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Donald Trump wins US presidency and the GOP flips the Senate; UT electric provider taps into the potential of 'virtual' power plants; Ohio State course bridges science and faith in polarized times; MI mayor prioritizes health, climate with 'health-in-all-policies' plan.

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Trump wins the White House. Republicans will take over the Senate after flipping several seats, and seem to be on track to hold the House. In spite of bomb threats and charges of fraud, a very high-turnout election mostly went smoothly.

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Abortion care can be five minutes away in California or 11 hours for women in Texas, rural living proves a mixed blessing for veterans, an ancient technique could curtail climate-change wildfires and escape divisive politics on World Kindness Day.

Utahns feel ignored by politicians. One Democratic Representative agrees

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Thursday, September 12, 2024   

Politicians not listening to voters is a top concern for Utahns, and one Utah Democratic representative agrees with that sentiment.

Rep. Jennifer Dailey-Provost, D-Salt Lake City, said while many of the issues politicians deal with are nuanced and not as black and white as they might seem, the Utah state Legislature "has continued to grow its own power relative to the other branches of government."

"Putting things on the ballot like the gutting of the ballot initiative that created the redistricting commission and doing so with extremely dishonest and misleading language, really pushes that narrative that the Legislature just is not listening to the will of the people," she explained.

Earlier this year, the Utah Supreme Court ruled the state Legislature had overstepped its authority regarding Utah's Independent Redistricting Commission, which was born out of a 2018 ballot initiative that bans gerrymandering.

Following the court's rule, the GOP controlled Legislature convened a special session to create a constitutional amendment giving it the power to modify future ballot measures - that'll be put to voters this November. Instead, Dailey-Provost contends policymakers should do better in facilitating discussions with those who propose ballot measures to try to find what she calls common ground.

Dailey-Provost contends politicians get a bad rap and adds it is not entirely undeserved. In 2018, in addition to the creation of the redistricting commission, voters also approved ballot measures legalizing medical marijuana and expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, all of which were later altered by the Utah Legislature.

Dailey-Provost said following those alterations, nothing happened electorally like she would have expected.

"There is something to be said for people criticizing vocally, but when the rubber hits the road, if people are truly dissatisfied with the job that politicians are doing, why are they continually being re-elected?" she continued.

Dailey-Provost wants voters to think about what it means to be dissatisfied with elected officials and the degree to which they're being held accountable moving forward.


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