News

The clock is ticking for Utah lawmakers to draw a new congressional map after the courts tossed out the boundaries last drawn in 2021, deeming them a product of an unconstitutional process. To meet their tight deadlines,
Out-of-state money may flood into Utah's congressional elections after new political boundaries are drawn and approved.
The Utah Supreme Court denied the Utah State Legislature's appeal requesting more time to draw congressional maps, forcing legislators to continue through the r
The Utah Supreme Court has voted to uphold a lower court ruling requiring the state Legislature to redraw its congressional district map ahead of next year’s midterm elections. The Monday ruling keeps in place last month’s decision from District Judge Dianna Gibson that found the Republican-led Legislature improperly weakened the process voters set up
This map redrawing comes after a Utah Supreme Court ruling last year saying the Legislature shouldn’t have been allowed to repeal 2018’s Proposition 4, also know as the Better Boundaries initiative. This voter-approved initiative has been reinstated as law.
The Utah Supreme Court has rejected the legislature's request to halt a judge's order demanding a new redistricting process. In a unanimous order issued without hearing
Congressional maps drawn by the Utah Legislature in defiance of a passed voter initiative banning gerrymandering will, for now, not be reinstated, the Utah Supreme Court said in a ruling Monday.
In an interview with conservative podcast host Charlie Kirk, Lee criticized independent map commissions and the decision of “leftist allies in the Utah courts.”