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).
20.12.16
Candidates of varying appeal test treasurer waters
With state Treas. John
Kennedy ascending to the U.S. Senate at the start of next month, the job he
has held for 17 years comes open. Since now it has catapulted upwards its last
two occupants who won reelection to it, ambitious politicians reasonably view
it as a stepping stone to higher office, attracting
a number who have voiced consideration for the job.
But as a state whose population votes center-right
ideologically, the electorate would prefer certain candidates over others. Even
though the job itself provides little room for policy-making, featuring largely
technocratic and arcane functions to most voters, because it can act as a
launching pad to higher, more issue-driven positions, candidates who stake out
issue preferences on fiscal matters appealing to conservatives have every
incentive to publicize these and force the election to play out in this
territory.
This makes certain candidates more acceptable than
others: those who have conservative fiscal ideas and can demonstrate at least
minor expertise in the area of the treasurer’s job functions (not that Kennedy
had a lot of this background before his election, and prior to the guy he beat
former Sen. Mary Landrieu held the job, who had zero qualifications on this
account). Thus, listed below in order of acceptability to conservatives are
major figures not fairly unlikely to run.
Speaker Pro-Tempore Rep. Walt Leger. A
liberal Democrat but sometimes cozy with business interests, Leger has the
problem of living in New Orleans and in a Senate district with an immovable
object (state Sen. Karen Peterson,
head of his party) and black majority in his way when he becomes term limited
for 2019. Thus, he has to move on soon, and this is as good as anything for
that purpose. He likely rather would want to take over from another white
Democrat, New Orleans Mayor Mitch
Landrieu, in 2018, but too many covetous black politicians at the local and
state levels will want to run for that job. With his pro-big government,
pro-tax-and-spend record, he has no chance to win.
State Sen. Eric
LaFleur. A more moderate Democrat than Leger, he has a background in public
finance, which would make him more competitive but still a distinct underdog
against almost all of the Republican names below. But he would have to give up his
public sector finance clients in his law practice, much of his business, to
take the job, meaning he may rather continue to serve as a legislator.
Starting-to-become-perennial-candidate and former
military officer Rob Maness. He will earn this sobriquet if he makes a run
here, after two failed U.S. Senate tries. If these tries taught the Republican
anything, it’s that as long as a credible conservative runs he has no chance of
winning, and that will happen this time. So, if he, with no experience in this
area and never having held elective office, does run for this, it will be for
reasons of boredom from retirement and vanity.
State Rep. Julie Stokes.
The Republican has shown a propensity for enjoying headlines and already has
started campaigning. However, in her legislative career she has shown too much
enthusiasm for expanding government and raising taxes, even as otherwise she
typically votes in a pro-reform fashion.
Former Speaker Chuck Kleckley. He got good marks
leading the GOP-majority House and held the line on tax increases. But he also
made some questionable moves, such as shepherding through legislation that
eventually facilitated ruinous Medicaid expansion that should make advocates of
right-sized, sensible government pause regarding his candidacy.
State Rep. John Schroder.
In large part, the Republican has provided a consistent message of reducing
government spending and avoiding tax increases. However, from time to time his
legislation and actions have served more to grandstand than to make for
productive governance, such as throwing his lot in with a faction once known as
“fiscal hawks” who presented a lot of feel-good, simplistic ideas that would
allege to cut spending, but which in reality treated the symptoms of fiscal
imbalance and not its underlying causes, solving nothing. He says he will run.
State Sen. Neil
Riser. Throughout his career the Republican has voted as one of the
Legislature most conservative members, fiscal matters included. Yet his
fumbling campaign in a special election for the Fifth Congressional District
where he managed to throw
away the contest to a rank amateur (who subsequently
self-destructed in office) raises questions about whether he can run a
winning statewide effort.
From a limited government perspective, the best
candidate expressing interest among these elected officials is GOP state Rep. Paul Hollis,
who has shown extreme aversion to giving government any more resources than it
has. He also briefly
ran a statewide campaign for Senate in 2014. The question will be whether
he gained enough experience and made enough contacts in that brief sojourn to
launch a serious effort this time.
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