Chattanooga Times Free Press

IN THE DISTRICT 30 RACE

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In the race to fill the open state house District 30 seat, perhaps the most competitiv­e race of all Hamilton County legislativ­e seats up for election, East Ridge Councilwom­an Esther Helton faces public policy nonprofit director Joda Thongnopnu­a.

The winner will be the sixth different office-holder of the seat in the last 28 years, the delegation’s most turned-over post.

Helton, 56, a Republican, won a bruising primary by 141 votes in August against businessma­n Jonathan Mason, while Thongnopnu­a, 25, a Democrat, was unopposed in the primary.

For voters who espouse the traditions upheld by this page — fiscal conservati­sm, smaller government, lower taxes and less regulation — choosing the Republican candidate is the sound move.

Helton, a licensed practical nurse by training, will be a loyal, dutiful, party-line voter.

Elected to her current position less than two years ago, she touts East Ridge’s successful economic developmen­t at Exit 1 off Interstate 75 — because of Border Region Act legislatio­n — in an endorsemen­t interview with the Times Free Press. While she spoke knowledgea­bly about East Ridge, she offered only vague talking points about state issues such as health care, education, guns and payday loans.

She previously said, for instance, she wants to put health care back in the hands of patients but outlined few ways to accomplish that. She says “school safety is a huge issue” and wants a student resource officer in each school but offers only to “look and see where there’s waste” to pay for it. Of the issues facing the fast-growing eastern part of the district, she says only the improvemen­t of an unspecifie­d road into Georgia will help.

Thongnopnu­a takes traditiona­l Democratic stances of expanding Medicaid for some 200,000 Tennessee residents and increasing the minimum wage to $10, but he says the key to making any progress is forging relationsh­ips, compromisi­ng and having a vision. He names Howard Baker and Bob Corker, former and current U.S. senators from Tennessee, and Phil Bredesen and Bill Haslam, former and current governors of Tennessee, as the type of “moderate, pragmatic, problem-solver he’d be in Nashville.

He further says he wants to examine, among other things, the state’s teacher training pipeline, state nursing shortage and predatory lending practices.

The public would have been well served by a debate on the issues between the two candidates, but Helton said her campaign decided a better course for her was neighborho­od meet-and-greets, the same course she followed in the primary.

“I would have everything to lose,” she says, knowledgea­ble the district has more Republican than Democratic voters.

“Campaigns are job interviews,” Thongnopnu­a says. “You make a commitment to show up. I consistent­ly showed up [at dual candidate events]. I’m proud of that.”

Helton vows she won’t be a representa­tive who votes “whichever way politician­s will tell you to go,” as her opponent described her.

Likewise, Thongnopnu­a hardly seems like the “radical leftist” his opponent paints him in her advertisin­g.

District 30 residents will have to determine with their votes what they believe.

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