Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Cook Partisan Voting Index: R+32
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Mormon (LDS) adherent share: ~55-60% (Pew/PRRI estimates)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Hispanic/Latino population share: 15.6%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median age: 32 (youngest in U.S.)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: bachelor's degree or higher: 36.1%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 71.5%
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 4.0% (January 2026)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 8.6%
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $95,166 (2020-2024 ACS)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Utah Constitutional Amendment A — Strengthen Education Funding (income tax earmark) (2024) — passed, margin 62% Yes — 38% No
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 31-33 (share 0.097)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.116)
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.126)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Brigham Young University (5000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Hill Air Force Base (23000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: University of Utah / University of Utah Health (23000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Intermountain Healthcare (42000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] District summary: Utah is a deeply conservative western state of approximately 3.54 million residents, with roughly 85% concentrated along the Wasatch Front (Salt Lake City, Provo, Ogden metropolitan corridor). The state has a median household income of $95,166 (Census 2020-2024), well above the national median, with a low 8.6% poverty rate and 4% unemployment as of January 2026. The population is 77.8% White (non-Hispanic), 15.6% Hispanic/Latino, with a median age of 32 — the youngest in the nation. The state is majority-Mormon (approximately 55-60%), with the LDS Church playing a significant cultural and political role. The economy is anchored by healthcare (Intermountain Healthcare, University of Utah Health), education (University of Utah, BYU, Utah State), technology ('Silicon Slopes' region), outdoor recreation and tourism (five national parks), aerospace/defense (Hill AFB, Northrop Grumman, L3Harris), and energy/mining. Utah has a Cook PVI of R+32 and voted for Donald Trump by nearly 20 points in 2024. Curtis won the 2024 Senate election with 62.1% of the vote, succeeding retiring Sen. Mitt Romney.
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on S. Con. Res. 22 (Continuing Resolution to Fund Government — September 2025) on 2025-09-19: Curtis voted to advance a continuing resolution to fund the government, breaking from fiscal hawks like Mike Lee who voted nay. The CR was rejected 44-48. This pattern — Curtis voting to fund government while Lee and MAGA conservatives vote no — echoes his House record of governing-wing votes on fiscal brinksmanship and illustrates the moderate-conservative split within Utah's own Senate delegation.
Date: 2025-09-19
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.Con.Res. 14 (Senate Budget Resolution FY2025 — SAVE Act filibuster stance) on 2026-02-11: Curtis opposed using the 'nuclear option' to pass the SAVE Act voter ID bill via a talking filibuster bypass — a procedural position that put him at odds with Trump, Senate MAGA allies, and his Utah colleague Mike Lee. Curtis argued the strategy was 'a slippery slope' that would erode Senate norms. The vote reflects his institutionalist approach and willingness to frustrate his own party's base on procedural grounds.
Date: 2026-02-11
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on PN 11 (Opposing Jeremy Carl for Assistant Secretary of State for International Organizations) on 2026-02-12: Curtis became the only Republican to publicly oppose a Trump State Department nominee over anti-Israel and antisemitic comments, effectively sinking Carl's nomination. He stated Carl's remarks were 'unbecoming of the position.' The vote illustrates the strength of the AIPAC relationship — Curtis's top career PAC donor — and his willingness to break from Trump on Israel-related matters. This is his most consequential party defection as a senator.
Date: 2026-02-12
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on PN 12-1 (Confirmation of Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense) on 2025-01-24: Curtis was initially undecided on Hegseth but ultimately voted to confirm — a decisive vote given the 51-50 margin decided by VP Vance's tie-breaker. Only three Republicans (Collins, Murkowski, McConnell) voted nay. By December 2025, Curtis expressed uncertainty about whether he'd confirm Hegseth a second time, citing 'recent controversial boat strikes' — a rare admission of regret. His initial yes vote was pivotal for the Trump administration's most controversial Cabinet pick.
Date: 2025-01-24
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on S. 5 (Laken Riley Act) on 2025-01-20: Curtis co-sponsored and voted for the first bill of Trump's second term — mandating ICE detention of undocumented immigrants for nonviolent crimes. The vote passed 84-9 in the Senate with 33 Democratic votes. While Curtis's January 2025 op-ed called for 'compassion' in immigration enforcement, this vote aligned him with the GOP's hardline immigration posture and contradicted the softer rhetorical tone he established in his early Senate tenure.
Date: 2025-01-20
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 8035 (Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024) on 2024-04-20: As a House member vying for the Senate seat of retiring Mitt Romney, Curtis voted yea on $61 billion in Ukraine aid — crossing the majority of House Republicans (112 nay, 101 yea). His GOP primary opponent Trent Staggs attacked the vote. This was a party-defection that aligned with Romney's internationalist tradition and Curtis's own Foreign Relations Committee orientation. He later criticized the Trump administration's UN vote with Russia as 'deeply troubling' — the most vocal Republican critic of the administration's Russia pivot.
Date: 2024-04-20
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) — Senate passage) on 2025-07-01: Curtis voted yea on legislation the CBO projected would add $3.3 trillion to deficits, cut $1 trillion from Medicaid, and cause up to 188,000 Utahns to lose health coverage. Only three Republicans voted nay. Curtis negotiated clean-energy credit delays but ultimately supported the bill. Utah's largest industry is healthcare, and approximately 23% of the state is on Medicaid — yet Curtis touted Senate leaders 'including my changes to the energy credits' as sufficient justification for his yes vote. His top donor sectors — Oil & Gas ($436K career), Securities & Investment ($657K) — benefited from the bill's tax provisions.
Date: 2025-07-01
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Curtis voted yea on the OBBBA (July 1, 2025), which the CBO projected would add $3.3 trillion to the federal deficit over ten years — nearly $1 trillion more than the House version. He released a statement calling the bill a 'deliver for Utahns' that 'provides permanent tax relief.'
Date: 2025-07-01
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[statement] Curtis campaigned as a fiscal conservative, voting against the 2019 Bipartisan Budget Act on deficit grounds and introducing legislation to withhold congressional pay during shutdowns, stating 'the American people expect Congress to do its most basic job: pass a budget and fund the government.'
Date: 2019-07-25
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Curtis co-sponsored and voted for the Laken Riley Act (January 2025), legislation requiring mandatory ICE detention of undocumented immigrants charged with nonviolent crimes including shoplifting — the first bill signed into law in Trump's second term, opposed by civil liberties groups and 159 House Democrats.
Date: 2025-01-20
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[statement] In his January 2025 op-ed for The Hill, Curtis argued that Trump's mass deportation agenda was not being 'wielded with a proper portion of compassion' and described watching a migrant being handcuffed by ICE, writing 'I felt as though I was the one who had failed.'
Date: 2025-01-28
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Curtis voted yea on the OBBBA (July 1, 2025) — legislation that largely dismantles federal tax incentives for electric cars, wind, and solar power, and cuts an estimated $1 trillion from Medicaid. He touted securing changes to soften the clean-energy provisions but voted for a bill that the CBO projected would add $3.3 trillion to the deficit.
Date: 2025-07-01
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[platform] Curtis founded the Conservative Climate Caucus in 2021 to educate House Republicans on climate policies, stating 'climate change is a global issue.' He was named to Time's '100 Most Influential Climate Leaders of 2025' and publicly criticized those who dismiss climate science, arguing the U.S. 'should brag on climate progress.'
Date: 2025-10-30
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Curtis is a former chief operating officer of Action Target (shooting range equipment manufacturer), former employee of Citizen Watch Company and OC Tanner, and was the 44th mayor of Provo, Utah (2010-2017). He holds a B.S. in Business Management from Brigham Young University (1985).
Date: 2010-01-01
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Quiver Quantitative estimates Curtis's net worth at $17.9M as of September 2025 — the 72nd highest in Congress. His disclosed assets include up to $5M in PEG Opportunity Zone Investors LLC, up to $5M in Sundance Debt Partners LLC, up to $5M in commercial property, up to $1M in Provo rental property, and up to $1M in Cynosure Partners III LP. He has approximately $3.4M in publicly traded assets.
Date: 2025-09-14
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
The American Conservation Coalition spent $254,181 and the American Chemistry Council spent $323,147 in outside expenditures supporting Curtis's 2024 Senate race. A single-candidate super PAC 'Conservative Values for Utah' also supported him, including $1M from Denver Broncos co-owner Rob Walton.
Date: 2024-11-05
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
AIPAC contributed $117,550 career total — $99,650 from individuals and $17,900 from its PAC. An AIPAC tracker database records 45 earmarked donations to Curtis across his career.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Top career contributor: No Labels Problem Solvers at $186,450 ($176,450 from individuals, $10,000 from PAC). Other top contributors include American Israel Public Affairs Cmte ($117,550), Blackstone Group ($90,200), Keller Investment Properties ($76,900), and Woodbury Corp ($69,900).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Career total raised (2017-2024): $10,184,685. Top contributing industry: Securities & Investment ($657,606), followed by Pharmaceuticals/Health Products ($606,947), Real Estate ($449,736), Oil & Gas ($436,588), and Leadership PACs ($408,100).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026