From Deseret News archives:

Mayor's options for race are nuts

Published: Sunday, Oct. 10, 2004 12:20 a.m. MDT
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You'd have to be nuts to pull out of the race for Salt Lake County mayor at this point.

Well, either that or suddenly physically disabled.

State law says the only way for a political party's central committee to replace someone on a ballot is for that candidate to resign "because of becoming physically or mentally disabled as certified by a physician." Merely being charged with two felony counts of misusing public funds isn't enough.

Frankly, neither option is terribly attractive, which must be driving incumbent Nancy Workman . . . well, crazy.

It's driving a lot of Republican operatives crazy, as well, which is why, less than a month until Election Day, the race for county mayor is beginning to resemble something that seems more fitting under a big tent with three rings in the middle.

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Actually, make that four rings. As I write this (deadlines being what they are, this page goes to press Friday night), there are now three Republicans, or pseudo-Republicans, in the race. Workman is one. She won her party's nomination this year before being charged in connection with giving public money to the Boys and Girls Club. Merrill Cook is another. He's running as an independent, but he likes to tell everyone — including the Deseret Morning News Editorial Board — that he is the real Republican in the race. He just can't get all the pretenders in the party to go along.

And now, longtime developer and Republican Ellis Ivory has launched a write-in campaign, and the Republican Central Committee has officially withdrawn its support for Workman and given it to him. Workman, however, still will be the only name with "Republican" next to it on the ballot.

It doesn't take a mathematical genius to figure out what is likely to happen. The Democratic candidate, Peter Corroon, must be starting to feel like that Australian speed-skater who waltzed over the finish line at the Salt Lake Olympics after all in front of him fell on top of each other.

And it's all because Utah has a ridiculous law governing candidate withdrawals. Well, almost all.

Workman still could leave the race at any time without having to certify herself as nuts. (There is an outside chance she may have done so by the time you read this.) In fact, some might call such a thing evidence of her sanity. So far, she has said she won't. In a meeting with our editorial board, however, Workman did say she might have considered withdrawing earlier if the party could have replaced her without the doctor's note.

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