Washington County Enterprise-Leader

GOP Caucus Hits Governor On ‘Rule Of Law’

CONSERVATI­VES WARN OF RETRIBUTIO­N IN ELECTIONS OVER MEASURED RESPONSE

- Maylon Rice MAYLON RICE, AN AWARDWINNI­NG COLUMNIST, HAS WRITTEN BOTH NEWS AND COLUMNS FOR SEVERAL NWA PUBLICATIO­NS AND HAS BEEN WRITING FOR THE ENTERPRISE­LEADER FOR SEVERAL YEARS.

The real ‘fireworks’ in the Arkansas Republican Party began on July 2 and still today fading embers and potential smoldering cherry bomb explosions threaten the party’s unity.

On the heels of the United State Supreme Court’s 5-4 ruling on gay marriage, the Arkansas GOP apparently launched into an intense internal war.

Serious GOP in-fighting broke out predicated on a simple assumption: You will be either be tolerant of the new “rule of law,” as dictated by the high court, or you will stand against everything taught by “the church.” Of course, meaning the white, Christian evangelica­l teachings of some of the biblical scriptures as defined by local conservati­ve church leaders.

And if one was to person- ally and publicly disagree with such a powerful state Senator as the one and only Jason Rapert of Conway? Well, he ( and others like him) will rain down upon you a throwback style of intense public scrutiny the like’s modern-day politics has rarely seen.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson, an attorney and a strict Constituti­onalist by training, despite being a noted conservati­ve, tried to quell the grassroots outrage.

His mistake, in trying to do so, was to raise the ire of Rapert and his mob-like followers.

Sen. Rapert has emerged as the biggest “bomb thrower” in the warfare of words following the high court’s ruling. The bombastic, verbose and evangelica­l now second-term state senator from Conway, sadly, reminds me more each and every press clipping of the late Justice Jim Johnson of old bygone days.

Visages of Justice Jim and his unintentio­nal namesake of regional intoleranc­e “Jim Crowism” were indeed some of the saddest days for this state.

Governor Hutchinson, today, is sadly caught in the middle and being pummeled by Rapert’s vitriolic and unreasonab­le verbiage, while trying to uphold the rule of law.

In a letter sent to other state senators soliciting their support for a caucus stance against Hutchinson’s pleas for following the law, Rapert spares no hide on Hutchinson’s backside for the governor’s measured stance to follow the law.

In the statement Rapert writes: “I want to be on record with my fellow senators … the Governor of this state does not “determine” unilateral­ly what legislativ­e action the state takes …”

Rapert does not stop there, he continues, “Only Senators and Representa­tives in the legislativ­e branch file bills in our state. It appears we have a misunderst­anding with the separation of powers in Arkansas as well. I mean no disrespect but I am going to speak the truth as best I can. I am disappoint­ed that he has positioned himself in opposition to the GOP majority in the legislatur­e and the voters in our state.”

“I have done all I can do to help Asa on issues. He may not want to personally be dealing with social issues — but the entire nation is and he is our governor and should be proud to defend the will of the people of Arkansas.”

Then Rapert turns the statement back to himself and how his personal trust has been violated by Hutchinson.

“... I don’t like threats to our values from within my own party any more than I like threats from liberal democrats. As of today, the executive branch and governor’s office must rebuild my ability to trust their resolve on core issues fundamenta­l to being an Arkansas Republican.”

Rapert then turns up the heat on Hutchinson with an eye to the 2018 elections.

“This has been one of the hardest messages I have ever drafted and I am saddened that it has come to this. I never dreamed the Republican governor we all worked so hard for would disrespect those of us that fought for his election the way he has today.”

It has not reached the epic rants by the late Jim Johnson against those who disagreed with his ideals, but Rapert is certainly researchin­g the future scripts for such exchanges against Hutchison.

It’s an internal war, not soon to subside.

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