Northwest Arkansas voters may have a sense of déjà vu when they head to the polls in the coming weeks. Bentonville and Springdale residents will decide rematches in Arkansas House Districts 9, 10 and 11 where Democrats are focusing on voter education to improve their odds of victory this time around.
All three Republican incumbents did not respond to interview requests for this story.
Democrat Diana Gonzales Worthen said she felt confident about her chances during the 2022 election for Washington County’s District 9, the state’s only district with a majority of Hispanic voting-age residents. When votes were tallied, she lost to Republican DeAnna Hodges by 109 votes, the exact number of votes cast for Libertarian Steven Stilling.
Stilling is not participating in the 2024 race.
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The loss was “heart-wrenching,” but Gonzales Worthen said she wanted to know what happened. What she found was that the district is home to several new voters, so lots of education about the voting process is needed, she said. As a result, the longtime educator has engaged in voter education initiatives and launched campaign efforts earlier than in 2022.
After participating at a candidate forum hosted by the League of Women Voters of Washington County at the Fayetteville Public Library on Oct. 8, Gonzales Worthen told the Advocate she’s running again because she feels she’s the best person to represent District 9.
“[The race] could have gone either way, and so I’m very happy that I decided to do it again because many of the people that had been identified supporters, being that the district is [a] majority Latino district, many of them were voting for the first time and didn’t know the process,” she said. “And so going back knocking doors, it’s been educating all of them to know exactly what they need to do because they didn’t know where to vote, how to vote. Some thought that they could vote online.”
In neighboring District 11, Democrat Rey Hernandez said he hadn’t planned on running again because he was getting older and wasn’t sure he had the stamina for another campaign. When Hernandez realized no one else had filed against the incumbent, he jumped in the race because he didn’t want it to go uncontested.
Following the Oct. 8 candidate forum, Hernandez told the Advocate he was optimistic in 2022 when he ultimately lost to Republican Rebecca Burkes by nearly 1,300 votes, and said he “wrongly assumed that people just automatically come out and vote.”
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“So it is [a] very different race for me,” Hernandez said. “I realize that people need to understand that there is a race going on and that that race can only be won with votes. It’s not won by reading your mail or looking on social media. You actually have to pick yourself up and go down to the polls.”
Arkansas historically has reported low voter participation rates, but Hernandez said he thinks the fact that it’s a presidential election year and a woman is running at the top of the ticket might help. Hernandez said it would be nice if he and Gonzales Worthen win their respective elections and could provide representation for Springdale’s Hispanic community at the state Capitol.
Residents of Springdale, where roughly 39% of the population is Hispanic, have never been represented by a Hispanic lawmaker in the Arkansas Legislature.
“That’s our hope, that we can get in there, create a Hispanic Caucus for once in the state of Arkansas and give our people, la raza, some representation as well as for all of our constituency — teachers, veterans, ranchers, everybody that we represent,” he said.
Hodges and Burkes did not participate in the Oct. 8 candidate forum.
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In Benton County, House District 10 also has a 2022 rematch on the ballot. Freshman Rep. Mindy McAlindon, a Centerton Republican, defeated Democrat Kate Schaffer by 1,460 votes.
Schaffer said she “didn’t know what to expect” two years ago as a first-time candidate with a non-incumbent opponent, and receiving 44% of the vote was “a pretty good showing” in her opinion. She decided to run again after paying close attention to the 2023 legislative session and being frustrated by the “lopsided” division of power due to Republicans’ supermajority, she said.
Her message that she hopes “to bring compassion and common sense” to the Legislature “seems to be resonating with people,” she said.
“I think there’s kind of a feeling that we need to bring some balance back to the statehouse, that it’s getting too extreme,” Schaffer said.
More than 60% of registered voters cast ballots in the District 10 race two years ago, and Schaffer’s campaign has responded by reaching out to newly registered voters this year, she said.
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House District 9
Rep. Deanna Hodges (Arkansas Secretary of State)
Hodges is the current representative of District 9, which includes east Springdale in Washington County. During her first term in office, the freshman legislator was the lead sponsor of a bill that amended the law concerning contracts for work performed on state aid roads.
She also co-sponsored bills that amended the state’s Freedom of Information Act, reduced the income tax and increased the homestead property tax credit.
Hodges told the Arkansas Democrat Gazette her constituents work hard and want to keep more of what they earn. The incumbent also told the newspaper she wants to explore what the state can do to help cities build needed infrastructure, and look at making public transportation safer by giving public transit systems more authority to remove disruptive passengers. Diana Gonzales Worthen (Arkansas Secretary of State)
This is Gonzales Worthen’s fourth time seeking a seat in the Arkansas General Assembly. She had unsuccessful bids for the House in 2006 and 2022, and the Arkansas Senate in 2012. Gonzales Worthen said her 2024 campaign is “all about strong schools, strong families and a strong Springdale.”
With 35 years of experience as an educator, Gonzales Worthen said her focus if elected would be on education-related issues, such as ensuring that teachers and support staff are well paid. Additionally, Worthen said she’s interested in looking at after-school and summer programs that would help working families and also provide an opportunity where students could work on literacy skills, which historically have been poor in Arkansas.
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“I’m a co-founder of two nonprofits where I worked with a lot of families and have helped to provide college opportunities there as well, and so in a nutshell, with my education background — education, health care, mental health care, those are all of the areas that I would really like to work towards,” she said.
House District 10
Northern Bentonville, northeastern Centerton and southern Bella Vista comprise District 10.
Schaffer, a Bentonville resident, has worked on previous Democratic legislative campaigns and said the area is “really forward-thinking… very dynamic and changing quickly.” Rep. Mindy McAlindon (Arkansas Secretary of State)
McAlindon told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that District 10 residents “are highly active entrepreneurs who don’t want constraints of government stopping them.” She supports reducing “regulations, red tape and taxes” to support small businesses, according to her campaign website.
She co-sponsored the two cuts to the state’s corporate and individual income tax rates that have been proposed since she took office, in September 2023 and in June of this year.
“Arkansans deserve to keep more of their own money,” McAlindon’s website states.
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Schaffer said tax cuts should be “targeted for average Arkansans” instead of adding to the state’s “upside-down tax system where low-income people pay the lion’s share.”
McAlindon was among the 80 GOP lawmakers who co-sponsored the LEARNS Act, a wide-ranging 2023 law that changed many aspects of education in Arkansas, including the creation of a new school voucher program. Her website mentions her support for allowing “parents to decide on what is best” for their children’s education. Kate Schaffer (Arkansas Secretary of State)
She introduced a “Parents Bill of Rights” late in the 2023 legislative session that would have allowed parents to review classroom materials and to remove their child temporarily from school if a class or school activity conflicts with the parents’ religious or moral beliefs. The bill passed the House but slowed to a halt after Senate Education Committee members expressed concerns that it would burden teachers.
McAlindon was also the lead sponsor of Act 511, which prohibits public schools and colleges from requiring employees to participate in implicit bias training.
Schaffer criticized McAlindon’s education policy stances, including her campaign fliers that say she favors “strong schools.”
“She fails to put the word ‘public’ in there, and I would argue that being a sponsor of the LEARNS Act is not being a strong advocate for public schools,” Schaffer said.
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By contrast, Schaffer supports “adequately funding schools, supporting teachers and preparing kids” in public education, according to her campaign website.
House District 11
Rep. Rebecca Burkes (Arkansas Secretary of State)
Burkes, who founded a residential and commercial real estate development, construction and brokerage company with her husband, represents District 11, which encompasses downtown Springdale and stretches northward into Benton County and eastward toward Beaver Lake.
During her first term in office, she was lead sponsor of a bill that revised child labor laws and eliminated the state requirement for children under the age of 16 to obtain permission from the Division of Labor in order to be employed.
According to her campaign website, Burkes said government will grow and become more invasive in people’s lives if left to its own devices, so the answer is less government. Rey Hernandez (Arkansas Secretary of State)
“Small business and entrepreneurship are the backbone and lifeblood of this region, and I will fight for lower taxes and against the red tape that limits and burdens these businesses,” Burkes said. “I am 100% pro-life and will fight to defend life of the unborn, protect your 2nd Amendment fundamental rights, and push back against invasive liberal ideology in our schools.”
Hernandez, a Marine Corps veteran, cattle rancher and University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences community health worker, said he’s likewise interested in education, and has helped the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) raise more than $1 million statewide over the last 20 years to help Latino students pursue higher education.
If elected, Hernandez said he would work to create a living wage for Arkansans, noting that although the state’s minimum wage increased to $11 an hour in 2021, those who were making just above that were left behind because they didn’t receive an increase in pay.
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“We don’t want to keep our Arkansans at a minimum,” he said. “We want them all thriving so whenever there’s going to be a wage increase for the minimum wage, there will also be an equal wage increase for every hourly worker with companies that are over 500 employees.”
STUTTGART — Members of the Arkansas House Agriculture, Forestry and Economic Development Committee met with economists Tuesday to hear about the financial outlook for the state’s farmers and from farmers themselves.
In recent months, farmers have cited depressed commodity prices, high input costs and a weak export market as pressing economic stressors going into the harvest season.
Rep. DeAnn Vaught, R-Horatio, who is also a farmer, opened the meeting Grand Prairie Center by saying the economic troubles facing Arkansas farmers affects more than just the agriculture industry.
“It does hit everybody in the state of Arkansas,” Vaught said.
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I think that’s one thing we have not really looked into, is it’s not just affecting Stuttgart or row crop farms, it’s seriously going to affect everyone in our state and that’s one of the reasons we decided to put this together. One to educate ourselves truly on what this does mean for our state.”
Leslie Rogers, a technical sales specialist at agricultural chemical manufacturer SePRO Ag, said farmers are among the largest private employers in the state of Arkansas and losses to the state’s agriculture industry will have widespread implications for Arkansas’s rural communities.
“In recent weeks, it has been consistently mentioned that up to 1 in 3 of our farms in our state will cease to operate if there is no supplemental aid offered to producers,” Rogers said.
“I’ve spent almost 20 years in ag sales and I’ve never seen this level of concern, hesitation and sheer exhaustion from growers,” she said.
“For three consecutive growing seasons, row crop farmers in Arkansas have faced break-even or below break-even margins. For the 2025 season, there was no workable budget for state row crops in Arkansas. The math simply doesn’t work anymore,” she said.
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Members of the audience, which included local farmers and agribusiness owners, called on state lawmakers to “bend the ear” of their federal counterparts in Congress to allocate supplemental financial assistance, not in months, but in weeks.
Some asked state lawmakers to pass a resolution and send it to the congressional delegation requesting immediate aid for farmers. Vaught said that was something she would be willing to pursue and said she was confident such a measure would pass in both the state House and Senate.
Arkansas farmers said it’s a matter of weeks, not months, that will determine whether they can stay in business with no financial assistance.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law in July, increased federal spending for agricultural financial aid, crop insurance, disaster assistance and other rural programs by $65.7 billion over the next decade. It also made adjustments to reference prices — the basis for risk and price loss coverage programs — which producers utilize when revenues and crop prices fail to reach certain levels.
“I understand the big beautiful bill was passed and it is going to give us a level of assistance but it is not going to be enough,” said Kirk Vansandt, a farmer and chief agriculture lending officer with Stuttgart-based Farmers and Merchants Bank, which has 29 locations across Arkansas. Vansandt visited Washington, D.C., last week to hear from congressional leaders.
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“We are already plugging the numbers in and all of these crops are still coming in with shortfalls, so we’re going to need some additional relief because we’re in such dire straits with our export markets and the need for reliable commodities right now,” Vansandt said.
“This is a dire time,” Cooperative Extension agriculture economist Hunter Biram said. “Yes, there was a boost to the safety net, but the biggest issue right now is we’re facing these losses but the cash that will paid out on these losses will not be received until the fall of 2026.”
Net farm income has been declining in Arkansas for two years; farming expenses have been outpacing revenues and government assistance since 2023 and the trend is projected to continue through 2026, according to materials Biram presented.
The disparity between crop prices received and farm expenses is the largest it has been in the last 25 years, with input prices 47% higher than crop prices across the United States, Biram said.
“For the most part, agriculture tends to be a break-even business, at least from a row crop perspective,” Biram said.
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Just comparing projections of total revenues versus total expenses, without including government assistance, Arkansas farmers are projected to experience a third consecutive year of negative net farm income, Biram said.
“We’re continuing to eat away at any equity that has built up from those post-covid years. So how sustainable is that, becomes the question,” he said.
Arkansas farmers’ expenses are projected to outweigh their cash receipts and other forms of financial assistance for corn, cotton, rice and soybean crops this year, according to Biram’s materials.
“What you see is per acre, corn is going to be losing nearly $300 an acre, cotton (losing) around $350 per acre, peanuts standing to make a little bit of money … rice at -$260 per acre, soybeans at -$85 per acre,” Biram said. “So if we’re looking at among these which one is the least bad, that’s going to be soybeans … but still losing nearly $100 an acre, add on operating expenses and rent just to produce the crop, and then we’re losing almost $200 per acre for 2025.”
Brett Barrouquere is a staff writer with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A reporter and editor for more than 30 years, he’s worked a little bit of everywhere, mainly in the South. His most recent stop before Arkansas was in Baltimore, Maryland, as a night and breaking news editor. He’s a New Orleans native and has two daughters.
Kilty Cleary is a Los Angeles-based media and marketing pro with 18+ years of experience. He’s worked with top brands like Sporting News and Sports Illustrated, building key partnerships and creating engaging content. Follow him on X and IG @theonlykilty
Kilty Cleary
Contributing Sports Writer
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College football Week 3 features Iowa State vs. Arkansas State, set for Saturday at 4 p.m. ET with live national coverage on ESPN2.
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Quarterback Mark Gronowski #11 of the Iowa Hawkeyes throws the ball in the first half of play at Jack Trice Stadium on September 6, 2025, in Ames, Iowa. The Iowa State Cyclones won 16-13 over… Quarterback Mark Gronowski #11 of the Iowa Hawkeyes throws the ball in the first half of play at Jack Trice Stadium on September 6, 2025, in Ames, Iowa. The Iowa State Cyclones won 16-13 over the Iowa Hawkeyes.
Photo by David K Purdy/Getty Images
How to Watch Iowa State vs. Arkansas State
Date: Saturday, Sept. 13, 2025
Time: 4:00 p.m. ET
Channel: ESPN2
Stream: Fubo (TRY FOR FREE)
Iowa State is the No. 14 team in the country, starting the season on a perfect 3-0 tear, defeating Kansas State 24-21, South Dakota 55-7 and rival Iowa 16-13. In the win over the Hawkeyes, the Cyclones were led by quarterback Rocco Becht, who connected on 18 of 27 passes for 134 yards and one touchdown. In the win over Kansas State, Becht threw for 183 yards and two touchdowns, while Brett Eskildsen caught three passes for 46 yards and one touchdown.
Arkansas State, meanwhile, fell 56-14 to in-state rival Arkansas. It was a tough game for quarterback Jaylen Raynor, who connected on 21 of 33 passes for 125 yards, one touchdown, and two interceptions, in the lopsided defeat.
Tune the channel to ESPN2 at 4:00 ET on Saturday afternoon to catch what should be an exciting matchup between Iowa State and Arkansas State.
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