While other candidates for the state’s top office, such as state Rep. John Bel Edwards,
Lt. Gov. Jay
Dardenne, and now the latest Treasurer John Kennedy,
have
admitted
if not volunteered
interest in the job, and Sen. David
Vitter allows speculation
of his interest in it to run rampant, Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelle, as Hanna
demonstrates by his piece, gets mentioned as a possibility but never himself addresses
the subject. As a candidate who has won as both a Democrat and Republican from
the local to state level, Angelle has shown broad electable appeal and
has done little on the issues to disqualify him from getting conservative
support in a right-of-center state.
The coy Vitter would be the favorite were he to announce, given his
strong conservative support among both the principled and populist winds of the
party that would eat at the populist’s Kennedy’s support, that has led no other
principled conservative to contest to this point, and would leave too little
left over for the moderate conservative Dardenne with the liberal Edwards in
the race. Angelle could take support further from Dardenne but he also could
gather principled conservative support that otherwise would coalesce around Vitter.