The Sentinel-Record

Eldridge trying to unseat Boozman in US Senate race

- ANDREW DEMILLO

LITTLE ROCK — Republican Sen. John Boozman’s fight against Democratic challenger Conner Eldridge has drawn barely a fraction of the money and attention of the 2014 Senate race, when national groups and candidates bombarded Arkansas’ airwaves with ads.

This year’s race, which also features Libertaria­n nominee Frank Gilbert, isn’t widely viewed as a competitiv­e for Democrats in a state that has become firmly GOP territory in recent years. And unlike Republican Tom Cotton’s rout of then-Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor in 2014 — which featured a flurry of TV ads for more than a year — Boozman and Eldridge have only begun airing spots over the past month.

Eldridge remains hopeful that there’s a path to victory. The 39-year-old former U.S. attorney for the Western District of Arkansas regularly compliment­s Boozman as a “nice man,” but follows that up by saying the incumbent lawmaker has done little for the state.

“He just sort of goes along to get along and hasn’t accomplish­ed anything. That’s really the distinctio­n in this race,” Eldridge said. “I got in this race because I

believe in strongly, positively, aggressive­ly trying to make a difference for all Arkansans every day.”

His 65-year-old Republican opponent regularly assails Eldridge for being an appointee of President Barack Obama, who remains deeply unpopular in the state, and says his rival is misreprese­nting his record.

“I’m running on the issues and represent the conservati­ve values the people of Arkansas have learned to expect: smaller government, fiscal responsibi­lity, rebuilding our military, getting some confidence in our economy,” Boozman said.

Eldridge has criticized Boozman for his repeated votes to repeal the federal health overhaul, a move he says would leave more than 300,000 people on the state’s hybrid Medicaid expansion without coverage. Eldridge won’t say how he would’ve voted on the 2010 legislatio­n, but doesn’t want to see it repealed and seeks changes such as an increase in the tax credit that small businesses receive for providing coverage.

“I don’t think we need to scrap the whole thing and go back to a day when 300,000 Arkansans didn’t have health insurance and depended on the emergency room and ultimately, for many, bankruptcy to get treated,” Eldridge said.

Boozman, however, said states could cover the uninsured through a block-grant system that would give them more freedom to spend federal dollars, and has called for what he calls “free market” reforms, like allowing people to purchase insurance across state lines.

“There’s nothing in the Obamacare bill to control costs,” Boozman said. “It’s more unaffordab­le than ever.”

The two also have tangled over the U.S. Supreme Court. Boozman has joined other Republican­s in saying that the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s vacancy shouldn’t be filled by Obama, which has prompted Eldridge to accuse the lawmaker of not doing his constituti­onal duty.

Presidenti­al politics play into the race as well, with Eldridge criticizin­g Boozman for not dropping his support of GOP nominee Donald Trump despite the billionair­e’s controvers­ial comments, including his lewd comments caught on tape in 2005 bragging about groping and kissing women without their consent. Boozman has condemned those comments and has likewise targeted Eldridge over his support of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, citing questions about her use of a private email server as secretary of state.

 ??  ?? John Boozman
John Boozman
 ??  ?? Conner Eldridge
Conner Eldridge

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