With state Rep. Jeff Thompson’s election as a 26th District judge, the process of picking his successor, depending how it’s done, creates conditions that could leave district residents better or worse off.
At the end of qualifying, no one but Thompson signed up to
run for the District B slot to succeed Ford Stinson, automatically putting him
in line to be sworn in early next year. To do so, he must resign his current
office before then. State law says that when the presiding officer of the
chamber, in this instance Speaker of the House Chuck Kleckley,
receives notice of a resignation when more than six months of a member’s term
remains (Thompson’s expires in early 2016) without a regularly scheduled
election prior to a session’s start, he may designate a qualification period
and election date.
Historically, in these kinds of situations
where a November election produces a legislative vacancy, presiding officers have
scheduled a special election anywhere from the end of January to early March.
Thompson plans on this as he has expressed intent to resign at the end of the
year. He may not be alone: over a half dozen other legislators (including state
Rep. Patrick Williams for
Shreveport mayor) are running for various posts with them not as lucky as he by
being an earlier winner. If any win, some may do so on Nov. 4 and others on
Dec. 6. The idea, then, would be that by the latter date all who will need to
resign will know, these will happen, and the replacement elections will be held
together statewide early in 2015.
But because Thompson is now
officially elected after the candidate challenge period ended at the end of
August, if he resigned immediately possibly that special election could occur
on the regular Nov. 4 date, or it could be scheduled for the designated runoff date
Dec. 6, where it’s almost certain that runoffs for one or more offices will require
every polling place in the state to be open. That Dec. 6 date could itself
produce a runoff, but that could be resolved during other special legislative elections
if needed. While it doesn’t matter to district taxpayers because the state pays
for legislative elections, as far as state taxpayers go at worst they’d be no
worse off having this particular election early, and they might better off if
none of the other legislative candidates win their general elections, so there
would be no need for an election outside of an already-scheduled election date and
would produce some savings of state money.
Although saving the state money
by resigning soon is unlikely to happen give the vagaries of elections, there’s
a much more concrete benefit to constituents: this is the slack period for almost
all legislators, with the first bill filings not to occur until late February,
and for some their advertising beginning in late January. That means that
unless a successor is in office by late January – practically impossible if a
resignation does not occur until the end of the year – such bills could not be
filed on retirement, and about a month later for local matters for District 8. However,
one would hope in this circumstance that those residents’ state senator, Robert Adley, would pitch in for that
area.
More generally, a later election
throws a new person right into the fire, with the session starting on Apr. 13.
If assuming office with much more advance notice and during a slow period, the
new representative can get up to speed more in advance and comprehensively. And
about the only decision of consequence that Thompson might have to make between
now and then, absent an entirely unanticipated special session, would be as a member
of the Joint Legislative Committee on Capital Outlay to consider “late” capital
outlay requests for next year’s budget.
An earlier election would provide
less lead time for campaigning. But as soon as qualifying ended, anybody
interested in the office now knows it has come vacant, and no doubt some
already have started planning to run to succeed him, so nobody would be
advantaged by any surprise factor.
Politicians naturally desire to hold
onto power as long as possible. But in line now to start earning a six-figure
salary with a six-year term (and historically having a great chance to serve
through reelections into his seventies), for his district Thompson may wish to
have discretion serve as the better part of valor by not waiting until the last
moment to release his hold on that office.
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