Chattanooga Times Free Press

DEAN BEST CHOICE FOR GOVERNOR

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Getting the vote out this fall for Tennessee’s tried and true Democratic gubernator­ial contender Karl Dean is far more important for our state than just putting in office another candidate with a D beside his name.

Even if you’re a Republican, especially now is the time to understand that Dean — 63, a former public defender and a two-term Nashville mayor — is the best choice for Tennessee leadership.

It’s not that Bill Lee, the 59-year-old Republican contender, isn’t a good guy. Like Dean, Lee won his party’s nomination by showing his good side, not by demonstrat­ing that he could hire a how-low-can-you-go negative campaign staff.

But Dean knows there’s much more to conservati­sm than church and community mission trips. He also knows that arming teachers is not a solution to school safety challenges.

Both men want Tennessee to prosper, but they see the paths to our state’s ultimate success differentl­y.

› Dean will make public education a funding priority with better teacher pay, high-quality early-childhood education, expanded afterschoo­l programs and resources for all school districts. Lee’s stock answer is school vouchers — in short good schools only for some.

› Dean will prioritize Medicaid expansion to stop the state’s hemorrhage of $3 million a day — federal money we already paid for left on the table rather than helping Tennessee’s uninsured and under-insured obtain affordable, quality health care. Lee says no to that because it may become to expensive. What? A successful businessma­n who doesn’t know all futures involve ongoing tweaking and renegotiat­ion? By the way, 67 percent of Tennessean­s favor Medicaid expansion.

› Dean understand­s that jobs are paramount to a successful state, and that bringing more jobs is more complicate­d than Lee’s notion of a one-man job training project — his successful businessma­n claim to fame. Bringing jobs means putting all of the pieces together: better education, better jobs training, successful schools, along with the adequate health care, viable hospitals, and top-notch broadband — all of which create the people infrastruc­ture necessary to attract and maintain growing business communitie­s everywhere in the state.

Dean has done this work: During his eight-year tenure as Nashville mayor — through the Great Recession and the devastatin­g Nashville floods and the city’s later boom — he oversaw the creation of more than 70,000 new jobs and more than 350 expanding or relocating companies in the Davidson County area.

He kept taxes low while making significan­t investment­s in public infrastruc­ture, paving the way for new economic developmen­t. He made business recruitmen­t and retention a priority. He increased funding for public schools and teacher pay, invested in after school programs and brought more public school choices to Nashville.

What about the D vs. R part of this question?

Close your eyes and imagine red Tennessee going redder. Imagine another untested, untried, vote-for-me-because-I’m-a-successful-businessma­n-outsider-candidate becoming our governor and putting us at the mercy of who he will surround himself with. We could have the Donald Trump effect, and our already too-many bathroom bills and no-gun-regulation-at-all legislatur­e will become still more extreme as long-time House Speaker Beth Harwell retires and someone such as Glen Casada seizes her crown. Will Tennessee soon be vying to lose billion-dollar sponsorshi­ps like North Carolina’s big basketball moneymaker­s?

If recent years have taught us nothing else, they’ve shown that super majority rule does a state and nation no favors.

Civil debate with each political party represente­d is democracy’s friend. And right now we sorely need a friend or two in our state and our national government­s.

Not only will Dean make the best Tennessee governor for Democrats, he’s also the best, most experience­d, most successful and most ready choice for Republican­s and all Tennessean­s.

Vote Dean for governor.

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