2006 election Shortly after returning to Arkansas, Hutchinson announced his candidacy for governor in 2006. Initially, he was to face three-term Lieutenant Governor
Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, who was favored in most pre-election polls, in the Republican primary. But Rockefeller's withdrawal and death from a blood disorder in early 2006 led to Hutchinson winning the primary. In the general election, he lost to the Democratic nominee, then-
Arkansas Attorney General Mike Beebe.
2014 election Hutchinson was the Republican nominee for
governor of Arkansas in 2014. He was supported by
House Speaker Davy Carter. On November 4, 2014, after defeating Tea Party-backed Curtis Coleman in the Republican primary, he defeated the Democratic nominee,
Mike Ross, in the general election with 55% of the vote, the best showing for a Republican in an open-seat gubernatorial race since the end of Reconstruction. His victory also gave the GOP complete control of state government for the first time since the end of Reconstruction.
2018 election Hutchinson was reelected on November 6, 2018, in a landslide, taking over 65% of the vote and carrying all but eight counties. In a bad year for the GOP nationally, Hutchinson garnered the largest margin of victory for a Republican candidate in Arkansas history.
Tenure in 2017 Hutchinson took office as governor on January 13, 2015. and
Laura Kelly in 2020 , Vice President
Kamala Harris and a bipartisan group of governors and mayors in 2021 On November 16, 2015, Hutchinson said that he would block all Syrian refugees from entering the state in response to the
November 2015 Paris attacks. Under Hutchinson, Arkansas resumed executions in 2017 after having executed no one since 2005. In 2021,
DNA testing on the murder weapon and a bloody shirt at the scene of the crime did not match
Ledell Lee, who was convicted and executed for murder. Hutchinson defended Lee's execution, saying, "the DNA findings released today do not present any conclusive evidence to undermine [Lee's guilty verdict]." As governor, Hutchinson implemented work requirements for
Medicaid enrollees. As a result, by December 2018, almost 17,000 Arkansans had lost their Medicaid health insurance, with reapplication available in the new calendar year. In February 2019, Hutchinson signed a
bill into law that would criminalize abortion in the event
Roe v. Wade is overturned. On March 9, 2021, he signed SB6, a near-total
abortion bill, into law. He said that the bill was intended "to set the stage for the
Supreme Court overturning
current case law. I would have preferred the legislation to include the exceptions for
rape and
incest, which has been my consistent view, and such exceptions would increase the chances for a review by the U.S. Supreme Court." On May 8, 2022, Hutchinson responded to comments by Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell about potential passage of a future federal law prohibiting abortions nationwide: "If the court reverses Roe v. Wade, they're saying that the Constitution does not provide that, which returns it to the states. And that's where the vigorous debate is going to be. That is where we're going to face a lot of concerns on the compassion side." In 2015, Hutchinson signed into law legislation that would prohibit localities from extending civil rights protections to
LGBT individuals. At the time, Arkansas was among states that allowed discrimination in the workplace, housing and business on the basis of
gender identity and
sexual orientation. In March 2021, Hutchinson signed into law legislation that would allow doctors to refuse non-emergency medical treatment to LGBT people based on moral objection. In April 2021, he vetoed a bill that would make it illegal for
transgender minors to receive
gender-affirming medication or surgery, calling it "a vast government overreach". The state legislature later overrode his veto. In August 2021, Hutchinson signed bills into law that prohibited businesses and government facilities from requiring proof of
COVID-19 vaccination for staff and customers to enter facilities. While Arkansas was experiencing a wave of COVID-19 cases, he also signed a bill into law that prohibited state and local officials from enacting mask mandates. He later said he regretted doing so. In January 2022, Hutchinson encouraged large businesses to not comply with the
Biden administration's vaccine requirements. Hutchinson demanded that Republicans who
tried to overturn the 2020 presidential election and spread
Donald Trump's "
Big Lie" about mass
voter fraud not be put in positions of leadership. He also accused Trump of dividing the party and said his election conspiracies were a "recipe for disaster". On February 5, 2022, Hutchinson and U.S. senator
Lisa Murkowski condemned the
Republican National Committee's
censure of representatives
Adam Kinzinger and
Liz Cheney for their support of and participation on the House Select Committee tasked with investigating the
January 6 United States Capitol attack. == Post-gubernatorial career ==