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Miller, seeking 11th term, says GOP opponent would seek partisan agenda

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August 18th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Democrat Tom Miller, the nation’s longest serving attorney general, says if he’s elected to an 11th term, he’ll continue to pursue cases against companies that scam Iowans.  “I just feel very lucky to be attorney general because we get to use the law to serve the interests of ordinary Iowans,” Miller says. Miller says consumer protection efforts in the office extend to farmers and the current investigation of sky high fertilizer prices. “Most of all, we’re communicating the message: ‘Somebody is watching,'” Miller says. “We’re working with the Department of Ag, with (U.S. Agriculture Secretary) Tom Vilsack and with the farm groups.”

Miller made his comments on the Des Moines Register’s Political Soapbox at the Iowa State Fair. Brenna Bird, the Republican running against Miller this year, spoke at the same venue earlier this week. Bird vows that as attorney general, she would go to federal court to challenge Biden Administration policies. “It looks like our attorney general is Biden’s attorney general,” Bird says. “…He joined a lot of lawsuits against the Trump Administration. Remember that?” Miller says Bird would pursue a partisan agenda as attorney general. “Her passion is for this extreme anti-regulation, extreme economics,” Miller says.

Bird also accuses Miller of failing to actively engage with local law enforcement. “I meet all the time with sheriffs that have never met him, not once, not even shook his hand,” Bird says, “so you know that will certainly change when I’m attorney general.” In response, Miller says he and his staff each year work on up to 13-hundred of the toughest criminal prosecutions in state court. “We’ve developed a great relationship with law enforcement. We work a lot with them on these cases — Department of Public Safety, but local law enforcement as well,” Miller says. “It’s a relationship of respect, trust and common good. We really see the need to protect Iowans.”

Miller was first elected attorney general in 1978. He did not seek re-election in 1990 when he ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic Party’s nomination for governor. Miller was re-elected attorney general in 1994 and is currently serving his 10th term.