Leslie Rutledge
Leslie Carol Rutledge is an American attorney and politician who has served as the 21st lieutenant governor of Arkansas since 2023. A member of the Republican Party, she was previously the 56th attorney general of Arkansas from 2015 to 2023.
Rutledge served as counsel for Governor Mike Huckabee before she was elected to be Arkansas attorney general in 2014. She was reelected as attorney general in 2018, and elected lieutenant governor in the 2022 after withdrawing from gubernatorial election and endorsing Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Rutledge was the first Republican and first woman elected attorney general for Arkansas, and is the first woman lieutenant governor of Arkansas.
Early life and education
Rutledge was born in Batesville, Arkansas, on June 9, 1976. She graduated from Southside High School, the University of Arkansas, and the William H. Bowen School of Law at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.Early career
Rutledge began her legal career as law clerk to the Arkansas Court of Appeals Judge Josephine Hart, a family friend. Rutledge worked on Hart's successful campaigns for election as associate justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court. Before seeking office herself, Rutledge also worked for the national Republican Party, as a lawyer for the National Republican Congressional Committee and Republican National Committee. For a time, she was also a deputy prosecuting attorney in Lonoke County.Rutledge was hired as an attorney for the Division of Children and Family Services within the Arkansas Department of Human Services in October 2006, and resigned with immediate effect on December 3, 2007. A partial set of personnel records obtained by the press in 2014 under Arkansas' freedom of information law showed that Rutledge was flagged by DHS with "do not rehire" status. Rutledge said that she resigned to work for Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee's presidential campaign, suggested the "do not hire" status was not related to any incident at work, and suggested that the notation, "My guess is that it was because I did not give a two weeks notice." In 2018, an employee of the Democratic Party of Arkansas filed a FOIA lawsuit to compel the release of Rutledge's DHS personnel file; Rutledge said the lawsuit was "dragging up decade-old fake news." The agency had initially withheld the records, but a state judge ruled that Rutledge's file must be released under the Arkansas' freedom of information law. The remaining eight pages of Rutledge's personnel file were then released, reflecting that her DHS employment was terminated for "gross misconduct"; Rutledge said the notation was incorrect. Other records released in 2018 included one document evaluating Rutledge's performance as "satisfactory"; one non-disciplinary "counseling statement" critiquing her handling of a case; and a "notice of disciplinary action."
Rutledge was a lawyer for Huckabee's unsuccessful 2008 campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, and campaigned for him in Iowa ahead of the caucus there.
Political career
Attorney General of Arkansas
2014 election and 2018 re-election
Rutledge sought the Republican nomination for Attorney General of Arkansas in the 2014 election. She faced fellow attorneys Patricia Nation and David Sterling. Rutledge finished with a plurality in the May 2014 primary but finished with less than 50 percent of the vote. She hence faced second-place finisher Sterling in a runoff election. Nation endorsed Rutledge, and she defeated Sterling.In September 2014, Pulaski County Clerk Larry Crane canceled Rutledge's voter registration when he discovered that Rutledge had registered to vote in Washington, D.C., and Virginia. Rutledge protested but nevertheless re-registered to vote in Pulaski County.
In the November 2014 general election, Rutledge defeated Democratic Party nominee Nate Steel, a member of the Arkansas House of Representatives, and Libertarian Party nominee Aaron Cash, in the general election. Rutledge won 51.61% of the vote, Steel 43.21%, and Cash 5.18%.
In 2018, Rutledge won re-election. She received 61.8% of the vote, defeating Democratic nominee Mike Lee and Libertarian nominee Kerry Hicks.
LGBT laws
In 2015, the state legislature passed the Intrastate Commerce Improvement Act, a law blocking local governments from passing anti-discrimination laws protecting from discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Several Arkansas local governments, including Fayetteville, Eureka Springs, Hot Springs, and Texarkana, passed anti-discrimination ordinances. Rutledge defended the state's law, opposed the local governments' ordinances, and appealed a ruling by a circuit judge that the Fayetteville ordinance did not violate state law. The Arkansas Supreme Court, in decisions in 2017 and 2018, sided with Rutledge, ruling that the local anti-discrimination ordinance was void.In February 2021, Rutledge proposed a bill that would prohibit transgender athletes from playing on girls' sports teams in K–12 schools.
Rutledge defended Arkansas House Bill 1570, a law enacted by the Arkansas Legislature in 2021 that banned gender-affirming care for minors. The law was enacted in 2021 amid an anti-transgender movement; in the subsequent court challenge, Rutledge defended the law. She was interviewed on The Problem with Jon Stewart about the law, which the federal courts blocked.
Immigration
In July 2017, Rutledge joined Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, as well as nine other Republican state attorneys general and Republican Idaho Governor Butch Otter, in threatening the Donald Trump administration that they would litigate if the president did not terminate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy that had been put into place by President Barack Obama.Rutledge was a speaker at the 2018 CPAC in Maryland; in her speech, Rutledge introduced herself as a "Christian, pro-life, gun-carrying conservative woman" and cited the Bible as a reason to limit immigration, mentioning the construction of city walls by Nehemiah referenced in the Book of Nehemiah.
Gambling
In June 2017, Rutledge again rejected a proposed state constitutional amendment to legalize casino gambling. She rejected the proposal by Barry Emigh of Hot Springs, writing that the proposed popular name and ballot title are "misleading and wholly deficient."Healthcare
As AG, Rutledge frequently targeted the Affordable Care Act, seeking to dismantle it through court challenges. In 2018, she joined 19 other Republican-led states in a challenge to the ACA, saying, "It's time that we remove the Affordable Care Act from the backs of the American people." Rutledge, along with then-President Donald Trump, asked the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down the entire ACA, which provides health insurance coverage to about 300,000 Arkansans. The Supreme Court rejected the states' claims in a 7-2 decision in 2021.Rutledge defended an Arkansas law that regulated pharmacy benefit managers. In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Arkansas law, ruling unanimously in Rutledge v. Pharmaceutical Care Management Association that the Employee Retirement Income Security Act did not preempt state laws regulating PBMs.
Abortion
In June 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade and ruled that there is no federal constitutional right to abortion. Under an Arkansas "trigger law" enacted in 2019, abortion was effectively banned in the state, except to save the life of the mother, immediately after the ruling. Rutledge celebrated the ruling and, under the 2019 law, she signed the formal certification that Roe had been overturned, implementing the abortion ban. Rutledge said that "it is my greatest honor to officially end abortion in Arkansas."Student debt
In 2022, after President Joe Biden took executive action to forgiving a portion of student loan debt, Rutledge joined a lawsuit brought by five other Republican state attorneys general. The debt-relief program was ultimately blocked by a divided Supreme Court in 2023; Rutledge celebrated the ruling on Facebook, describing the program as "a way to erase the debt of privileged college grads."Role as Trump surrogate
Rutledge was a campaign surrogate for Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign. In a speech at the Republican National Convention in July 2016, she declared "I proudly stand with Donald Trump" and blasted his opponent, Hillary Rodham Clinton, saying: "How can you support someone who has had an FBI investigation?" At the first presidential debate between Trump and Clinton, in September 2016, Rutledge sat on a CBS News panel and stated people did not care about Trump's tax returns, leading to an extended exchange with journalist Bob Schieffer. Asked about the discussion in an Arkansas Money and Politics interview, Rutledge stated it was to be expected because the other panelists were part of the "liberal elite media." In October 2016, after the Access Hollywood tape came to light ; Rutledge said that Trump's remarks were "offensive" but reiterated her support for his candidacy.As AG, Rutledge aligned herself with Trump, including on the lawsuit seeking repeal of the Affordable Care Act.
In November 2016, Rutledge was appointed to the executive committee of the Republican Attorneys General Association; she became the group's vice chairwoman the following year.
Attempt to overturn 2020 presidential election result
In the November 2020 United States presidential election, Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump. After his election loss, Trump and his allies attempted to subvert the election result. In December 2020, after the electoral college had already voted, Rutledge was one of 18 Republican state attorneys general who filed a failed lawsuit, Texas v. Pennsylvania, that sought to nullify the election outcome in four key states won by Biden and thus keep Trump in power. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the lawsuit, which was predicated on baseless claims. Rutledge did not publicly acknowledge the legitimacy of Biden's election victory until February 2021, after he had already taken office.In September 2022, The 65 Project, a legal activism group, submitted an ethics complaint against Rutledge to the Arkansas Office of the Committee on Professional Conduct. The complaint said that, by advancing false and frivolous claims to undermine the election result, Rutledge violated the rules of professional conduct governing lawyers. Rutledge denied wrongdoing, framing the ethics complaint as a "political attack" against her.