IN LOUISIANA THEY’RE ASKING — WHO’S IN CHARGE?
Thursday, March 5th, 2015
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
IN LOUISIANA THEY’RE ASKING — WHO’S IN CHARGE?
In his quixotic quest to run for president, Louisiana Governor
Bobby Jindal has been out of the state 50% of the time in recent months. He’s
rarely been visible in his home state, but voters are getting to know him far
and wide in the likes Iowa, New Hampshire, Florida, and numerous other states
with early presidential primaries. So the question is — who’s in charge when
the Louisiana Governor is on the campaign trail?
The Baton Rouge Morning Advocate posed this question to
Jindal’s press secretary recently. The response was, “the Governor
remains the Governor wherever he is.” Apparently, the mindset is that the
governor is always available by phone or email, so he never really is “away.”
Not so, says the Louisiana Constitution, where clear language states:
“When the governor is temporarily absent from the state, the lieutenant
governor shall act as governor.”
The most recent constitutional convention, which was held in
1973, was called by the Louisiana legislature to update and rewrite the state’s
founding document. I was a co-author of the legislation creating the
convention, and I also served as an elected delegate for the one year undertaking
to draft a new constitution. With little controversy, the convention
overwhelming adopted the provisions that put the lieutenant governor in charge when
the governor is out of state. The intentions of the delegates were quite clear.
In 1973 there were no cell phones, but landlines, of course,
were abundant. However, Louisiana had experienced numerous blackout problems
during hurricanes. Phone lines went dead during the storms and the delegates to
the constitutional convention wanted provisions that, under emergency
conditions, someone on the state level would be physically in charge. They had
the savvy and the foresight to see that regardless of communication breakdowns,
Louisiana would be best served by an onsite governor during an emergency.
Granted, communication systems have become much more
sophisticated today, but the importance of the provisions still applies. No
better example can be found than the Katrina experience. Cell phone and
Internet service failed, and local television and radio stations were off the
air. An absentee governor would not have been able to communicate to first
responders, the state police or the National Guard. No matter how
electronically “tuned in” an out of state governor might be, the delegates felt
that a major emergency needs “hands on” leadership. And they were right.
Was another statewide official ever called on the issue of an
executive order from the Governor’s office? Yes. On several occasions, I filled
the role as Governor to deal with an anticipated emergency. I was elected
Secretary of State in 1979, and the office is second in line to the Governorship
behind the Lieutenant Governor. On several occasions, both then serving Governor Dave
Treen and Lieutenant Governor Bobby Freeman were out of the state and I got the
call.
The first time was in the fall of 1980. I had been in office for
a little less than a year, and I was attending a national convention of
Secretaries of State in Atlantic City. My wife was along, and we had tickets
for one of the final concerts of Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin. This was a big
deal back then, and an event my wife and I did not want to miss.
Late in the afternoon before the concert, the phone rang. The
Governor’s executive counsel, Sonny Mouton was on the phone along with then
Commissioner of Administration Bubba Henry. They quickly told me that both the
governor and the lieutenant governor were out of the country, and they needed
me to get back to Louisiana immediately to call a much-needed special session
of the legislature. “I’d be glad to,” I told them, “first thing in the
morning.”
No, they told me — the call had to be signed by midnight. What a
dilemma. Either Frank, Dean and me hangin’ out (well, sort of), or back
to Louisiana on a late flight. I reluctantly opted to skip the concert, and fly
back to New Orleans. A State Police helicopter met me on the Delta runway, and
I signed the needed document minutes before the midnight deadline.
Should the law be changed to have the governor in charge at all
times? There are pros and cons, particularly in a state that is as
disaster prone as Louisiana. Right now, a succession in command is the law. So
when Governor Jindal continues his travels around the country, he needs to know
that there is someone back home looking over his shoulder. Whether he likes it
or not.
********
“A governor kind of looses the opportunity of
symbolic leadership of being on the front lines when he is out of the
state.”
Professor Joseph Marbach,
Seton Hall University
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column
appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites
worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates
at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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