Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill will have a Republican challenger next year, if he runs for re-election.
Zionsville attorney John Westercamp announced his bid Thursday.
Hill is seen as vulnerable because of allegations he groped four women last year. Republican leaders have called on him to resign, though Hill remains defiant that he’s done nothing wrong.
Westercamp mostly sidestepped questions about Hill, except for this:
“I think the distractions around the [Attorney General's] office is not good for the state of Indiana and we need new leadership,” Westercamp says.
Westercamp’s platform is largely the same as Hill’s: he focused, for instance, on opposition to abortion and robocalls. But the 30-year-old Republican did try to differentiate himself.
“Indiana needs an attorney general that will take seriously the fiduciary duty to collaborate with state legislators and the administration," Westercamp says. "I intend to represent the state with integrity, judgment and loyalty.”
Westercamp works at the Indianapolis law firm Bose, McKinney and Evans. He's been practicing for about five years and has never run for public office before.
Republican convention delegates will decide next year who gets the GOP nomination.