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Trump mocks Hutchinson following veto override

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LITTLE ROCK — Former President Donald Trump continues to ramp up his feud with Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, attacking the Republican state leader Thursday over his veto of a bill that targeted people who are transgender. The story made the front page of the Newsweek web site.

'Asa Hutchinson, the lightweight RINO Governor of Arkansas, just vetoed a Bill that banned the CHEMICAL CASTRATION OF CHILDREN,' Trump said in a statement to reporters.

''Bye-bye Asa,' that's the end of him! Fortunately for the Great State of Arkansas, Sarah Huckabee Sanders will do a fantastic job as your next Governor!'

Hutchinson, a staunch conservative who has been Arkansas' governor since 2015, is term-limited and cannot run in the 2022 gubernatorial election. His state office didn't immediately respond to Newsweek's request for comment on Trump's attack.

On Wednesday, Hutchinson vetoed legislation that would ban gender-affirming medical care for transgender people younger than 18.

'We want to send a message of tolerance and diversity,' Hutchinson told reporters in Arkansas of the bill, noting that if it became law, people could turn to the black market or go out of state for trans health needs.

The state legislature overruled his veto just a day later.

Sanders, the daughter of former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, previously served as White House press secretary to Trump for nearly two years. She announced in January that she will run for governor.

Hutchinson, once a Trump ally, was a critic of the former president after a deadly insurrection at the U.S.

Capitol on January 6 that attempted to upend the election of Joe Biden as president. He has said he won't support the former president if he seeks another term in 2024, which Trump has floated as a possibility.

'He's going to have a voice, as former presidents do,' Hutchinson said during a CNN interview in February. 'But there's many voices in the party.'

Trump had kept a relatively low profile after leaving the White House just before Biden's inauguration

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PMG file photo STATE NEWS (cont.)

on January 20, but in recent weeks, the former president has begun releasing more statements to the press through email. His Twitter account—once his preferred mode of direct communication—was suspended after the Capitol riots.

Hutchinson joins several other Republicans who spoke out against Trump after the election whom Trump has vowed to help defeat in upcoming elections.

Despite Trump's re-election loss, he has remained politically popular among his GOP base. Several Republicans in recent weeks have traveled to his new home at Mar-a-Lago in Florida to try to woo his support and hold fundraisers.

Sanders recently posted a photo to social media showing Trump dropping into a fundraiser she was holding at the resort.

'Another great weekend on the campaign trail featuring a surprise appearance at one of my events by President Trump!' she wrote on Twitter.

***

LITTLE ROCK — Following severe thunderstorms that sped through the state last Wednesday, the National Weather Service declared Thursday the damage in Clinton was related to straight-line winds ranging from 60 to 65 mph, following a survey of the damage.

Around 5:15 p.m.

Wednesday a line of strong storms moved across northcentral Arkansas.

After the storm passed, multiple damage reports started coming in from the Clinton area in Van Buren County, according to a report on the website KARK.com.

A tractor-trailer was reported blown over on U.S.

Highway 65, and there were also reports of structural damage southwest of where the tractor-trailer was damaged, according to the website.

On Thursday, much of the state was under river flooding warnings. Seventeen counties face flooding concerns, some until next Tuesday, involving the White, Black, Ouachita and Mississippi rivers and Bayou Dorcheat near Springhill in Columbia County.

On Thursday, forecasters warned of severe storms today from Texas and Oklahoma to the Carolinas. Parts of Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama were at the highest risk of several storms, the national Storm Prediction Center said.

To the south, torrential rains flooded several New Orleans streets in a storm system that spawned a tornado in north Louisiana, toppling trees and damaging homes. The twister hit northern Morehouse Parish about 7:41 p.m. Wednesday near the community of Galion, about 9 miles northeast of Bastrop, the National Weather Service said.

It moved from Louisiana into south Arkansas, meteorologists said.

Sheriff Mike Tubbs said the area was really fortunate not to have major injuries. He said there has been one moderate injury and some minor injuries reported.

Most damage reported so far, he said, was around the Log Cabin community.

Several trees fell and many homes were damaged, but he said no major injuries or loss of life has been reported.

Several roads in New Orleans and neighboring Jefferson Parish were impassible after 3 inches to 5 inches of rain fell in a short time early Thursday, emergency management officials said.

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