Eva Lopez Chavez, a member of the Salt Lake City Council, announced she is running for Congress Monday, joining a crowded Democratic field amid an ongoing fight over congressional redistricting.
“As the first-ever elected Mexican American to Salt Lake City Council and the youngest elected official at City Hall, fighting for working class families is a daily practice,” Lopez Chavez said in an announcement video released Monday. “It’s time for the next generation of leadership, and I’m ready to step up — ready to make sure every Utahn has access to home ownership opportunities, reproductive rights and to steward our greatest resources: the Wasatch Mountains and the Great Salt Lake.”
Lopez Chavez is vying to represent the newly drawn 1st Congressional District. So, too, are former U.S. Rep. Ben McAdams, state senators Sens. Kathleen Reibe and Nate Blouin and former state Sen. Derek Kitchen.
Last month, the McAdams campaign included Lopez Chavez in a list of endorsements from Salt Lake City Council members, but Lopez Chavez asked to be removed from the list, saying she had offered support but not her endorsement.
“I said, ‘Hey, I’m happy to help however I can. I support you.’ I can see how that’s assumed, but I’ve been on the other side, and you can’t assume these things,” she told ABC4. “You’ve got to ask for consent. You’ve got to ask for permission to ask for a photo of that person’s choosing and whatever statement they consensually agree to. Can’t put words in people’s mouths.”
The Democratic primary has received significant national attention in recent weeks. Earlier this year, 3rd District Judge Dianna Gibson ruled that the current congressional maps do not comply with a citizen-passed anti-gerrymandering initiative, and new maps drawn by the Legislature earlier this year did not comply with the law.
State lawmakers recently extended the candidate filing deadline during a special legislative session in an effort to buy time to appeal the ruling, and have said they intend to ask the Utah Supreme Court and potentially the U.S. Supreme Court to toss the map.
Last month, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders weighed in on the race and endorsed Blouin.
Lopez Chavez was 27 when she was elected in 2023. She previously served as a liaison for Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall’s administration and the chair of the Salt Lake County Democratic Party. When she initially ran for City Council, she told The Tribune her main concerns were housing costs and affordability.
Since joining the council, Lopez Chavez has often advocated for the health of downtown, which she represents. Recently, she helped send emergency aid to the bars and restaurants affected by an August fire on Main Street, a section of the city she’s long boosted. She also came out against a proposed ordinance this fall that would’ve banned late-night drinking at city businesses — even getting onstage at a Twilight Concert Series show to encourage concertgoers to get engaged on the issue.