Gov. Mike Parson picks staffer to replace Eric Schmitt as Missouri attorney general

The governor is picking a new attorney general for the second time, after Eric Schmitt won a seat in the U.S. Senate

By: - November 23, 2022 9:40 am

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has appointed two attorneys general during his tenure, with the last two people to hold the office leaving after successful Senate campaigns (photo courtesy of the Missouri Governor's Office).

A top staff member in the governor’s office will be Missouri’s next attorney general.

Andrew Bailey, 41, who has served as general counsel for Gov. Mike Parson for the last year, will replace Attorney General Eric Schmitt, who was elected to the U.S. Senate earlier this month.

Bailey will complete Schmitt’s term, which ends in 2024. 

Parson made the announcement Wednesday morning before the Thanksgiving weekend.

Andrew Bailey

According to the governor’s office, Bailey has roughly eight years of professional experience as an attorney, including stints working as an assistant prosecuting attorney in Warren County and as an assistant attorney general. His previous jobs in the Parson administration were as deputy general counsel for the governor and general counsel for the Missouri Department of Corrections.

He is an army veteran that was awarded two Army Achievement Medals, an Army Accommodation Medal, a Combat Action Badge and two Bronze Star Medals for his service.

Bailey has never held elected office. 

“My entire career has been defined by public service, and now I’m ready to continue that service as your Attorney General,” he said, “where I will work tirelessly to earn your trust and never stop fighting on your behalf.”

Bailey has been Parson’s top choice for the job all along. But his appointment has not been greeted by universal support among Republicans. 

On Tuesday, Jackson County Republican Chairman Mark Anthony Jones sent a letter to the governor on behalf of his organization begging Parson not to appoint Bailey.

“PLEASE DO NOT appoint Andrew Bailey as Attorney General for Missouri!!” the letter said. “He has little experience in the attorney general’s office, and what he has is from Democrat Chris Koster’s office. He has only been an attorney for eight years. There MUST be other choices.”

The governor spoke with other potential candidates — former U.S. Attorney Tim Garrison, Cole County Judge Chris Limbaugh, former state Sen. Kurt Schaefer and state Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer —but never wavered from Bailey. 

On Wednesday, Bailey pushed back on any suggestion he doesn’t have the needed experience to be attorney general.

“I’m battle tested,”  he said, “and I am ready for this job.”

Parson said one of his top considerations on who to appoint was stability in the office that has seen the last two incumbents leave for higher office.

Stability was critical when considering the next attorney general,” Parson said. 

Bailey vowed to run for the office in two years.

Parson said Bailey was critical to much of the governor’s agenda over the last few years, pointing specifically at efforts to “end elective abortions in Missouri.” and “strengthen the Second Amendment protections.”

He also gave Bailey credit for efforts the governor’s office has made to close over 2,000 clemency files and fill more than 100 judicial openings. 

In the weeks leading up to the announcement, The Independent and other media have filed requests under Missouri’s Sunshine Law for access to records documenting internal discussions with Bailey about the appointment. The office has said the records may not be turned over until January, after the new attorney general will already be sworn into office.

Kelli Jones, Parson’s taxpayer-funded spokeswoman, has ignored inquiries about the records requests and whether the governor would consider expediting the release of those records.

Asked about whether the governor’s office should release the records quickly, Bailey didn’t answer directly, saying “the people out there absolutely deserve a government that is responsive and transparent.”

During his tenure with Parson, Bailey has kept a relatively low public profile. 

His closest brush with headlines came after records revealed he helped craft talking points the governor’s office used to advocate for the criminal prosecution of a journalist who uncovered a security problem in a state website. 

The reporter discovered a security flaw that left more than 500,000 teacher Social Security numbers exposed. Parson accused the reporter of being a hacker. Bailey helped come up with the governor’s argument that the reporter engaged in illegal hacking because he took “eight separate steps” to get the Social Security numbers.

According to Bloomberg News, one of the eight steps included opening a new tab in Google Chrome.

That effort by the governor’s office was widely panned, and a 158-page investigative file produced by the Missouri State Highway Patrol and Cole County prosecutor showed no evidence of anything that even resembled computer hacking.

Asked about the push to prosecute a journalist Wednesday, Bailey stood behind the office’s strategy though acknowledged “the issue has been resolved and put to bed.”

Bailey’s appointment marks the second time Parson has selected a new attorney general.

Schmitt got the job in 2018, after then-Attorney General Josh Hawley was elected to the Senate.

“Few Missouri governors have had the opportunity and responsibility to appoint an attorney general on the behalf of the people of Missouri once,” Parson said, let alone twice.”

Parson will also have to pick a new state treasurer. Scott Fitzpatrick, who was appointed treasurer in 2018 and elected to a full term in 2020, won the race for state auditor on Tuesday

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Jason Hancock
Jason Hancock

Jason Hancock has spent two decades covering politics and policy for news organizations across the Midwest, with most of that time focused on the Missouri statehouse as a reporter for The Kansas City Star. A three-time National Headliner Award winner, he helped launch The Missouri Independent in October 2020.

Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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