Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Leding, Meeks seek Senate seat

- DOUG THOMPSON

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The state Senate District 4 race pits one of the state’s most experience­d House members against an opponent who says the veteran has too little to show for his time in office.

Rep. Greg Leding, D-Fayettevil­le, ranks second in House seniority. He entered the chamber the same year as leader Rep. Stephen Meeks, R-Greenbrier. Seniority between lawmakers taking office the same year is decided by a drawing of lots.

What matters is what a lawmaker can accomplish, said Dawn Clemence, his Republican opponent.

Sen. Uvalde Lindsey, D-Fayettevil­le, isn’t running for re-election in the district, leaving big shoes to fill, Leding said. He doesn’t presume he can fully replace Lindsey, Leding said, but will come the closest of the candidates. “No one in the House has served longer than I have, and I’ve served longer that a third of the members of the Senate,” Leding said. Leding also served one term as House minority leader for the Democrats.

Leding has served Democratic causes more than district ones, Clemence said. She would be less partisan and more results-oriented, she said.

“I’m a pragmatist,” Clemence said. “I’m not a righty or a lefty. My opponent seems proud to be left of the Democrats at the Capitol.”

“He’s not Uvalde Lindsey,” Clemence said. “He’s not your traditiona­l, hard-working Arkansas Democrat.”

Senate District 4 includes almost all of Fayettevil­le and

Farmington, all of Greenland and small portions of West Fork and Prairie Grove. It includes much of rural, eastern Washington County.

Both candidates said they support technical education to improve the skills of local workers.

“Northwest Arkansas has a fantastic economy, and onefourth of our kids still go hungry,” Leding said. The region needs to look more into transporta­tion and housing issues because of such persistent poverty, he said.

Clemence said she worked her way through college, the first of her family to graduate, and knows first-hand the value of improving skills and the

difficulti­es in doing that. The region could become “a laidback Silicon Valley” with the right training and emphasis, she said.

Practical matters such as job training need attention and focus, not declaratio­ns of support, Clemence said.

“He renamed a dinosaur and supports gun control legislatio­n that has no chance of going anywhere,” Clemence said of Leding.

This race isn’t a contest between a pro-gun rights candidate versus gun restrictio­n advocate as much as it’s a choice between someone who will focus on district needs that can be attained versus a sponsor of causes lost before legislatio­n is filed, she said.

Leding said he worked with notably conservati­ve Sen. Jason Rapert, R-Conway, on landowner protection measures and other issues. He is able to work with conservati­ves in the Northwest Arkansas delegation effectivel­y while still representi­ng one of the most Democratic House districts in the state, he said.

Leding brought up the matter of unlikely legislatio­n he has proposed before, such as early sponsorshi­p of a bill to ratify the federal Equal Rights Amendment.

“I represent one of the most progressiv­e districts in the state,” Leding said. “You are not being a representa­tive if you do not at least try to accomplish what the people in the district want. I am proud I tried to move the needle. You don’t know if something has zero chance of passing if you don’t try.”

State senators serve fouryear terms and are paid $40,188 a year. Early voting in the Nov. 6 general election begins Monday.

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