Jordan Clarkson breaks the triple-double drought in Utah; Utah's snowpack is below normal at the halfway point of the season
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The Utah Policy newsletter is your one-stop source for political and policy-minded news. We scour the news so you don't have to! Send news tips or feedback to Holly Richardson at editor@utahpolicy.com.

 

Situational Analysis | Jan. 2, 2024

Today is Tuesday and it's World Introvert Day, when introverts can recharge after the hustle and bustle of the holidays.

Top of Mind Today

  • If you are thinking of, or committed to, running for office in Utah this year, this is your week! If you think it seems early, you'd be right. The filing period used to be in March but the dates were changed during the legislative session two years ago. Filing opens at 8 am this morning and closes at 5 pm next Monday, Jan. 8. 

Rapid Relevance

 

Utah Headlines

Political news

  • New Utah laws go into effect (Fox13)
  • Utah’s new voter affiliation deadline and other laws to ring in 2024 (KUER)
  • Riverdale seeking applicants to fill vacant City Council spot following official’s death (Standard-Examiner)
  • 2023 year in review (Hinckley Report)
  • Social media ‘absolutely’ causing increases in anxiety and depression, Utah governor says (Politico)
  • Utah Republican lawmaker wants to legalize lottery to help pay for property tax cuts (KSL TV)

Election news

  • Want to vote in Utah’s GOP presidential, primary races next year but aren’t a registered Republican? Better hurry (Deseret News)
  • Sunday Edition: Joseph Grenny & John Curtis (KSL TV)

Utah news

  • Editorial Board: This word described Americans in 2023 - resilient (Deseret News)
  • Utah ended the year poised to host the 2034 Winter Games. Here’s how the IOC sees another Olympics (Deseret News)
  • Leaders, thinkers and doers: Here are the notable Utahns who died in 2023 (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • 40+ people treated for carbon monoxide poisoning after leak in Latter-day Saint meetinghouse (Fox13)
  • UHP makes over 60 DUI arrests during New Year's weekend (Fox13)
  • Man dead after climbing into airplane engine at Salt Lake City International (KUTV)

Business/Tech

  • Ryan Smith aims to create 'iconic' tech incubator in Provo (KSL)

Crime/Courts

  • Teen believed to be victim of cyber-kidnapping returns safely to Riverdale home (KUTV)

Culture

  • Journaling advice for the easily overwhelmed (Deseret News)
  • 7 ways to stay organized in the New Year (Deseret News)
  • What to read if you want to reinvent yourself (The Atlantic)
  • At 1-year mark of near-fatal snowplow accident, Jeremy Renner reveals what’s next in his career (Deseret News)

Education

  • At this Utah school, students helped shape a no-phone policy. And they like it. (Salt Lake Tribune)

Environment

  • How clean energy collides with the environment — namely birds (Deseret News)
  • Here's what Utah's snowpack looks like at the start of 2024 (KSL)
  • It’s not just Utah, snow shortages are plaguing the entire West (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • Is Rocky Mountain Power’s 20-year plan for clean energy already off track? (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • With clean water in southern Utah in short supply, a Navajo mission plays crucial role (Salt Lake Tribune)

Family

  • Following this ‘success sequence’ can help young people become successful adults (Deseret News)

Health

  • Here’s the reason why women need more sleep than men (Deseret News)
  • Did you know the Mediterranean diet does more than lower risk of diabetes? (Deseret News)
  • 7 habits to live a healthier life, inspired by the world's longest-lived communities (NPR)
 

National Headlines

General

  • Lahaina banyan tree showing signs of life following the Maui wildfires (KSL)
  • Feel alone? Check out these quotes on what it’s been like to be human in 2023 (AP)

Political news

  • It was a historic year in the U.S. House — but not in a good way (Deseret News)
  • 5 eyebrow-raising moments in politics in 2023 (Deseret News)
  • New state laws for 2024 impact guns, pornography, taxes and even fuzzy dice (AP)
  • Americans sour on the primary election process and major political parties, an AP-NORC poll says (AP)
  • US Supreme Court's Roberts urges 'caution' as AI reshapes legal field (Reuters)
  • Mental hospitals warehoused the sick. Congress wants to let them try again. (Politico)

Election news

  • Mitt Romney and his moderate friends plan to leave Senate or face an uphill battle for reelection (Deseret News)
  • The ‘why’ behind the effort to recruit Romney for president in 2024 (Deseret News)
  • Maine bars Trump from ballot as US Supreme Court weighs states’ authority to block former president (AP)
  • Boebert faults Ryan Reynolds, Barbra Streisand for her district switch (The Hill)
  • More Gen Z candidates are lining up to run for office amid frustration over the country’s aging political class (The Hill)

Ukraine 🇺🇦

  • Russia launches record number of drones in Ukraine, and Putin says Moscow will intensify its attacks (AP)
  • Russia rounds up thousands of migrants at New Year's Eve festivities, reports say (Reuters)
  • Russia uses POWs as a political weapon against Kyiv (Politico)

Israel 🇮🇱

  • In landmark ruling, Israel's Supreme Court rejects right-wing changes to judiciary (NPR)

World news

  • Multiple dead in powerful Japan earthquake (KSL)
  • Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II to step down from throne on Jan. 14 (AP)
  • Displaced, repatriated and crossing borders: Afghan people make grueling journeys to survive (AP)
  • U.S. forces say they killed the boat crews in a Houthi ship attack in the Red Sea (NPR)
  • China’s Xi says reunification with Taiwan ‘inevitable,’ ahead of crucial vote on island (Politico)
 

Number of the Day 

Number of the Day, Jan. 2, 2024

 

Guest opinion: We cannot serve two masters

by Deborah Gatrell

There is a â€œNo Quarter” flag â€“ a mutilated American flag in black – proudly waving in front of a home in my small LDS stake. It troubles me. I acknowledge I’m a stickler for the US flag code â€“ I grew up in a military family and we were taught to respect the flag, so I find all mutilations of my country’s flag deeply offensive. The “No Quarter” flag is especially frightening because of its brazenly violent message: kill anyone who does not support “the cause.” Modern political extremism is alive and well in the Intermountain West, and it is actively destroying “pure religion”...

It’s true that we live in challenging times, as is true for each generation at some point. Indeed, these may be times that “try men’s souls,” as Paine cried early in the Revolutionary War. But today, too many of us see the world in a false dichotomy, a world where political questions are limited to “right or wrong” and “black or white.” The results are damning. Utah routinely rejects 90% of folks who apply for state assistance because they’ve fallen on hard times, but then takes credit for millions of dollars of assistance and volunteer labor provided by members of the LDS church. Governor Cox was right in his 2022 State of the State address when he noted “If we want smaller government, we need bigger people.” We haven’t lived up to his call to action, let alone Christ’s commandment to love our neighbors, to include sworn enemies like the Samaritans of His day. Christ goes further when he commands us to “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you.” Wealthy as we are, if we were truly a Christian nation there would be no poor among us...

As we prepare for a new year and a new Legislative session, let us recommit to being good citizens and good neighbors – helping where we can individually and ensuring there are state resources to address the many problems that are bigger than what we can handle at the local level. If we love God, we MUST love our neighbor – that includes everyone, regardless of whether or not we share political or religious affiliation or agree on the contentious issues of the day. (Read More)

 

Tweet of the Day

Screenshot 2024-01-02 at 7.10.18 AM

 

Upcoming

  • Jan. 2 — Candidate filing period opens
  • Jan. 16 — Legislative session begins
  • Mar. 1 — Legislative session ends 
 

On This Day In History 

  • 1776 - Congress publishes the Tory Act, describing how the colonies should “handle” those who remained loyal to the British crown
  • 1811 - First censuring of a U.S. Senator, Timothy Pickering, who publicly revealed secret documents
  • 1839 - Louis Daguerre takes the first photo of the moon
  • 1854 - Alice Marry Robertson is born. An educator, social worker and Native American rights activist, she was America’s first female postmaster and the second woman to serve in Congress.
  • 1868 - Alice Merrill Horne is born. She was elected to the Utah state legislature in 1898 and began Utah’s art program.
  • 1890 - President Benjamin Harrison welcomes Alice Sanger as the first female White House staffer
  • 1903 - US President Theodore Roosevelt shuts down post office in Indianola Miss, for refusing to accept its appointed postmistress because she was black
  • 1965 - Martin Luther King, Jr. starts a voting drive in Selma.
  • 1974 - President Nixon signs national 55 mph speed limit into law
  • 1988 - Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan sign Canada-US Free Trade Agreement
  • 2009 - Eric Holder confirmed as the first Black US Attorney General
  • 2017 - US House Republicans vote to gut the independent Office of Congressional Ethics, a public uproar forces them to back down the next day
  • 2018 - US senator Al Franken resigns
  • 2021 - President Donald Trump says to Georgia's secretary of state Brad Raffensperger "I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” in recording released by the Washington Post

Quote of the Day

"If you really want to learn what art is, live with it: make it a part of your home and of your experience." 

—Alice Merrill Horne


On the Punny Side

Someone just called my phone, sneezed and then just hung up.

I am getting sick and tired of these cold calls.

 

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