From Deseret News archives:

Leading Utah's Demos is a thankless job

Published: Friday, April 8, 2005 9:50 a.m. MDT
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Half a dozen or so dedicated souls wish to be elected next month to the two-year job of Utah Democratic Party state chairman.

I've tried to think of some witty comparisons to this job:

• Safety officer on the Titanic.

• Coach of the 2004-05 Utah Jazz.

• Legislative lobbyist for Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson.

• Person in charge of seating at the pope's funeral.

Yes, being responsible for getting Democrats elected in Utah must seem like a thankless job.

"I do thankless jobs," says Wayne Holland Jr., the odds-on favorite to succeed current chairman Donald Dunn in a vote by state delegates in the Democratic Convention May 7.

Others are challenging Holland. But the 46-year-old steel worker union representative has the endorsements of key leading Democrats, including Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, who recently told the Deseret Morning News editorial board he believes Holland will be the next chairman.

"I feel confident I can win," Holland said Thursday as he gears up for his final push for delegate votes.

Notice that Holland didn't say "hopeless" or "lost" in defining the Utah Democratic Party chairman's post.

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Last year, Holland worked three months traveling around the Western states on behalf of Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry.

And he found that the populations of Nevada, Colorado, Arizona and other states are changing.

Democrats have won some statewide races in those states.

"We haven't seen that success here. It's time we do," says Holland, who believes Democrats can make some important gains over the next two years.

But except for former Attorneys General Paul Van Dam and Jan Graham, Democrats have not won a statewide race in Utah in 25 years. (Of note, Van Dam dropped out of the Demo chairman race last week after it was clear Holland had wrapped up key support.)

It's not that Utah Democrats hold no power.

Matheson has won the 2nd Congressional District three straight times, twice after the GOP-controlled Legislature redistricted the district in 2001, pushing Matheson into eastern and southern Utah, Republican strongholds.

And just last November, Democrats Peter Corroon and Jenny Wilson won important Salt Lake County races.

But Democrat Scott Matheson Jr. (Jim's older brother) lost handily to GOP Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. in a race many predicted would be closer.

And Van Dam didn't come near U.S. Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah, in that statewide race.

Democrats haven't been able to make any real gains in the Utah Legislature, either, where they still remain below two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate.

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