Arkansas’ Former Governor, Asa Hutchinson, To Challenge Trump for GOP Nomination

Instead of picking fights on Twitter, Mr. Hutchinson tweets out Bible verses every Sunday morning.

AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, file
Arkansas' Governor Hutchinson during an interview with the Associated Press in December 2022. AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, file

The former governor of Arkansas, Asa Hutchinson, says he’s running for president in 2024, offering himself as an alternative for Republicans ready to turn the party away from President Trump.

“I’m confident that people want leaders that want the best of America, not those who appeal to their worst instincts,” Hutchinson told ABC’s “This Week” in an interview aired Sunday. He said he would make a formal announcement in April in Arkansas.

“I have made a decision and my decision is I’m going to run for president of United States,” Mr. Hutchinson said.

Mr. Hutchinson, 72, left office in January after eight years as governor. He has ramped up his criticism of the former president in recent months, calling another Trump presidential nomination the “worst scenario” for Republicans and saying it is likely to benefit President Biden’s chances in 2024.

In addition to Mr. Trump, Mr. Hutchinson joins a Republican field that also includes former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy. Governor DeSantis is expected to jump into the race in the summer, while Senator Scott of South Carolina and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are among those considering bids.

Mr. Hutchinson, who was term-limited, has been a fixture in Arkansas politics since the 1980s, when the state was predominantly Democratic. A former congressman, he was one of the House managers prosecuting the impeachment case against President Clinton.

Mr. Hutchinson served as President George W. Bush’s head of the Drug Enforcement Administration and was an undersecretary of the Department of Homeland Security.

As governor, Mr. Hutchinson championed a series of income tax cuts as the state’s budget surpluses grew. He signed several abortion restrictions into law, including a ban on the procedure that took effect when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade last year. Mr. Hutchinson, however, has said he regretted that the measure did not include exceptions for rape or incest.

Mr. Hutchinson earned the ire of Mr. Trump and social conservatives last year when he vetoed legislation banning gender-affirming medical care for children. Arkansas’ majority-Republican Legislature overrode Mr. Hutchinson’s veto and enacted the ban, which has been temporarily blocked by a federal judge.

Mr. Trump called Hutchinson a “RINO” — a Republican In Name Only — for the veto. Mr. Hutchinson’s successor, former White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, has said she would have signed the legislation.

Mr. Hutchinson, who signed other restrictions on transgender youth into law, said the Arkansas ban went too far and that he would have signed the measure if it had focused only on surgery.

Although he has supported Mr. Trump’s policies, Mr. Hutchinson has become increasingly critical of the former president’s rhetoric and lies about the 2020 presidential election. He said Mr. Trump’s call to terminate parts of the Constitution to overturn the election hurt the country.

Mr. Hutchinson also criticized Trump for meeting with white nationalist leader Nick Fuentes and the rapper Ye, who has praised Adolf Hitler and spewed antisemitic conspiracy theories. Mr. Hutchinson has contrasted that meeting to his own background as a U.S. attorney who prosecuted white supremacists in Arkansas in the 1980s.

An opponent of the federal health care law, after taking office Mr. Hutchinson supported keeping Arkansas’ version of Medicaid expansion. But he championed a work requirement for the law that was blocked by a federal judge.

During the Covid pandemic, Mr. Hutchinson tried to push back against misinformation about the virus with daily news conferences and a series of town halls he held around the state aimed at encouraging people to get vaccinated.

Mr. Hutchinson infuriated death penalty opponents in 2017 when he ordered eight executions over a two-week period, scheduling them before one of the state’s lethal injection drugs was set to expire. The state ultimately carried out four of the executions.

The former governor is known more for talking policy than for fiery speeches, often flanked by charts and graphs at his news conferences at the state Capitol. Instead of picking fights on Twitter, he tweets out Bible verses every Sunday morning.

Associated Press


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