Michael Shumway Lee (born June 4, 1971) is an American lawyer and politician serving as the senior United States senator from Utah, a seat he has held since 2011. He is a member of the Republican Party.

Lee began his career as a clerk for the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah before clerking for Samuel Alito, who was then a judge on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. From 2002 to 2005, Lee was an assistant United States attorney for the District of Utah. He joined the administration of Utah governor Jon M. Huntsman Jr., serving as the general counsel in the governor’s office from 2005 to 2006. Lee again clerked for Alito after he was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In 2010, during the Tea Party movement, Lee entered the party caucus process to challenge incumbent three-term Republican senator Bob Bennett. He defeated Bennett and business owner Tim Bridgewater during the nominating process at the Utah Republican Party convention. Lee won the Republican primary, and defeated Democratic nominee Sam Granato in the general election. He was reelected in 2016 and became the dean of Utah’s congressional delegation when Representative Rob Bishop retired in January 2021. He was reelected again in 2022. Lee chaired the Joint Economic Committee from 2019 to 2021.[1] He coordinated with and supported the Trump administration in its efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, but ultimately voted to certify the election.

Lee became Utah’s senior senator in January 2019, when Orrin Hatch retired from the Senate. He is also the dean of Utah’s congressional delegation.

Early life and education

Lee was born in Mesa, Arizona on June 4, 1971, the son of Janet (née Griffin) and Rex E. Lee, who was solicitor general under President Ronald Reagan. Lee’s older brother Thomas Rex Lee is a former justice of the Utah Supreme Court.

Lee’s family moved to Provo, Utah, one year later, when his father became the founding dean of Brigham Young University‘s J. Reuben Clark Law School. While Lee spent about half of his childhood years in Utah, he spent the other half in McLean, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, D.C. His father served first as the assistant U.S. attorney general for the civil division of the U.S. Department of Justice from 1975 to 1976, and then as the solicitor general of the United States from 1981 to 1985. Lee is of English, Swiss, and Danish descent.[2][3]

After graduating from Timpview High School in 1989, Lee attended Brigham Young University. He served as the president of BYUSA,[a][4][5] serving together with his father, who was then president of BYU. He graduated in 1994 with a bachelor of arts in political science. Lee then attended BYU’s J. Reuben Clark Law School, where he was a member of the BYU Law Review and graduated with a juris doctor in 1997.[5]

Legal career

After law school, Lee clerked for Judge Dee Benson of the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah from 1997 to 1998, then for Judge (later Supreme Court Justice) Samuel Alito of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit from 1998 to 1999. Lee then entered private practice at the Washington, D.C., office of the law firm Sidley Austin, specializing in appellate and Supreme Court litigation. In 2002, Lee left Sidley and returned to Utah to serve as an assistant U.S. attorney in Salt Lake City, preparing briefs and arguing cases before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. He served as general counsel to Utah Governor Jon M. Huntsman Jr. from 2005 to 2006. From 2006 to 2007, Lee again clerked for Alito, who had recently been appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.[5] Afterward, Lee returned to private practice in Utah, joining the Salt Lake City office of the law firm Howrey LLP.[6]

As an attorney, Lee also represented Class A low-level radioactive waste facility provider EnergySolutions Inc. in a highly publicized dispute between the company and the Utah public and public officials that caused controversy during his first Senate election. Utah’s government had allowed the company to store radioactive waste in Utah as long as it was low-grade “Class A” material. When the company arranged to store waste from Italy, many objected that the waste was foreign and could be more radioactive than permitted. Lee argued that the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution allowed the company to accept foreign waste and that the waste could be reduced in grade by mixing it with lower-grade materials, while the state government sought to ban the importation of foreign waste using an interstate radioactive waste compact. EnergySolutions eventually abandoned its plans to store Italian radioactive waste in Utah, ending the dispute, with the 10th U.S. Circuit court later ruling that the compact had the power to block foreign radioactive waste from being stored in Utah.[7][8]

U.S. Senate

Elections

2010

Lee ran for the U.S. Senate in 2010. When campaigning, he focused on the size of the federal government. He said the U.S. Constitution needed to be amended to create a flat-tax system and impose term limits on members of Congress. Senators would be allowed up to two terms and representatives up to six terms under the proposal.[9]

At the Republican State Convention, he received 982 votes (28.75%) on the first ballot, to Tim Bridgewater‘s 26.84% and incumbent U.S. senator Bob Bennett‘s 25.91%.[10] Bridgewater won the second and third ballots to win the party endorsement. Both Bridgewater and Lee received enough support to have their names placed on the primary ballot.[10]

In the June 22 primary election, Lee won the Republican nomination with 51% of the vote to Bridgewater’s 49%.[11]

Lee won the November 2 general election with 62% of the vote to Democratic nominee Sam Granato’s 33% and Constitution Party nominee Scott Bradley’s 6%.[12]

2016

Mike Lee speaking at the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland on February 26, 2015.

Lee was reelected in 2016. He was endorsed by the Club for Growth, the Senate Conservatives Fund, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee.[13]

2022

Lee defeated Becky Edwards and Ally Isom in the Republican primary election. Isom criticized Lee for seeking a third term after he had supported legislation to limit senators to two terms.[14]

In the general election, Lee was challenged by independent Evan McMullin, for whom Lee voted for president in 2016.[15] The Utah Democratic Party backed McMullin instead of nominating a candidate. Polling in September showed Lee with 36% support and McMullin with 34%, with the rest undecided or choosing another candidate.[16] According to Jason Perry, the director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah, Utah had “not seen a Senate race this competitive in decades”.[17] Lee won the election with 53% of the vote.[18]

Tenure

Scorecards and rankings

In 2011, Club for Growth gave Lee a 100% score.[19] He also received a 100% Conservative voting record for 2011 from the American Conservative Union.[20] The Heritage Foundation gave him a 99% score, tied for first with Jim DeMint.[21] He received a Liberal Action score of 38%.[22]

2016 presidential election

In March 2016, Lee endorsed Ted Cruz over Donald Trump in the 2016 Republican primary. He was the first senator to do so. At the time, he said, “I expect I’ll be the first of many Republican senators who will endorse Ted Cruz. I’m confident more are on the way, and I welcome others to join.”[23] By June, after Trump had become the presumptive nominee, Lee had still not endorsed him, saying he needed “assurances” that Trump would not act as an “authoritarian” or “autocrat” and expressing frustration that Trump had “accused my best friend’s father of conspiring to kill JFK“;[24] at several points during the 2016 primary, Trump publicly implied that Ted Cruz’s father Rafael had consorted with Lee Harvey Oswald to assassinate President John F. Kennedy.[25] Lee voted for Independent Evan McMullin.[15]

2017 Alabama special election

On October 16, 2017, Lee endorsed Roy Moore in the 2017 Alabama special election runoff to fill the seat of U.S. Attorney General and former senator Jeff Sessions.[26] Moore had been removed as the Alabama Supreme Court’s chief justice in 2003 for defying a federal order to remove an illegal Ten Commandments monument from the Alabama Judicial Building. He was reelected chief justice in 2012. In May 2016, Moore was once again removed from the bench by the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission (JIC), permanently via suspension for the rest of his term, making him ineligible for reelection,[27] for ordering state probate judges to ignore a U.S. Supreme Court decision.[28] In a 50-page opinion, the Court of the Judiciary denied Moore’s appeal of the JIC’s decision, and said his removal was necessary “to preserve the integrity, independence, impartiality of Alabama’s judiciary”.[29] Nevertheless, Lee praised Moore for his “reputation of integrity” and said he was essential to getting conservative legislation through the Senate. “That is why I am proudly endorsing Judge Roy Moore. Alabamians have the chance to send a proven, conservative fighter to the United States Senate”.[26] On November 9, 2017, Moore was accused of molesting a 14-year-old and other girls under age 18 when he was 32.[30]

On November 10, Lee asked the Moore campaign to stop using Lee’s endorsement of Moore in its ads.[31] Lee’s spokesperson said of the sexual misconduct allegations, “If these allegations are true, Judge Moore should resign.”[32] Later that day, Lee rescinded his endorsement of Moore.[33]

2020 presidential election

On October 28, 2020, Lee compared President Trump to Captain Moroni, a heroic figure in the Book of Mormon, telling rally-goers in Arizona: “To my Mormon friends, my Latter-Day Saint friends, think of him as Captain Moroni.” He said that Trump “seeks not the praise of the world” and wants only “the well-being and peace of the American people”.[34] His comparison was met with backlash. The overwhelming majority of responses on Lee’s Facebook account characterized his efforts as “shameful” or “blasphemous”.[35] In a follow-up Facebook post, Lee wrote that he had praised Trump for his willingness to “threaten the established political order”,[36] but that the comparison was “perhaps awkward” and that his “impromptu comments may not have been the best forum for drawing a novel analogy from scripture”.[35]

Text messages gathered by the January 6 Committee reveal Lee’s close coordination with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in the aftermath of Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election.[37][38][39] In the weeks after the election, Lee pursued a series of strategies to overturn the election results, claiming to have been working “14 hours a day” on this effort.[37][39] The strategies included attempts to persuade state legislatures in states Joe Biden won to put forward alternative slates of electors and promoting the efforts of attorneys Sidney Powell and John Eastman.[37][38] Ultimately, Lee became concerned by what he considered Powell’s missteps, the lack of evidence given by her and others of election fraud, state legislatures’ failure to convene alternate slates of electors, and what Lee considered the unconstitutional efforts of Senators Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley to challenge the election certification in Congress on January 6.[37][38][39]

Lee ultimately voted to certify the election, saying that the effort to block the certification “could all backfire badly”.[37][40]

After Biden won the 2020 presidential election, Trump refused to concede, and a pro-Trump mob stormed the U.S. Capitol, Lee said Trump should be given a “mulligan” for his inflammatory January 6 speech immediately before the storming of the Capitol.[41] Lee later defended his remarks, saying, “my reference to taking a ‘mulligan’ was not referring to Trump, but to Democratic politicians whose inflammatory comments had just been played for me on the air [on Fox News]. I used the term…to avoid needlessly inflaming partisan passions.”[42] On May 28, 2021, Lee voted against creating an independent commission to investigate the riot.[43] By April 2022, the January 6th Committee had discovered and released over 100 emails between Lee, Congressman Chip Roy, and Meadows discussing their plans to overturn the election results.[44]

Committee assignments

Committee on the Judiciary

Committee on Energy and Natural Resources

Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation

Special Committee on Aging (2021–present)

Joint Economic Committee

Previous committee assignments

Political positions

Lee is a conservative Republican. The New York Times used the NOMINATE system to rank Senate members by ideology; Lee ranked as the Senate’s most conservative member.[45] GovTrack‘s 2017 analysis placed Lee on the right end of the spectrum, to the right of most Republicans, but to the left of a handful of Republican senators.[46] FiveThirtyEight, which tracks Congressional votes, found that Lee voted with Trump’s positions on legislation 81.3% of the time as of July 2018.[47] A study[48] by Brigham Young University political science professor Michael Barber found Lee to be the “most ideologically extreme senator in the 113th Congress”.[49]

9/11 Responders Compensation Fund

On July 17, 2019, Jon Stewart and disabled construction worker John Feal criticized Lee and Rand Paul on Fox News for blocking a bill that provided Victims Compensation Fund support for disabled 9/11 responders. The fund was near exhaustion.[50][51] On the Senate floor, Paul objected to Senator Kirsten Gillibrand‘s request for the bill to be approved by unanimous consent; per Senate rules, such a request is rejected if any senator objects. Lee had placed such a hold on the measure, despite its 73 Senate co-sponsors.

Stewart and Feal, as well as leaders of the Fraternal Order of Police and the International Association of Firefighters, tried to get both senators to withdraw their objections. “The people from the state of Kentucky and the people from the state of Utah deserve better”, Feal said. Stewart said, “We have to stand up for the people who have always stood up for us, and maybe cannot stand up for themselves due to their illnesses and their injuries. … There [are] some things that they have no trouble putting on the credit card, but somehow when it comes to the 9/11 first responder community, the cops, the firefighters, the construction workers, the volunteers, the survivors, all of a sudden … we gotta go through this.”[50] On July 23, 2019, Lee was one of two senators to vote against the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund.

Criminal justice reform

In 2013, Lee, Dick Durbin, and Patrick Leahy proposed a bill aiming “to focus limited federal resources on the most serious offenders”. The bill would reduce some minimum sentences for drug-related offenses by half.[52]

In November 2018, Lee criticized Senator Tom Cotton for his stance on the proposed First Step Act, a criminal justice reform bill Lee supported. Cotton had said that the legislation “gives early release to ‘low level, nonviolent’ criminals like those convicted of assaulting police, even with deadly weapons”. Lee responded that “the First Step Act does not ‘give early release’ to anyone. Anyone claiming it does, does not understand how the bill works.”[53] The bipartisan bill, drafted by Chuck Grassley, Lee, and Durbin, passed the House of Representatives overwhelmingly, 360–59.[54] The bill intends to improve rehabilitation programs for former prisoners, and to give judges more “wiggle room” when sentencing nonviolent crime offenders.[55] The bill eventually passed the Senate and became law.[56]

Democracy and election reform

In September 2020, during a Senate hearing, Lee took out and waved a pocket-size Constitution published by an anti-government Mormon group founded by conspiracy theorist W. Cleon Skousen.[57][58]

In October 2020, Lee sent a series of tweets declaring that the United States is “not a democracy” and that “democracy isn’t the objective; liberty, peace, and prospefity [sic] are. We want the human condition to flourish. Rank democracy can thwart that.”[59] A Maryland economics professor argued Lee fundamentally misunderstood the terms “democracy” and “republic”.[60]

In March 2021, Lee said on Fox News that the For the People Act was “rotten to the core” and was “as if written in Hell by the devil himself”.[61][62] The act attempts to expand voting rights, change campaign finance laws to reduce the influence of money in politics, limit partisan gerrymandering, and create new ethics rules for federal officeholders.[63][64] It has been criticized by conservatives, including Lee, who believe its provisions improperly take power over elections away from state governments and give it to the federal government.[61][65]

Economy

Lee has worked with Senator Amy Klobuchar to use antitrust laws against large technology companies like Facebook, Apple, and Amazon.[66] Klobuchar said of collaborating with Lee:

We do find common ground on questions of policy, working out deals and contingencies we want to have. We get along quite well.

Lee was among the 31 Senate Republicans who voted against final passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023.[67]

Environment

In 2017, Lee was one of 22 Republican senators to sign a letter[68] to President Trump urging him to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement.[69] According to OpenSecrets, Lee has received campaign contributions from oil and gas interests amounting to $231,520 and from coal interests in the amount of $21,895, for a total of $253,415 since 2012.[70] At a May 2016 event, Lee rejected the overwhelming scientific consensus on climate change, calling it “little more than a cheap public-relations ploy” by the Democratic Party.[71] Lee opposes a carbon tax to deal with climate change.[72]

In 2018, Lee defended Jim Bridenstine‘s nomination to head NASA. Bridenstine’s nomination was contentious, given that he rejected the scientific consensus on climate change and had no background in science. In defending Bridenstine, Lee falsely claimed that NASA disputed that there was a scientific consensus on climate change.[73] Since his confirmation, Bridenstine has said that he agrees with the scientific consensus on human contributions to climate change.[74]

On March 26, 2019, the Senate opened debate on the Green New Deal. When Lee took the floor, he called the plan absurd, comparing it to an image of Ronald Reagan riding a velociraptor, and argued that having more babies was the real solution.[75][76][77] He also said that “the authors of the Green New Deal proposal are trying to suggest people should not have babies and I think that’s atrocious”. According to Deseret News, “The text of the resolution does not address population growth or suggest limiting the number of children people can have.”[78]

Foreign policy

As part of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in 2018, Lee, Bernie Sanders, and Chris Murphy co-sponsored a resolution “that would end U.S. military support for the Saudi-led campaign in Yemen’s civil war“. Interviewed by The Hill, he said: “regardless of what may have happened with Mr. Khashoggi [referring to the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi], we are fighting a war in Yemen that we haven’t declared, that has never been declared or authorized by Congress. That’s not constitutional.”[79] The Senate voted 60–39 to “formally begin debate on the resolution”, which would require the President to “withdraw troops in or ‘affecting’ Yemen within 30 days unless they are fighting al Qaeda“.[80]

In April 2018, Lee was one of eight Republican senators to sign a letter to United States Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin and acting Secretary of State John Sullivan expressing “deep concern” over a United Nations report exposing “North Korean sanctions evasion involving Russia and China” and asserting that the findings “demonstrate an elaborate and alarming military-venture between rogue, tyrannical states to avoid United States and international sanctions and inflict terror and death upon thousands of innocent people” while calling it “imperative that the United States provides a swift and appropriate response to the continued use of chemical weapons used by President Assad and his forces, and works to address the shortcomings in sanctions enforcement”.[81] He criticized Trump for ordering the 2018 missile strikes against Syria in response to the Douma chemical attack, stating that he lacked the constitutional authority to do so without Congress’ permission because the U.S. was not in imminent danger.[82] Lee supported Trump’s decision to withdraw American troops from Syria in December 2018, saying that American forces should not have been in the country without Congressional authorization. He said that the Obama administration had not made clear American objectives in Syria surrounding Assad’s future, and that he believed Trump’s claim that the Islamic State had been defeated.[83]

Lee has long been in favor of ending American involvement in Afghanistan. He signed a letter in 2011 urging President Barack Obama to withdraw troops from the country. In May 2017, he called into question a proposal from military leaders to send additional troops there, calling to mind previous times when more soldiers were sent to the country but which, according to Lee, failed to make a significant difference. Lee maintained that American involvement in the war has wasted thousands of lives and trillions of dollars.[84][85] In April 2021, President Joe Biden announced plans to withdraw all remaining US troops from Afghanistan by September 11 of that year.[86] At a virtual meeting later that month, Lee stated his support of Biden’s plan.[87]

In April 2019, after the House passed the resolution withdrawing American support for the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, Lee was one of nine lawmakers to sign a letter to Trump requesting a meeting with him and urging him to sign “Senate Joint Resolution 7, which invokes the War Powers Act of 1973 to end unauthorized US military participation in the Saudi-led coalition’s armed conflict against Yemen’s Houthi forces, initiated in 2015 by the Obama administration.” The group of Senators included Bernie Sanders, Rand Paul, and others. Trump was expected to veto the measure.[88]

In June 2019, Lee was one of seven Republicans who voted to block Trump’s Saudi arms deal providing weapons to Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Jordan.[89]

Lee has been considered a strong supporter of Israel.[90]

Lee has been a vocal critic of Japan’s handling of the conviction and imprisonment of Lieutenant Ridge Alkonis, who is serving a three-year sentence in Japan for a May 2021 car crash that killed two Japanese citizens. In February 2023, Lee issued a 24-hour deadline on Twitter to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to hand Alkonis over and threatened to cut off military aid to Japan over the incident.[91][92][93] After the deadline passed, Lee took to the Senate floor to question the Status of Forces Agreement between the U.S. and Japan, which governs how military personnel stationed in Japan are treated under Japanese law. In March 2023, the Japanese Foreign Ministry lodged an official complaint against Lee through the U.S. government.[94]

In December 2023, Lee introduced the Disengaging Entirely from the United Nations Debacle (DEFUND) Act, legislation to withdraw the U.S. from the United Nations.[95][96][97][98]

Healthcare

Lee was part of the group of 13 senators drafting the Senate version of the American Health Care Act of 2017 behind closed doors.[99] He eventually came out against the bill, along with Senator Jerry Moran, bringing the “no” vote total among Republicans to four.[100] This effectively stopped any chance of the bill’s passage.[101]

Immigration

In February 2019, Lee was one of 16 senators to vote against legislation preventing a partial government shutdown and containing $1.375 billion in funding for barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border that included 55 miles of fencing.[102] In that same month, he reintroduced a bill to remove the per-country limitation on employment-based green cards and raised the per-country limitation on family-based green cards from 7% to 15%.[103]

In March 2019, Lee was one of 12 Republican senators to vote to block Trump’s national emergency declaration that would have granted him access to $3.6 billion in military construction funding to build border barriers.[104]

LGBT rights

In 2015, Lee condemned the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which held that same-sex marriage bans violated the Constitution.[105]

In 2018, Lee condemned the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which is part of the Organization of American States (OAS), for recommending that Costa Rica legalize same-sex marriage. The court’s decision was spurred by a petition by Costa Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis, who was working on ways to improve LGBT rights in Costa Rica. Lee suggested that the U.S., a primary funder of the OAS, should use its money more wisely and do more to safeguard religious liberties worldwide.[106]

In May 2019, Lee called the Equality Act “counterproductive” and argued it “unnecessarily pits communities against each other”.[107]

On November 29, 2022, Lee voted against the Respect for Marriage Act, which requires the U.S. federal government to recognize the validity of same-sex and interracial marriages in the United States.[108] A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Lee cast this vote despite his church’s support for the legal guarantees of religious freedom found in the legislation.[109][110]

National security

In February 2011, Lee was one of two Republicans to vote against extending the three provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act that deal with roving wiretaps, “lone wolf” terrorism suspects, and the government’s ability to seize “any tangible items” in the course of surveillance.[111] He voted in the same manner in May 2011.[112]

Privacy

In 2017, Lee voted in favor of a joint resolution providing for congressional disapproval (per chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code) of the rule submitted by the Federal Communications Commission relating to “Protecting the Privacy of Customers of Broadband and Other Telecommunications Services.”[113]

Social Security

In April 2011, Lee and senators Lindsey Graham and Rand Paul proposed a plan to reform the U.S. Social Security retirement payment system. Workers born after 1969 would have to wait until their 70th birthday to receive full Social Security benefits, rather than age 67 under current law. Furthermore, higher-income earners would receive smaller monthly checks under the plan.[114][115]

In December 2020, Lee was the sole vote in the Senate against the ALS Disability Insurance Access Act of 2019, which eliminated the five-month waiting period for those with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis to receive Social Security benefits.[116]

Spending

In September 2018, Lee was among six senators, including Jeff Flake, Pat Toomey, Rand Paul, David Perdue, Ben Sasse, and Bernie Sanders, to vote against a $854 billion spending bill that would avert another government shutdown. The bill included funding for the departments of Defense, Health and Human Services, Labor and Education.[117]

Supreme Court

In March 2019, Lee was one of 12 senators to cosponsor a resolution that would impose a constitutional amendment limiting the Supreme Court to nine justices. The resolution was introduced after multiple Democratic presidential candidates expressed openness to the idea of increasing the seats on the Supreme Court.[118]

In March 2016, eight months before the 2016 election, Lee opposed considering Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland, during a presidential election year, citing “the contentious presidential election already well underway”. In September 2020, less than two months before that year’s presidential election, Lee supported an immediate Senate vote to confirm Trump’s nominee, Amy Coney Barrett.[119]

Trade

In January 2018, Lee was one of 36 Republican senators to sign a letter to Trump requesting that he preserve the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) by modernizing it for the economy of the 21st century.[120]

In November 2018, Lee was one of 12 Republican senators to sign a letter to Trump requesting the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (the replacement to NAFTA) be submitted to Congress by the end of that month to allow a vote on it before the end of the year as they were concerned “passage of the USMCA as negotiated will become significantly more difficult” if it had to be approved by the incoming 116th United States Congress.[121]

Personal life

Lee married Sharon Burr in 1993. They live in Alpine, Utah, and have three children.[5] Lee is a second cousin to former Democratic U.S. senators Mark Udall of Colorado and Tom Udall of New Mexico, as well as former Republican senator Gordon H. Smith of Oregon.[122]

As a young adult, Lee served a two-year mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Texas Rio Grande Valley.[5]

On October 2, 2020, Lee announced he had tested positive for COVID-19.[123] A few days earlier, he had attended an event for Amy Coney Barrett at the White House where he interacted closely with a number of other people who tested positive for COVID-19. Lee did not wear a mask and video footage showed him hugging others at the event.[124]

Lee has served on the BYU alumni board, the BYU Law School alumni board, and as a longtime member of the J. Reuben Clark Law Society and the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies. He earned the Eagle Scout award from Boy Scouts of America in 1989 and was selected to receive the National Eagle Scout Association Outstanding Eagle Scout Award (NOESA) in 2011.[125]

Electoral history

2010
State Republican I Convention results, 2010[126][127][128]
CandidateFirst ballotPct.Second ballotPct.Third ballotPct.
Tim Bridgewater91726.84%127437.42%185457.28%
Mike Lee98228.75%122535.99%138342.72%
Bob Bennett88525.91%90526.99%Eliminated
Cherilyn Eagar54115.84%Eliminated
Merrill Cook491.43%Eliminated
Leonard Fabiano220.64%Eliminated
Jeremy Friedbaum160.47%Eliminated
David Chiu40.12%Eliminated
Total3,416100.00%3,404100.00%3,237100.00%
State Republican Primary results[129]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanMike Lee 98,512 51.2%
RepublicanTim Bridgewater93,90548.8%
Total votes192,417 100.0%
United States Senate election in Utah, 2010[130]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanMike Lee 390,179 61.56% -7.18%
DemocraticSam Granato207,68532.77%+4.37%
ConstitutionScott Bradley35,9375.67%+3.78%
Majority182,49428.79%
Total votes633,801 100.00%
Republican holdSwing
2016
United States Senate election in Utah, 2016[131]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanMike Lee 760,241 68.15% +6.59%
DemocraticMisty Snow301,86027.06%-5.71%
Independent AmericanStoney Fonua27,3402.45%N/A
UnaffiliatedBill Barron26,1672.34%N/A
Majority458,381
Total votes1,115,608 100.00%
Republican holdSwing
2022
United States Senate election in Utah, 2022[132]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanMike Lee (incumbent) 571,974 53.15% –15.00
IndependentEvan McMullin459,95842.74%N/A
LibertarianJames Hansen31,7842.95%N/A
Independent AmericanTommy Williams12,1031.12%–1.33
Write-in2420.02%N/A
Total votes1,076,061 100.00%
Republican hold

Books

Since his election to the Senate in 2010, Lee has published four books:

  • The Freedom Agenda: Why a Balanced Budget Amendment is Necessary to Restore Constitutional Government (July 2011, Regnery Publishing)
  • Why John Roberts Was Wrong About Healthcare: A Conservative Critique of The Supreme Court’s Obamacare Ruling (June 2013, Threshold Editions e-book)
  • Our Lost Constitution: The Willful Subversion of America’s Founding Document (April 2015, Sentinel)
  • Written Out of History: The Forgotten Founders Who Fought Big Government (May 2017, Sentinel)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ comparable to student body president in most colleges

References

  1. ^ “Annual Reports – United States Joint Economic Committee”. www.jec.senate.gov. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
  2. ^ Rucker, Philip (February 5, 2011). “Sen. Mike Lee: A political insider refashions himself as tea party revolutionary”. The Washington Post. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  3. ^ Litvan, Laura (February 28, 2012). “Obama’s Nominee Battle a One-Man Fight By Freshman Senator Lee”. Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
  4. ^ Callister, Laura Andersen (February 20, 1993). “Student Body Election Gives BYU Another President Lee”. Deseret News. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e “About Mike”. lee.senate.gov. Office of Senator Mike Lee. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  6. ^ “New Members 2010 – Utah”. The Hill. October 27, 2010.
  7. ^ Fahys, Judy (January 14, 2010). “Utah argues case to ban foreign nuke waste”. The Salt Lake Tribune. Archived from the original on October 22, 2016. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  8. ^ Vergakis, Brock (November 9, 2010). “Court: Compact can keep foreign nuke waste out”. KSL. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  9. ^ “Flat tax, term limits on agenda for Bennett challenger, Herald Extra”.
  10. ^ a b Catanese, David (May 8, 2010). “Sen. Bennett loses GOP nomination”. Politico. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  11. ^ Gehrke, Robert (June 3, 2010). “Lee clinches GOP Senate nomination”. The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
  12. ^ “Utah Election results”. Electionresults.utah.gov. Archived from the original on March 2, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
  13. ^ Raju, Manu (December 22, 2014). “Tea partier braces for primary challenge from the establishment”. Politico. Retrieved February 3, 2015.
  14. ^ Romboy, Dennis (February 10, 2022). “GOP challenger says Sen. Mike Lee is ‘no longer a credible voice’ on term limits”. Deseret News. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  15. ^ a b Harrie, Dan (November 9, 2016). “Utah Sen. Mike Lee voted for McMullin in protest of Trump”. The Salt-Lake Tribune. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
  16. ^ Romboy, Dennis (September 22, 2022). “How tight is the Mike Lee-Evan McMullin race for Senate? New Utah poll has answers”. Deseret News. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
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External links

Party political offices
Preceded by

Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Utah
(Class 3)

2010, 2016, 2022
Most recent
Preceded by

Chair of the Senate Republican Steering Committee
2015–present
Incumbent
U.S. Senate
Preceded by

U.S. senator (Class 3) from Utah
2011–present
Served alongside: Orrin Hatch, Mitt Romney
Incumbent
Preceded by

Chair of the Joint Economic Committee
2019–2021
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Honorary titles
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Baby of the Senate
2011–2012
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U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
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Order of precedence of the United States
as United States Senator
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Preceded by

United States senators by seniority
42nd