GOP senators pressure Buttars

He's asked to announce that this is his last term

Published: Saturday, Feb. 16 2008 12:09 a.m. MST

Sen. Chris Buttars, who has been asked to resign by the NAACP after making what's been seen as a racist statement, is being quietly pressured by Senate GOP leaders to announce he won't seek re-election this November.

The West Jordan Republican met for about 45 minutes Friday morning with Senate Majority Leader Curt Bramble, R-Provo, about a statement Buttars made on the floor of the Senate earlier this week.

While Bramble declined to detail any specifics of the conversation, sources told the Deseret Morning News that it was made clear to Buttars this needs to be his final term in the Legislature.

Bramble said that what happens next is "his decision. He needs to decide what he's going to do. We talked about a lot of things. I think I can state with some certainty he feels remorse for his comments. He's apologized. The Senate has accepted his apologies and wants to move on."

While Buttars reportedly has told fellow senators in recent months he planned to run again, he has not publicly announced he is seeking re-election. At one time, he intended to instead serve a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but he is now apparently prevented from doing so by health problems.

Senate Republican leaders apparently are hoping that an announcement from Buttars that he won't run for a third term this November — senators serve four year terms, and Buttars was first elected in 2000 — will put an end to the controversy surrounding the statement he made during Tuesday afternoon's floor session.

Buttars used the word black to negatively describe the "baby" being divided by a bill dealing with sharing school district revenues, saying, "This baby is black, I'll tell you. This is a dark and ugly thing."

That led to a call for Buttars' resignation from Jeanetta Williams, president of the Salt Lake Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

"We're not backing down," Williams said Friday. She was headed Friday to a national NAACP meeting where she planned to discuss the issue with the civil rights organization's national president.

Williams said she had yet to hear from Buttars despite making several phone calls to him over the past two days. Buttars told the Morning News on Thursday he stood by his apology and "this issue is done as far as I am concerned" when asked about the call for his resignation.

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