http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,270018446,00.htmlWho runs Utah?
Behind-scenes efforts helped cut crime rate
© 2001 Deseret News
By Lucinda Dillon and Bob Bernick Jr.
Deseret News staff writers
Utah is a state of 2.2 million, but a couple of dozen people call the shots here.
Months of research by the Deseret News tells a comprehensive story about those Utahns who have power and influence.
In Utah's complex society, power revolves around religion, politics and money ? in that order, according to the findings in the newspaper's study.
After a 10-month survey of powerful and influential people, the Deseret News named the three considered the most influential of all in Utah. They are:
No. 1 ? President Gordon B. Hinckley of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
No. 2 ? Gov. Mike Leavitt.
No. 3 ? Jon Huntsman Sr.,industrialist and philanthropist.
"This is kind of like the Utah way of doing things. Some problems so rattle us, we want all sectors to work together," he said. "But we're a conservative state. We don't want government to do everything. So we work like this ? church, private business, government ? to accomplish something." Having the church, Huntsman and Leavitt work quietly for a special goal "is quite natural," Wilson said.
Utah is unique in its power structure ? no other state has 70 percent of its residents identifying with one religion. And few states can match the dominance of one political party ? four out of the five members of Utah's congressional delegation are Republicans, as are all state executive officers and two-thirds of the Utah House and Senate.
For many Utahns, daily life revolves around church, work and activities like school and recreation. Reflecting those priorities, President Hinckley, 90, was listed as the most influential person in the state.
The longtime church leader was also often named as a man who holds great power but rarely uses it; a man who can, if he chooses, influence people behind the scenes; a man who can stop a project dead if he so desires.