Last week, Baton Rouge firm JMC Analytics conducted
an automated telephone survey largely about this election. After a perfunctory
question about the 2020 presidential contest, it asked questions about the
mayor’s race, at-large city council races, and council district races specific
to the district in which the call was received.
For the mayor’s contest, it asked abut voting for
2001 council candidate Tommy Chandler, current councilors Jeff Free and David
Montgomery, city chief administrative officer Pam Glorioso, and incumbent Mayor
Lo Walker. In addition, it asked whether
the respondent would vote to reelect Walker.
Chandler
floated a run against Walker in 2017, but demurred. Neither councilor has
indicated whether he would run for reelection or anything else. As Walker
already has announced his intention at age 87 to run for reelection, it
seems unlikely that Glorioso would step down and oppose him.
The question about at-large competitors mentioned
incumbents Montgomery and Tim Larkin as well as announced
challenger Chris Smith. Larkin hasn’t revealed his future election plans.
And for District 1, respondents had a choice between incumbent Scott Irwin and
District 11 school board member Shane Cheatham.
Probably many of the names are guesses, with just
Walker and Smith having made things official. As such, it’s likely that one of
them commissioned this, although no incumbent nor Smith have filed any campaign
finance form that would list this expenditure.
Most likely, Walker and/or his political allies
inside and/or outside of city government paid for this. It may be that one or
all wishes to gauge voter sentiment for his try at an unprecedented fifth term,
and if support seems lukewarm then run Glorioso in his place, replicating 2005
when Walker as CAO ran to replace George Dement who had served four terms.
Still, names don’t appear in a vacuum when you’re
throwing down good money for something like this. At least some folks must
think it a real possibility that Chandler would follow through this time, or
that Free or Montgomery would seek a promotion in order for their names to
appear.
At the very least, the very fact a poll like this
has gone out five months before qualifying demonstrates some heightened expectation
of competition. New Central Asian “democracies” have had greater competition in
their national elections than has Bossier City in regular elections since 2001.
Of the minimum 32 spots up for grabs from 2005 on, just 41 candidacies have contested
these. Of eight slots available for each cycle, no fewer than six each time
have gone unopposed, with only District 5 seeing any significant turnover – Walker,
Larkin, Montgomery, Irwin, Jeff Darby and Bubba Williams have all served since
2005, with Free joining in 2013. Of them, Irwin has been the punching bag as
the only one to face opposition in the past two cycles.
Perhaps the information will become public, but
even if not, the Bossier City public can hope it’s a sign it’ll have more choices
in 2021.
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