Janet Ann Graham Hunt (néeCrump; July 19, 1949 – January 29, 2024), best-known as Jan Graham, was an American lawyer from Utah who served as State Attorney General from 1993 to 2001.[1] Other than candidates for Lieutenant Governor running on a ticket with a male candidate, she is the only[2] woman ever elected to statewide office in the state of Utah.[3] She is the last Democrat to hold statewide office in Utah.
Early life, education, and legal career
Janet Ann Crump was born on July 19, 1949, and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah.[4][5][6][7] She graduated from South High in 1967, and enrolled at Brigham Young University. While at BYU, Crump successfully bypassed BYU’s prohibition on women wearing jeans to its Testing Center by wearing no pants at all, which gave the impression she was wearing a hidden skirt.[8] She transferred to the University of Utah, and then to Clark University in Massachusetts, and graduated in 1971 with a bachelor's degree in psychology.[7]
Crump returned to Salt Lake and enrolled in the University of Utah's graduate school, where she got a master's degree in psychology in 1977.[7] While in graduate school, she worked as a teacher at Franklin Elementary for one year, and as a counselor at the Northwest Multipurpose Center. In 1977, she enrolled in the University of Utah law school, and was awarded her J.D. in 1980.[7] While in law school, she married, and took the name Graham. She subsequently divorced.[6]
Graham was hired at Jones, Waldo, Holbrook and McDonough in 1980. By 1985, she had made partner, and become the first woman on the Board of Directors. In 1989, she married Verl "Buzz" Hunt.[5][9] She was a founding member of Women Lawyers of Utah, and one of the first four women members of the Alta Club.[10]
Public office
She ran for the office of Attorney General in 1992, while she was pregnant with her first child. She had her baby two days after the State Democratic Convention. In the general election, she defeated Iron County Attorney Scott Burns, getting 49% of the statewide vote.[11] She was re-elected in 1996 in a rematch with Burns with 52% of the vote.[12]
Graham made the state of Utah a plaintiff in landmark tobacco legislation. The litigation included arguments over the Attorney General's power, both from the tobacco companies,[13] and from Utah's Governor, Michael Leavitt.[14] The struggle between Utah's only Democratic statewide officeholder and the state's Republican legislature and Governor resulted in passage of a law requiring the Governor's approval on any civil litigation. The Attorney General sued, a compromise was reached, and the law was ultimately repealed.[15][16]
At the end of her second term, Graham was one of two women on the Deseret News list of Utah's most powerful people.[17][18][19]
▌2 Unknown (2 territories) An asterisk (*) indicates that the officeholder is serving in an acting capacity. State abbreviations link to position articles.