LOUISIANA VOTERS -- WON’T GET FOOLED AGAIN!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
LOUISIANA VOTERS -- WON’T GET FOOLED
AGAIN!
To many
electoral observers across the country, Louisiana is the centergy of the
political universe. Nowhere is there
such a concentration of political interest – right? Wasn’t it a Speaker of the U.S. House of
Representatives who said if you want to get a graduate degree on successful
politics, go down to Louisiana? And who
can forget former Governor Earl Long’s final wish on his deathbed: “Or Lord, when I die, bury me in Louisiana so
I can stay active in politics.” There’s
more interest and participation in political campaigns in Louisiana than in any
other place in the country. Or is there?
A new study
by the Wallethub Foundation shows a significant drop in voter participation in
the Bayou State. Louisiana has slid down
the scale, tying with Michigan for a run of the mill 14th place in
the rankings of civically
engaged Americans. The
study took in a number of factors, ranging from the percentage of registered
voters in the 2012 presidential election to the total political contributions
per adult population.
Neighboring Mississippi, far and
away out ranks Louisiana in voter participation. Young voters (18 to 24)
in Mississippi out rank Louisiana by more than 20 points, at 64 percent
compared to Louisiana’s 42 percent.
Seniors in Mississippi are far ahead in going to the polls with an 82
percent participation rate compared to Louisiana at 74 percent. A long list of Midwestern and East Coast
states turn out for elections at a significantly higher level than in
Louisiana.
So what has happened in the
deepest of the deep southern states, where being active in politics has been a
part of the state’s DNA for decades?
Politics used to be a way of life in the Bayou State, where the Longs
and the anti-Longs, Sam Jones and the reformers, oil money, Edwin Edwards and
the rise of Cajun country created lots entertainment. After all, You Are My Sunshine is the state song.
The simple fact is that
Louisiana political life has grown stale and, well, just a lot less
interesting. Retail politics has become a thing of a bygone age. Remember in
years past where statewide politicians would never miss a parade or a festival,
even in small communities? In my twenty years as a statewide elected
official, I seldom missed the Pecan Festival and parade in Colfax, the Frog
Festival in Rayne, or the Watermelon Festival in Farmerville. Rarely does any candidate for major office
show up for these people oriented events today.
Former U.S. Senator Allan Ellender used to visit every parish in the
state once a year. The current
candidates for U.S. Senate haven’t been to a number of parishes in their entire
terms of office.
Apathy has set in, particularly
among millennials. In discussing the
current U.S. Senate race, a young voter recently told me: “What difference does it make who controls
the senate? If the Republicans win
control, the senate will be run by an out of touch old white guy. If the Democrats keep control, the leader in
charge is an out of touch old white guy.
Who cares?”
The President engenders a huge
negative in Louisiana, particularly for Democrats. But if you take Obama out of the equation,
many voters have concluded that if you put both parties in a sack and shake it
up, it wouldn’t matter who you pulled out.
They both have dropped the ball on being fiscally responsible,
addressing the immigration problem, and finding reasonable solutions for a host
of festering problems.
Throw into this mix a
legislature that genuflects to the governor, and a governor who has all but
abandoned the state, and it’s surprising that there’s any interest in elections
at all. Louisiana gets one more bite at
the apple in the December 4th run-off election. But don’t get your hopes up for much of a renewal
of political interest.
Unfortunately, for many
Louisiana voters and non-voters alike, their attitude mirrors the 1971 hit by
the English Rock group, The Who.
“There's nothing in the streets
Looks
any different to me.
Meet the new boss
Same
as the old boss
We Won't Get Fooled Again”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
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