State Rep. John Bel Edwards can breathe a
sigh of relief. Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelle and Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne have decisions to make. And
so do Louisiana Democrats.
When New Orleans City Councilman
Jason Williams publicly announced, after interest got stirred about the
possibility, that he
would not run for governor, this effectively meant the last opportunity for
the contest to change as a result of an additional beyond these men and Sen. David Vitter had passed. Williams is
thought to contemplate running for mayor of New Orleans in 2018 and a
gubernatorial candidacy could have increased his profile in that regard in a
cost effective manner – especially as he would have received support from some
not so much because those believed in his candidacy but because they saw one of
the other four as obnoxious.
At this late date Williams could
have influenced the race because, as a black Democrat with a record of
capturing enough votes to win something more than an office with a relatively trivial
amount of power, he could have drawn (unlike
others) a significant amount of votes as even a subdued but not practically
invisible campaign effort would be enough to alert black voters to his presence
in the contest. Now with two months to go to the election, no non-black candidate
or black candidate not a proven vote-getter for an office of significant
stature has enough time to make enough of an impact to change the dynamics of
the contest, given the compressed time frame involved.
And these are that Vitter and
Edwards will score roughly the same number of votes that between them will total
two-thirds of the electorate voting and Angelle and Dardenne will share the
remainder, thereby mathematically eliminating the latter pair from winning.
Vitter has too
much money and too much support already built in to falter among the
Republican candidates, while enough yellow dogs exist that will see Edwards through
as he shares no quality Democrat competition.
At the point now where no other
entrant into the race can change this dynamic, only the existing candidates or
aggregate choices made within the electorate can. Simply, in the first
instance, one of Angelle or Dardenne must drop out to give the other a chance
if either feel so strongly that Vitter should not be elected.
That seems unlikely. Both have
spent years laying the groundwork for this attempt, neither feels any special antipathy
towards Vitter to want to deny him the job out of spite, and each knows that
not only is the other perhaps the only candidate in the contest that might
defeat him in the runoff yet that runoff pairing is extremely unlikely, but also
that if he lands in a runoff with Vitter or Edwards he becomes the heavy
favorite. There is no reason for either to throw away this chance.
So only if the electorate’s
dynamics change does the Vitter-Edwards runoff matchup, which while offering
Edwards his best chance of winning still leaves him as a distinct underdog, not
occur. And that can happen only if enough Democrats vote tactically in an “anybody
but Vitter” mode, by abandoning Edwards in favor of Angelle of Dardenne.
But it remains questionable whether
a broad swath of Democrats in the electorate detest a Vitter governorship so
much as to jettison their otherwise sure-fire runoff entry. Vitter does
carry a populist streak that makes him appear tolerable to some Louisiana
Democrats, and it seems inconceivable that Democrat elites would call publicly so
boldly for the mass base of the state party to give Edwards short electoral
shrift, which is the only way enough votes can head either Angelle or Dardenne’s
way – and overwhelmingly to one as opposed to the other or else Edwards would
run second. With these leaders
having endorsed formally Edwards, the chances of such a turnabout seem
remote.
So, absent one of these essentially
near-miraculous developments, that two months out from the general election the
present four quality candidates running continue as the only such candidates
strengthens the dynamic present for the last year. That is Vitter and Edwards
make the runoff, where Vitter wins. Only an unforced error by either candidate can
change that impeding sequence of events.
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