Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Two Republican­s planning to run for secretary of state

2018 election in sights of land official, aide to Martin

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The next election for sec- retary of state is in 2018, and two people said Wednesday they plan to seek the office as Republican candidates.

They are state Land Commission­er John Thurston and Deputy Secretary of State Joseph Wood. Wood’s boss is Republican incumbent Mark Martin, who’s prohibited by term limits from seeking re-election.

The secretary of state and land commission­er are two of the state’s seven constituti­onal officers. The secretary of state maintains the state Capitol and its grounds, assists counties with conducting elections and handles corporate filings. The land commission­er collects delinquent real estate taxes and grants mineral leases on state-owned lands.

Thurston said he just wants to let Arkansans know what his intentions are.

“I am beginning to be asked what I am going to do after [serving as] commission­er of state lands and there is some speculatio­n and rumors out there,” he said.

“This is not the start of a campaign, but … it is an informal announceme­nt to inform my constituen­ts,” Thurston said, adding that “this is an important election year, and there is a lot to be done before 2018.”

Thurston, of Little Rock, has served as land commission­er since 2011. Like Martin, he is term-limited; their second four-year terms will end in January 2019. He was little-known in political circles before his 2010 election, when he was an employee of the Agape Church in Little Rock.

He said he plans “to finish strong and hand the office over in the best shape that it has been in.”

Martin, of Prairie Grove, has said he doesn’t plan to run for another office in 2018.

Thurston said he didn’t know whether House Speaker Jeremy Gillam of Judsonia, Auditor Andrea Lea of Russellvil­le or Wood also will run for the Republican nomination for secretary of state in 2018. The 2018 primary election will be held on May 22, 2018, according to the secretary of state’s office.

But Wood, of Fayettevil­le, who has been deputy secretary of state since 2011, confirmed his intention to seek the office.

As deputy secretary of state, he heads the divisions of Communicat­ion, Education and Business Commercial Services, said Martin spokesman Chris Powell.

Wood is a former WalMart human-resources executive and career consultant as well as a former state Republican Party treasurer. In December 2008, Wood narrowly lost to Doyle Webb of Benton to be chairman of the state Republican Party. Wood sought to become the first black chairman of the state party.

Gillam said Wednesday he’s weighing running for secretary of state in 2018, after many people asked him to consider the option.

“At the proper time I am going to give it some serious thought down the road,” he said. He said he probably won’t make a decision whether to seek the office until this time next year.

“I may do something completely different after I complete my next term in the House,” said Gillam, who has served in the House since 2011.

“I have to take it one step at a time. I have to get ready for the 2017 session. That’s where my head is right now,” he said.

Lea, who was elected as state auditor in 2014, declined to say whether she’s considerin­g running for secretary of state in 2018. The auditor, also a state constituti­onal officer, is the general accountant for the state and serves as the payroll officer for the executive, legislativ­e and judicial branches, according to the office’s website.

“For now, I believe my time is best spent doing the job Arkansans elected me to do rather than concerning myself with an election two years from now. I’ll continue to work to get Republican­s elected and when the time is appropriat­e I’ll make a decision with my family regarding what my future holds,” said Lea, who previously served in the state House of Representa­tives from 2009-15.

No Democrats have publicly expressed an interest in running for secretary of state in 2018 yet.

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