Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Penzo to challenge Womack

State senator files to run for Congress in GOP primary

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Arkansas State Sen. Clint Penzo, R-Springdale, filed Monday to challenge U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, a Republican from Rogers, in the March 5 primary.

Penzo said he is running for the Republican nomination in Arkansas’ 3rd congressio­nal district because “I had numerous people reach out to me and ask me to primary Womack.”

“Most people are saying to me they feel like he’s been in D.C. too long [and] he’s lost touch touch with our community,” Penzo said of Womack. “I think that’s probably the biggest reason people are disappoint­ed. It is no specific instance.”

Penzo said he decided to take on Womack in the primary, even though Republican U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton and Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders have voiced support for Womack, because “I think they’d committed prior to knowing I was considerin­g it.”

Asked why he believes he has a shot at ousting Womack, Penzo said that “… I have had so many people reach out to me and express their displeasur­e. I wouldn’t run if I didn’t think I could win.”

Penzo said he has done “a tremendous amount of thinking” about challengin­g Womack in the past two or three weeks.

“I talked to my wife and the rest of my family and had a long conversati­on with my priest and prayed about it and I think this is the direction God wants me to travel,” he said. “People have always asked me to primary [Womack] since I have been down here, and I wasn’t ready. But I think the time is right now.”

Penzo, a real estate agent, has served in the Arkansas Senate since January of this

year and served in the Arkansas House of Representa­tives from 2017-2023. He is up for reelection to the Arkansas Senate in 2026.

Womack, in a written statement, said that elections are about choices and are a contest of ideas.

“That’s the genius of America,” he said. “I’m proud to live in a country where the people get to decide. I will always do what I think is right, take care of my district, and be focused on our national security.”

Womack has served in the U.S. House of Representa­tives since 2011. He is currently a senior member of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, where he is chairman of the Financial Services and General Government Subcommitt­ee and also sits on the Defense and Transporta­tion, Housing and Urban Developmen­t subcommitt­ees. He formerly served as chairman of the House Budget Committee.

Prior to his election to Congress, Womack served as mayor of Rogers for 12 years. He also served in the Arkansas Army National Guard for more than 30 years, retiring at the rank of colonel in 2009.

Caitlin Draper of Fayettevil­le filed as a Democrat in the 3rd congressio­nal district last week.

In other candidate filings Monday, Arkansas Supreme Court Justices Rhonda Wood and Karen Baker and attorney and former state Rep. Jay Martin filed to run for Arkansas Supreme Court chief justice in 2024.

Wood, Baker and Martin joined Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Barbara Webb, who filed last week, in the chief justice race. The chief justice post is currently held by Dan Kemp, who isn’t seeking reelection in 2024.

Monday was the sixth day for the filing period for state and federal offices in Arkansas. The filing period for state and federal offices ends Tuesday at noon. A complete list of filings can be found at candidates.arkansas.gov.

Arkansas will hold its primary on March 5, which is Super Tuesday. The runoff will be April 2, and the general election will be Nov. 5.

Also Monday, four Democratic candidates for president and a Republican candidate for president filed to run in the March 5 primary.

In the race for Arkansas Supreme Court chief justice, Wood said she believes that she is the best candidate for the post because “I think it is a time of great change in the judiciary and the world in general and so it matters that there is a chief justice with the right judicial experience and the right leadership experience within the judiciary.”

She said she has served on the state Supreme Court since 2015, on the state Court of Appeals from 2013-2014 and as a circuit judge from 2007-2013, and she has served in leadership roles within the three levels of judiciary. She previously was an attorney for eight years.

Wood was elected to Position 7 on the state Supreme Court in 2014 and reelected to the post in 2022.

The seven justices on the Supreme Court are elected in statewide, nonpartisa­n elections.

Baker has served on the state Supreme Court since 2011. Baker was reelected to Position 6 on the high court in 2014 and again in 2022.

She served on the state Court of Appeals from 20012010 and as a 20th judicial district circuit, chancery and juvenile judge from 1995-1996 and 20th judicial district circuit and chancery judge from 1997-2000.

She was a public defender for Van Buren and Searcy counties from 1989-1995 and was in private law practice from 1987-1995.

Baker could not be reached for comment at her office on Monday afternoon.

Martin, who has been an attorney for about 26 years, served as a Democrat in the Arkansas House of Representa­tives from 2003-2007 and made unsuccessf­ul bids for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in 2006 and governor in 2022.

He described himself as a fairly independen­t person who is a consensus builder.

Martin said he’s running to be chief justice because he wants to protect the constituti­on, to expand access to the courts, to make sure that rural and urban courts have the staff and resources to have safe and good courts, and to use all the burgeoning technology in the court.

In other races Monday, U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips of Excelsior, Minn., Cenk Uygur of Los Angeles, Frankie Lozada of Valley Stream, N. Y., and Armando Perez-Serrato of Orange, Calif., filed to run for the Democratic nomination for president in Arkansas, while David Stuckenber­g of Tampa, Fla., filed for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in Arkansas.

Lozada said Monday that although Democratic President Joe Biden “has done great things, I think there are other better alternativ­es and I think folks need the reassuranc­e that there are other candidates out here.”

Other presidenti­al candidates who have filed in Arkansas to run for president so far include three other Democrats — Biden, Stephel Lyons of Maryland and Marianne Williamson of New Hamphire — and eight other Republican­s — former President Donald Trump; former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, who is also the former governor of South Carolina; Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis; former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson; former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie; North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum; entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy; and businessma­n Ryan Binkley of McKinney, Texas.

Monday’s filings bring the total number of candidates for state and federal offices who have filed during the first six days of the filing period to 257.

That’s in addition to 78 judicial candidates who qualified by submitting a petition with a sufficient number of signatures of registered voters, according to the secretary of state’s office.

So far, 128 Republican­s and 88 Democrats have filed for state and federal offices, and two independen­t candidates have filed for state office, according to the secretary of state’s office. A total of 117 nonpartisa­n judicial candidates have filed thus far.

For the General Assembly, all 100 House seats and 18 Senate seats will be on the ballot in 2024. Currently Republican­s hold 82 of the state House of Representa­tives’ 100 seats, with Democrats holding the other 18. Republican­s currently hold 29 of the state Senate’s 35 seats, with Democrats holding six.

Maureen Skinner of Conway, who is a therapist, filed Monday to run for the Democratic nomination in Senate District 17. State Sen. Mark Johnson, R-Ferndale, filed last week to seek reelection in Senate District 17.

In 2018, Skinner lost to then-Republican state Sen. Jason Rapert of Conway.

Skinner said she believes she has a better shot at winning in 2024.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) ?? Kiara Ramirez (right) with the Secretary of State’s office goes over paperwork with Jay Martin (left) as he files to run for Arkansas State Supreme Court Chief Justice while Raynetta Hansberry, also with the Secretary of State’s office, looks on Monday at the state Capitol in Little Rock.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe) Kiara Ramirez (right) with the Secretary of State’s office goes over paperwork with Jay Martin (left) as he files to run for Arkansas State Supreme Court Chief Justice while Raynetta Hansberry, also with the Secretary of State’s office, looks on Monday at the state Capitol in Little Rock.

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