'Light her up!' Huckabee Sanders sets off Arkansas MAGA rebellion
Sarah Huckabee Sanders' path to a 2028 presidential run is hitting serious turbulence in her own backyard — a grassroots rebellion of conservative Arkansas voters who feel blindsided and betrayed by her aggressive push for a massive new prison.
The former Trump White House press secretary leveraged her Trump connections and family political legacy to become governor, but locals say she brought Washington D.C. power politics with her — and they're experiencing serious buyer's remorse.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Sanders "blindsided" voters by ramming through plans for a 3,000-bed prison on 815 acres of rocky pastureland south of the Arkansas River, sparking an unlikely revolt from MAGA conservatives. The conflict has escalated from heated to explosive, with both sides claiming to represent Trump's actual vision for governance.
Franklin County Sheriff Johnny Crocker stands at the forefront of opposition, framing the prison as government overreach and fiscal waste.
"In the state of Arkansas, we're a very split Republican Party," Crocker claimed. "It's big government against small government…These people want power. And that's simple."
J.B. Jackson, a supply-chain risk assessment specialist living directly across from the proposed site, runs the viral Facebook page "Arkansas Alcatraz," filled with anti-prison memes and has decorated his fence with plastic skeletons and signs reading, "This Prison is Going to Kill Arkansas."
"I never gave a rat's crap about politics," he said. "Now I have a third of the legislature following my Facebook page."
During her campaign, Sanders promised to tackle crime and resolve Arkansas's severe prison overcrowding crisis — the nation's third-highest incarceration rate per capita, trailing only Louisiana and Mississippi according to federal data.
Her solution: a massive new facility with an estimated price tag of $825 million. Critics counter that the rocky terrain will inflate costs substantially, and the isolated location will make staffing recruitment a nightmare.
Marc Dietz, 55, a businessman, rancher, and radio station owner in Ozark, first exposed the prison plan's location in Franklin County. He said residents felt completely caught off guard.
"We're a small county, not enough votes, and she thought she'd run roughshod," he said.
Sanders justified the secrecy to the Journal, explaining the state kept the location under wraps until after purchasing the land for approximately $3 million to prevent a bidding war. She argued the Northwest Arkansas location offered optimal advantages for the facility.
With prison funding stalled in the legislature, Crocker remains undeterred in his opposition.
"I'm a Republican, and I voted for most of them, but now, seeing the truth, I think we need to clean house," he said. "Like Trump said, drain the swamp. Well, there's a swamp in Little Rock right now, and it needs to go away."
Jackson vowed to escalate pressure if Sanders attempts to revive the prison proposal.
"I'm going to light her up," he said. "Our governor wants to be president. That piece of property is going to stop her."