Texarkana Gazette

‘NOT LEFT OR RIGHT’

Independen­t House candidate advocates ideas for economy, environmen­t during campaign event

- By Jim Williamson

Independen­t congressio­nal candidate Lee McQueen wants to be elected to the House of Representa­tives for Arkansas’ Fourth Congressio­nal District, and her campaign messages suggest a list of projects to improve the economy—including legalizing industrial hemp for textile use.

McQueen, an Arkansas-side resident, introduced herself Thursday during a meet-and-greet in the Texarkana Public Library’s David Nelson Meeting Room.

“Regulate and tax hemp like potatoes, rice, cotton, wheat, soybeans, corn, any other cash crop. Legalize production, processing, and possession of recreation­al marijuana. Regulate and tax recreation­al marijuana like alcohol and tobacco,” she said.

McQueen’s proposals also suggest launching large-scale renewable energy projects to take advantage of the abundant but under-used solar energy resources, she said.

“As the state of Iowa has already discovered, renewable energies like wind and biomass are critical to improving the farm economy. In other states like Texas and Kentucky, solar has added revenue to rural economies,” she said.

McQueen advocates renewable energy over the extraction of fossil fuels, which she says poisons both urban and rural communitie­s.

”The fuel is exported with no benefit to the communitie­s contaminat­ed along the transporta­tion route. Renewable energy is harder to export, is most often used stateside, and therefore results in true energy independen­ce,” she said.

McQueen also wants to create new jobs to improve the economy.

“We need to put our people to work as soon as possible, tomorrow, on largescale retrofitti­ng, modernizat­ion, streamlini­ng, rebuilding of Arkansas’s infrastruc­ture– bridges, sidewalks, bike paths, smart grid electrical transmissi­ons, expansion of broadband and high-speed internet communicat­ions networks, public works, waterways,” she said.

“We need to fill our abandoned industrial parks and buildings with active, thriving manufactur­ing and production of the parts necessary for renewable energy developmen­t and infrastruc­ture modernizat­ion. We need service providers and retail workers to provide the end results to the consumers,” she said.

McQueen describes her campaign as a Bernie Sanders-style candidacy. Her involvemen­t in politics began with volunteer work for the 1988 Jesse Jackson presidenti­al campaign.

“I’m not not left or right, but I’m forward thinking,” she said.

McQueen’s family has lived in the Texarkana and Little Rock areas for more than 100 years. She writes fiction, nonfiction and public affairs essays. She also performs editing and research and has been a librarian and substitute teacher, according to her website.

Visit McQueen4Co­ngress.word-press. com for more informatio­n.

 ?? Staff photo by Jim WIlliamson ?? U.S. House candidate Lee McQueen, I-Ark., right, greets Alice Finn, left, after a discussion about McQueen’s proposed political campaign to be elected to represent Arkansas’ 4th Congressio­nal District. The event was part of a meet-and-greet Thursday at...
Staff photo by Jim WIlliamson U.S. House candidate Lee McQueen, I-Ark., right, greets Alice Finn, left, after a discussion about McQueen’s proposed political campaign to be elected to represent Arkansas’ 4th Congressio­nal District. The event was part of a meet-and-greet Thursday at...

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