

People, Planet, Future
Now is our time to serve
Darin Mann is a proven, solutions-focused leader committed to strengthening the relationship between Utah communities and the environment that sustains them.
With a platform rooted in healthy ecology, clean air, and protected rivers, he believes economic growth and environmental responsibility can and must work together. Darin is proudly pro-business and pro-worker, supporting policies that create good-paying jobs while safeguarding Utah’s natural resources for future generations.
Known for working across party lines, he brings a track record of writing effective, practical policy in service of First Nation and Indigenous communities, including the Navajo Diné people. From supporting urban farming initiatives in Salt Lake City to standing with air quality advocates and Utah river protectors, Darin Mann leads with integrity, collaboration, and a deep commitment to community-driven progress.

Join the Future
Join the coalition to help elect Darin Mann a proven leader who fights for healthy ecology, clean air, protected Utah rivers, and stronger community connection to the environment. Darin is pro-business, pro-worker, and proudly works across party lines to get real policy written and passed.
He has a strong track record serving First Nation and Indigenous communities, including the Navajo Diné people, while standing with SLC urban farming advocates, air protectors, and river defenders.
Sign on today and be part of the movement to build a healthier, stronger Utah for everyone.

Our Campaign Focus
Proper Water Management
Water is Utah’s most valuable resource, and conservation has to be about more than just restricting urban and economic growth. It needs to be about smarter long-term stewardship for the entirety of the State. One of the most effective ways to protect our water supply is to strengthen the land itself through regenerative agriculture and permaculture practices that build healthy soil, retain moisture, and reduce irrigation demand. By investing in proven solutions like soil restoration, efficient irrigation, drought-resistant farming methods, and local food production, Utah can conserve water while supporting farmers, ranchers, and the long-term security of our food supply. Healthy soil holds water — and that means a stronger, more resilient Utah for generations to come.
Food Access and Production
Food affordability and access are becoming serious concerns for Utah families, and we can’t ignore how fragile centralized supply chains have become. When disruptions hit whether from weather, transportation breakdowns, labor shortages, or global instability prices rise fast and grocery shelves can empty quicker than people expect. Utah should strengthen local food production as a practical defense against that kind of instability by supporting farmers, ranchers, and small producers, expanding access to local markets, and removing unnecessary barriers that make it harder to grow and sell food locally. A resilient Utah means ensuring families can afford healthy food, and that our communities aren’t dependent on distant systems we can’t control.
Housing
Affordability in Utah isn’t just about housing costs anymore it’s also about rising energy bills and the growing strain on household budgets. Utah families should be able to buy a home, pay their utilities, and build a future without being squeezed from every direction. That’s why we need policies that increase the supply of attainable housing, reduce unnecessary permitting delays, and encourage responsible development that supports starter homes and working families. At the same time, we must ensure taxpayers aren’t subsidizing massive out-of-state data centers and industrial developments that drive up power demand and infrastructure costs while families are left paying the bill. Utah’s growth should benefit Utah residents first not shift costs onto the people already struggling to afford everyday life.
Election Integrity
Utah has a strong tradition of honest government and civic responsibility, but like the rest of the country, we’ve seen growing frustration with politics being driven by big money, national influence, and partisan gamesmanship instead of local priorities. Utahns deserve full transparency in campaign financing, stronger safeguards against outside special-interest influence, and election systems that are secure, accountable, and trusted by everyone Republican, Democrat, and independent. Just as importantly, we need leaders willing to work across the aisle to solve real problems like housing, water, energy, and food security, instead of turning every issue into a political fight. Restoring trust means keeping elections clean, making government more transparent, and putting Utah communities ahead of party politics.