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Missouri Attorney General Candidates View The Job Itself In Different Ways

Republican Josh Hawley and Democrat Teresa Hensley are running for Missouri Attorney General.
Courtesy of Hawley campaign; Brian Ellison
/
KCUR 89.3

Every Missouri attorney general since 1969 has sought higher office at the conclusion of their term, just as gubernatorial candidate Chris Koster is doing this year. Even so, the race to be the nextattorney general hasn’t received much attention. Perhaps it should; this year’s two major candidates have completely different ideas about what the job even is.

“This is an office that is the top law enforcement office of the state of Missouri with over 180 attorneys in that office, in five offices around the state going into court day in and day out," says Teresa Hensley, the Democratic candidate. "In the last 60 days, they’ve handled murder cases, child sex abuse cases, consumer scam and fraud scam, all cases that I handled as prosecutor.”

Hensley, 57, served as Cass County Prosecutor from 2005 to 2014. That’s the job Koster had before she did, and that’s the experience she says over and over again qualifies her to follow in his footsteps as Missouri’s top attorney.

“I practiced law for over 25 years, the last 10 as the elected prosecutor in Cass County where I had 21 murder convictions out of 21," Hensley says. "Hundreds of felony convictions like armed robbery and home invasion. And over 500 cases of sexual assault, domestic violence and child sex abuse convictions. I think that kind of experience is important.”

Her Republican opponent, Josh Hawley, has a totally different conviction about the nature of the job — he says it’s about protecting Missourians from federal overreach.

https://youtu.be/R7yFsN1WozY

That television ad from Hawley, a law professor at Mizzou, shows him in front of the Platte County courthouse, but Hawley’s legal work has all been in appellate and federal courts. He represented conservative interests in several cases, including the Supreme Court’s “Hobby Lobby” case that said corporations could be exempted from certain laws (like mandatory coverage of birth control expenses) because of religious objections.

Hawley says his is the kind of experience Missouri needs.

"You’ve got to have someone who’s a constitutional lawyer, because that’s the job of the attorney general," says Hawley, 36. "Someone who knows how to litigate in a federal court, who knows how to litigate in the appellate courts, which is where the AG spends much of his or her time. And of course the Supreme Court of the United States. It’s becoming increasingly important to be able to defend the state’s interest there."

That disagreement over the role of the attorney general is at the heart of this race, and supporters of both candidates say their terms in office wouldlook different.

Hawley would likely join with other Republican attorneys general in suits challenging federal regulations from the Obama administration, like environmental rules that affect farmers, or provisions of the Affordable Care Act.

Hensley might do some of that, as Koster has on occasion, but she says she’d focus more on developing programs like mental health courts, veterans courts, victim advocacy—all programs she worked on in Cass County.

https://youtu.be/qTQMZ_8Imb8

Ads like that one for Hensley have been airing more frequently in recent weeks, but despite their differing visions for the office, the candidates have only faced off once — at a Q&A at a brewery in Springfield, Mo., that wasn’t broadcast or recorded. But they’ve been hitting each other hard in the media.

Hawley portrays his Democratic rival, who ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2012 and lost her prosecutor election in 2014, as a career politician. 

“My opponent has run in seven or eight different elections since I was 8 years old," says the 36-year-old Hawley. "And I think that Missourians deserve an attorney general who wants to be attorney general. And this isn’t just the next thing to run for.”

Hensley has the support of labor unions and a group of Republican sheriffs, as well as the endorsement of the state’s largest newspaper, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. She challenges her Republican opponent for accepting large campaign contributions. His campaign war chest more than triples hers.

“My opponent has received since the primary when he first started running over $3.5 million from one individual, David Humphreys out of Joplin, Missouri," Hensley says. "These offices ought not be for sale, and there ought not to be one person who ends up buying the attorney general’s office.”

The latest Post-Dispatch pollshows Hawley leading 50 percent to 40 percent. As Hawley also continues to enjoy a substantial fund-raising advantage, Hensley would need exceptional voter turnout and some undecided voters to swing her way on Election Day.

Brian Ellison is host of Statehouse Blend Missouri and contributes to KCUR's political coverage. He can be reached by emailor followed on Twitter @ptsbrian.

Copyright 2020 KCUR 89.3. To see more, visit KCUR 89.3.

Brian Ellison
Brian Ellison is substitute host of Central Standard and Up To Date and has served in a variety of roles at KCUR since 2008. He has been acting producer and associate producer of Up To Date and was acting producer of The Walt Bodine Show. A member of the Religion Newswriters Association, he also contributes occasionally to KCUR news coverage. Even before joining the KCUR staff, he was a producer and frequent guest on Up To Date's "Religion Roundtable," as well as a committed listener and volunteer.