Utah
Why Prop 4 still haunts Utah politics 8 years later
The state’s most powerful lawmakers laid bare their true feelings on Friday about the political upheaval caused by Utah’s Proposition 4 redistricting law, saying that it risks permanently upending the legislative system.
Eight years ago the Better Boundaries ballot initiative, or Prop 4, galvanized anti-gerrymandering organizers and led to sharp partisan pushback. On Friday, Utah Senate leadership made it clear the rancor has only intensified.
“It’s chaos,” said Sen. Scott Sandall, R-Tremonton, who chairs the Legislative Redistricting Committee. “This problem that is occurring right now is because the outcome was not what some wanted, so they attacked the process.”
But Prop 4 proponents allege the law’s fallout — including public outcry, a yearslong legal slugfest and a repeal petition — stems, instead, from legislators’ opposition to people placing a check on their authority to decide electoral boundaries.
Understanding where Utah is today, eight years into this fight, requires understanding how it began.
The stakes in Utah’s redistricting battle
Ever since voters approved Prop 4 in 2018 by a margin of less than 1%, the law has split Utah’s public officials. But over the past 18 months, the debate has erupted into what some top Republicans are calling a constitutional crisis.
In July 2024, the Utah Supreme Court flipped constitutional precedent on its head, according to critics. In a unanimous ruling, the GOP-nominated justices prohibited lawmakers from amending ballot initiatives in many circumstances.
“When our Supreme Court ruled that the initiative process had superiority over the statutory process they destroyed the Republic, in my mind,” Senate President Stuart Adams, R-Layton, said. “And that’s what’s caused the chaos.”
Last fall, a district judge eliminated Utah’s 2021 congressional map based on that ruling, declaring the map violated Prop 4’s intent. The judge later rejected lawmakers’ attempt to comply with the law, instead picking a map drawn by plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
Now, during the 2026 legislative session, with court cases in flux and candidates on edge ahead of the midterm elections, lawmakers continue to feel the disruption of Prop 4 as it reshapes Utah’s political landscape.
It has been difficult to keep up with the constantly evolving news cycle of late-night rulings, special sessions and court filings. Here are the key events in Utah’s tumultuous, and at times explosive, redistricting battle.
2018: Voters pass Prop 4
In 2017, five years after Utah lawmakers were accused of “cracking” Salt Lake County’s Democratic strongholds into three U.S. House seats, Better Boundaries was created to sponsor a statewide ballot initiative.
The initiative sought to increase transparency and implement guardrails around the once-in-a-decade redistricting process. It would establish an appointed commission to recommend district maps to the Legislature.
While ultimate redistricting authority would remain with lawmakers, Prop 4 required them to vote on recommended maps and for the final map to not “unduly favor” a political party, or else face lawsuits.
In 2018, a majority of voters in Salt Lake, Summit, Carbon and Grand counties — driven to the polls at least in part by other initiatives on the ballot that year, including legalizing medical marijuana and expanding Medicaid — approved of Prop 4, making it law.
2020: Prop 4 gets amended
Before the 2020 legislative session, Better Boundaries approached lawmakers with concerns that Prop 4 in its original form could invite constitutional challenges by interfering with legislators’ redistricting authority.
After more than a year of negotiations, lawmakers and ballot initiative sponsors held a press conference to champion what both sides called a compromise solution, which later passed both chambers with nearly total bipartisan support.
The bill reforming Prop 4, SB200, kept the seven-member redistricting commission, but removed the requirement for lawmakers to accept or reject its proposals, and to provide an explanation for their decision.
The bill also replaced Prop 4’s list of redistricting criteria — forbidding districts that protect incumbents and requiring districts to minimize municipal splits — with internal rules to avoid “purposeful or undue favoring” of parties.
2021: Legislature passes new map
The first round of Utah’s new redistricting commission did not go as smoothly as some had hoped. Commission member former Rep. Rob Bishop abruptly resigned in October 2021, arguing that the process was biased against rural Utah.
In November, the state Legislature’s redistricting committee largely dismissed three congressional maps drafted by the commission, which claimed it had followed a nonpartisan process, though one map used a tool with partisan data.
The Legislature ultimately endorsed a congressional map combining urban and rural representation and splitting Salt Lake County between four districts. Cox signed the map into law despite what he labeled a “partisan bend.”
Better Boundaries immediately threatened possible legal challenges or a new ballot initiative. After years of pushing for what the group characterized as fairer congressional representation, Utah appeared to have less competitive districts than before.
2022: Legislature is sued by special interest groups
In 2022, the League of Women Voters Utah, Mormon Women for Ethical Government and Millcreek residents, sued lawmakers for allegedly violating the state Constitution by ignoring voters’ right to initiate legislation and to rein in gerrymandering.
The Legislature grounded its defense in Utah’s Constitution, which states, “the Legislature shall divide the state into congressional … districts.” But lawmakers were about to receive an earthshaking message from Utah’s top court.
2024: Supreme Court shifts status quo
In the summer of 2024, the Supreme Court responded to an appeal of the lawsuit with a new interpretation of the state Constitution: ballot initiatives altering the structure of government would, from now on, be a wholly new class of laws.
The ruling prohibited lawmakers from amending initiatives that reform government unless they satisfied the highest legal standard of strict scrutiny, allowing changes only to address a compelling state interest in the least restrictive way possible.
2024: Failed constitutional amendment
Shocked by the Supreme Court’s ruling, legislative leadership met for a special session to draft a constitutional amendment that would clarify the Legislature’s ability to change or repeal ballot initiatives after they are approved by voters.
But, in a decision upheld by the Supreme Court, Gibson ruled that the so-called Amendment D was void because lawmakers did not meet the standard for advertising the amendment in newspapers and the ballot language was unclear.
2025: Judge throws out 2021 map
In an August 2025 ruling — months after a self-imposed deadline — 3rd District Judge Dianna Gibson ruled that SB200 “unconstitutionally impaired” Prop 4 and that the Legislature’s 2021 congressional map needed to be thrown out.
Gibson directed the Legislature to approve a remedial map in line with Prop 4. Working on a truncated timeline, lawmakers requested public feedback, and approved a map including two more competitive, but still Republican-leaning seats.
2025: Gibson chooses plaintiffs’ map
In a bombshell decision, delivered on Nov. 10, just minutes before a midnight deadline requested by Utah Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, Gibson rejected the Legislature’s offering as “an extreme partisan outlier” that failed to meet Prop 4 standards.
Up against an election timeline, Gibson said she felt she had no choice but to pick a map submitted by the plaintiffs. Utah’s new congressional map, Gibson said, should have a “Democratic-leaning district anchored in the northern portion of Salt Lake.”
2025: Legislature promises to appeal
The ruling ignited a Republican firestorm. Adams and House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, vowed to repeal it, GOP lawmakers threatened impeachment and conservatives hurled the accusation of gerrymandering right back at Gibson.
Cox backed the Legislature, supporting an appeal and suggesting that Gibson’s delayed redistricting decision had limited the ability “for justice to fairly play out.” This was just the beginning of the Republicans’ attempt to counter the ruling.
2026: Challenge from U.S. Reps
On Monday, U.S. Reps. Burgess Owens and Celeste Maloy of Utah joined 11 local leaders in filing a federal lawsuit alleging the state’s court-ordered congressional map violates the Elections Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The federal lawsuit marks just the latest effort to undo Gibson’s decision. Her ruling so far has prompted a partial appeal by the Legislature — as they are still waiting for Gibson to issue her final judgment — and a GOP initiative to repeal Prop 4 entirely.
“Whether by ballot initiative, litigation, or by supporting judicial reform, we will continue to fight for the rights of all Utahns by strengthening our constitutional republic,” Utah Republican Party chair Rob Axson said in a statement.
Beyond the backlash, Gibson’s ruling has clear political implications. By reducing Utah’s GOP-leaning districts from four to three, it has become unclear which districts Owens, Maloy or Reps. Blake Moore or Mike Kennedy will choose to run in.
2025-26: Democratic candidates see opportunity
Gibson’s map creates a Salt Lake City seat where Kamala Harris won by 23 percentage points in 2024. The district is home to 41% of the state’s actively registered Democrats and just 15% of the state’s registered Republicans.
At least seven Democratic candidates, including two state lawmakers, have announced their intention to run for the new 1st congressional district, which they see as an unprecedented chance to provide Democratic representation for the state.
Over 52% of actively registered Utah voters are Republican, less than 14% are Democrats and roughly 28% are unaffiliated. The other 6% are split among smaller parties. In the 2024 election, Trump won just under 60% of Utah’s vote, while Harris won 38%.
Looking ahead: Will Prop 4 be repealed?
In an effort to counter Gibson’s ruling using all means possible, Axson launched a ballot initiative of his own, with the support of Sen. Mike Lee and Attorney General Derek Brown, to repeal Prop 4.
The party recruited hundreds of volunteers and paid employees from around the country to try to get 141,000 signatures by Feb. 15 to put Prop 4 on the ballot again. As of Friday, the Lieutenant Governor’s Office had recorded over 76,000 valid signatures.
National GOP weighs in
The Beehive State’s ballot initiative has drawn attention from the highest levels of GOP politics. President Donald Trump endorsed the effort in January, after his son encouraged people to sign up to become paid signature gatherers in October.
The initiative also attracted GOP get-out-the-vote guru Scott Presler for an eight-day signature gathering blitz, and Turning Point Action, which is bringing its “super chaser” door-knocking strategy to Utah for the first time to repeal Prop 4.
Repeal effort boils over
As election season nears, Prop 4 has brought out the worst of Utah partisanship. Multiple police reports have been filed alleging assault and aggression toward GOP signature gatherers, resulting in at least several dozen lost signatures.
Many complaints have also been made by Utah voters who report signature gathers using misleading tactics to score signatures. Some gatherers have characterized the initiative as an effort to “stop gerrymandering” or “remove the crooked judge.”
Meanwhile, Better Boundaries has launched a signature removal campaign, mailing letters to thousands of voters who signed what the group calls “a pro-gerrymandering petition” and providing them with forms to remove their names.
A criminal investigation is now underway after the GOP’s political issues committee, Utahns for Representative Government, flagged potential fraud by its gatherers, with one county clerk disqualifying roughly 300 signatures, KSL reported.
Is the repeal popular?
A Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics poll conducted in January found 44% of Utah voters don’t know whether they support the repeal effort. The rest of voters are split, with 26% supporting the proposition and 29% opposing it.
On Friday, Utah Senate Minority Leader Luz Escamilla, D-Salt Lake City, said she shared some concerns about a judge choosing electoral boundaries without legislative input. But many Utah voters have felt this way about the Legislature’s actions, she pointed out.
Utah is not unique in trying to implement a redistricting commission. Too often, Escamilla said, arguments made in favor of unfettered legislative control over redistricting are only supported by members of states’ dominant political party.
“We feel totally excluded from that process, and that hurts our districts that we represent, and I hope that’s also acknowledged,” Escamilla said.
“That’s also part of this exercise, that you realize human nature runs a lot of the stuff that’s happening.”
Utah
UDOT plans $621M expressway to ease northern Utah County traffic
EAGLE MOUNTAIN, Utah (KUTV) — The Utah Department of Transportation has planned a major groundbreaking for what it calls the first east-west expressway corridor in Utah County.
The plan is to build a six-lane freeway to connect I-15 and Mountainview Corridor, with three lanes in each direction and making 2100 N a frontage road on both sides.
“You almost hate to see it grow, but when it does grow, you like to see reasonable solutions for people’s problems,” said Michael Crofts, resident of Lehi.
MORE | UDOT Projects
Drivers in northern Utah County are no strangers to the 2100 N congestion come rush hour.
“‘Cause one of the big things is that not a lot of jobs are out in Saratoga and Eagle Mountain,” Crofts said. “They’re out here in the East and this part of the valley or North and there does need to be a better way for people to get around.”
To ease traffic flow in the area, UDOT is planning to put the new expressway in the patch of grass between where 2100 N runs now.
“This is one of our biggest projects this year,” said John Gleason, public relations director for UDOT.
It’s about a three-mile segment and will cost roughly $621 million dollars. It will include two bridges—at 3600 W and 2300 W—and have freeway-to-freeway interchanges, so traffic won’t have to stop.
“Right now, there’s not a lot of great options East-West out there; and so by building this freeway, you’re going to improve not only the East-West connection, but you’re going to alleviate some of the traffic on the North-South roads there as well,” Gleason said.
2100 N will stay open during construction, according to UDOT.
“Any short-term issues that you have with construction, we’re hoping that that payoff is going to be great things for everybody that lives and works out in the area,” Gleason said.
“It’s kind of a bittersweet thing because it does feel almost overcrowded, but at the same time it’s one of those, well, but if we build better infrastructure, will it feel less crowded?” Crofts said. “But the bitter part is that they’re like, oh, our little tight-knit community is suddenly grown into a city.”
The groundbreaking is scheduled for March 18th, and UDOT estimates they’ll be building the expressway through late 2028.
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Utah
A win-win? Utah revisits discussion of public land for housing — with a narrower scope
SALT LAKE CITY — Measures to turn swaths of public land over to local entities were met with widespread opposition last year, but a Utah legislative committee agrees it could yield good things.
Outdoor recreation groups and others say they’re concerned it could be a slippery slope leading to the loss of public land.
Members of the House Natural Resources, Agriculture and Environment Committee voted unanimously on Monday to favorably recommend HCR14, which urges Congress to allow “limited use of unreserved lands near existing communities and infrastructure for moderate income housing.”
Unlike Utah’s effort to secure 18.5 million acres of Bureau of Land Management land or Utah Sen. Mike Lee’s push to include the sale of 0.5% to 0.75% of public lands in Utah and 10 other Western states in a federal budget bill, each of which failed last year, HCR14 supports a “much smaller ask” and a particular type of federal land, said Rep. Raymond Ward, R-Bountiful, the resolution’s sponsor.
The idea was sparked by a conversation with Santa Clara leaders, who are dealing with southwest Utah’s population growth near federal land, but it’s a challenge that many other Utah communities face, he and members of the committee added. That’s contributed to some of the state’s housing affordability and other challenges.
“At least some portion of this difficulty is that land is a lot more expensive than it used to be,” he said. “You can’t make any more land, but there is some land that is right close by us, but because of the way it is designated federally, it is not available to be used for housing.”
Department of the Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner announced last year that they formed a joint task force to explore using “underutilized federal land” for housing to increase supply and potentially lower costs. Utah’s resolution, if passed, offers federal leaders “one more thing in their hand that they can use as a tool” when they have these types of land policy discussions in Washington, Ward said.
However, efforts to tinker with public land have been unpopular across all spectrums thus far, especially among those who recreate outdoors. Brett Stewart, president of the Utah OHV Advocates, asked if there are ways to trade state and private land in exchange for public land, so that the public doesn’t lose access to the land.
“Once you start doing this, you start handing it off … it’s going to do the domino effect,” he said. “It’s going to get easier and easier and easier, and now we’ve got that reputation that we’re selling off our public lands, which we’ll never, ever be able to touch again once it’s privatized.”
Housing is an important issue, but there’s a “huge lack of trust” following last year’s effort to sell land off land, said Kael Weston, of Salt Lake County.
Members of the committee agreed that it’s a complicated issue, which could require tighter language in the final resolution to avoid confusion, said House Majority Leader Casey Snider, R-Paradise.
“I think the intent is appropriate. I’d like to see it move forward, but I’m wondering if we could just have a conversation,” he said.
Ward acknowledged that it could be nice to clear up any concerns to reassure the public that the resolution isn’t seeking “a lot of other lands” that should remain in the public’s hands.
Others on the committee said land swaps and other types of agreements can be beneficial for both sides of the conversation. They can produce “win-wins” that support conservation and housing development needs, added Rep. Doug Owens, D-Millcreek.
“I think it’s a great resolution. It’s not in the far distant past where this used to happen more,” he said.
The resolution now heads to the House floor for a wider vote.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Utah
Utah leaders say gas prices will fall thanks to new agreement – KSLTV.com
SALT LAKE CITY — State leaders announced a partnership with the petroleum industry that they said will increase fuel supply, lower gas prices and resolve an ongoing feud with Idaho.
The announcement comes after weeks of tension between Utah and Idaho leaders over a plan floated by Utah lawmakers to tax fuel exports. Officials in Idaho said that could have raised gas prices there.
Instead of taxing exports, the Legislature plans to cut the state gas tax by 15% while working with the oil and gas industry to increase the supply of fuel at Utah’s refineries, House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, announced Monday.
“If you want lower prices, you have to increase supply. It’s that simple,” Schultz said. “This agreement will bring in nearly 800,000 additional gallons of fuel into the market every single day, boosting competition and putting real downward pressure on prices at the pump.”
At the same time, leaders in Idaho have tentatively agreed to work to increase water supply on the Bear River system, which runs through Idaho, Wyoming and Utah. Gov. Spencer Cox signed a memorandum of understanding about that during a press conference at the state Capitol. Idaho Gov. Brad Little was expected to sign it soon, a spokesperson said.
“We are at a critical crossroads in Utah’s energy and water future and we are choosing an abundance mindset over managing scarcity,” the governor said. “This partnership not only benefits Utahns, but it will benefit the entire Intermountain region.”
He said industry leaders have committed to increase refinery production in Utah by 23,500 barrels of oil per day within the next five years. The state is also investing in fuel storage to help meet seasonal demand and infrastructure to aid production and delivery of fuel, Cox added.
The agreement with Idaho won’t secure any new water rights in the Bear River system, but will let both states work together on managing excess flows and water sustainability.
“We have so much in common — probably more in common with Idaho than any other neighbor out there — and so I’m grateful that the relationship is coming out even stronger,” Cox told reporters.
Meanwhile, the proposal to cut the gas tax, HB575, is moving through the Legislature in the final weeks of the session. Besides slashing the tax, the bill also requires refineries to report to the state how many barrels of oil and other petroleum products they produce. It also aims to make it easier to build pipelines in the state that would increase the supply of gasoline.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Cal Roberts, R-Draper, was unanimously approved by a House committee last week and is awaiting a vote in the full House of Representatives.
Rikki Hrenko-Browning, the president of the Utah Petroleum Association, said “tightening supplies” in the fuel market has led to some higher prices.
“We stand together with state leadership to reaffirm our commitment to the state, to our neighbors and to our customers,” she said. “We look forward to working together to grow Utah to become an energy leader across the Intermountain West.”
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