Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
13.12.16
Campbell blowout loss brings doubt to his PSC future
Last weekend’s elections produced a big and unexpected
surprise in north Louisiana in a cycle that should not have produced anything
unusual, perhaps foretelling the future.
As expected, Republican state Rep. Mike Johnson
crushed Democrat lawyer Marshall Johnson in racking up nearly two-thirds of the
vote. History tells us that Johnson can stay as long as he likes, as no
incumbent has lost reelection to this Shreveport-based district since former
Gov. Buddy
Roemer upended former one-term Rep. Buddy Leach in 1980, which broke a
six-decade stretch of successful incumbent reelections. Johnson’s rock-ribbed
conservatism combined with superior analytical and rhetorical skills honed by a
legal career featuring his argumentation in front of the U.S. Supreme Court
will make him, absent enormous change in district attitudes, hard to dislodge.
It also came as no surprise that the area’s Democrat
Public Serviced Commissioner Foster
Campbell lost to Republican Treasurer John
Kennedy for the open U.S. Senate seat. But the margin of his defeat and how
it happened does raise some eyebrows.
Simply, Kennedy crushed Campbell, by over 20
points. Campbell won only nine parishes, with none
of them having a white majority, eight of them touching the Mississippi
River, and seven of them having black pluralities or majorities. Perhaps humiliatingly,
he won only three – the smallest – of the 22 whole parishes in his PSC district.
He could not even win Caddo Parish, and got wiped out almost 3:1 in his home
parish of Bossier. His vote proportion in the district about matched his
statewide number.
This result begs the question of his viability
going forward. He has won three terms to the PSC, the last in 2014, and that
post offers fairly significantly different dynamics than a job as senator. It
has little in the way of national issues that intrude and involves more arcane
and technical matters that favor incumbents, as voters with next-to-no information
about such a contest give the benefit of the doubt to the present
office-holder.
Yet the magnitude of Campbell’s loss in the
district demonstrates that a concerted effort by a Republican could topple him.
Kennedy had a lot of credibility, wide recognition, and plenty of cash –
qualities none of Campbell’s previous PSC opponents in his reelection bids had.
Republicans would have to find a candidate like Kennedy, probably an
experienced politician that would have to a degree Kennedy’s strengths, to hope
to accomplish this.
Campbell also would become more vulnerable in a
2020 match for two reasons. One, he would have turned 74 by the time of his
swearing in for a fourth term. When he upset Don Owen in 2002, Owen’s age at 72
was a campaign issue. A credible, well-financed Republican a generation younger
than Campbell could make this an issue again.
Also, the 2020 election cycle Campbell would encounter
the less favorable dynamics seen for him this year. A GOP president will run
for reelection, and the two congressional districts that essentially comprise
the district along with the reelection attempt of Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy will feature
runaway Republican incumbent winners. By contrast, no city contests in
Shreveport (almost a quarter of the district’s voters) nor school board
contests anywhere will make available high-profile Democrats local candidates who
can win their contests (but Monroe, representing about 6 percent, will have
city elections). This kind of environment disproportionately drives turnout higher
among majority party adherents, to his disadvantage.
Of course, Campbell has stayed in office on
borrowed time. Of the 24 federal and non-judicial state elective positions either
statewide or majority-white district in nature, only he and ally Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards are
Democrats. When he first assumed office, more than half of the then-26 were
Democrats. As such, the poor performance of Campbell on this occasion may
signal his imminent departure, either through retirement or defeat in four
years.
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