Recounts on in 2 races
Curtis, Walker each won his
seat by less than 20 votes
Utah
House Speaker Greg Curtis, R-Sandy, will have
one fewer Republican in his caucus during the
2007 Legislature, provided Curtis survives an
election
recount.
After counting provisional and by-mail absentee
ballots and having the vote canvass approved by
the Salt Lake County Council, Curtis officially
defeated Democratic challenger Jay Seegmiller
by 19 votes, it was learned Tuesday. That final
result was closer than the tallies following
Election Day, when Curtis led by 46
votes.
While Democrats
likely missed a golden opportunity to take out
one of the most powerful Republicans in the
state, the minority party in the Legislature
did keep another one of its incumbents when
Rep. Carl Duckworth, D-Magna, defeated
challenger Deena Ely. Duckworth had trailed by
25 votes before the additional ballots were
counted but ended up winning by 33 votes, a
total large enough to avoid a
recount.
"I've always
been hopeful, never given up," Duckworth said
Tuesday evening. "We ended the (election) night
behind, and it was scary to wait."
There will be one other recount,
however, as Rep. Mark Walker, R-Sandy, only won
by 18 votes over challenger Laura
Black.
To qualify for a
recount, the margin of victory must be less
than one vote per precinct. The losing
candidate has seven days to request the
recount, although both Seegmiller and Black
said they planned to request one.
Curtis and Walker were both
confident about their chances of surviving a
recount, since there is historically little
change in the vote totals following
recounts.
"The recount
is not nearly as ominous as the outstanding
ballots," Curtis said, noting he was
"surprised" that Seegmiller made up that much
ground in the additional ballots.
Part of his concern stemmed from
the fact that the Board of Canvassers, which is
made up of members of the Salt Lake County
Council, was including ballots that were mailed
in and lacked sufficiently dated
postmarks.
Seegmiller said his success in the race was
helped by a dissatisfaction with Curtis in the
district, especially his involvement with
bringing the Real Salt Lake stadium to Sandy
and his previous employment as former Salt Lake
County Mayor Nancy Workman's staff
attorney.
"Greg has had
some baggage in the past," Seegmiller said. "I
can only assume there were people voting
against him."
Like
Curtis, Walker said the hardest part was
waiting for the additional ballots to be
counted. He was much more optimistic about the
recount.
"It's like
having a zit on your nose," he said about the
two-week wait for final results. "You know it's
there, but there's nothing you can do about
it."
Black said little,
only that she "could have been 18 votes
better."
With
Duckworth's victory and barring any change
following the recounts, the Democrats will now
have 20 representatives, up from the 19 they
had the past two years. They are still below
the 25 needed to keep the Republicans, who now
have 55 members, from having a veto-proof
majority.
E-mail: jloftin@desnews.com