Louisiana, for a variety of reasons, has the
weakest state major political parties of any in the country. Part of that comes
from the historical dominance that governors can exert informally, blessed by a
political culture that too intensely conceptualizes its chief executive as a
man on horseback that keeps order and dispenses or withholds resources. In the
past, governors have loomed large over their parties, determining their
leadership and directing their resources.
But not Edwards. The party had serious reservations
about his ability to win when he set off in 2014 to capture the office. Famously,
among others, the party chairwoman state Sen. Karen Carter Peterson had gone to him
and asked him to withdraw in favor of throwing their support behind a Republican
they thought could defeat Republican Sen. David Vitter. Of course the party revved
up support for him when he did well in the general election, signaling a runoff
victory where it became his mouthpiece
afterwards, but Peterson and other party officials like recently-departed
executive director Stephen Handwerk had their own independent bases of support.
Perhaps one reason why some distance remained between
the state’s chief executive and only statewide elected Democrat was the party
base and state central committee had solid black majorities, with much of its
leadership reflecting that, and Edwards is white. Despite that black majority
among registrants, and for many years before that establishing a majority among
legislators, its backing
of black Democrat Shreveport Mayor Adrian
Perkins for U.S. Senate this fall represents only the second time ever that
the state party has endorsed a black statewide candidate before a general election
runoff. Black candidates always have played second fiddle to whites in the
party, prompting some degree of separation in letting yet another high-profile white
figure boss around the party.
But not with a much lower-profile white activist.
Months ago, first-term central committeewoman Katie Bernhardt announced she
would contend for the chairmanship. Daughter of another party activist the late
John Bernhardt, Katie Bernhardt hadn’t had much history with the formal
organization. In fact, she or through her firm have donated to select Republicans,
including former Lt. Gov. Scott Angelle when he opposed Edwards in 2015. (She
did donate to Edwards for his 2019 reelection.) And in 2012, her father defeated
Handwerk for a central committee seat.
With her not on Edwards’ team, he responded when
Peterson, fighting off both a poor record of electing Democrats and personal
problems, declared she would not seek heading up the party again by throwing
his support behind state Rep. Ted James, who
is black. That automatically should have won the race right there: after recent
elections that had at least 108 blacks win central committee seats out of 210 (with
likely dozens more appointed, since a number of seats drew no competition), if
all voted in racial solidarity James would win.
That won’t happen. Last week, James
withdrew, claiming he needed to devote his energies to getting Democrats former
Vice Pres. Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala
Harris elected to the White House (and Naval Observatory) this fall.
Nobody should believe that. It would be a moral
victory for Democrats if Republicans Pres. Donald Trump and Vice Pres. Mike Pence don’t
receive at least 60 percent of the vote in Louisiana. There’s nothing James
could do to bring his side to victory, and he probably could have done more for
the ticket heading up the state party.
No, James quit because he didn’t have the votes.
So, what we have here is a prominent black Democrat state legislator with the
governor’s backing facing a majority-black panel but unable to defeat a rookie
white female. Not only does this incident show how little authority Edwards can
exert over the party, but also it may show Edwards actually is considered
poisonous by it.
This expectant outcome when the central committee
meets in the near future suggests a distinct lack of enthusiasm by the official
state party for any future electoral plans Edwards may pursue.
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