Keeping the Electoral College

On Wednesday, Hillary Clinton told CNN’s Anderson Cooper the U.S. needed to abolish the Electoral College, calling it an “an anachronism that was designed for another time.”

Family Council successfully opposed two efforts to undermine the Electoral College in Arkansas — one in 2007 and another in 2009. Each of these proposals would have awarded Arkansas’ electoral votes to the winner of the nationwide popular vote in presidential elections.

The Electoral College keeps major metropolitan areas from running roughshod over rural America. It also forces candidates to consider other parts of the country besides the heavily-populated seaboards.

Below is a video by Dennis Prager about the benefits of the Electoral College.

Teen Abortion in Arkansas Hit New Low in 2016

Earlier this summer the Arkansas Department of Health released its annual report regarding abortion.

The report shows, among other things, that abortion has fallen to its lowest levels since 1977 and that fewer women are coming to Arkansas from other states to have abortions.

It also shows that abortion among teenagers has fallen to new lows.

In 1994 some 6,036 abortions were performed in Arkansas. Of those, 1,503 were on teenagers — nearly one in every four abortions.

In 2016 only 349 abortions were on teenagers — less than 11% of all the abortions performed in Arkansas that year.

Some say this decline is due to increased access to birth control among teenagers. However, Arkansas’ teen pregnancy rates have remained high. While that’s nothing to brag about, it shows contraceptives are not the reason teenagers are having fewer abortions.

What’s behind the drastic decline in abortion? For one thing, we are building a culture of life. Abortion is unthinkable to many young people who have seen ultrasound images and know what abortion really is.

I also believe much of the credit goes to our pro-life laws passed in recent years. In 2015 Arkansas passed one of the best informed-consent laws in the nation. It ensures women are given all the facts about abortion up front. Nearly 500 women chose not to have abortions last year after being given that information.

Below is a breakdown of abortion among teenagers and adults in Arkansas since 1994.

Year Teen Non-Teen / Unknown Total
1994 1,503 (24.9%) 4,533 (75.1%) 6,036
1995 1,435 (24.4%) 4,451 (75.6%) 5,886
1996 1,479 (24.3%) 4,603 (75.7%) 6,082
1997 1,378 (23.4%) 4,511 (76.6%) 5,889
1998 1,334 (21.4%) 4,891 (78.6%) 6,225
1999 1,157 (20.7%) 4,435 (79.3%) 5,592
2000 1,158 (21.3%) 4,291 (78.7%) 5,449
2001 1,184 (20.1%) 4,715 (79.9%) 5,899
2002 1,006 (19%) 4,282 (81%) 5,288
2003 1,015 (18.8%) 4,384 (81.2%) 5,399
2004 884 (19.1%) 3,756 (80.9%) 4,640
2006 956 (19.2%) 4,029 (80.8%) 4,985
2007 870 (18%) 3,972 (82%) 4,842
2008 866 (18.1%) 3,916 (81.9%) 4,782
2009 774 (16.9%) 3,799 (83.1%) 4,573
2010 750 (16.6%) 3,778 (83.4%) 4,528
2011 615 (15.3%) 3,417 (84.7%) 4,032
2012 535 (14.1%) 3,247 (85.9%) 3,782
2013 451 (12.1%) 3,281 (87.9%) 3,732
2014 486 (11.4%) 3,786 (88.6%) 4,272
2015 407 (10.8%) 3,364 (89.2%) 3,771
2016 349 (10.9%) 2,858 (89.1%) 3,207
Total 20,243 (19.2%) 85,441 (80.8%) 105,684

Lottery Scholarship Funding Dismal Despite Revenue Spike

Last week the Arkansas Lottery posted its financial report for the month of August.

The Arkansas Lottery took in over $49.3 million in last month — nearly $12.5 million than the month before — but it paid out $8.9 million to scholarships — roughly 18.1% of its gross revenue.

Since 2014, the Arkansas Lottery has spent roughly 18% – 19% of its revenue on scholarships. That’s well below the national average.

There are no two ways about it: The Arkansas Lottery is a failure. It rolled out more gambling more quickly than any lottery we know in order to artificially bolster ticket sales.

It sets aside a smaller percentage of money for education than the average state lottery.

Other state lotteries pay more money to education despite making less money than Arkansas’ lottery.

And rather than reassess its priorities or restructure its budget, the Arkansas Lottery has a habit of trying to use marketing and promotion to gloss over its shortcomings.

Below is a breakdown of lottery figures so far this financial year.

Month Gross Lottery Revenue Paid to Scholarships % Gross Revenue
July $ 36,885,396.81  $ 6,661,762.99 18.1%
August  49,320,459.23 8,912,741.54 18.1%
Total  $ 86,205,856.04  $ 15,574,504.53 18.1%