The Sentinel-Record

Cruz gets help from sponsor of religious objections law

- ANDREW DEMILLO

LITTLE ROCK — Texas Sen. Ted Cruz enlisted the help of the legislator behind Arkansas’ religious objections law on Wednesday as the Republican presidenti­al hopeful tried to rally support in rival Mike Huckabee’s home state.

Cruz’s Arkansas campaign is being co- chaired by state Rep. Bob Ballinger, who sponsored a state law aimed at preventing government from infringing on someone’s religious beliefs without a compelling reason. The measure was quickly rewritten in the final days of the legislativ­e session over concerns an initial version was anti- gay.

Cruz and the other GOP hopefuls defended Arkansas and Indiana, which both faced a backlash over their religious protection measures. Ballinger said Cruz’s support for the measure wasn’t the main reason for his support

“There’s no doubt it’s a total package,” Ballinger said. “He’s got that, he’s also a fiscal conservati­ve. He also just understand­s the people and is willing to vote and work for the people, which is what excites me about him.”

The Texas senator touted Arkansas’ role in the 2016 presidenti­al contest, noting it had joined other southeaste­rn states in moving up their nominating contests to early March.

“Arkansas is going to play a critical role in the 2016 Republican presidenti­al nomination,” Cruz told a crowd of hundreds gathered outside the state Republican Party’s headquarte­rs in downtown Little Rock.

Touting himself as a “real and gen-

uine conservati­ve,” Cruz called for the repeal of the federal health care overhaul and said he would scrap the Common Core education standards that have come under fire from many in his party.

Huckabee, who served 10 ½ years as Arkansas governor, launched his campaign in his hometown of Hope in May. But Republican­s hope moving the state’s primary up to March from May will draw more presidenti­al hopefuls to the state. Billionair­e and Republican presidenti­al hopeful Donald Trump headlined a fundraiser for the state GOP last month, the day before Democratic hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton — who served as the state’s first lady for 12 years — spoke at a state party fundraiser.

Huckabee has won endorsemen­ts from most of the state’s top Republican­s, including Gov. Asa Hutchinson and nearly all of the state’s congressio­nal delegation. But Cruz’s “leadership team” announced this week includes some former allies of the governor, including Curtis Coleman, who managed Huckabee’s unsuccessf­ul U. S. Senate bid in 1992.

Cruz also planned stops in Russellvil­le and Van Buren, where he was set to headline the Crawford County Republican Party’s Lincoln Day Dinner. The Family Council Action Committee, a conservati­ve group, initially said it planned at the dinner to give “Power of Courage” awards to Republican Reps. Charlene Fite and Justin Harris at Wednesday’s dinner in honor of legislatio­n they sponsored during this year’s session.

But later Wednesday, Committee President Jerry Cox said the awards wouldn’t be presented to the two lawmakers at the event at the request of the dinner’s organizers. Crawford County Republican Party Chairman Mark Shaffer said the awards presentati­on was never part of the dinner’s program.

Harris earlier this year admitted he gave his adopted daughters to a man who later admitted to sexually abusing one of them, which prompted the Legislatur­e to ban the “re- homing” of adopted children. Harris has since announced he won’t seek re- election this year.

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