Texarkana Gazette

Filing period opens Monday for 2014 Arkansas races

- By Christina Huynh

LITTLE ROCK—The filing period for Arkansas’ political offices opens Monday with races for the U.S. Senate and governor at the top of the ticket.

Each of the state’s seven constituti­onal offices will on the ballot this year, along with all 100 House seats, half the state Senate and Arkansas’ four U.S. House seats.

The U.S. Senate contest is expected to draw incumbent Democrat Mark Pryor and Republican Rep. Tom Cotton, who have been airing commercial­s for months.

Expected to enter the governor’s race are former congressme­n Mike Ross, a Democrat, and Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, and Republican businessma­n Curtis Coleman. Advertisin­g in that race, too, ramped up well before the filing period.

Incumbent Gov. Mike Beebe, a Democrat, is term-limited and cannot run for re-election.

Alex Reed, spokesman for Secretary of State Mark Martin, said the office expects about 20 filings for Arkansas’ constituti­onal offices and about a dozen or so for Congress, though he said it’s difficult to tell for sure.

“Every year during the filing period, there are always surprises with some people,” he said.

Doyle Webb, chairman of Arkansas’ Republican Party, said he expects previously announced GOP candidates to file the required paperwork.

“All of these candidates have been traveling across the state, speaking to groups of citizens and have been campaignin­g for months,” he said. “We’re looking forward to an exciting primary.”

For the Arkansas Democratic Party, a party member has lined up for five of the state’s constituti­onal offices, according to chairman Vince Insalaco, all but state treasurer and land commission­er. He said the party would prefer to not have a contested primary.

“We have felt very strongly the divisive primaries are not healthy for the Democratic Party,” he said. “We would rather focus on winning the general election than having to fight within ourselves in a divisive primary.”

The Arkansas Green Party is also expected to have candidates file Monday, party treasurer Mark Jenkins said. So far, the party has planned candidates for governor and the U.S. Senate, he said.

And for the state’s Libertaria­n Party, contenders will likely make their official entry throughout the week, according to party President Jessica Paxton. She said in a statement that the party should have candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and state auditor. The party also should have candidates for all four U.S. congressio­nal district seats, she said.

Independen­t candidates qualify through a separate petition process.

The filing period closes March 3 and the primary is scheduled for May 20 with the general election set for Nov. 4.

In the 2012 election, Republican­s took control of the Legislatur­e for the first time since Reconstruc­tion and also won all four U.S. House seats. In 2010, the GOP won a U.S. Senate seat from Democrats and also captured most of the state’s constituti­onal offices.

Entering this year’s elections, Republican­s hold a 22-13 majority in the state Senate and a 51-48 edge over Democrats in the House, with one Green Party member. Among state senators not facing re-election this year, 11 are Republican­s and six are Democrats.

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