Republican
Official
From Shelby Co.
Believes In
Tough
Sentencing Laws
BY TOM
YANCEY
STAFF WRITER
Shelby County
District Attorney General Bill Gibbons, who has headed the largest criminal-prosecution operation in
the state for 12 years, believes he has the experience to be the next
governor.
Gibbons, who turned 59 on Sunday, spoke at the Greene County
Republican Women's Lincoln Day dinner Friday night. He was interviewed by The Greeneville Sun that
afternoon.
Shelby County is the state's most populous county, with
approximately one million people. Tennessee has a population of eight million.
Despite being targeted for defeat by the national Democratic party in
his bid for re-election in a district that usually votes Democratic, Gibbons pointed out that he got
62 percent of the vote in the general election, a landslide.
Gibbons said
he thinks his strong showing in a key part of Tennessee with so many votes makes him the strongest
candidate in the race for the GOP nomination now.
Others officially
running for the Republican nomination for governor are: Knoxville Mayor Bill Haslam; Lt. Gov. Ron
Ramsey, of Blountville; and U.S. Rep. Zack Wamp, of Chattanooga.
Asked
how someone based in Memphis with a demanding job and almost no name recognition in East Tennessee
can be a viable candidate, Gibbons said, all of the candidates are going to have some "long days"
until the primary in 2010.
Gibbons said he believes that his track record
directing a staff of roughly 100 attorneys who handle about 100,000 cases each year shows he knows
how to be an administrator and make tough decisions.
He said, "I sign 250
indictments every week," deciding whether to seek the death penalty and whether to prosecute a
juvenile as an adult on a regular basis.
Gibbons added that he is now a
veteran of 12 state budget cycles, which this year have forced him to make layoffs, giving him
insight into the budgetary process and necessary belt-tightening
process.
Whoever is elected governor in 2010 will no doubt still have to
focus on what Gibbons called "the economic slump," and create a business climate in the state that
brings more jobs.
The governor will also have to "hold the line on
taxes," Gibbons said. "There is a benefit to being a low-tax state."
TOUGHER SENTENCING
But Gibbons said he will most of all bring
his prosecuting experience to the governor's mansion.
"Tennessee has the
second highest violent crime rate in the nation," Gibbons said, behind South Carolina. He believes
this is because Tennessee also has "weak state laws" that result in convicted criminals not serving
enough time for their crimes.
He said, "We need fundamental changes in
the sentencing structure" that a governor who knows the problem can propose -- and work for -- until
they are made law. I've been seeing that up close for 12 years."
In
general, "Law enforcement is doing a good job" of enforcing state laws, Gibbons said. "I want to
give law enforcement the hammer it needs in its toolbox -- tough sentencing
laws."
"I'm a big believer in drug courts," Gibbons said, and if elected
would try to "funnel state dollars" to judges that institute tough rehabilitation measures as an
alternative sentence in drug cases.
Gibbons said he would also focus on
better schools, more education and more innovation.
He noted that in 2010
Tennessee will move from its own set of standardized tests to a national test. He believes the
results at that time "will be a wake-up call" for the state. He acknowledged that Gov. Phil Bredesen
has been saying much the same thing for some time.
Gibbons said he would
seek to "give local school systems more flexibility" and allow teachers and principals to "think
outside the box."
Currently, he said, "Charter schools have to jump
through a lot of hoops" to be created and to continue to exist, a process he would try to streamline
and simplify.
Memphis has 12 charter schools that Gibbons said generally
do a good job. "But it wasn't easy" getting them approved and started, and needs to be easier, if
the state is to foster the creativity needed to avoid a "one size fits all" approach to
education.
Gibbons said he wants to "encourage innovation at the local
level" in schools: "No cookie-cutter approach."
Part of the governor's
job is as the state's "chief salesman," Gibbons said.
"As governor, I
want to be able to sell Tennessee as a place with low taxes, good infrastructure and safe
communities.
HUMBLE BACKGROUND
Gibbons
was raised on a small farm in Arkansas by his mother after his father left her with a family of six
children.
He said an extraordinary fourth-grade teacher noticed that he
could read better than his classmates, but was not attending very often because he saw no hope for
the future.
That teacher bent attendance rules that would have required
her to make him repeat the fourth grade, he said. She explained to him that his only real choice for
moving out of poverty was to come to school every day in the fifth grade and study
hard.
In 15 minutes, "She changed my life," Gibbons said. That teacher's
lesson turned out to be true, he said, and Gibbons found other mentors along the way, including a
high school guidance counselor who showed him how to get a scholarship to Vanderbilt University, and
Lamar Alexander, whom Gibbons met as a high school student.
After college
and then law school, Gibbons served on Gov. Lamar Alexander's staff. Gibbons said he learned 90
percent of what he knows about public service while working for
Alexander.
Those lessons, he believes, have served him well so far, and
would serve him well as governor.
Gibbons is married to Judge Julia
Gibbons of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, a George W. Bush appointee.