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Richardson wages independent candidacy
5-13-02
By
Ron Jenkins
OKLAHOMA
CITY (AP) _ With $2 million of his own money to get his message
out, independent Gary Richardson has attracted a lot of attention in the
governor's race by calling for tax cuts, a lottery to raise money for
education and elimination of turnpike tolls.
Richardson says he's gaining ground on other candidates because people
are fed up with political infighting between Democrats and Republicans.
His proposals are contained in a 33-page booklet called the "Richardson
Plan," and he says that his candidacy has some built-in advantages
because, as an independent, he could avoid partisan bickering.
He said in an interview with The Associated Press that if he could not
get warring Republicans and Democrats to reason together, he would go to
the people to try to get his programs enacted through initiative
petitions.
"It wouldn't take the Legislature long to learn that I mean business --
that I'm a bottom-line person," the Tulsa attorney said.
"At my age, 61 years old, I'm not running for governor because I want a
political career. I'm not looking for the next job."
He said he did not even like politics and "and I particularly don't like
partisan politics. I think it is a waste."
Those may seem to be strange words from a man who was heavily involved
in politics early in his career, running twice for Congress as a
Republican. He failed to get elected. He served as U.S. attorney after a
political appointment, before starting a successful law practice.
As U.S. attorney in Muskogee, Richardson said he was criticized by
members of his party for hiring Democrats to top positions. He said he
still believes in the best person for the position, regardless of party.
Richardson wants to succeed Republican Gov. Frank Keating, who is
winding up eight years in office. Others in the race are Republicans
Steve Largent and Jim Denny and Democrats Vince Orza, Brad Henry, Kelly
Haney and Jim Dunegan.
Richardson gives Keating and the Legislature no better than a C-plus
grade for their work.
"I think Frank has been very partisan," he said. "I've told him that. It
won't be any shock if he reads it in the paper."
Richardson and Keating are friends, going back to when they were both
federal prosecutors.
In fact, Keating was able to run for governor in 1994 because Richardson
gave him a job after Keating returned to Oklahoma from Washington, D.C.,
where he had served in Republican administrations for several years.
Richardson said he told Keating in February of 2001 that he was thinking
about running for governor as an independent and Keating "tried to
convince me to run as a Republican."
He said he told Keating he would not have his job as a partisan.
"The reason is I don't think Frank has been free; nor do I believe any
governor from one of the two parties today would be free to lead the
whole, to be a leader for the people."
In other comments, Richardson said that if elected governor, he would
probably support a study of the how the Oklahoma death penalty is
applied and why Oklahoma executes more people than most other states.
He also said he would oppose a ban on smoking in restaurants, saying
business owners should have the freedom to make their own smoking
policies.
A lottery, in Richardson's mind, is not a moral issue. He called it a
voluntary tax and "a means to an end" that makes sense because
Oklahomans already are spending heavily on lotteries in nearby states.
"It can't be gambling," he said. "No one has any right to believe they
are going to win anything. As one bumper sticker said, "It's a tax for
people that are bad with math."
He calls the turnpike system "the biggest scam that has ever been placed
on this state."
Arguing the system exists largely to serve special interests, he said it
is retarding state growth and costing the state millions in federal road
dollars each year.
Regarding Oklahoma's spiraling prison population, Richardson said he was
a strong supporter of community sentencing and other alternatives to
incarceration.
"We need to quit locking up people we're mad at and lock those up we're
afraid of," he said.
Richardson said he is a man of faith who prayed about running for
governor.
"I had more peace to saying yes than saying no and people can interpret
that any way they want to."
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