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Parish results Jindal: 30–40% 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Boasso: 40–50% Georges: 30–40% Campbell: 30–40% 40–50% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Elections in Louisiana |
|---|
The 2007 Louisiana gubernatorial election was held on October 20. Democratic incumbent Kathleen Blanco did not run for re-election to a second term in office. Bobby Jindal won the election in the open jungle primary, capturing a majority of the vote and obviating the need for a run-off election. [1]
This was the first time since 1968 in which the winner of a Louisiana gubernatorial election was of the same party as the incumbent president.
Louisiana state elections, with the exception of U.S. presidential elections (and congressional races from 2008 until 2010), followed a variation of the open primary system called the jungle primary. Candidates of any and all parties are listed on one ballot, and unless one candidate takes more than 50 percent of the vote in the first round, a run-off election is then held between the top two candidates, who may in fact be members of the same party.
The filing deadline for candidates was September 6.
Incumbent Kathleen Blanco originally planned to run for re-election, but she entered the year facing a significant erosion in her popular support, in large part to perceptions of inadequate performance in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. In November 2006, Blanco had an approval rating of 39 percent.
In December 2006, Blanco called a special session of the legislature which she intended to use to pass $2.1 billion in tax cuts, teacher raises, road projects, and other spending programs. Legislators allied with Blanco attempted to lift a constitutional spending cap, but Republicans defeated the proposed measures. The high-profile defeat further eroded Blanco's political reputation. [2]
Blanco also faced increasingly strong accusations of delays and incompetence in administering the Road Home Program, a state-run program Blanco set up following Katrina to distribute federal aid to victims. By January 2007, fewer than 250 of an estimated 100,000 applicants had received payments, and many payments apparently underestimated the costs of damages. [3]
By January 2007, early opinion polls showed Blanco trailing Bobby Jindal by over 20 percent. Blanco began her campaign by repeatedly criticizing of the administration of President George W. Bush, noting that Bush neglected to mention Gulf Coast reconstruction in his 2007 State of the Union Address and calling for a bipartisan congressional investigation into the conduct of the Bush administration following Katrina to determine whether partisan politics played a role in the slow response to the storm. [4] The latter proposal followed comments by former Federal Emergency Management Agency director Michael D. Brown, who claimed that the White House had planned to upstage Blanco by federalizing the National Guard in the days following Katrina. Blanco also repeated accusations that Mississippi had received preferential treatment because its governor, Haley Barbour, was a Republican. [5]
In early 2007, a number of prominent Democratic figures declined to run. On March 20, following weeks of calls from her own party to step aside, Blanco announced that she would not run for re-election. Former U.S. senator John Breaux, who was a leading candidate to succeed her, faced charges that he would be ineligible to run as a resident and registered voter in Maryland since 2005; he announced on April 13 that he would not be a candidate. On April 17, lieutenant governor Mitch Landrieu also declined to run. [15]
Due to the lack of a high-profile Democratic candidate, party leaders approached Republican state senator Walter Boasso; Boasso formally switched to the Democratic Party on April 26. [6] [7] Boasso, the president and CEO of a network of shipping container facilities and a member of the Port of New Orleans Board of Commissioners, had a reputation as a conservative, pro-business legislator. After Hurricane Katrina, Boasso achieved prominence as a leading advocate for consolidation and reform of the state's Levee Boards.
Foster Campbell, a cattle farmer and insurance businessman from Bossier Parish who served on the Public Service Commission, was a long time advocate for regulating and lowering utility rates. A centerpiece of his populist campaign is a proposal to tax foreign oil refined in Louisiana and use the proceeds to eliminate personal income tax.
By April, two Republicans had emerged as the leading fundraisers in the race. John Georges, a wealthy businessman, had $5.5 million cash on hand and Bobby Jindal, who had led the Republicans in 2003 and narrowly lost to Blanco, had received $5 million in campaign financing. Although Georges would later leave the Republican Party to run as an independent, the financial and polling strength of the two Republicans presented a tremendous challenge to Democratic Party recruitment. [14]
In late late August, an ad campaign by the Louisiana Democratic Party attacked Bobby Jindal on the basis of supposed inflammatory remarks made about Protestantism. The ad was solely aired in the largely Protestant central and northern districts of the state. The ad drew attention to essays Jindal had written over a decade previously discussing his Catholic faith and conversion. One such essay was titled "How Catholicism Is Different – The Catholic Church Isn't Just Another Denomination" was published in 1996 in the New Oxford Review . [16] Jindal said about the ad, "They're absolute lies. We're not talking about an exaggeration." A letter from Jindal's campaign said, "each claim made in the advertisement distorts Mr. Jindal's positions with false and grossly distorted statements." [17]
| Source | Date | Kathleen Blanco (D) | Walter Boasso (D) | John Breaux (D) | Foster Campbell (D) | John Georges (I) | Bobby Jindal (R) | Undecided /Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loyola Institute of Politics [18] | October 2–8, 2007 | – | 9% | – | 7% | 9% | 50% | 25% |
| Southeastern Louisiana University [19] | October 1–7, 2007 | – | 10% | – | 6% | 9% | 46% | 29% |
| Kitchens Group [20] | September 4, 2007 | – | 11% | – | 8% | 7% | 51% | 23% |
| Verne Kennedy [21] | August 23, 2007 | – | 11% | – | 3% | 8% | 50% | 7% [b] |
| Southern Media and Opinion Research [22] | August 3–6, 2007 | – | 10% | – | 3% | 2% | 60% | 25% [c] |
| – | 14% | – | 4% | 1% | 63% | 18% | ||
| Anzalone Liszt Research [23] | July 8–12, 2007 | – | 21% | – | 6% | 1% | 52% | 20% |
| Anzalone Liszt Research [23] | May 7–9, 2007 | – | 6% | – | 9% | 1% | 62% | 22% |
| John Breaux declines to run | ||||||||
| Verne Kennedy [24] | March 29–April 3, 2007 | – | 1% | 23% | 2% | 10% | 39% | 25% [d] |
| Kathleen Blanco declines to run | ||||||||
| Southern Media and Opinion Research [25] | March 19, 2007 | – | 2% | 26% | 5% | – | 56% | 11% |
| 24% | 2% | – | 4% | – | 59% | 11% | ||
| Southern Media and Opinion Research [25] | January 18, 2007 | 31% | – | – | 6% | – | 58% | 5% |
| Verne Kennedy | October 24–30, 2006 | 20% | – | – | – | – | 52% | 28% [e] |
| Verne Kennedy [26] | March 17–19, 2006 | 16% | 1% | 17% | 1% | – | 39% | 26% [f] |
| Verne Kennedy [27] | February 7–15, 2006 | 16% | – | – | 1% | 23% | 36% | 24% [g] |
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| Sabato's Crystal Ball [28] | Likely R (flip) | October 20, 2007 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Bobby Jindal | 699,672 | 53.91 | ||
| Democratic | Walter Boasso | 226,364 | 17.44 | ||
| Independent | John Georges | 186,800 | 14.39 | ||
| Democratic | Foster Campbell | 161,425 | 12.44 | ||
| Democratic | Mary Volentine Smith | 5,843 | 0.45 | ||
| Independent | Belinda Alexandrenko | 4,782 | 0.37 | ||
| Independent | Anthony Gentile | 3,369 | 0.36 | ||
| Libertarian | T. Lee Horne, III | 2,639 | 0.2 | ||
| Independent | Sheldon Forest | 2,319 | 0.18 | ||
| Democratic | M. V. "Vinny" Mendoza | 2,076 | 0.16 | ||
| Democratic | Hardy Parkerson | 1,661 | 0.13 | ||
| Independent | Arthur D. "Jim" Nichols | 993 | 0.08 | ||
| Majority | 473,308 | 36.47% | |||
| Turnout | 1,297,943 | 100% | |||
| Republican gain from Democratic | Swing | ||||
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