Mike Hunter for Attorney General

| | TrackBacks (0)

There are three candidates for the Republican nomination for Oklahoma Attorney General. One of them, Mike Hunter, was appointed Attorney General to fill the unexpired term of Scott Pruitt following his appointment as EPA Administrator. I will be voting to elect him to a full term.

Hunter has had a long and varied career dealing with many aspects of Oklahoma's constitution and statutes. He served as a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, Secretary of State, secretary of the Commissioners of the Land Office, general counsel of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, and Gov. Frank Keating's liaison to the legislature and our congressional delegation. During Keating's tenures heading the American Banking Association and the American Council of Life Insurers, Hunter served as chief operating officer. Hunter has been endorsed by the NRA.

One of the most important roles the AG plays is to defend our state against federal overreach. When the legislature passes a law, we need an AG who will vigorously defend the decisions of our elected representatives in the event of a court challenge. In other states, the AG has effectively exercised a veto by refusing to defend a law enacted by the people or their representatives.

We also need an AG who will push back when federal agencies overreach their statutory bounds. One of the best legacies of Pruitt's tenure was the establishment of a "Federalism Unit" in the AG's office. While the change in control of the White House should reduce the need for state AGs to push back against Washington, the nature of the beast means it will never go away entirely.

While I disagreed with the basis of the Oklahoma State Election Board's ruling on Hunter's eligibility to run -- if years in residence is going to be a meaningful requirement, residence needs to mean where you lay your head at night -- I'm glad Hunter is still on the ballot.

His well-funded opponent, Gentner Drummond, is running as a Republican, but he was a major contributor to Democrat Brad Carson's 2004 run for U. S. Senate and Democrat Dan Boren's campaigns for U. S. House. However "moderate" those two candidates may have been, Drummond's support for their candidacies was support for Democrat majorities in Washington and for leftist Democrats like Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi to run the committees and set the legislative agenda.

Drummond's unwillingness to be interviewed by Tulsa conservative talk show host Pat Campbell suggests that the veneer of conservatism conjured up by his campaign consultants wouldn't stand up to even 20 minutes of careful questioning.

And what does Drummond's support for a 2018 candidate for district judge say about his ideological leanings? Drummond contributed $1,000 to Chris Brecht, a candidate for District 14 (Tulsa & Pawnee counties) Office 9, and the Drummonds are named as members of Brecht's campaign committee. (The race has only two candidates and will not be on the ballot until November. The linked report shows that DA candidate Ben Fu is a $200 donor to Brecht's campaign.)

Gentner_Drummond-Chris_Brecht.jpg

Christopher Uric Brecht-Smith, as he calls himself on his Facebook profile, is "married" to another man, and he supports the use of government force to compel Christian adoption agencies to pretend that a "gay marriage" is equivalent in every respect to a natural marriage between a man and a woman, referring to SB1140, which protects the rights of adoption agencies to make decisions in the best interests of the child and in accordance with their values, as "hateful, discriminatory and blatantly unconstitutional on its face." I think it's fair to assume that, as a judge, Mr. Brecht would be hateful and discriminatory to people who uphold natural understandings of marriage and sexuality and would twist the federal and state constitutions and statutes to use government power to impose his twisted opinions on those issues on the people of Oklahoma.

Chris_Brecht-Against_SB1140_Christian_Adoption_Agencies.png

Whether or not Drummond recruited Brecht to run, as he has been accused of doing, Drummond is enthusiastically backing Brecht's campaign, and it says something worrying about Drummond's own judgment. If Gentner Drummond thinks that Brecht would make a good judge, I don't think we can count on Drummond, as AG, to defend vigorously our state's religious liberty protections. When asked by the Enid News for his opinion of SB1140, Drummond used the possibility of future litigation (and any issue could potentially be the subject of litigation) as an excuse not to comment.

One other candidate in the race, Angela Bonilla, is running a low-budget campaign. Bonilla is opposed to capital punishment and SB1140's protections for adoption agencies, which are both show-stoppers for me. Oklahoma's use of the death penalty for murder is under threat from anti-capital-punishment activists who are employing a combination of commercial and legal pressure to accomplish an effective repeal. Attorney General Mike Hunter has already been working to defend Oklahoma's laws against these attacks.

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Mike Hunter for Attorney General.

TrackBack URL for this entry: https://www.batesline.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/8266

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Michael Bates published on June 26, 2018 6:44 AM.

Re-elect District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler was the previous entry in this blog.

Oklahoma primary 2018: BatesLine ballot card is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Contact

Feeds

Subscribe to feed Subscribe to this blog's feed:
Atom
RSS
[What is this?]