- Mike Beebe
-
Mike Beebe 45th Governor of Arkansas Incumbent Assumed office
January 9, 2007Lieutenant Bill Halter (2007-11)
Mark Darr (since 2011)Preceded by Mike Huckabee 54th Attorney General of Arkansas In office
January 3, 2003 – January 9, 2007Governor Mike Huckabee Preceded by Mark Pryor Succeeded by Dustin McDaniel Member of the Arkansas Senate
from the 21st districtIn office
1993–2003Succeeded by Barbara Horn Personal details Born December 28, 1946
Amagon, Arkansas, United StatesPolitical party Democratic Party Spouse(s) Ginger Beebe Residence Governor's Mansion Alma mater Arkansas State University
University of ArkansasProfession Lawyer Religion Episcopalian Military service Service/branch United States Army Unit Reserves Mike Dale Beebe (born December 28, 1946)[1] is the 45th and current Governor of Arkansas, since January 9, 2007. He was re-elected to a second term in 2010. Beebe is a member of the Democratic Party.
Contents
Early life, education and career
Beebe was born in Amagon, a small town in Jackson County, Arkansas. He was raised by his mother, a waitress, and never met his father. As a child, he moved often with his family. They lived in Detroit, St. Louis, Chicago, Houston and Alamogordo, New Mexico. They returned to Arkansas, and he graduated from Newport High School in 1964.[2]
Beebe received a bachelor of arts degree in political science from Arkansas State University in 1968, where he was a member of Sigma Pi fraternity. He earned a law degree from the University of Arkansas in 1972. Beebe served in the U.S. Army Reserve. He practiced law in Searcy in White County for ten years after his graduation from law school.
Beebe and his wife, Ginger, have three children and seven grandchildren.
Early political career
In 1982, he was elected to the Arkansas State Senate, where he would serve for 20 years. In 2002, he was elected Arkansas Attorney General, a position he held until getting elected Governor of Arkansas.
Governor of Arkansas
In his official website, Beebe outlines some of the policies he has pursued during his first term. He has outlined a plan for a balanced budget and attempted to cut middle class taxes by slashing in half the percentage of the state's grocery tax and increasing the Homestead Property Tax Credit, which can provide for the lowering of property taxes.[3]
Beebe has focused heavily on education reform. He has called for an additional $19 million per year to be spent on assisting special needs students and has designed a program that attempts to increase the quality of teachers within Arkansas by providing alternative pay and mentoring to motivate bright students to enter education or young teachers to work in struggling rural schools. Beebe has rejected calls to allow for Social Security private accounts to be established. He has also made plans to phase out the tax on utilities for manufacturers.[4]
He has also outlined a 12-point plan to make health care more accessible and affordable. Some of his proposals include using federal tax credits to make private insurance cheaper, promote the expansion of Medicaid, advocating preventive care to stop health concerns before they grow worse, expanding school health clinics, and using home or community based cares as an alternative to nursing homes.[4]
In September 2008, Beebe's Commission on Global Warming voted 11-10 to adopt a moratorium on new coal plants in Arkansas.[5] It was unclear whether he would support his commission's vote or whether the state legislature would even include it in future legislation.
Political campaigns
2006
Main article: Arkansas gubernatorial election, 2006On June 14, 2005, Beebe announced his candidacy for the Democratic Party's nomination to run for Governor of Arkansas. Beebe defeated former Republican Congressman and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) chief Asa Hutchinson as well as the Green Party candidate and independent candidate Rod Bryan in the general election on November 7, 2006, capturing 55 percent of the vote.
Beebe was sworn in as governor on January 9, 2007.[6] He was elected to the Democratic Governors Association Executive Committee for 2008–2009.
2010
Main article: Arkansas gubernatorial election, 2010Beebe was challenged by Republican nominee Jim Keet, a former state legislator from Little Rock. Beebe defeated Keet 64% to 34%[7] He was sworn in on January 11, 2011, at the Arkansas State Capitol rotunda.
Electoral history
Arkansas Gubernatorial Election 2010 Party Candidate Votes % ±% Democratic Mike Beebe (incumbent) 503,336 64.42 Republican Jim Keet 262,764 33.63 Green Jim Lendall 14,513 1.86 Arkansas Gubernatorial Election 2006 Party Candidate Votes % ±% Democratic Mike Beebe 422,198 55.3 Republican Asa Hutchinson 312,644 41.0 References
- ^ "ELECTION NEWS & RESULTS Latest Michigan, U.S. Senate & 2008 Presidential Elections Updates". elections.nj.com/. January 2008. http://elections.nj.com/dynamic/external/pre-election/bios/5647.html?SITE=MIGRAELN&SECTION=POLITICS&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT. Retrieved 2008-01-20.
- ^ "ClarkCast 016 - The Importance of 2006". Securingamerica.com. 2006-07-24. http://securingamerica.com/printready/clarkcast_072406.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-29.
- ^ "Biography | Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe". Governor.arkansas.gov. 2007-01-09. http://www.governor.arkansas.gov/gov_biography.html. Retrieved 2010-08-29.
- ^ a b "Mike Beebe on the Issues". Ontheissues.org. http://ontheissues.org/Mike_Beebe.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-29.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ "Beebe Takes Oath", The Morning News, January 9, 2007.
- ^ "2010 General Election & Non Partisan Judicial Runoff Election Statewide Results". Arkansas Secretary of State. November 15, 2010. http://www.votenaturally.org/electionresults/index.php?ac:show:contest_statewide=1&elecid=231&contestid=4. Retrieved November 15, 2010.
External links
- Governor of Arkansas official state website
- Mike Beebe for Governor official campaign website
- Biography at the National Governors Association
- Biography, interest group ratings, public statements, vetoes and campaign finances at Project Vote Smart
- Biography at WhoRunsGov.com at The Washington Post
- Issue positions and quotes at On the Issues
- Campaign contributions at FollowTheMoney.org
- Appearances on C-SPAN programs
- Appearances at the Internet Movie Database
- Mike Beebe at the Encyclopedia for Arkansas
- 2007 Arkansas Gubernatorial Inauguration
Legal offices Preceded by
Mark PryorAttorney General of Arkansas
2003–2007Succeeded by
Dustin McDanielPolitical offices Preceded by
Mike HuckabeeGovernor of Arkansas
2007–presentIncumbent Party political offices Preceded by
Jimmie Lou FisherDemocratic nominee for Governor of Arkansas
2006, 2010Most recent United States order of precedence Preceded by
Joe Biden
as Vice PresidentOrder of Precedence of the United States
Within ArkansasSucceeded by
Mayor of city
in which event is heldSucceeded by
Otherwise John Boehner
as Speaker of the House of RepresentativesPreceded by
Jay Nixon
as Governor of MissouriOrder of Precedence of the United States
Outside ArkansasSucceeded by
Rick Snyder
as Governor of MichiganGovernors and Lieutenant Governors of Arkansas GovernorsTerritorial
(1819–1836)State
(since 1836)J. Conway · Yell · Adams · Drew · Byrd · Roane · E. Conway · Rector · Flanagin · Murphy · Clayton · Hadley · Baxter · Brooks* · Baxter · Garland · W. Miller · Churchill · Berry · Hughes · Eagle · Fishback · Clarke · Jones · Davis · Little · Moore · Pindall · Martin · Donaghey · Robinson · Oldham · Futrell · Hays · Brough · McRae · Terral · Martineau · Parnell · Futrell · Bailey · Adkins · Laney · McMath · Cherry · Faubus · Rockefeller · Bumpers · Riley · Pryor · Purcell · Clinton · White · Clinton · Tucker · Huckabee · BeebeLieutenant GovernorsItalics indicates acting governor · * Disputed; see Brooks-Baxter War. Current governors of U.S. states and territories AL Bentley (R) AK Parnell (R) AZ Brewer (R) AR Beebe (D) CA Brown (D) CO Hickenlooper (D) CT Malloy (D) DE Markell (D) FL Scott (R) GA Deal (R) HI Abercrombie (D) ID Otter (R) IL Quinn (D) IN Daniels (R) IA Branstad (R) KS Brownback (R) KY Beshear (D) LA Jindal (R) ME LePage (R) MD O'Malley (D) MA Patrick (D) MI Snyder (R) MN Dayton (D) MS Barbour (R) MO Nixon (D) MT Schweitzer (D) NE Heineman (R) NV Sandoval (R) NH Lynch (D) NJ Christie (R) NM Martinez (R) NY Cuomo (D) NC Perdue (D) ND Dalrymple (R) OH Kasich (R) OK Fallin (R) OR Kitzhaber (D) PA Corbett (R) RI Chafee (I) SC Haley (R) SD Daugaard (R) TN Haslam (R) TX Perry (R) UT Herbert (R) VT Shumlin (D) VA McDonnell (R) WA Gregoire (D) WV Tomblin (D) WI Walker (R) WY Mead (R) DC Gray (Mayor) (D)
Territories:AS Tulafono (D) GU Calvo (R) MP Fitial (R) PR Fortuño (R) VI de Jongh (D) Republican 32 · Democratic 23 · Independent 1 Current statewide elected officials and legislative leaders of Arkansas U.S. Senators State government Mike Beebe, Governor · Mark Darr, Lieutenant Governor · Mark Martin, Secretary of State · Dustin McDaniel, Attorney General · Martha Shoffner, Treasurer · Charlie Daniels, State AuditorSenate Robert Thompson, Majority leader · Paul Bookout, President pro tempore · Ruth Whitaker, Minority leaderHouse Robert S. Moore, Speaker of the House · Johnnie Roebuck, Majority Leader · John Burris, Minority LeaderAL • AK • AZ • AR • CA • CO • CT • DE • FL • GA • HI • ID • IL • IN • IA • KS • KY • LA • ME • MD • MA • MI • MN • MS • MO • MT • NE • NV • NH • NJ • NM • NY • NC • ND • OH • OK • OR • PA • RI • SC • SD • TN • TX • UT • VT • VA • WA • WV • WI • WY Categories:- 1946 births
- Governors of Arkansas
- Arkansas Attorneys General
- Arkansas Democrats
- American Episcopalians
- Arkansas lawyers
- Arkansas State Senators
- Arkansas State University alumni
- Democratic Party state governors of the United States
- Living people
- People from Jackson County, Arkansas
- United States Army personnel
- University of Arkansas alumni
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.