Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ethics raised as issue in bid for governor

Candidates spar over how each should address graft

- HUNTER FIELD AND MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Arkansas’ gubernator­ial candidates Wednesday exchanged yet another series of jabs over their plans for ethics changes in state government.

During a news conference at his Little Rock campaign headquarte­rs, Democrat Jared Henderson attacked Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson for being what Henderson said was too passive in addressing corruption at the state Capitol.

At his own news conference 30 minutes earlier, Hutchinson said it wasn’t time to “play politics with this issue,” adding he’d released a series of ethics proposals.

The governor also shot back at Henderson, saying the former Teach for America executive should answer questions about his relationsh­ip with lobbyist Milton “Rusty” Cranford, who is at the center of a federal corruption probe.

The candidates’ backand-forth came on the same day ex-state Sen. Jon Woods, R-Springdale, was sentenced to more than 18 years in federal prison for his role in a bribery scheme prosecutor­s say steered state money to a private Christian college. It also comes a week after Hutchinson’s nephew, former state Sen. Jeremy Hutchinson, R-Little Rock, resigned after being federally indicted on allegation he used campaign money

for personal expenses. (The ex-senator has said he plans to fight the charges.)

Henderson on Wednesday touted seven ethics proposals he released earlier in the summer, ranging from revoking a public official’s pensions for committing any crime relating to an abuse of power, to requiring lawmakers to disclose and itemize during each week of a legislativ­e session all employment or profession­al services and compensati­on they have or had in the previous year with registered lobbyists or companies that employ profession­al lobbyists.

In addition to Jeremy Hutchinson, Henderson referred to the June arrest of Rep. Mickey Gates, R-Hot Springs, who, according to court documents, failed to file state income tax returns between 2003 and 2017. The governor has called on Gates to resign, but Gates hasn’t heeded calls from the governor and other prominent Republican­s to vacate his House seat, saying he plans to plead innocent in the case.

“I can imagine the governor’s office would say that these instances I am citing are not his fault, and that might be true,” Henderson said. “But in my philosophy of leadership, it is still your responsibi­lity to take action when you see wrong things happening so that you can minimize the chances in which they happen in the future.”

Indeed, Gov. Hutchinson said many of the allegation­s of wrongdoing that led to conviction­s of several former lawmakers pre-date his time in the Governor’s Mansion. He also pointed to several ethics changes he proposed in June, including empowering the state Ethics Commission to levy larger penalties for serious ethical breaches. The commission now is limited to penalizing violators $2,00o per infraction.

“The challenge that we face whenever it comes to bad actors in public service crosses administra­tion, it crosses party lines, and so no one is exempt from that,” Hutchinson said. “We just have to make sure that we look within ourselves to make sure we’re fulfilling our public duty. And then secondly, that we have a system that gives the maximum amount of public informatio­n to make good decisions and to prevent conflicts of interest and opportunit­ies to take advantage of the system.”

Neither candidate has been accused of wrongdoing in the federal case involving Cranford and several other ex-lawmakers. However,

the governor said Wednesday that Henderson should answer questions about his role in a saga described in court documents, involving Cranford, Teach for America and Jeremy Hutchinson as a senator.

In 2015 while Henderson was the nonprofit’s Arkansas director, it hired Cranford as a lobbyist. As part of guilty plea, Cranford admitted to bribing Arkansas lawmakers, including “Senator A,” later acknowledg­ed as Jeremy Hutchinson by his attorney, to steer state money to non-government­al organizati­ons.

Jeremy Hutchinson, who hasn’t been charged with a crime over his relationsh­ip with Cranford, sponsored a pair of bills to send General Improvemen­t Fund money to Teach for America. Jeremy Hutchinson was doing legal work for Cranford at the time.

As a result of that legislatio­n, Gov. Hutchinson pledged $3 million from the governor’s discretion­ary fund to Teach for America, which recruits college graduates from across the U.S. to teach in low-income schools.

A group of private donors, including Arkansas Democrat-Gazette publisher Walter E. Hussman Jr., also pledged matching funds.

The state and private group of donors paid only about two-thirds of their commitment­s after Teach for America failed to recruit the number of teachers it had promised.

“Mr. Henderson certainly needs to answer for the role that he played in hiring a lobbyist that’s being convicted, as he represente­d Teach for America that put in jeopardy, really, $3 million in taxpayers’ money,” Hutchinson said Wednesday. He added that he thought at the time that it “was a very genuine effort to help bring teachers from out of state into Arkansas.”

Henderson on Wednesday said he regretted hiring Cranford, but everything the nonprofit group did under his leadership was “aboveboard.”

“In terms of Rusty Cranford, I have answered every question by the press that has ever been put in front of me,” Henderson said. “We didn’t do a thing wrong. I’m proud of the work that we did at Teach for America. We got thousands of kids good teachers that wouldn’t have had them otherwise. I think it is important to say that for every minute I spent working with Rusty Cranford on this, I probably spent 10 or 15 working with someone on his staff to make this happen.”

Henderson and Hutchinson will face each other in the Nov. 6 general election. Libertaria­n Mark West of Batesville is also seeking the office.

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