The Democratic candidate for Texas agriculture commissioner, Kim Olson, said Thursday that the incumbent sheโ€™s challenging, Sid Miller, โ€œis the perfect candidate to run against.โ€

โ€œWho best can I juxtapose my leadership skill set against?โ€ said Olson.

Olson, a third-generation farmer and retired U.S. Air Force colonel, was speaking with The Texas Tribuneโ€™s CEO, Evan Smith, during an hourlong event. You can watch the replay above.

Here are a few highlights:

Sid Miller

Olson said she was going to bring professionalism back to the Texas Department of Agriculture.

โ€œIf you are seen as someone who does everything else but agriculture, then thatโ€™s not good for Texasโ€™ agriculture,โ€ Olson said about Miller.

Olson said Texans pay the consequences of Millerโ€™s leadership style.

โ€œWhen … because of your behavior you canโ€™t get along with legislators, and you canโ€™t get along with the associations that you need to be successful in that job, then people suffer,โ€ Olson said.

Eminent domain

Olson said that Texasโ€™ eminent domain laws need to be looked at.

โ€œWhat farmers want is a good price for their land,โ€ Olson said. โ€œThey donโ€™t want pennies on the dollar. Not only is the land worth something, the land has production value to it.โ€

Olson also said that, as agriculture commissioner, she would focus on educating farmers about their rights and offering the legal services of the Texas Department of Agriculture.

Internet access

Olson said she wants to bring broadband internet to rural Texas.

โ€œI believe it should be a public utility like electricity and water,โ€ Olson said. โ€œAnd the reason is kids get 80 percent of their homework out of the internet, you canโ€™t start a business without it, you canโ€™t go to higher ed.โ€

Olson also said that lack of access to internet also affects the health care of rural Texans.

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โ€œBecause the leadership of this state decided not expand Medicaid, 19 rural hospitals shut down in this state,โ€ Olson said. โ€œTherefore, we could bring telemedicine to some of those places and actually save lives in rural Texas.โ€

Note: Miller visited with the Tribuneโ€™s Smith in February. Watch his event here.

Omar Rodriguez-Ortiz was a social media engagement fellow in the fall of 2018. His job was to help engage audiences in our politics and policy coverage across platforms, capitalizing on his bilingual and...