Take 2

KUTV 2News

2News Heidi Hatch hosts an array of special guests as they talk about the issues most important to Utahns.

  1. 6D AGO

    Take 2: Prop 4 signatures move forward as tax referendum faces tight deadline

    HOST: Heidi Hatch GUESTS: Maura Carabello Exoro Group, Rep Ryan Wilcox Prop 4 is moving closer to the ballot as organizers report tens of thousands of signatures submitted to county clerks, even as another major policy fight begins to take shape. A newly filed effort to challenge Salt Lake County’s tax increase is now racing against a tight signature-gathering deadline, adding urgency to an already crowded political landscape. At the same time, unresolved court questions surrounding Prop 4 are keeping key decisions in limbo. Did you catch the Variety White House Expose? https://www.vanityfair.com/news/story/trump-susie-wiles-interview-exclusive-part-1?srsltid=AfmBOopKq4pM-ka2qo47Cc-_KgQd8ZemDcDLj8JIfkSPGgD6Yg2yglP7   Salt Lake County Tax Referendum Goud Maragani and others applied for the referendum on Monday, which if approved by clerk's office, gives them a chance to put the increase on next year's ballot. They would need to get about 45,000 handwritten signatures in 45 days. They are using volunteers.   Prop 4 Signature Gathering   Rob Axson Utah GOP Chair reports an estimated 75k valid signatures gathered – first signatures turned in a week ago to county clerks.   Few Hundred paid gatherers- majority local Utah hires   Latest on Prop 4 Case appeal   In new court filings, the legislature is asking Third District Judge Dianna Gibson to issue a final judgment in the case so they can appeal it to the Utah Supreme Court, which the plaintiffs and Gibson say she can’t do yet because of unresolved claims.   3 Governors Take the Stage together   3 Utah governors say the country ‘desperately needs more of Utah’ ... in the White House?   https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/3-utah-governors-country-desperately-030000599.html   Bridger Bolinder   A leader in Utah’s House Republican caucus says he will not seek reelection next year, citing other commitments and responsibilities that require his attention. House Majority Assistant Whip Bridger Bolinder, R-Grantsville, announced the decision this week. Bolinder was elected by his House colleagues to a leadership role over the summer, becoming one of the newest GOP leaders on Capitol Hill. “Serving in the Utah House of Representatives has truly been the honor of a lifetime,” Bolinder said in a post on Instagram. “Representing the people of Tooele, Juab and Millard counties has meant more to me than I can put into words.”   Political and Religious Violence   Brown University Shooting/MIT Professor Shooting – person of interest found dead Salem New Hampshire 2 Students killed, 9 critically injured MIT professor shot and killed at home Bondi Beach Shooting On Dec. 14, a mass shooting during a Hanukkah celebration on Sydney’s Bondi Beach killed 15 people, including a child, and injured dozens. Australian authorities said two gunmen linked to the Islamic State opened fire on a crowd of about 1,000 people, with police killing one suspect and arresting the other, who was critically injured. Police later removed two homemade bombs from a car connected to the attackers.   Trump Gave himself a year in review in primetime address. Border closed Peaced Deal Gaza/Israel Economy is awesome (Many would debate this)   Utah Year in Review Charlie Kirk shooting and Utah Congressional Maps biggest stories of the year   New Year New Documentary: Melania    Exclusively in theaters Jan 30 https://x.com/MELANIATRUMP/status/2001266577077837917?s=20 “Hi, Mr. President, congratulations,” Melania Trump says on the phone, speaking from a golden bathroom in the first trailer for “Melania,” Amazon MGM Studio‘s upcoming documentary about the First Lady. “Did you watch it?” Donald Trump asks on the other end of the call. “I did not, I will see it on the news,” she replies.   See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    55 min
  2. DEC 12

    Take 2 Podcast: Salt Lake Co. approves property tax increase, Gov. Cox signs 3 bills

    Host: Heidi Hatch Guests: Maura Carabello, Exoro Group; Nic Dunn, VP of Strategy, Sutherland Institute Salt Lake County Approves Property Tax Increase The Salt Lake County Council voted Tuesday night to approve a property tax increase of around 14%, lower than the originally proposed increase of nearly 20%. Special Session: Gov. Cox Signs 3 Bills Repeals the new law that stripped power from public labor unionsChanges the filing deadlines for Utah’s 2026 congressional racesClarifies the exclusive and original appellate jurisdiction of the Utah Supreme CourtLegislative Audits: District Attorney, Police and Criminal Justice System Salt Lake County District Attorney AuditSalt Lake City Police Department AuditWelfare Reform Nic Dunn returns from meetings in Washington, D.C.Work disincentives built into the current systemUtah as a national leader due to:Health Care: Dueling Senate Bills Fail As the deadline approaches for expiring enhanced ACA subsidies, the Senate rejected: University of Utah Athletics: Private Equity Deal University of Utah unveils plan for a private equity partnershipOtro Capital would become a minority owner in Utah Brands & EntertainmentNCAA President warns schools to use caution with new forms of athletic equity financingPublic Lands Group Files Lawsuit Over New National Parks Pass Featuring Former President Donald Trump See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    59 min
  3. DEC 5

    Take 2 Podcast: Utah GOP fuels repeal push with millions as redistricting fight intensifies

    Utah GOP has raised over $4 million to repeal Proposition 4. The money is being donated by 501(c)(4) out of MA   Signatures gathered- Rob Axson Utah GOP Chair reports healthy pace (tens of thousands) and growing momentum. None turned in yet.            Utah GOP filed for a stay, no ruling yet   Sutherland Institute Survey: Utah voters think elected officials, not judges, should choose congressional maps   https://sutherlandinstitute.org/utah-redisticting-survey/   Do voters agree or disagree with the court-driven process produced by proponents of Proposition 4? Sutherland Institute recently commissioned Y2 Analytics to conduct a survey of Utah voters to investigate this question.   By a 63-point margin, Utah voters believe that the policymakers they elect should be making redistricting decisions over judges. A full 71% of Utah voters say that an elected body or elected official at the state or county levels ought to have primary responsibility to decide congressional maps, compared to 8% who say judges should be primarily responsible. A plurality of Utah voters say that a body elected by the people (e.g., the Utah Legislature or county council) should be making redistricting decisions, while 21% of voters say it should be a state-level elected official (e.g., the governor), and 15% say it should be a county-level elected official (e,g., a county mayor).     5 Democratic Candidates in the D1 2025 Race   State Sen. Nate Blouin announced his candidacy Nov. 24- now backed by BernieNewcomer Luis Villarreal entered the race1st in Sen. Kathleen RiebeFormer congressman Ben McAdamsFormer state Sen. Derek Kitchen.   REP. VERONA MAUGA looking to pass gun law change in upcoming session after shooting of Afa Ah Loo at No Kings Protest Drafting bill to keep long guns off the streets during protestsManslaughter charges filed this week against the “peace keeper”              Cox proposes $30.7B budget with funding for homeless campus, child tax credits Gov. Spencer Cox proposes a $30.7 billion budget prioritizing literacy, a homeless campus and child tax credits.The budget includes $20 million for reading support and $25 million for a homeless campus in Salt Lake City.Cox's proposal also allocates funds for school safety, technical colleges and outdoor recreation.fund a literacy public awareness campaign and invest tens of millions in "paraprofessionals" to help teachers give an extra hand to young students who are falling behind. That would include $20 million for reading support in elementary schools that fall below the statewide proficiency benchmark of 70% of third graders reading at grade level. How the Trump administration could make or break Utah Gov. Cox’s budget priorities Trump tax bill leads to projected $300 million decrease in state income tax revenue.Gov. Cox prioritizes $25 million in budget to finish construction of homeless campus.Cox not proposing income tax cuts like the ones he supported for five years in a row. https://governor.utah.gov/press/gov-cox-releases-fy-2027-budget-proposal-focused-on-responsible-fiscal-management-strong-families-and-long-term-prosperity/       Rep. Blake Moore joins Pres. Trump to celebrate Michael and Susan Dell’s $6.25B investment in Trump Accounts   Congressman Blake Moore joined President Trump at the White House to celebrate Michael and Susan Dell’s monumental $6.25 billion investment in Trump Accounts for children. Congressman Moore introduced legislation in the House to establish these investment accounts, which was passed and signed into law as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act on July 4th, 2025.   U.S. pauses immigration applications from 19 countries after two National Guard members shot in DC See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    1h 2m
  4. NOV 21

    Take 2 Podcast: No map appeal, shift left, Epstein files, Utah birthrate

    Heidi Hatch | Maura Carabello, Exoro Group | Curt Bramble, former state senator • Speaker Mike Schultz on redistricting ruling Says Judge Gibson’s late decision blocked any chance for an emergency appeal; calls timing “wrong” and says it cut the Legislature out of the court process. • Rep. Burgess Owens letter Accuses judge of overstepping and “imposing an outcome never chosen by the people.” • Redistricting history with Curt Bramble Utah missed a fourth seat by 856 people after the 2000 Census; Bramble helped draw the first four-district map. • New map creates a safe blue district Republicans now competing for three GOP seats; questions around whether 74-year-old Owens will retire. • Candidates for Utah’s new Democratic district Derek Kitchen joins Ben McAdams and Kathleen Riebe. Others considering: Caroline Gleich, Kael Weston, Nate Blouin. • Trump backs release of Epstein files Bill requires AG to release unclassified DOJ records within 30 days, including names of officials and entities tied to Epstein. • Utah birthrate continues to fall Most counties still above replacement level, but two-thirds saw declines; shifts peak childbearing to ages 25–29. • Juvenile aggravated murder bill Would allow judges to send offenders convicted as adults directly to prison instead of secure care. • Brigham City nuclear project $750M investment under Gov. Cox’s “Operation Gigawatt,” creating Utah’s first full-scale nuclear ecosystem. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    56 min
  5. OCT 23

    Take 2 Podcast: Sen. John Curtis shares why he believes stalemate was 'pre-determined'

    On day 22 of the government shutdown, Utah Sen. John Curtis sat down with Heidi Hatch to share why he believes the stalemate was “pre-determined,” driven by partisan politics. Before the interview, Curtis voted for the 12th time to reopen the government with a continuing resolution that failed 54-46, falling short of the 60 votes needed to advance. Three Democrats voted with Republicans, but no additional Democrats crossed the aisle. At 22 days, the shutdown is now the second-longest funding lapse in modern history, surpassed only by the 35-day shutdown in late 2018 and early 2019. Curtis said a short-term continuing resolution may be necessary to get the government reopened, but it’s not a long-term solution. “It doesn’t make sense to keep the government closed when the very people we’re trying to help with high premiums are also the ones losing SNAP benefits,” he said. He noted that since 1974, Congress has only passed a budget on time four times, often relying on continuing resolutions or shutdowns that end in massive omnibus spending bills. Curtis is pushing a new approach modeled after Utah’s baseline budget system, where prior-year funding automatically carries over until new appropriations are passed. “Instead of a shutdown, an omnibus, or a CR, we’d simply stay on the previous appropriation,” he said, calling it a plan that promotes fiscal responsibility. Still, Curtis said Washington has grown accustomed to crisis politics. “Both Republicans and Democrats are part of the problem,” he said. “It’s a fair accusation.” While he said he understands the frustration of families facing higher health premiums, Curtis believes tying those costs to shutdown negotiations is inappropriate. On federal subsidies, he added, “People like free things once we give them free things. It’s near impossible to undo that. Do people at 400% of poverty really need zero premium? Maybe they need some help, but certainly not zero premium — and yet, how do you take that back?” As the Senate remains gridlocked and the House out of session, Curtis warned the shutdown could last “a long time” unless public pressure builds. He outlined potential off-ramps and pointed to his own proposals — such as a baseline budget bill and an automatic spending cut plan — as ways to prevent future shutdowns. Hatch also asked Curtis about rising beef prices and President Trump’s plan to import beef from Argentina, pressing whether the move could help or hurt Utah ranchers. Curtis also discusses his new bill on forest fire mitigation, the East Wing Ballroom renovation, energy prices, and the future of energy in Utah. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    23 min
4.2
out of 5
34 Ratings

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2News Heidi Hatch hosts an array of special guests as they talk about the issues most important to Utahns.

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