SALT LAKE CITY — Three of the four Utah Republicans vying for the seat of retiring U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney sought to portray themselves as the most loyal to former President Donald Trump during Monday's primary debate, while the likely frontrunner stood out as someone willing to challenge party leadership.
The state's marquee race is expected to test Trump's broad influence in Utah, one of the few red states that has been hesitant to embrace him. The former president's day-of endorsement of a little-known mayor helped the local official to win the party nomination over nearly a dozen contenders at the April convention, but may carry less weight with voters statewide.
Romney has long been the face of the party's moderate wing, and his retirement from the Senate opens a door for more conservative candidates. Observers are closely watching whether voters select a successor whose politics align more with Romney's or with Utah's other U.S. senator, Trump ally Mike Lee.
While moderate U.S. Rep. John Curtis is considered the favorite going into the June 25 primary, convention victor Trent Staggs and former Utah House Speaker Brad Wilson, another Trump supporter, could push Utah politics further right in the post-Romney era.
Curtis, Wilson and businessman Jason Walton had already qualified for the primary ballot through signature gathering before the convention and joined Staggs on the debate stage Monday night.
Staggs, 49, repeatedly touted Trump's endorsement and argued the former president was a victim of ''political persecution.'' Last month, Trump became the first former American president to be convicted of felony crimes when a New York jury found him guilty of all 34 charges in a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election through a hush money payment to a porn actor.
Staggs criticized Curtis for being the only candidate who had not endorsed Trump's reelection bid and gave him an opportunity to do so. The congressman responded that he had already pledged to support the party nominee, which is now Trump, but offered no real endorsement.
''Serving with him is a degree of difficultly of a 10,'' Curtis said. ''When President Trump is doing anything that I consider aligned with Utah values, and I can check off a pretty good list, I'm wind at his back. But I'm not going to give him an unconditional yes to anything he wants.''