Political blogger Holly Richardson was selected by a group of 100 Utah County Republican delegates Saturday to fill the vacancy representing House District 57.
PLEASANT GROVE — Political blogger Holly Richardson was selected by a group of 100 Utah County Republican delegates Saturday to fill the vacancy representing House District 57.
Richardson, a mother of 24 — including 20 adopted children — from Pleasant Grove who runs the conservative blog "Holly on the Hill," beat out five others in the special election held after it was determined Rep. Craig Frank was living outside the district boundaries.
Richardson's name will now be submitted to Gov. Gary Herbert, who will make the official appointment.
"It's a little surreal, but I'm excited to get to work on Monday," Richardson said.
There were 125 possible delegates and 100 who cast ballots in two rounds of voting at Lincoln Academy in Pleasant Grove. The victor needed to garner 60 percent of the votes to win, and Richardson had 62 votes in the second round of voting.
Signs for both Richardson and John Glen Stevens peppered the walkway into the auditorium, and the bulk of those in attendance wore either a sticker endorsing one of the two candidates or a tan badge indicating they were a delegate or both.
Of the four candidates present — Stevens, Gary Gygi, Stephen Graham and Richardson — she was met with the loudest crowd response.
The post opened up following Frank's resignation. He unknowingly consulted an inaccurate Utah County election map before moving his family to Cedar Hills, which landed him outside the boundaries of the district he was serving.
The map not only misled Frank, but also about 2,500 Cedar Hills residents who had been voting for the wrong state House, Senate and congressional candidates for 10 years.
The mistake was discovered when Frank entered his address into a new House website, based on the official state map, and he saw another lawmaker's name appear as his representative. At that point, he had been living in the disputed Cedar Hills area two years.
Frank notified officials and hoped to keep his seat, arguing that his election had been certified by the lieutenant governor's office. But Frank gave up that fight after the House GOP caucus overwhelmingly voted against seating Frank or redrawing the district boundaries.
While there is legislation pending that would redraw the district's boundary and have allowed Frank to run in the special election, no action was taken by the Legislature.
- Cottonwood High School football coach Josh...
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
- Four people killed in plane crash in Kane...
- Bus driver on leave after ejecting 7-year-old...
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Driver dies in fiery early morning crash on...
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- Volunteers save Salt Lake County millions,...
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
23 - Liljenquist pushing to make name for...
21 - KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
19 - Utah woman adopted as baby faces...
18 - Vets heart Mitt: Romney enjoys big...
17 - Cottonwood High School football coach...
15 - Man shot brother while showing him...
12 - Rep. Jim Matheson favors getting rid of...
12






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments