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What to Watch For In Today’s Mike Ross, Asa Hutchinson KATV Debate

3 min read

 LITTLE ROCK – Republican gubernatorial hopeful Asa Hutchinson and Democratic rival Mike Ross are squaring off for their second live televised debate in the race for Arkansas’ top office.

The two ex-congressmen are scheduled to face off Tuesday night at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock in a debate being broadcast by Little Rock television station KATV. It comes a little more than three weeks after their first televised debate in September.

The two have been sparring over a number of issues, including their competing tax cut plans and the state’s compromise Medicaid expansion.

The two are running to succeed Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe, who is barred by term limits from seeking re-election.

What to Watch

Here are some key issues and themes likely to emerge in Tuesday’s debate:

WHO’S THE MIDDLE CLASS CHAMPION?

Hutchinson had used his first debate against Ross to cast himself as a champion of the middle class, saying his proposal to cut individual income taxes by $100 million in his first year if elected would do more for working Arkansans.

Expect Ross to try to undermine that argument while touting his own tax cut plan, which calls for eventually reducing individual income taxes by $575 million as the state’s budget will allow. He’ll likely continue his argument that Hutchinson’s proposal would jeopardize the state’s budget by cutting too much, too soon.

The two will also likely spar over the ballot measure to raise Arkansas’ minimum wage from $6.25 an hour to $8.50 by 2017. Ross endorsed the proposal earlier this year, while Hutchinson said he he’d vote for the measure after it was approved for the ballot.

WHO’S THE WASHINGTON INSIDER?

Both Ross and Hutchinson have ties to Washington as former congressmen, but the two have spent much of the campaign trading attacks as they try to label each other as D.C. insiders.

It’s a label that could fit either one easily. Ross served 12 years in Congress and was a public face of the Blue Dog Coalition of Democrats during his time there. Hutchinson served four years representing northwest Arkansas in Congress and another two years in the Bush administration.

Ross regularly derides Hutchinson as a Washington lobbyist and has said the Republican hopeful’s time in Washington shows how partisan he is. Hutchinson has tried to link Ross to national Democratic figures who remain unpopular in Arkansas, including President Barack Obama and House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi.

WHO HAS THE BEST EDUCATION PLAN?

Ross has said he wants to be known as the “education governor,” while Hutchinson says he wants to be known as the “jobs governor.” But both have been sparring over who has the best education plan for Arkansas’ schools.

Ross will likely continue touting his proposal to expand pre-kindergarten programs to every 4-year-old in the state, a plan that he says eventually would cost an additional $37.4 million a year. Hutchinson has criticized the plan, saying his Democratic rival is trying to expand a program the state isn’t fully funding already.

Hutchinson will also likely continue promoting his proposal to expand computer science education in the state’s schools, a proposal that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush praised when he campaigned with Hutchinson last week.

WHAT’S NEXT?

The two meet up Oct. 16 for a taped televised debate held by the Arkansas Educational Television Network in Conway. Unlike their past two debates, this one will feature Green Party nominee Joshua Drake and Libertarian Frank Gilbert.

(Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, rewritten, broadcast or distributed.)

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