Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hutchinson to pursue second term

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Tuesday — four months after his first campaign fundraiser — that he plans to seek re-election next year and said he wants to continue cutting state income taxes and creating jobs in a second four-year term.

He has no announced opponent yet.

The Republican governor made his announceme­nt in a news release issued by his campaign.

Hutchinson held a fundraiser at the Capital Hotel in Little Rock in January in advance of this year’s regular legislativ­e session. He reported more than $690,000 in his campaign treasury at the end of March in his latest campaign finance report. The filing period for state and federal offices will be Feb. 22-March 1 at the state Capitol in Little Rock.

“You can never take it for granted,” Hutchinson said of his re-election bid in a telephone interview. “You have to earn it and I expect I’ll have to earn it in a competitiv­e environmen­t.”

He said he would provide

details next year about his agenda for a second term.

“We have a lot we want to work on and that includes tax reform efforts, transforma­tion of state government, and reform of Medicaid,” Hutchinson said. He said he also wants to continue working to make government more efficient and on his computer coding initiative.

Hutchinson said he wants to talk about his accomplish­ments at this point.

“When I ran in 2014, I outlined specifical­ly what I would do as governor; promises that I made and kept. I am running for re-election to expand on our progress from pro-growth tax reform to marketing our state to the world to create more jobs here at home,” Hutchinson said in his news release.

Hutchinson said he promised to be a jobs governor; nearly 60,000 new jobs have been created in Arkansas since he became governor, and the state has the lowest unemployme­nt rate in recorded history. He said he promised that computer coding would be taught in every public high school in Arkansas; he championed legislatio­n to do that in 2015, and the number of students enrolled continues to grow in these courses.

He said he promised to cut individual income taxes by $100 million; income tax cuts totaling more than $150 million have been provided to Arkansans. The 2015 Legislatur­e enacted Hutchinson’s plan to cut individual income tax rates for Arkansans with taxable income between $21,000 and $75,000 a year. That individual tax cut is projected to cut state general revenue by $100 million in fiscal 2017 ending June 30.

Earlier this month, Hutchinson cut the state’s $5.33 billion general revenue budget in fiscal 2017 by $70 million, citing lagging sales tax and corporate income tax collection­s. He also cut the state’s $5.49 billion general revenue budget for fiscal 2018 by $43 million.

This year, the Legislatur­e enacted Hutchinson’s plan to cut individual income tax rates for Arkansans with taxable income below $21,000, effective Jan. 1, 2019. That’s projected to cut general revenue by $25 million in fiscal 2019 and $50 million a year thereafter.

Hutchinson said a hiring freeze policy he implemente­d eliminated about 1,400 positions with savings of about $40 million.

Earlier this month, the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e enacted the governor’s plan to ask the administra­tion of President Donald Trump for a waiver to shift about 60,000 of the more than 300,000 Arkansans receiving private health insurance through the Medicaid expansion called Arkansas Works to the state’s health insurance exchange and impose a work requiremen­t on many participan­ts in the program.

Asked if shifting people off of Arkansas Works would be the first step toward dismantlin­g the state’s Medicaid expansion, Hutchinson replied, “Absolutely not.” He said he views the change as creating long-term stability for the program and making it more affordable for the state.

State Democratic Party Chairman Michael John Gray of Augusta said Hutchinson’s plan to take people off Arkansas Works makes it “a little easier” for potential Democratic candidates to consider challengin­g Hutchinson in 2018.

The Republican brand “has been damaged” across the nation and people are ready for change, Gray said. “A lot can happen between now and the election.”

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