City and runs a horse farm, but his family is in Alpine so he joined them for an afternoon of trick-or-treating. He leans left, but is happy to elect a conservative like Mr. McMullin to Congress, given Utah鈥檚 choices. 鈥淎s long as we aim left, we鈥檙e doing OK,鈥 he says.
At the playground, Ashton Lin watched his two children go down a slide. He鈥檚 a Mormon who grew up in Asia before moving to the U.S., which he says gives him a different perspective on politics. He jokes that he and his wife, who鈥檚 South Korean, are the 鈥渙ne percent鈥 Asian in their census tract.
A Republican voter, he鈥檚 also open to the idea of an independent representing Utah. 鈥淚 think it meets the new needs of our generation,鈥 he says. But it depends on the candidate, and he may swing back to Mr. Lee. 鈥淚鈥檓 just looking for rational thought,鈥 he says.聽