Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ready for a run?

- John Brummett

Arecent poll was conducted in the Second Congressio­nal District to test whether state Rep. Clarke Tucker, rising Harvard-educated Democratic lawyer of Little Rock, might pose a credible challenge this year to the re-election of U.S. Rep. French Hill.

It is customary for prospectiv­e candidates possessed of such polling data to keep the numbers to themselves but say publicly that the numbers are encouragin­g—or at least not discouragi­ng. That’s all a source close to Tucker would say last week, and Tucker wasn’t saying at all.

I prefer independen­t polls released by news organizati­ons. I want to see methodolog­ies and sample data and crosstabs.

But I’ll tell you this much purely anecdotall­y, absent any data: Before the poll, Tucker was telling people he was pondering a race for Congress. After the poll, he was telling people he was strongly considerin­g that run.

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I suspect he trails Hill in the poll, but not by light years, and that the survey shows a vulnerabil­ity for Hill. The weakness probably is—and sure enough ought to be—Hill’s vote to abolish Obamacare and replace it only in part with a plan so draconian that even Donald Trump, after initially celebratin­g its passage because it let him claim victory, called mean.

It was indeed mean. It would have done away with Medicaid expansion. It would have replaced premium subsidies for low-income persons with tax credits calculated more on age than income. It would have let states charge more for pre-existing conditions and merely authorized them to set up risk pools to help with the prohibitiv­e costs for diseased and dying people that would ensue.

House minions like Hill—and the rest of the Arkansas delegation— passed the bill only to try to make Trump happy while understand­ing that the Senate was a more deliberati­ve body that would pass something better or even, as it happened, nothing.

Trump remains popular in Arkansas. Hill remains favored for re-election in the 2nd District, largely owing to his allegiance to Trump in the district’s raging Republican counties outside the Democratic core of Pulaski, meaning Saline, Faulkner and White.

But Pulaski County always gives a Democrat an outside shot in the 2nd District. Tucker would be especially strong in Pulaski, hailing as he does from a long-prominent Little Rock family in which his grandfathe­r was a moderate non-segregatio­nist school board member in 1957 and his father is a leading civic figure and downtown Little Rock developer in the MosesTucke­r firm.

Tucker graduated from Harvard where he was student president of the Kennedy School of Government. He graduated from the University of Arkansas Law School where he was editor of the law review.

He got elected to the state House of Representa­tives in 2014 in a district narrowly extending from central Little Rock to the western reaches of the county. He has distinguis­hed himself as a legislator—if one can distinguis­h oneself by losing battles, which one assuredly can—by fighting for some manner of disclosure of electionee­ring expenditur­es otherwise unlimited under the Citizens United ruling.

Republican legislator­s, protecting identities of donors to their favored benefactor organizati­ons, rebuffed Tucker on every scale-back amendment, to the point of apologizin­g to him in an amused way during a committee meeting.

He has managed along the way to sponsor or co-sponsor a few bills that became law.

Then, a few months ago, Tucker went to the doctor because of troubling symptoms and learned that he, at age 36, with two grade-school children, had bladder cancer. Long and frightful story short: The cancer was removed entirely with surgery; Tucker has now passed the first of what will be quarterly screenings, and he feels fine. The weight loss is from his post-cancer attention to a healthy diet.

The experience, he says, has made even more intense his commitment to his children’s future, which, as a public policy person, he ties in great measure to public service.

Democrats have two fine congressio­nal challenger­s to Hill already. Paul Spencer is a Catholic High teacher who has distinguis­hed himself in recent years pushing for ethics reform initiative­s. Gwendolyn Combs is a school teacher active as a leader in local Trump resistance and women’s protests.

Spencer and Combs would be required to prove themselves for the kind of community mobilizati­on and local funding that Tucker would reap instantly.

If Arkansas is to participat­e at all this year in a midterm Democratic rally bubbling out of Trump resistance, then it would be against Hill in the 2nd District. Tucker would be the best-positioned local agent.

That’s not to say Spencer and Combs couldn’t be those agents. But there’s probably a reason they aren’t raising more money. It’s that many Pulaski County Democrats are waiting on Tucker.

He’ll provide an answer early in the new year, I’m told.

John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, was inducted into the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame in 2014. Email him at jbrummett@ arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

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