Project Vote Smart gets cold shoulder from Utah Demos

Party snubs effort to post candidates' views on Internet

Published: Sunday, Aug. 27 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT

Polls show that few Utahns can name their state senator or representative. And legislative candidates often complain that voters are not engaged in state House races.

So it is especially disheartening for a national organization that attempts to get legislative candidates to post their issue stands on the Internet to help educate voters to once again meet with organized resistance in Utah.

Project Vote Smart has mailed candidate questionnaires to Utah legislative candidates for years, only to see various groups encourage candidates not to fill out the PVS forms.

"We don't have a formal campaign against" Project Vote Smart, says Todd Taylor, executive director of the Utah Democratic Party. "But if one of our (Democratic) candidates asks us about them, we tell them not to fill out their questionnaires."

Taylor says that he and other professional party operatives "have had problems with Project Vote Smart for more than a decade. But (Project Vote Smart officials) have never even talked to us to try to work things out."

PVS spokeswoman Rachel Pagliocca says it is unfortunate that the Utah Democratic Party opposes the group's questionnaire. "All of our questions include an open, blank response area" should the candidate not agree with the multiple-choice responses. "We allow for 30 percent of the questions to not even be answered," and PVS will still post that candidate's response on their Web site, she said.

"Our most basic question is: Are you willing to let citizens know where you stand on important issues of the day?" she said. Voters should demand that kind of information, she added.

PVS is a non-partisan, non-profit voter education group based out of Philipsburg, Mont., that polls gubernatorial, congressional and legislative candidates in all states. It uses experts in each state to localize their questionnaire — this year including Utah questions like whether the candidates support a flat-rate income tax or favor repeal of a law that allows illegal immigrant high school graduates to pay in-state college tuition.

Jeff Hartley, executive director of the Utah Republican Party, says his group does not make any recommendations to GOP candidates on any questionnaires. "We let our candidates make up their own minds. Some groups use questionnaires to decide if they will give financial support" to the candidate, and so candidates may want to fill out those forms.

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