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Mia Love has been in politics since the early 2000s. She began her career as a politician as a member of the Saratoga Springs City Council in Utah. She was on the council from 2003 to 2009. After her time as a councilmember, she was elected Mayor of Saratoga Springs from 2010 to 2014. She ran for Congress for the first time in 2012, but lost to incumbent Democrat Jim Matheson. After running again in 2014, she won, and she served from 2015 to 2019, after she lost her second re-election bid in 2018.
After her time in Congress, Mia has gone on to serve as a political commentator on CNN, and she was also named as the national outreach director for the Utah State University Center for Growth and Opportunity. She was also a guest co-host on ‘The View,’ first in September 2021, and then again in December.
Scroll through our gallery to see photos of Mia Love.
Mia Love sported a white-striped blazer for a campaign rally in 2018. Unfortunately, the Utah representative lost her re-election bid to Ben McAdams
Mia Love spoke at a campaign rally in 2018 and delivered a rousing speech. Utah Senator Mitt Romney also attended the event and stood behind her.
Mia Love rocked a red blazer during a party on Election Night 2018. While she didn’t win the race, she still looked stunning. 
Mia Love spoke to the Utah State Senate in February 2018 about gun violence. She sported a blue outfit for the speech.


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Mia Love joined the ladies of 'The View' at the table for her second time guest co-hosting on Monday December 6.
As the search to find Meghan McCain ‘s replacement for The View continues, former Utah congresswoman Mia Love re-joined the ladies at the table again for her second stint as a guest co-host on Monday December 6. Mia, 46, first joined the table on September 8 for a brief stand as a guest co-host.
After Meghan bid The View farewell i n August 2021, the series was left without its’ conservative voice. Ahead of the show’s 25th season, ABC announced plans to “ tak[e] a little time ” while trying out various personalities for the show, including politicians like former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and TV personalities like ex-Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson . So far, Mia is the first guest co-host to return for second stint at the table. Here are five things you need to know about Mia here!
Mia started getting involved in politics, after she moved to Utah in 1998. Mia was elected as a member of the Saratoga Springs city council in 2003, and held her position until 2009. She was then the mayor of Saratoga Springs from 2010 to 2014, via Ballotpedia . She first ran for the House of Representatives in Utah’s 4th District in 2012, but lost to Democratic incumbent Jim Matheson, but she ran again in 2014 and won. Mia won again in 2016, but lost her re-election in 2018 to Democratic candidate Ben McAdams . From 2015 to 2018, she served on the House Financial Services Comittee.
Leading up to the 2016 election, Mia was one of the Republicans to go against her party and oppose then-Presidential candidate Donald Trump ‘s election. She announced that she wouldn’t vote for him in an October 2016 Facebook post . “have said all along that I was still waiting for Mr. Trump to demonstrate his commitment to the kinds of principles and policies the people in Utah’s 4th Congressional District want in their elected leaders. Mr. Trump has yet to clear that bar and his behavior and bravado have reached a new low. I cannot vote for him,” she wrote at the time.
After she lost in 2018, she continued to criticize Trump, especially after he made a comment about her loss. ““The president’s behavior toward me made me wonder, what did he have to gain by saying such a thing about a fellow Republican? It was not really about asking him to do more, was it? Or was it something else? Well, Mr. President, we’ll have to chat about that,” she said, according to The New York Times . “This gave me a clear vision of his world as it is: no real relationships, just convenient transactions.”
Shortly after losing her re-election bid, Mia announced that she’d be joining the news network. She tweeted about her excitement to serve as a political commentator for CNN in a January 2019 tweet. “My time in Congress has ended but the chance to engage Americans is only beginning – I’m excited to join CNN to offer a different, principled and unleashed perspective,” she wrote at the time.
Mia joined as the director for the Center for Growth and Opportunity (CGO) at Utah State in June 2021. The CGO contributes research as well as training for students, connecting scholars and creating solutions to national issues, according to its website . In the announcement for her position with the university, Mia showed a strong belief in the organization’s goals. “The CGO’s data-driven, non-partisan approach to research is a breath of fresh air and exactly what we need in DC right now. I’m excited to get the data from the research out there and work with students to give them a unique perspective of how policymaking works,” she said.
Mia met her husband Jason Love, while he was a missionary in Connecticut. He recalled their first meeting as seeing her lean against a red car singing showtunes in a January 2015 interview with Deseret News . “I thought, hmmm, that’s intriguing, seeing a dark woman singing show tunes with a beautiful voice,” he said. Together, the couple has two daughters and a son: Alessa, Abi, and Peyton . Mia has a family photo with her husband and kids as her banner photo on Twitter.

Published November 20, 2018 8:30pm EST
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Utah Rep. Mia Love was narrowly defeated by Democratic challenger Ben McAdams. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
Incumbent Republican Utah Rep. Mia Love, whom President Trump derided in a post-Election Day news conference, has been narrowly defeated by Democrat Ben McAdams in a race that took two weeks to settle.
Final results posted Tuesday showed McAdams defeated the two-term Love by fewer than 700 votes in the deep-red state -- barely more than the tally that would have triggered a recount.
McAdams' victory adds to Democrats' majority in a year when they've flipped more than three dozen Republican-held seats across the country to win control of the House of Representatives.
A day after the Nov. 6 midterm elections, when it appeared Love was headed for a loss, Trump said that she had asked him for help over an American hostage's release from Venezuala, but in return "Mia Love gave me no love."
He suggested that Love would have prevailed if she had embraced him politically, instead of highlighting the times she's stood up to him, like when Trump used an expletive to describe her parents' home country of Haiti. She tried to separate herself from Trump on trade and immigration and shunned him on the campaign trail.
The president added that he wasn't sure whether or not to feel happy or sad over Love's apparent defeat at the time, but insisted that he "feels just fine about it."
Trump also singled out defeated Virginia Rep. Barbara Comstock and New Jersey businessman Bob Hugin for not embracing his message of "low taxes, low regulations, low crimes, strong borders and great judges."
However, as votes continued to stream in after the president's remarks, Love took a slim lead , and it appeared briefly that she would ultimately prevail.
McAdams declared victory Monday night after a release of ballots gave him a margin his campaign believed was insurmountable. State election officials will certify the final results next Monday.
"This race was about connecting with Utah," he said. "This race was about who was best positioned to serve Utah and working to not get it caught up in a national, partisan election."
Love did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
He pitched himself as a solid moderate, and not a typical Democrat, while calling Love a partisan who almost always votes with the president. The strategy was aimed at independent voters who account for nearly four in 10 voters in the largely suburban district, and designed to overcome his built-in disadvantage in a district where registered Republicans in the district outnumber Democrats by nearly 3-to-1.
He is an attorney who graduated from Columbia Law School and practiced in New York before returning to his home state of Utah. He has been a political figure in the state for a decade. He was elected as one of the few Democrats in the GOP-dominated state Legislature in 2008 and successfully ran for the Salt Lake County mayor's seat four years later.
He became known for working with the state's Republican leaders on issues like homelessness, where he backed a narrow Medicaid expansion to cover treatment and once went undercover as a homeless person when the issue reached crisis mode downtown.

Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams, Democratic candidate for Utah's 4th Congressional District, speaks to supporters during an election night party, in Salt Lake City on Nov. 6. (AP Photo/Alex Goodlett, File )

Though solidly conservative, Utah voters have long been uncomfortable with Trump's brash style and his comments about women and immigrants. That anxiety is especially pronounced in the suburbs of blue-leaning Salt Lake City, and McAdams' mayoral position gave him solid name recognition with voters.
McAdams said during the campaign he would not support California Rep. Nancy Pelosi as House Speaker and insisting he'd be able to work with the president. He sharply criticized Love's support for the GOP-backed tax overhaul and said she had not been available enough to her constituents at town halls.
He has already signed a letter along with 15 other Democrats vowing to oppose Pelosi.
Love pushed back hard, saying the tax overhaul has been good for people in Utah and defending her approach of meeting with voters in smaller groups, on the phone or online.
This is the second time Love was locked in a tight, drawn-out race for this House seat. In her first bid for Congress in 2012, Love lost to incumbent Democrat Jim Matheson by 768 votes. She went on to defeat Democrat Doug Owens in 2014 and again in 2016.
Fox News' Stephen Sorace and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2022 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Legal Statement . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper .


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