A look into Governor Huckabee Sanders’ plans for Arkansas
Sarah Huckabee Sanders will make history Tuesday when she is sworn in as the first female governor of Arkansas, and the youngest governor in the nation, with plans to bring an “aggressive, bold and conservative” agenda that will have a “generational impact” on the state.
Sanders, 40, easily defeated Democratic opponent Chris Jones in November. She succeeds Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who was term-limited and could not run again. He endorsed her bid.
Sanders follows in the footsteps of her father, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who led the state from 1996 to 2007.
“It is a pretty humbling thing,” Sanders said in an interview ahead of her inauguration. “As far as we know, we’ll be the first-ever father-daughter pair anywhere in the country, and so, you know, that is a pretty historic and amazing thing.”
Sanders, who worked as a White House press secretary for former President Donald Trump and on a number of political campaigns throughout her career, said she “always thought” she would work “more behind the scenes” in politics.
“And here I am, anything but after the last few years,” Sanders said.
Trump encouraged Sanders to run for governor when she left the White House in 2019.
“It certainly was not the path I envisioned, but it is one I’m extremely excited and enthusiastic about taking on,” Sanders noted.
Sanders said she is “a little biased” but that her father is “certainly the best governor we’ve ever had here in Arkansas and one of the best governors we’ve ever had in the country…He’s set the bar high, and I have very big shoes to fill,” adding that there is “nobody more hopeful and more helpful in helping me achieve my goals.”
Education reform is at the top of Sanders’ list after being sworn in.
“I’ve made no secret that the biggest priority I have for this session is a large-scale education reform package,” Sanders commented. “I am really excited to work with our legislative partners to bring about education reform that, I think, will have a generational impact on our state.”
As a mother of three elementary-aged children, a daughter and two sons, Sanders has an inside look at classrooms and curriculum across the state.
“I am living it every day with a fifth-grader, a third-grader and a first-grader, and I feel the impact of education and what it means and what it means to each kid,” Sanders said, noting they “all learn differently and all need different things…Making sure that we are providing the best pathway and best opportunities to every student in the state is going to be a big priority and going to be very important as we move forward in this session.”
“There is a real hunger, not just from the public, but I think also from the legislature here, where we have Republican super-majorities in the House and the Senate, to do some pretty big things and enact some conservative reform,” Sanders continued.
Sanders tapped Jacob Oliva, a senior chancellor at the Florida Department of Education, to serve as Arkansas secretary of education.
“My hope is that states look to Arkansas as a model and as a national leader on how to do it right,” she said.
Other top priorities for Sanders’ administration is an emphasis on public safety.
“Making sure that our law enforcement officers have the training and the resources and the tools that they need to do their job well, and being supportive of their efforts, and putting some truth into sentencing here in the state of Arkansas,” Sanders said, adding that she will also focus on “making sure that violent repeat offenders aren’t let out into our community so that they can continue to commit crime.”
Sanders already named 26-year veteran of the Arkansas State Police, Capt. Mike Hagar, to serve as her pick to lead the law enforcement agency and the Department of Public Safety. Sanders said she’ll also appoint Hagar to serve at the same time as director of the Division of State Police.
Sanders also said that A.J. Gary, who is currently serving as public safety secretary, has agreed to stay on as director of the state Department of Emergency Management in her administration. Hutchinson had named Gary public safety secretary in August.
Gary is a retired police chief who served more than 28 years with the Conway Police Department.
Meanwhile, Sanders also said that she plans to work to phase out Arkansas’ state income tax.
“It is not going to happen overnight, but we want to keep chipping away at it,” she said, adding that she also will focus on growing Arkansas’ tourism industry.