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0000017b-f971-ddf0-a17b-fd73f3950000Election coverage from SPR and the Northwest News Network:Statewide Election: WashingtonSpokane County ElectionStatewide Election: IdahoStatewide Election: OregonU.S. House and Senate

Candidates For Idaho Governor Square Off In Coeur d'Alene

From left: Democrat A.J. Balukoff, Libertarian John Bujak, Republican incumbent Gov. Butch Otter, independent candidate Pro-Life.
Jessica Robinson
/
Northwest News Network
From left: Democrat A.J. Balukoff, Libertarian John Bujak, Republican incumbent Gov. Butch Otter, independent candidate Pro-Life.

Idaho Governor Butch Otter defended his record on schools, healthcare and the economy at a debate in Coeur d'Alene Friday.

From left: Democrat A.J. Balukoff, Libertarian John Bujak, Republican incumbent Gov. Butch Otter, independent candidate Pro-Life.
Credit Jessica Robinson / Northwest News Network
/
Northwest News Network
From left: Democrat A.J. Balukoff, Libertarian John Bujak, Republican incumbent Gov. Butch Otter, independent candidate Pro-Life.

The Republican governor faced off for the first time with his Democratic opponent as well as a Libertarian candidate hoping to appeal to disillusioned Republicans.

Libertarian candidate John Bujak kicked off the debate by thanking the governor for being there.

“Although, I'll have to share with you, I don't know that there's anything the governor could say today to explain away the way he's betrayed the Republican party and the people of the state of Idaho,” Bujak said.

Otter has taken heat from tea party factions for opting to set up a state-run health exchange under the affordable care act – some have called it “Ottercare.”

Governor Otter told the crowd in Coeur d'Alene the other option was letting the federal government run the state's exchange.

“Obamacare, no matter how much I dislike it -- and I'd vote tomorrow to get rid of it -- but if it's the rule of law, you're going to have to deal with that law as best you can,” the governor said.

Meanwhile, Democratic candidate and businessman A.J. Balukoff said Idaho should take advantage of the federal Medicaid expansion to save on the taxpayer cost of the uninsured.

“Getting back some of the federal tax dollars that we spend in just makes perfect sense because it will free up local dollars that we are already paying,” Balukoff said.

A fourth candidate who's change his legal name to Pro-Life also joined the debate.

Copyright 2014 Northwest News Network

Jessica Robinson
Jessica Robinson reported for four years from the Northwest News Network's bureau in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho as the network's Inland Northwest Correspondent. From the politics of wolves to mining regulation to small town gay rights movements, Jessica covered the economic, demographic and environmental trends that have shaped places east of the Cascades. Jessica left the Northwest News Network in 2015 for a move to Norway.