Gov. Sanders dubs Siloam Springs "Capital for a Day"

Gov. Sanders dubs Siloam Springs "Capital for a Day"

Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders designated Siloam Springs "Capital for a Day" on Tuesday, touting education gains, tax cuts and job growth while giving residents direct access to cabinet officials.

Why it matters: Sanders uses these road trips to sell her governing record outside Little Rock while testing how state policy is landing in local communities.

  • The visit offered a snapshot of how Sanders wants Arkansans to see her administration heading into her re-election campaign.
  • Driving the news: The governor visited a coffee shop, the Waters of Oklahoma & Arkansas Whitewater Park and held a meet-and-greet at the family barn of State Rep. Randy Torres (R-Siloam Springs).

    The big picture: Sanders said Siloam Springs was chosen because of its "hardest working, most patriotic" residents.

  • "We don't want to just show up and give speeches and walk away," Sanders told a crowd gathered at the barn. "We're coming because we want to hear from you."
  • Zoom in: Sanders leaned heavily on Arkansas LEARNS, her signature 2023 education law, pointing to stronger student performance, teacher raises, Education Freedom Accounts and more public school spending.

  • Statewide proficiency across all grades and subjects rose from 36.9% in 2025 to 42.2% in 2026, according to recent ATLAS results.
  • Reality check: The University of Arkansas Office for Education Policy has said the ATLAS gains are encouraging, but more data is needed to show whether the improvement is broad, durable and tied to classroom changes.

    Sanders also tied her agenda to job growth and tax cuts. Arkansas nonfarm employment hit a record high in May, with 1.35 million employed residents, according to the state Department of Commerce.

  • Yes, but: The number of unemployed Arkansans was still higher than a year earlier.
  • She reminded the audience of her fourth income tax cut in May, saying $1.5 billion has been returned to Arkansans.

    The bottom line: Sanders framed the visit as part of the harder work of turning conservative policy wins into measurable results.

  • "Passing legislation is the easy part," Sanders told the audience. "Implementing correctly and executing is the really hard part."