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A New Day for the Louisiana Democratic Party 5

Four years ago, I, along with two of my friends, traveled to Denver for the Democratic National Convention. The three of us were selected as the “official” bloggers for the Louisiana delegation. We were given full access to the Louisiana Democratic Party’s events, floor passes at the convention, and were treated more like delegates than members of the media. It was an incredible, eye-opening experience, and I will always be grateful to have had a front row seat.

My buddy Daniel was wise. He recorded a video with the express intention of proving our attendance (though we both eventually relocated to the floor):

But we weren’t in Denver to report on the Louisiana Democratic Party; that wasn’t our story. We were there to write about the nomination of Barack Obama. In hindsight, I wish I had written about the Louisiana Democratic Party, because that was the real story: Obama’s nomination was preordained, after all, and the convention itself was scripted political theater. The Louisiana Democratic Party, however, didn’t follow a script, and behind the scenes, it was a complete mess.

At the time, Chris Whittington, a Baton Rouge attorney, served as the Chairman of the Party. Mr. Whittington was notably absent from many of the party’s events that week. Indeed, even though I stayed at the host hotel and got to know nearly every single delegate, the first and only time I saw Mr. Whittington was on the floor of the convention. I am, literally, sitting right under the microphone here (and thankfully, off camera):

I couldn’t help but feel embarrassed for my state. They hadn’t counted their delegates until the very last moment. Only minutes before the delegation was to appear on national television, they were still scrambling. Considering the circumstances, the word “disorganized”is an understatement. And when the cameras finally panned over, instead of allowing our Senior United States Senator, Mary Landrieu, the opportunity to make the announcement (something that nearly every other delegation had done), the mic went to a delegate (who called Louisiana the home of “shrimp”) and Chairman Whittington, who slurred his words so badly that the DNC asked for a clarification.

It was deeply troubling to me and, without question, to many others as well. This was the biggest stage the Louisiana Democratic Party could possibly be on, and they fumbled it, big time. But there is another reason I was both embarrassed and troubled: During the previous three or four days, I had met and spoken with exceptionally dedicated and fiercely intelligent Louisiana Democrats. The problem, as I saw it, was that these folks weren’t in charge. The party had smart, organized leaders, but they weren’t in a position to lead. For too long, the word “party” was taken literally.

Chris Whittington, former Chairman of the Louisiana Democratic Party

Mr. Whittington resigned from his post only two years later, and former Congressman Buddy Leach, who had served previously as Chairman of the party, took back his old position. I do not question Mr. Leach’s commitment to the Louisiana Democratic Party. He’s an accomplished man with an impressive resume and an equally impressive family. (In fairness, to both men’s credit, they employed two exceptional communications directors, Scott Jordan and Kevin Franck, who would be an asset to any organization).

But frankly, I believe if the Louisiana Democratic Party wants to be competitive, then it must adapt. They cannot afford to return to the sloppy and fractious leadership offered by those who supported Mr. Whittington, and they cannot make any headway under the leadership of Mr. Leach, a man who provided former Governor Edwin Edwards a job right after he was released from prison. In return, Governor Edwards publicly suggested that Louisiana Democrats rebrand themselves under a different name. Thanks but no thanks.

(Credit: Chris Granger of The Times-Picayune)

Governor Edwards has a fascinating story, and, without question, he’s remained a magnetic personality throughout his career. But by definition, magnetism requires polarization. Like him or loathe him, Governor Edwards has done more to undermine the credibility and the reputation of the Louisiana Democratic Party than any other single person in Louisiana history. When he emerged from prison after eight years, he married a Republican conservative more than fifty years younger than him (an Alexandria woman who met him in prison after reading Leo Honeycutt’s biography), took a “consultant” job with a company owned by the Chairman of the Louisiana Democratic Party, and went on a media tour during which he suggested the Democratic Party rebrand itself to appeal to conservative-minded centrists.

With all due respect to the former Governor (who has refused multiple requests for interviews), the Louisiana Democratic Party is no longer your party.

State Senator and Louisiana Democratic Party Chairwoman Karen Carter Peterson

Two weeks ago, Karen Carter Peterson defeated Buddy Leach to become Chairwoman of Louisiana Democratic Party. In so doing, Senator Peterson made history as the first-ever African-American woman elected to lead a major political party in Louisiana. And this week, she made history again, selecting Stephen Handwerk as the Louisiana Democratic Party’s interim executive director. Mr. Handwerk is the first openly gay executive director of a major political party in Louisiana, and he is also, perhaps, the most qualified executive director of a political party in modern Louisiana history.

Senator Peterson’s election as Chairwoman represents a major, fundamental shift in the Louisiana Democratic Party’s power structure and a huge victory for like-minded Louisiana progressives. I have no doubt that in Louisiana, progressives are the sleeping giant, the silent majority, and the future. We are a state of big and bold ideas, a state that once imagined every man as a king. We may not be as radical today, and, thankfully, we’re also not naive: Still, we know that government can build bridges and roadways and schools, that competent government yields returns for all of us.

Stephen Handwerk, the new interim Executive Director of the Louisiana Democratic Party.

And without question, Senator Peterson and Director Handwerk also know this: Governor Jindal and the Louisiana Republican Party may be good at running campaigns, but Mr. Jindal and his party have been colossal failures at governing. Mr. Jindal inherited a billion dollar surplus and immediately squandered it, recklessly repealing a tax plan that had been approved through a statewide referendum only a few years prior and costing the state billions and billions in future lost revenue, all the while providing enormous tax incentives to mega-wealthy corporations.

Look, this isn’t fiction; this isn’t hyperbole; this is the truth: Jindal is the most financially reckless governor in contemporary Louisiana history.  If Louisiana were a Fortune 500 company and Jindal was the CEO, he would have been fired years ago; the man cannot manage a balance sheet. But because he’s a Governor who has bankrupted the State and pilfered revenues, depleted services, and privatized programs and assets in order to prop up private-sector balance sheets, he can somehow, incredibly, present himself as a steward of fiscal conservatism. Though, truthfully, Governor Jindal and the Louisiana Republican Party don’t need to run on their abysmal economic record: They can just run on social issues. Louisiana voters are that stupid, the logic apparently goes: You can squander a huge surplus by giving all of the money away to your well-heeled corporate campaign contributors as long as the real issues are creationism in the schools, gay marriage, school bullying, and sex offenders on Facebook, his top legislative priorities. To be sure, privatizing public education and selling off prisons (in order to eliminate the need to pay for employee benefits) are an afterthought.

Under the leadership of Senator Peterson and folks like Stephen Handwerk, it’ll be a new day for the Louisiana Democratic Party. Sorry Governor Edwards and apologies to the old guard: Life is hard; you have to change.

PS: Thanks to the vapid idiot who runs the website The Hayride for inspiring this post. You and your website contribute nothing of substance to our political discourse, nothing. You are corrosive, and often, your website is nothing more than thinly-veiled bigotry. 1951 may be comfortable, but most of us prefer to live in 2012.

Update: Correction: The Hayride did not publish the article titled “Not a Drop of Slave Blood;” LouisianaConservative.com did. I apologize to my readers for the mistake.

Drew Ward’s Debut Post: Duckweed 4

duckweed30bp.jpgDuckweed belongs to the family Lemnaceae and is small, free floating green plants that form large blankets on the surface of sheltered water. The body of duckweeds is composed of a simple floating disc of photosynthetic tissue often with roots attached. It is not differentiated into stem and leaf tissue. All species of duckweed supposedly produce minute flowers, but these flowers are seldom observed. Reproduction is generally vegetative and its growth rate is tremendous, A thumb-sized planting will cover 1.2 acres in 55 days if uninhibited.

Slimy or not, it’s what’s happening in Louisiana Politics

BOUSTANY TO INHERIT MCCRERY’S LEADERSHIP PAC … Second-term U.S. Rep. Charles Boustany’s stock is on the rise with the pending departure of the state’s two more senior Republican Congressmen. Both Richard Baker of Baton Rouge and Jim McCrery of Shreveport are stepping down from their Congressional seats this year to move into private sector jobs. The Shreveport Times reports that McCrery plans to bestow his leadership Political Action Committee, called the Committee for the Preservation of Capitalism, to Boustany. Leadership PACs are set up by senior congressmen to both raise money and then filter funds to other congressional colleagues and organizations, helping the congressman to boost his stature in party ranks. “I’m going to make [Boustany] as senior as he can be,” McCrery told the Shreveport newspaper. “It will give him a head start at leadership.”

According to reports from the Federal Elections Commission, The Committee for the Preservation of Capitalism raised about $624,000 and spent about $616,000 in 2007. It currently has approximately $368,000 funds on hand. Its contributions have come from a wide variety of industry lobbying groups, with some of the heaviest donations coming in from drug manufacturers as well as physician and other medical industry groups. Source: theind.com

MELANCON VAULTS IN POWER RANKINGS
The Independent Weekly noted last month in our story “Charlie at the Plate” that Democratic U.S. Rep. Charlie Melancon is positioned to gain politically from the recent upheaval in Louisiana’s congressional delegation — meaning the retirements, prostitution scandal and federal corruption investigation involving various members. In the midst of the turmoil, two-term Congressman Melancon has become a superstar in the state Democratic Party
practically overnight. He’s led the House leadership on tours of his district, has a spot on the influential Energy and Commerce Committee, chaired Louisiana’s fabled D.C. Mardi Gras this year and is a superdelegate to the Democratic National Convention. Now others are noticing Melancon’s surge as well. Congress.org, a nonpartisan system, placed Melancon in the No. 144 position among the House’s 439 members in its annual power rankings. More impressive is the fact that Melancon was at No. 418 just two years ago. The big question is whether all the attention on Melancon will convince the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee that he’s the man to take on incumbent Republican U.S. Sen. David Vitter in 2010.

The list is based on 2007 performance, so Republican Gov. Jindal’s still included, as is now-retired Republican Richard Baker. Clocking in dead last — No. 439 out of 439 — is none other than Louisiana Democrat and albatross Bill “Dollar Bill” Jefferson, the only Congressman to earn a negative rating for power and effectiveness.
Source: theind.com

IS MCCOLLISTER’S SACRIFICE A POLITICAL DONATION? … During a sometimes-touchy hearing last week, a Senate committee surmised that a bill co-sponsored by lawmakers from Thibodaux and New Orleans had everything and nothing to do with Gov. Bobby Jindal. House Bill 89 would only allow the individuals who have been charged with violating campaign finance or ethics laws to pay the related fines. On paper, it was just another ethics reform bill for the Senate and Governmental Affairs Committee, but the political back story may have played a role in its defeat.

After Jindal’s campaign failed to timely report an $118,000 donation from the Louisiana Republican Party last year, Baton Rouge Business Report publisher and Jindal campaign treasurer Rolfe McCollister Jr. offered to personally pay the pending fine, which could reach as high as $2,500. Under the proposed legislation by independent Rep. Jerome “Dee” Richard and Democrat Karen Carter Peterson, such third-party payments would be prohibited.

New wrinkles surfaced during the debate about whether McCollister’s payment of Jindal’s fine would constitute a political donation. If it would, then McCollister might be prohibited from paying the fine if it exceeds the personal donor cap in state law, says Sen. Mike Walsworth, a Republican from West Monroe. A review of Jindal’s campaign finance records indicates that McCollister, at least personally, would be in the clear under these circumstances.

Still, one question remains: Is it a donation? Richard Sherburne, administrator of the state Ethics Board, said his office would take the check regardless, but he wasn’t sure if the money would count as a donation and would have to be reported as such. “I think the board would have to take a closer look at that,” he says.

While Jindal appears to be at the heart of the issue, speaker pro tem of the House Peterson disagrees. She says she was “incredibly offended” by media reports suggesting that the governor was the primary target of her efforts. “There have been accusations made that this is an attempt to embarrass someone or to make someone look bad,” Peterson says. “That’s not how I operate.”

The bill’s still alive in some respects. Peterson also amended three other bills moving through the special session with her proposal, meaning the issue could potentially reach the Senate floor without another committee hearing.

Louisiana’s Super Delegates

(From the Washington Post)
“Democratic Super Delegates Super Delegates are not elected through the normal primary and caucus process. They are designated by party rules and include high elected officials (members of Congress and governors), party committee members and some former office holders. Unlike delegates awarded through primaries and
caucuses, super delegates are not required to stay pledged to a specific candidate. In 2008, the Democratic Party has designated 796 super delegates. An estimated 4,049 total delegates will vote at the national convention, including super delegates. A candidate needs a total of 2,025 delegate votes to win the party’s nomination. “

State’s Total Number of Super Delegates: 9
Patsy Arceneaux
Pbarcen@aol.com
Baton Rouge
Clinton
Patsy Arceneaux of Baton Rouge is a DNC committeewoman and was a delegate to both the 2000 and 2004 conventions. She has pledged her vote to Hillary Clinton. Supposedly Arceneaux chose to announce her allegiance following a personal phone call from Bill Clinton who gave her husband a job during his presidency. She donated $1000 to Chris Dodd.

Renee Gill Pratt
New Orleans
rgpratt@cityofno.com
Clinton
Renée Gill Pratt is from New Orleans and a protégée of Democratic U.S. Representative William “Bill” Jefferson. Pratt served as state representative from 1991 to 2002 and as a New Orleans city council member for District B from 2002 to 2006. Pratt lost her bid for re-election in 2006, against Stacy Head, another Democrat. In the weeks following her defeat, Pratt faced criticism for driving a $28,266 Dodge Durango that she had donated to a nonprofit organization before she left office. The
organization subsequently hired her and assigned her to the vehicle. She also was blamed for renting office space from a company formed by Mose Jefferson, the brother of U.S. Representative Bill Jefferson, at the rate of $1,800 a month, for her satellite council office.

Ben L. Jeffers
benjeffers@eatel.net
Baton Rouge
None
Jeffers of Baton Rouge fills the Member-at-Large position. He ran against Jim Brown for Secretary of State in 1988.

Buddy Leach
Lake Charles
None
Anthony Claude “Buddy” Leach, Jr. is a wealthy lawyer, businessman, farmer, and politician who resides in his native Leesville as well as Lake Charles. Leach served two stints in the Louisiana House of Representatives (1968-1979 and 1984-1988). Leach was defeated by his fellow Democrat John Smith, also of Leesville, in the 2007 general election for the District 30 state senate seat. Leach was elected to the Democratic National Committee in 2006. He donated $1000 to John Edwards.

Chris Whittington
Baton Rouge
None
Whitington is a resident of Baton Rouge and is the Chairman of the Louisiana Democratic Party.

Mary Lou Winters
mlwinters2000@aol.com
Metairie
Clinton
Mary Lou Winters of Metairie is 1st Vice President of the state democratic party. She donated $2100 to Clinton’s campaign.

Mary Landrieu
New Orleans
None

Bill Jefferson

New Orleans

None
Charlie Melancon
Napoleonville
None