OGDEN, Utah — The Republican and Democratic candidates vying for Mitt Romney's open U.S. Senate seat sought to convince Utah voters on Thursday that they have the better blueprint to tackle climate change and protect the state's vast natural resources.
Republican U.S. Rep. John Curtis, who leads the Conservative Climate Caucus on Capitol Hill, squared off on the debate stage against a climate activist and mountaineer who aimed to undercut Curtis' credentials as a climate-focused congressman.
''I've heard from young people who have debilitating anxiety about the future of our planet," said Democrat Caroline Gleich. "I'm an environmental advocate, so I'm all about reduce, reuse and recycle, but we cannot keep recycling the same old politicians and expect them to get out of this mess.''
Gleich, 38, is the underdog in a deeply red state that has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1970. Utah voters typically favor moderate Republicans, like Romney and Curtis, in statewide elections.
The winner in November will succeed one of Washington's most prominent centrists and an outspoken critic of former President Donald Trump. Romney reiterated this week that he will not vote for Trump, but he declined to join a growing group of high-profile Republicans including former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney and a Trump White House aide who have publicly endorsed Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
The outgoing senator said he wants to continue to have a voice in a Republican Party that he thinks might need to be rebuilt after this election cycle.
Curtis, 64, has been compared to Romney for his willingness to push back against Trump and others in his party who have falsely claimed that climate change is a hoax.
In the June GOP primary, Curtis emerged from a crowded pool of candidates to defeat a Trump-backed mayor. Before Trump became the Republican nominee, Curtis pledged to support the party's eventual pick, but he has offered no real endorsement of the former president.