Say it aint' so Joe!
Joe Cannon resigns as state GOP chief
Greene to take party reins until a new chairman is selected
By Bob Bernick Jr.Deseret Morning News
Joe Cannon said Thursday that he's resigning as chairman of the Utah Republican Party immediately. Vice Chairwoman Enid Greene, a former U.S. House member from Utah, will take over the chairman's duties until the party's central committee can pick a new chairman, probably some time in February, Cannon said. That person will serve out his term until August, when state party delegates will pick new party leaders for two-year terms. Greene said as of now she has no plans to run for chairman next summer. "I want to finish the job Joe and I started" when she was first picked as vice chairman three years ago. "If there is a draft-Enid movement, we'll see. But when was the last time that's happened in our party?" she said, joking about some of the controversial GOP intra-party activities of recent years. Cannon, who is also a member of the board of directors of the Deseret Morning News, told a group of GOP leaders of his decision Thursday morning as they met to discuss party finances.
"I actually thought about this for several months," Cannon said. "I decided some months ago, in the summer, that it was time for me to step away from a public partisan profile. I didn't want to do it before the election — after all, I was elected (party chairman) to help the party during this election." Cannon said he believes Utah Republicans did "very good" in last week's election. If other state GOP parties had done as well, the U.S. Congress wouldn't be going to Democrats, he added. Cannon was elected chairman for three terms. He told delegates in August 2005 that he wouldn't be seeking re-election. Both Greene and GOP executive director Jeff Hartley are more than capable of directing the party's operation, Cannon said. "I wouldn't be stepping down if I did not have absolute confidence in Enid and Jeff," he said. The Thursday morning meeting of GOP leaders was called to get input on how to retire some $100,000 of party debt, left over from this year's campaigns. Cannon said it is not unusual to have some debt after a big election, and his leaving now has nothing to do with that. "Enid has her hand to the plow" and is ready to help fund-raise to get the party moving financially forward, said Cannon. An attorney and lobbyist, Cannon is often in Washington, D.C., and in other states advocating for his clients. But he's been doing that job for several years now, and he said work-related pressures is not the reason he's leaving early. Asked what his major accomplishment has been over the past 5 1/2 years at Utah's major party post, Cannon said when he first took over in 2001 "there were any number of tensions" among different GOP factions. He said he believes he's calmed some of those by trying to have a more open party decisionmaking process. On the political front, Cannon has overseen a large-candidate field for the 2004 governor's race and seen GOP incumbents and candidates win races up and down the ballot. And it was during Cannon's tenure that the party decided to close primary elections to only registered Republicans, even though Cannon was opposed to the move. Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., a Republican, believes Cannon "was an effective chairman for our party," the governor's spokesman, Mike Mower, said. "We're pleased here in Utah Republicans were able to hold their own in the last election. Part of that success needs to be attributed to our state party and our state party chairman, Joe Cannon." Utah's senior Sen. Orrin Hatch praised Cannon for "his strong leadership and reasonable voice. "Joe has been a terrific leader of the Utah Republican Party."
E-mail: bbjr@desnews.com
Joe Cannon said Thursday that he's resigning as chairman of the Utah Republican Party immediately. Vice Chairwoman Enid Greene, a former U.S. House member from Utah, will take over the chairman's duties until the party's central committee can pick a new chairman, probably some time in February, Cannon said. That person will serve out his term until August, when state party delegates will pick new party leaders for two-year terms. Greene said as of now she has no plans to run for chairman next summer. "I want to finish the job Joe and I started" when she was first picked as vice chairman three years ago. "If there is a draft-Enid movement, we'll see. But when was the last time that's happened in our party?" she said, joking about some of the controversial GOP intra-party activities of recent years. Cannon, who is also a member of the board of directors of the Deseret Morning News, told a group of GOP leaders of his decision Thursday morning as they met to discuss party finances.
"I actually thought about this for several months," Cannon said. "I decided some months ago, in the summer, that it was time for me to step away from a public partisan profile. I didn't want to do it before the election — after all, I was elected (party chairman) to help the party during this election." Cannon said he believes Utah Republicans did "very good" in last week's election. If other state GOP parties had done as well, the U.S. Congress wouldn't be going to Democrats, he added. Cannon was elected chairman for three terms. He told delegates in August 2005 that he wouldn't be seeking re-election. Both Greene and GOP executive director Jeff Hartley are more than capable of directing the party's operation, Cannon said. "I wouldn't be stepping down if I did not have absolute confidence in Enid and Jeff," he said. The Thursday morning meeting of GOP leaders was called to get input on how to retire some $100,000 of party debt, left over from this year's campaigns. Cannon said it is not unusual to have some debt after a big election, and his leaving now has nothing to do with that. "Enid has her hand to the plow" and is ready to help fund-raise to get the party moving financially forward, said Cannon. An attorney and lobbyist, Cannon is often in Washington, D.C., and in other states advocating for his clients. But he's been doing that job for several years now, and he said work-related pressures is not the reason he's leaving early. Asked what his major accomplishment has been over the past 5 1/2 years at Utah's major party post, Cannon said when he first took over in 2001 "there were any number of tensions" among different GOP factions. He said he believes he's calmed some of those by trying to have a more open party decisionmaking process. On the political front, Cannon has overseen a large-candidate field for the 2004 governor's race and seen GOP incumbents and candidates win races up and down the ballot. And it was during Cannon's tenure that the party decided to close primary elections to only registered Republicans, even though Cannon was opposed to the move. Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., a Republican, believes Cannon "was an effective chairman for our party," the governor's spokesman, Mike Mower, said. "We're pleased here in Utah Republicans were able to hold their own in the last election. Part of that success needs to be attributed to our state party and our state party chairman, Joe Cannon." Utah's senior Sen. Orrin Hatch praised Cannon for "his strong leadership and reasonable voice. "Joe has been a terrific leader of the Utah Republican Party."
E-mail: bbjr@desnews.com