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).
19.12.16
Edwards unable to afford hyper-politicized agency
Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards threw overboard
outgoing Wildlife and Fisheries Secretary Charlie Melancon because the latter’s
use as a political instrument became too costly to the former’s political
future.
Last week, Edwards announced
the departure of Melancon after less than a year on the job. Melancon
latter clarified, saying he
had been dismissed but would stay on the job until completion of an audit
of past agency practices.
Melancon’s stormy
tenure included shilling for national Democrat interests in fisheries
policy against the will of all other Gulf states and congressional majorities,
aligning himself with commercial fishing interests against recreational users,
firing an apparent whistleblower that came forward concerning unseemly
management practices that earned
him a law suit, and feuding with the Wildlife and Fisheries Commission, the
other part of the duopoly that runs the department. The audit also had overtones of
politicization, perhaps as a method to subjugate the agency and Commission that
clearly have resisted Edwards’ influence in the department.
Melancon, a lobbyist before serving three terms in
Congress, had no expertise in the area and his appointment appeared to throw a
bone to the old wing of state Democrats, with whom Edwards aligned himself and
includes the likes of former Gov. Kathleen
Blanco and recently defeated Senate candidate Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell. They compete
against the state’s nationally-oriented Democrats, who include former Sen. Mary
Landrieu, New Orleans Mayor Mitch
Landrieu, former Senate candidate and lawyer Caroline Fayard, and party
chief and state Sen. Karen Peterson.
But he loyally carried out Edwards’ dictates, with
resisting turning
over the management of red snapper to Gulf states perhaps the most
important. In saying he opposed the move on the allegation that it would cost
the state money – when in fact a funding stream for that purpose already exists
– this backed Edwards’ desire generally to increase taxation. That also placated
leftist special interests allied on this issue with commercial interests.
However, as Melancon continued to wage what seemed
almost an intentional war on recreational fishers – his last move seeking to abolish
several popular programs relying upon volunteer efforts by anglers that
provided much helpful data to the state at next to no cost – he began to raise
the ire of Republican Rep. Garret Graves,
the former head of Louisiana’s coastal restoration efforts and perhaps the most
knowledgeable member of Congress on coastal issues. Graves, who represents the
Capital area, also will wield enormous influence over federal relief efforts
concerning the food disaster earlier this year that inundated the region,
especially with the ascension next month of GOP Pres.-elect Donald Trump to office.
Edwards, a liberal governing a center-right state,
desperately needs the recovery process to go swiftly without hiccups to salvage
a chance of gaining reelection in 2019. Yet already Graves
has questioned the Edwards Administration response, creating unfavorable
publicity, and in the process of trying to secure more recovery dollars could
use his congressional perch to do more of the same.
Thus, Edwards could not afford to have Melancon
out there alienating Graves and those interests he represents. That’s why
Melancon and his top assistant are gone, and hopefully with them the
hyper-politicization that has characterized the department’s administration
over the past year will go with them. It’s baggage Edwards simply no longer can
afford.
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