YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
Republican candidates for Missouri governor emphasized their own strengths rather than attack their opponents in a debate last week in Jefferson City.
“The dome at our state Capitol is sort of like a fishbowl and a pressure cooker,” said Sen. Bob Dixon, R-Springfield. “With me, you know what you’re getting. I’ve been dome tested. That’s where character or corruption are revealed.”
Two candidates, former businessman John Brunner and former Navy SEAL Eric Greitens, emphasized their positions as political outsiders committed to bringing change to Jefferson City.
“If you believe that career politicians and political insiders in Jefferson City have failed you and your family and your neighbors, then you have a choice,” Greitens said. “You can shut up and take it, or you can decide to do something about it.”
Brunner pointed to his work as past CEO of Vi-Jon, a manufacturer of private-label personal care products his family founded in 1908.
“The problem about government here is that that they are not subject to competition,” Brunner said. “You need to bring somebody who understands competition, efficiency, productivity into government who has that mindset.”
Most attacks were reserved for Chris Koster, the leading Democratic gubernatorial candidate. The formal rules for the Nov. 3 discussion organized by Cole County Republicans prohibited the candidates from making negative attacks against each other.
Former Missouri House Speaker Catherine Hanaway criticized Koster’s inaction after the unrest in Ferguson last summer.
“All the while, our state attorney general, Chris Koster, sat idly by, prosecuting no one for looting, for arson, for rioting,” she said.
The other candidates argued their governmental experiences were an advantage.
Hanaway talked about her knowledge gained both as speaker of the House of Representatives and later as the U.S. attorney for eastern Missouri.
Lt. Governor Peter Kinder argued his statewide electoral successes demonstrated he can win elections for Republicans.
Kinder noted the absence of another person from the panel of GOP candidates: the late State Auditor Tom Schweich. He died of a self-inflicted gun shot to the head after he charged he had been subjected to a whisper campaign and after a radio advertisement was aired that mocked his appearance.
“I join him in his call that it is time to end the politics of personal destruction in our state, the idea that you get a bucket of slime to dump on the head of your opponent,” Kinder said. “I call on the other candidates to join me and to conduct a campaign that lays facts and fair argument on the table and discusses the issues candidly and honestly and lets the people decide.”
The candidates did not directly respond to Kinder’s challenge.
On policy issues, the candidates cited traditional conservative positions, including passage of right-to-work, easing government regulation, liability lawsuit limits and repealing the Affordable Care Act.
40-year-old document among considerations in roadway initiative.
O'Reilly Automotive board approves 15-for-1 stock split
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints forms new local ward
Hammons pact raises questions over Highway 60 plan
Trump administration investigates STL college for 'race-exclusionary practices'
Renew Jordan Creek groundbreaking celebrates $33M project to reduce flooding, provide public amenity