Understanding Utah Politics Through Measurable Outcomes
This is where Utah politics gets stripped down to performance.
No branding.
No party loyalty.
No vague talking points.
Just:
Who is delivering
Where democracy is functioning
And where the system is breaking
We use two scoring systems to evaluate Utah’s political landscape from the ground up.
Who is actually delivering for working people?
The American Proletariat Score evaluates political leaders based on real-world impact—not ideology, not messaging.
Each profile is scored across:
Economic Alignment (housing, wages, cost of living)
Resource Stewardship (environment, sustainability)
Public Investment (education, healthcare, infrastructure)
Cultural & Social Impact (representation, inclusion)
Accountability & Power Behavior
This is not about who sounds right.
It’s about who is aligned with how people are actually living.
Nate Blouin • Eva Lopez Chavez • Kathleen Riebe • Jenny Wilson • Evan McMullin • Mike Kennedy
How well is democracy actually functioning?
The Democracy Ninja Score evaluates places—not people.
It measures how effectively democracy operates at the local level across:
Electoral Integrity
Institutional Trust
Information Transparency
Governance Quality
Power Distribution
This answers a different question:
Not who is in power—but how that power behaves.
Ballpark • Central City • Central City-Liberty Wells • Downtown • East Bench • East Central • Fairpark • Glendale • Liberty Wells • Marmalade • Poplar Grove • Rose Park • Sugar House • The Avenues • University District • Wasatch Hollow • Westpointe • Yalecrest
Bluffdale • Cottonwood Heights • Draper • Herriman • Holladay • Midvale • Millcreek • Murray • Riverton • Sandy • South Jordan • South Salt Lake • Taylorsville • West Jordan • West Valley City
Brigham City • Layton • Logan • North Ogden • Ogden • Roy • Syracuse
American Fork • Lehi • Orem • Pleasant Grove • Provo • Spanish Fork • Springville
Beaver • Cedar City • Hurricane • Ivins • Kanab • Moab • Panguitch • Santa Clara • St. George • Washington
Utah politics has been dominated by:
Assumptions
Identity
Habit
This system replaces that with:
Measurement
Comparison
Accountability
Because at this point, the real question isn’t:
Who says the right things?
It’s:
Who is actually producing outcomes—and where is the system actually working?
That’s what this page answers.