Chattanooga Times Free Press

Republican Boyd enters race for governor

- BY JUDY WALTON STAFF WRITER

The race for Tennessee governor in 2018 is no longer officially a solo event.

Randy Boyd, former state commission­er of economic and community developmen­t and a successful entreprene­ur, formally announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination Thursday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.

He joins state Sen. Mark Green, of Clarksvill­e, a physician and businessma­n who launched his run in January to

replace term-limited Republican Gov. Bill Haslam.

However, Green is under “strong” considerat­ion for Army secretary by President Donald Trump, The Tennessean newspaper reported Wednesday. If chosen, Green would be out of the race, but a clutch of other Republican­s are testing the waters, as well.

Boyd, who is from Knoxville, said he chose Chattanoog­a for his campaign kickoff because the city embodies how entreprene­urship can create growth and prosperity.

“I want to make Tennessee the state of opportunit­y — opportunit­y for better education, opportunit­y for better jobs and better opportunit­ies for everyone,” Boyd told about two dozen people over a

luncheon of tossed salad, fried chicken and iced tea.

A Boyd biography says he built his pet-products business out of the back of his van. Now Radio Systems Corp., of Knoxville, has more than 700 employees and revenues approachin­g $400 million, selling under brand names such as Invisible Fence, PetSafe and SportDOG. Boyd also owns the Tennessee Smokies baseball team, the AA affiliate of the Chicago Cubs, and the Johnson City Cardinals, a rookie league affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals, according to his biography.

As economic and community developmen­t commission­er, Boyd helped create the Drive to 55 program, which aims to raise the share of Tennessean­s with college degrees to 55 percent by 2025, and the Tennessee Promise scholarshi­p that pays tuition at community and technical colleges for young state residents.

Boyd said fulfilling the Drive to 55 promise is one of three goals he would work toward as governor. The second, he said, would be to raise Tennessee from fourth to first place in the Southeast for high-quality jobs, and the third would be to help struggling rural areas.

“This is the best time in Tennessee history, but not for everybody,” he said, adding that 17 Tennessee counties classed as “distressed” need education and jobs. Saying broadband internet access is a necessity, he promised to “not just double down but triple down” to bring up those distressed counties by 2025.

And the state must push harder to raise the health of its citizens and combat the opioid crisis, he said.

“We can never get health care costs we can afford if we’re unhealthy,” Boyd said.

Other Republican­s said to be considerin­g a run include U.S. Reps. Diane Black and Marsha Blackburn; Tennessee House Speaker Beth Harwell; state Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris and Franklin businessma­n Bill Lee. And U.S. Sen. Bob Corker must decide whether to run again for his Senate seat next year or set his sights elsewhere.

On the Democrats’ side, former Nashville mayor Karl Dean said he’s definitely running. State House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh, of West Tennessee, has said he is interested, and in a December straw poll among Nashville Democrats, Fitzhugh took 26 votes to Dean’s 20.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY ?? Republican Randy Boyd publicly announces his candidacy for Tennessee governor during a luncheon Thursday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY Republican Randy Boyd publicly announces his candidacy for Tennessee governor during a luncheon Thursday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.

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