Who actually delivers for working people in Utah
Most political coverage focuses on:
What politicians say
What party they belong to
What they claim to believe
This section does something different.
It evaluates political figures based on:
What they actually produce.
Not ideology.
Not branding.
Outcomes.
The American Proletariat Profiles are structured evaluations of Utah’s political leaders through one lens:
Housing
Cost of living
Economic pressure
Environmental reality
Public investment
Each profile asks the same core question:
Does this person make life better—or harder—for everyday people?
Because in Utah right now, that’s the only question that matters.
Nate Blouin • Eva Lopez Chavez • Kathleen Riebe • Jenny Wilson • Evan McMullin • Mike Kennedy
Every profile is scored across five categories:
Economic Alignment
Resource Stewardship
Public Investment
Cultural & Social Impact
Accountability & Power Behavior
This creates a consistent way to compare:
Democrats vs Republicans
Local vs federal leaders
Messaging vs actual impact
Utah politics has been dominated by:
Identity
Habit
Assumption
For a long time, voters didn’t need to evaluate outcomes.
They just needed to:
Belong
Align
Repeat
That model is breaking.
Because now:
Housing is expensive
Growth is uneven
Environmental risk is real
And people are starting to ask:
Is this system actually working?
When you read multiple profiles, patterns emerge:
Who is aligned with real conditions
Who is relying on outdated models
Who is responding to pressure—and who isn’t
It becomes clear that:
Party labels explain less than they used to.
Start with any profile.
Then compare:
Across parties
Across regions
Across levels of power
Look at:
Who scores higher
Where they differ
What they prioritize
Because this is not about agreeing.
It’s about:
Understanding who is actually producing outcomes.
These profiles connect directly to:
They are not standalone.
They are part of a system.
The American Proletariat Profiles exist for one reason:
To measure power by impact—not by narrative.
Because in Utah today:
The narrative is stable
The reality is changing
And the gap between those two things?
That’s where this section lives.