Former House Speaker Greg Hughes on Wednesday made the long-anticipated announcement that he’s vying to become Utah’s next governor.
“You’re the average Joe, the average Jane,” Hughes told a crowd at the Murray automotive shop where he kicked off his campaign. “And that’s who I want to run for.”
Known as a scrapper who has sometimes stepped on toes to achieve his goals and shrugged off, rather than avoided, controversy, Hughes most recently was a leader of the Operation Rio Grande effort to curb crime and better control the large population of people experiencing homelessness in downtown Salt Lake City.
Supporters praised the initiative as helping to clean up the area and shift to a new model of homeless services more focused on long-term assistance rather than emergency shelter. Critics saw it as a heavy handed initiative to clear homeless people out of an area coveted by developers.
Hughes admitted he’s ruffled feathers in the past, arguing that he’s been misunderstood because of his bluntness and direct approach to problem solving. As governor, he vowed, he’d tell hard truths rather than spare feelings and confront the state’s most thorny challenges, even if it comes at a political cost.
“I don’t have time for blue ribbon panels and task forces. We need to move. We need to move now,” Hughes said next to a neon sign that blazed with the message, “Get It Done.”
Former state lawmaker Mike Noel, a polarizing figure in his own right, commended Hughes as the “best conservative in the state of Utah,” someone who would fight for ranchers, farmers and other rural residents if he moves into the Governor’s Mansion.
“Greg is the real deal,” Noel, a Kanab Republican, said.
Early surveys in the GOP contest show other gubernatorial candidates with a sizable lead on Hughes, who’s been polling in the single digits, and he acknowledged he has a “high hill to climb” to become a front-runner. Unlike his rivals, Hughes will not be gathering signatures to get his name on the ballot and will instead bank on support from party delegates at the state Republican convention.
While most of the other GOP candidates have come out swinging against the tax reform package recently approved in the Legislature, Hughes sounded a different note: Avoiding comment on the plan’s specifics, he argued that the effort suffered from a lack of public outreach led by Gov. Gary Herbert.
“When the entire effort is not done with a governor who has the bully pulpit and 100% name ID making the case to the public at large, I don’t think there’s a high level of understanding about what the bill does or doesn’t do,” Hughes said. “And that creates apprehension.”
Hughes said he is not in favor of a referendum effort to repeal the bill and believes the system works best when legislating is handled by the lawmakers, who then stand accountable to their constituents. He declined to take a position on what will likely be the next phase of tax reform — debate over eliminating a constitutional amendment that dedicates income tax revenues to public and higher education.
“I’m not in there,” he said, referring to the Legislature. “They can have that robust debate.”
House Majority Leader Francis Gibson showed up Wednesday to back Hughes, saying his chamber’s former leader wouldn’t be a governor to take the path of least resistance.
“I worked for four years with the speaker, and I’ve seen him say yes to a lot of hard stuff when other people for political reasons or whatever would say no,” Gibson, R-Mapleton, said. “We need a governor that’s willing to keep moving forward.”
With Hughes in the race, there are now seven Republicans in the running for the state’s top executive spot.
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Former House Speaker Greg Hughes jumps into Utah gubernatorial race - Salt Lake Tribune
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