From Deseret News archives:

Statewide election results certified with no changes

Published: Monday, Nov. 27, 2006 10:04 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The best news for state elections officials was that nothing changed when they certified the statewide election results Monday.

There will be no recounts in the races certified by the State Board of Canvassers, which handles all statewide and multicounty races. Those include all of the federal offices and about two dozen legislative seats, as well as constitutional amendments, some school board seats, and the state and district court judicial retentions.

"The election process is pretty accurate, and the touch-screen voting machines are very accurate," said Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert, who oversees state elections. "We go through this process (of canvassing) to ensure that accuracy and give the results our stamp of approval."

The only new problem discovered in analyzing the election results was a problem with ballots in Wayne County, where voters were not allowed to vote in a state school board race because the ballots were not programmed correctly. The discrepancy did not affect the race, however, since Dixie Allen won by almost 35,000 votes over write-in candidate Tod Tesar, and only 1,192 voters cast ballots in Wayne County.

Programming errors also caused problems in Utah County and Weber County but were discovered and addressed on Election Day.

Story continues below
The certified results also mean that only three political parties, the Republican, Democratic and Constitution, retain ballot status for the 2008 election. To do so, the parties had to have their candidates in the three U.S. House of Representatives races receive a combined 2 percent of the votes, or just more than 11,000 votes.

The Constitution Party accomplished it because of a strong showing by Jim Noorlander in the 3rd District. He received 14,533 votes, which was just under 10 percent in the race eventually won by Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah.

The parties eliminated were the Green, Desert Greens, Libertarian and Personal Choice. To be placed on the ballot in 2008, they must gather 2,000 signatures.

Notable among third parties was the Personal Choice Party, which received well over 10 percent of the straight party vote in many counties and whose U.S. Senate candidate, Roger Price, received 9,089 votes. But many people changed their votes on the ballot away from Personal Choice candidates, and anecdotal evidence suggests that many voters actually thought that they were simply choosing to choose their own candidates, not a specific party.


E-mail: jloftin@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

This article and the points many of the commentators bring up are very...

Real Champions

I'm not a soccer fan, but I'm not totally unfamiliar with the sport. But the...

Wynn will blow past BYU. I recommend Utah fans to stay at either...

Boys basketball rankings

I had to go back and check. I thought Manti was ranked in 3A.

Way to go Real! We are so excited to have a championship in our state. The...

Reagan much-beloved in Utah

Ronald Reagan was a good man, and I was proud to know him. The first time I...

Letters: Palin on the fringe?

Okay Charles, here's one, just off the top of my head. Gov. Palin stated that...

Bronco, Kyle rubber match

I can't believe how much ignorance is spewed from both sides. Can we please...

That's right on target. Long ago I stopped going to see football and...

I've read most of the comments on here, and they are spot on. I would...

Advertisements