Category Archives: Legislature

The legislator without a party label

Mark McElroyBy Steve Brawner, © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.

Rep. Mark McElroy of Tillar says he’s “too conservative really to be a Democrat, but I’m too poor to be a Republican.” Earlier this year, he decided he didn’t want either label, and now he’s campaigning to see if his district’s voters will send him back to the Capitol as an independent.

McElroy spent 20 years as Desha County judge before winning election to the Arkansas House of Representatives in 2012. He represents District 11 in Arkansas’ southeastern corner along the Mississippi River. He’s always been elected as a Democrat, but he didn’t really fit into either party. He didn’t like the national Democrats’ stand on social issues like abortion, but he believed the Republican Party’s policies favored the top 1 percent. He chafed at morning caucus meetings where he felt he was being told how to vote, regardless of his district’s wishes. He drew a primary opponent from his own party in the last election and did again this year.

Faced with all that, this spring he decided to leave the party and become an independent. He’s the only one in the Legislature.

“I don’t see why you have to fit in,” he said Tuesday after attending a meeting of the House and Senate Education Committees. “I don’t know why you have to be a label to represent your people.” Continue reading

Who should represent Arkansas for the next 100 years?

Bart Hester

Sen. James Paul Clarke’s statue at the U.S. Capitol, near the entrance.

By Steve Brawner,  © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.

What two historical Arkansans are most deserving of one of the state’s highest honors and would best represent it before the nation and world?

I’ll give you a second.

You may have said Walmart founder Sam Walton, singer Johnny Cash, civil rights pioneer Daisy Bates, or Sen. Hattie Caraway, the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

You probably didn’t mention Uriah Rose, founder of the Rose Law Firm, or James Paul Clarke, who served one term as Arkansas’ 18th governor from 1895-96 and later two terms in the U.S. Senate. But those are the two figures who have been memorialized in Congress’ National Statuary Hall Collection for about the past 100 years – Rose since 1917, and Clarke since 1921.

That might change. Continue reading

How to disagree about the NFL anthem controversy

Jim Hendren Joyce Elliott

Sens. Joyce Elliott and Jim Hendren as he flew her in his plane to Paragould, where they would disagree agreeably about the NFL anthem controversy.

By Steve Brawner, © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.

Jim Hendren and Joyce Elliott come from very different places, which is a big reason why they disagree on many issues including the NFL anthem controversy. But that was OK as they flew together in his small plane to speak about that subject to the Paragould Rotary Club.

How different are their backgrounds? He’s a conservative Republican state senator from Sulphur Springs in Northwest Arkansas. She’s a liberal Democratic state senator from Little Rock. He’s an engineer who owns a plastics company. She’s a retired schoolteacher. He’s the son of a longtime state legislator and nephew of the current governor. She’s the daughter of a single mother who struggled to keep food on the table. He flew F-15 fighter planes, now serves with the Air National Guard, and has deployed several times to the Middle East to fight ISIS. She and her siblings fought their own battle growing up in segregated schools in Willisville in southwestern Arkansas. Soon after forced integration, they were the only black students in an all-white school.

And yet Hendren calls her “one of my best friends in the Senate.” She says, “He’s one of my very best friends as well.” Continue reading

In legislative corruption case, which will be the next puzzle piece to fit?

By Steve Brawner, © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge met with reporters Wednesday, the main purpose being to try to put to bed a four-year-long story about her 2007 departure from the Department of Human Services. The more interesting tidbit was the bigger story that won’t go away – the continuing investigation into legislative corruption.

First, let’s sum up the part about Rutledge’s work history, because you’re going to hear about it occasionally during her re-election campaign. In 2007, she was working as a foster care attorney for the Department of Human Services. In December, she left to work for Gov. Mike Huckabee’s presidential campaign without giving her two weeks notice. She reasoned that campaigns happen fast so she couldn’t spare the two weeks, but it left the short-staffed agency in a bind. There were some hard feelings, and her supervisors placed her on a “do not rehire” list. Her file was changed to say she was discharged for “gross misconduct,” which is simply not true. She clearly resigned voluntarily.

The issue came up in 2014 during her first campaign for attorney general. It resurfaced recently when the Democratic Party of Arkansas sued in order to release the unreleased parts of her personnel file. A judge on Monday ordered it to be done. She preemptively released eight pages Wednesday.

Her opponents are Democrat Mike Lee and Libertarian Kerry Hicks. Unless something else surfaces, base your vote on something other than this.

The more interesting part of Wednesday’s meeting occurred in its first few minutes, when Deputy Attorney General Lloyd Warford discussed the office’s work alongside an ongoing federal investigation into legislative corruption.

Continue reading

No permanent ethics fix in part-time Legislature

Arkansas Legislature, Arkansas Works, Jeremy Hutchinson, Mickey GatesBy Steve Brawner, © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.

Sen. Larry Teague, D-Nashville, is an insurance agent who sits on the Insurance and Commerce Committee, so he’s able to offer insight and understanding when insurance legislation is considered. Also, he might be personally affected by it.

So which is more important: Expertise or objectivity? That’s a particularly tough question to answer in a part-time Legislature. Continue reading