KY-GOV: Race Will Test the Limits of Democrats' Red-State Survival Strategies [View all]
Beshear, whose father, Steve, ran the state from 2007 to 2015, has become one of the countrys most popular governors, after winning office in 2019 over a widely detested incumbent by just over 5,000 votes.
The reasons arent complicated: He focuses relentlessly on local issues like the flooding that devastated the eastern part of the state last year talks often about his faith and tries to keep national politics at bay. He brands his regular news conferences as a Team Kentucky Update.
Beshears ideology is hard to pin down, though Republicans see him as a doctrinaire Democrat in disguise. He has supported some tax cuts while opposing others. He raised pay for state troopers but restored voting rights to felons, albeit with a lengthy list of exceptions. He issued an executive order last year to allow medical cannabis, angering Republicans, who said he had overstepped his authority.
Beshear has also vetoed legislation requiring school districts to set aside money for charter schools, though Republicans overrode it. And last year, when Republicans sent Beshear a bill barring transgender girls from participating in school sports under their gender identity, he said it was most likely unconstitutional. Explaining his veto, he wrote that public officials had an obligation to show compassion, kindness and empathy, even if not understanding to transgender children.
Beshear got a boost in 2021 when Ford announced plans to invest $5.8 billion to build two plants to manufacture batteries for electric vehicles, creating 5,000 jobs conveniently located in a Republican-leaning county south of Louisville. And when Ford announced an additional $700 million plan for truck manufacturing in the state, Beshear capitalized by declaring Sept. 27 KenTRUCKy Day.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/03/us/politics/andy-beshear-democrats-kentucky.html