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Mike Beebe: Outside Groups Have Misled Voters About Arkansas

4 min read

JONESBORO — Gov. Mike Beebe on Saturday accused outside conservative groups of misleading voters on Arkansas’ record on education, jobs and taxes, as he and fellow Democrats made a final push to prevent a Republican takeover of the state Legislature.

Kicking off a series of rallies in the northeast part of the state, the Democratic governor continued his criticism of conservative advocacy groups such as Americans for Prosperity and touted his successes under a majority-Democrat state Legislature. Confidence is building among Republicans that they will win control of both the state House and Senate for the first time since Reconstruction, and Americans for Prosperity has spent more than $900,000 over the past two years in Arkansas and sent out 1.1 million mailers in dozens of state House and Senate districts.

“They’re backing candidates that would go backwards and they’re backing candidates against these folks who are here,” Beebe said at a rally in front of a Jonesboro bed and breakfast. “And I’m going to tell you something: I’m sick and tired of them trashing Arkansas. … If they don’t like us, then they need to keep their mouths shut and get out of here. They dang sure don’t need to lie about us.”

Beebe singled out an Americans for Prosperity ad that claims Arkansas residents are fleeing the state because of high taxes. He said the ad by the group formed by conservative billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch is both false and anti-Arkansas.

He said $730 million in net tax cuts have been enacted since he took office in 2007.

Beebe also defended the state’s record on education, claiming groups were trying to downplay the state’s gains and national rankings in the classroom.

“Why would they run our education system down when we’ve made so much progress just for a vote, just to try and influence somebody and tear what we’ve done down?” Beebe said. “Why would you want to do that unless you didn’t love Arkansas and weren’t from Arkansas, didn’t care about Arkansas but cared more about electing somebody with some letter by your name than whether or not they cared about the future of our state?”

Republicans dismissed Beebe’s remarks and said Democrats’ last-minute rallying wouldn’t be enough to stop a GOP surge.

“This is too little, too late,” said Katherine Vasilos, a spokeswoman for the state Republican Party. “Unlike Gov. Beebe, Arkansas Republicans are not in the business of winning elections by making personal partisan attacks. This election is about who has a better plan to help hard-working taxpayers and create a better future for Arkansas.”

Teresa Oelke, state director for Americans for Prosperity, accused Beebe of “Washington-style rhetoric” for criticizing her group and others for being involved in the legislative races.

“We have continually pushed for a conversation about policy and where Arkansas stands as a state so we can compete for jobs in the future,” Oelke said.

The focus on northeast Arkansas in the final weekend before Tuesday’s election shows how tough of a fight Democrats face for the Legislature even in a region that has traditionally been the party’s stronghold. Republicans have made gains in the state by tying Democratic candidates to President Barack Obama, who remains unpopular in the state and is widely expected to lose the state’s six electoral votes to Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

L.J. Bryant, a Democrat running for a state House seat, noted the uphill battle for the Legislature that his party faces.

“We live in this climate now, unfortunately, where the brand that people know is an ‘R’ brand and if they don’t know any better, they’re going to check an ‘R’ when they go in that room,” Bryant said.

Democrats have been increasingly relying on Beebe, a popular two-term governor who was re-elected in 2010. Beebe, who told reporters that this election is the most he’s ever campaigned for other candidates, has held off from predicting who will have control of the Legislature after Tuesday.

“Whatever happens, it’s going to be close with Republicans and Democrats in both the House and Senate,” Beebe told reporters. “They’re going to have to figure out how to work together.”

Saturday’s rally also came a day after the Arkansas Democratic Black Caucus began airing a radio ad featuring former President Bill Clinton that criticizes the writings of Republican state Reps. Jon Hubbard and Loy Mauch and GOP House hopeful Charlie Fuqua.

Hubbard wrote in a self-published book that slavery was a “blessing in disguise” for African-Americans. Mauch, in letters to newspapers, defended the Confederacy and declared his belief that former President Abraham Lincoln was a war criminal. Fuqua, a former legislator challenging an incumbent Democrat in east Arkansas, wrote in a self-published book that he believes all Muslims should be deported and that disobedient children must be “permanently removed” from society.

Republicans have said they won’t contribute any more money to the three, but have not called on them to end their candidacies. The three have defended their writings, and Hubbard later compared the state’s top Democrats to Nazis for criticizing him.

Beebe and Harold Copenhaver, the Democrat challenging Hubbard, did not bring up Hubbard’s writings in Saturday’s campaign stop. Beebe, however, said he believed it may play a role in Hubbard’s race.

“I think it’ll drive some folks,” Beebe told reporters. “But, you know, the people of Jonesboro are pretty smart. I don’t have to tell them what he stands for.”

(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, rewritten, broadcast or distributed.) 

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