Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In reversal, AG in office’s ad

Campaign chief: Rutledge nearly didn’t do vaccine message

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge has abandoned changes she implemente­d in July 2020 to remove her name, image and voice from her office’s television ads, by airing a commercial that started in mid-August on covid-19 vaccines.

The Republican attorney general and five office staff members appear in the ad and say they have been vaccinated against covid-19. Rutledge urges people to get the facts about the vaccine.

In the ad, she says she is tired of masks, but also sick of going to funerals.

“No one should be forced to get the shot. It’s about personal responsibi­lity.”

More than a year ago, Rutledge had changed her office’s ads to remove her name, image and voice to ensure that “the unfounded concerns of her political opponents” wouldn’t stop her from carrying out the office’s duties, Rutledge spokeswoma­n Amanda Priest said at that time. Priest declined to specify to whom she was referring as Rutledge’s political opponents.

On July 1, 2020, Rutledge announced her bid for the Republican nomination for governor in 2022 and said her office’s ads were “absolutely not” aimed at promoting her for the higher office.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders is the other announced Republican gubernator­ial candidate. Sanders is the daughter of former Gov. Mike Huckabee and a former White House press secretary for then-President Donald Trump.

Asked what led to the reversal in the use of Rutledge’s name, image and voice in the office’s vaccine ad, Priest said Friday that Rutledge is a statewide leader who has played a pivotal role in almost every important issue facing Arkansas over the last seven years.

“In the last month alone, she has spoken at two funerals and attended several others of individual­s who passed away from Covid and had not been vaccinated,” she said in a written statement.

Priest said Rutledge personally wrote the public service announceme­nt to include language assuring Arkansans

that getting vaccinated is a personal choice that should not be mandated, adding that Arkansans should consult their doctor and not Google on whether to get the shot.

“The statement in the [public service announceme­nt] that ‘over 90% of Arkansans who have died from COVID did not get the shot’ stems directly from data from the Arkansas Department of Health taken since the vaccine has been available in 2021,” Priest said in the statement.

In comparing the period between January to July 2020 when Rutledge was the face of the office’s public service announceme­nts with the same period in 2021 when she wasn’t, the office received nearly 20,000 more consumer calls and emails — a 41% higher response — when Rutledge was prominentl­y featured in the ads, Priest noted.

She said the covid-19 vaccine ad began airing on television and radio stations statewide Aug. 16. It’s the only public service announceme­nt the office has aired since then.

Asked how long Rutledge plans to air the covid-19 vaccine ad, Priest said, “We are reviewing the great need as evidenced by the response and will plan accordingl­y.”

Rep. Mark Berry, R-Ozark, said in an interview that Rutledge “really debated on whether or not to do that because of the potential controvers­y.

“She came very close to not doing it, but in her heart she felt that it was the right thing to do as a leader to encourage people to be personally responsibl­e and really strongly consider getting the shot,” said Berry, who is chairman of Rutledge’s gubernator­ial campaign.

Senate President Pro Tempore Jimmy Hickey R-Texarkana, said in an interview that he hasn’t seen the ad.

He said he watches Shreveport television stations at home in Texarkana, “so I don’t see that stuff.”

Priest said the public service announceme­nt has been airing on Shreveport-based network television stations as well as cable stations such as Fox News and CNN and is airing throughout the state of Arkansas.

State Rep. Jim Dotson, R-Bentonvill­e, said he noticed the vaccine ad but didn’t check into it.

State Rep. Vivian Flowers, D-Pine Bluff, said the ad is both good and appropriat­e and she compared it to the state Department of Health’s ads.

She noted, “Clearly, we are very different in our ideology on a lot of things, myself and Attorney General Rutledge.” She said she supports Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Chris Jones of Little Rock.

But Flowers said, “This is about the fact that we are a state with terrible numbers with regard to infections, deaths, hospitaliz­ations and our vaccinatio­n rate and, if what they are doing can help, then I’m all for it.”

AD SPENDING

So far in fiscal 2022 that started July 1, the attorney general’s office has spent $1.3 million on radio and television advertisin­g, Priest said.

She said she doesn’t have a way to determine how much of that spending is for the covid-19 ad.

In fiscal 2021, Rutledge’s office spent $969,587 on radio and television advertisin­g.

In fiscal 2020, the office spent $2.2 million on radio and television ads.

Rutledge and her aides have said the coronaviru­s pandemic, which was first verified in Arkansas in March 2020, led the office to increase its ad spending to bolster its outreach efforts.

Before fiscal 2020, the largest amount that office spent on such ads since at least fiscal 2008 was $459,200 in fiscal 2014 when Democrat Dustin McDaniel was attorney general. Fiscal 2014 started in July 2013; McDaniel withdrew from the governor’s race in the middle of the previous fiscal year, in January 2013.

The office’s advertisin­g expenses are paid out of its consumer education and enforcemen­t fund, which is funded by money from lawsuits won by the office.

Sen. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, said in an interview, “We have been so busy with all of the other legislativ­e activity with the sessions, this hasn’t got the attention maybe that it needs to get.”

Ad spending in Rutledge’s office led to the enactment of Act 1043 of 2021 — sponsored by Hammer in this year’s regular session — that requires certain disclosure­s on publicly funded ads using an image or voice of an elected official.

Under Act 1043, all articles, statements or communicat­ions using the image or voice of an elected official appearing in any radio, television, or other electronic medium for the publicatio­n of which a considerat­ion is paid or to be paid by federal, state or county funds, shall clearly contain the words paid advertisem­ent, paid ad, paid for by, sponsored by or furnished by and the name of the state entity, county or constituti­onal office that paid for the ad.

Priest said the vaccine ads comply with Act 1043 of 2021.

Hammer said state lawmakers likely “will be looking in the future to put some caps and limitation­s” on ad spending by the attorney general’s office and potentiall­y require legislativ­e review after ad spending hits a certain threshold.

“Probably what we are going to have to do in the future is to look at what constitute­s good use of that money and does it really fall under the purview of the attorney general’s office to be promoting things like encouragem­ent of vaccinatio­n,” he said.

Act 1043 also applies similar conditions to paid advertisin­g in newspapers. The law doesn’t apply to paid political advertisin­g using campaign funds.

Through the end of June, Sanders reported raising $9.1 million in total campaign contributi­ons and having balances of $6.2 million; Rutledge reported raising $1.4 million in total campaign contributi­ons and having balances totaling $1.1 million. The next quarterly campaign report is due Oct. 15.

Sanders’ campaign manager, Chris Caldwell, last week declined to comment when asked about the vaccine ad.

In a July 25 guest column in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Sanders encouraged people to get vaccinated against covid-19.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, shown here at a March 15 news conference to announce her office’s lawsuit against Walgreens, has backed away from changes she implemente­d in July 2020 to remove her name, image and voice from her office’s television ads in light of her campaign for governor.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, shown here at a March 15 news conference to announce her office’s lawsuit against Walgreens, has backed away from changes she implemente­d in July 2020 to remove her name, image and voice from her office’s television ads in light of her campaign for governor.

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