THE CONTINUING INTEREST IN EDWIN EDWARDS!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
THE CONTINUING INTEREST IN EDWIN EDWARDS!
Former Louisiana
Governor Edwin Edwards is approaching 90 years old and hasn’t seemed to slow
down a bit. He remains active, still
speaking throughout the state, often accompanied with his young wife and
4-year-old son. Last year, a Baton Rouge
Advocate poll listed him as Louisiana’s most popular governor.
According to his
biographer Leo Honeycutt, Edwards is an enigma…a puzzling political personality
shaped by his background and a lifetime effort to climb to the top of the
heap. Did he cross the imaginary line of political propriety in his
public dealings? Honeycutt astutely argues that the line often moves with the
times and can be bent and shaped by unscrupulous federal prosecutors.
Three reasons emerge
as to why there continues to be so much interest in the enduring saga of the
state’s longest serving governor. First of all, he is a likeable
rogue. Even his ardent distracters over the years found him to be
funny and highly entertaining. Few came close to mesmerizing a crowd
like the Cajun from Crowley. He could have handled a late night talk
show with much more pizzazz and humor than Conan O’Brien on any night of the
week.
Secondly, some
naysayers disregard the Edwards years as all negative with no progressive
public accomplishments by his administration. There is no doubt
Edwards became bogged down in his later terms as his legal problems with the
federal government mounted. But a number of more neutral observers will stack
up Edwards’ first two terms as the most productive and positive for Louisiana in
the twentieth century.
I posed the question
of Edwards’ accomplishments to a group of journalists who had covered the state
capitol for many years, going back to the administration of Gov. Jimmy Davis in
the 1960s. When asked to name the state’s shining period of progress, they all
pointed to the 1970s during Edwards’ first two terms. A new constitution, tax
reform, a new ethics code, the creation of an architects and engineers
selection board taking these decisions away from politics that became the
prototype throughout the country, the passage of the strongest public records
and open meetings laws of any state, all done under an Edwards administration.
I was hosting a radio
show a few years back discussing the Edwards years and opened up the phone
lines for listener observations. Former Public Affairs Research Council
Director and President of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry Ed
Steimel called in to comment. He said during the 1970s, Edwards both
embraced and worked for passage of every one of PAR’s good government
recommendations. Steimel also agreed the 70s were a “special, productive time”
under Edwards’ leadership.
The third reason
Edwards continues to command so much interest is the feeling by many observers
that he did not get a fair shake in the federal trial that sent him to
prison. Former Governor Dave Treen, recently deceased, summed up
this prevailing view in the last public letter he wrote as an introduction to
the Honeycutt book. “I believe the federal government….doubled his
sentence from the prescribed five years purely out of
vindictiveness. They didn’t like him. That’s not a good
reason to double someone’s sentence and is, I believe, a misuse of
power.” Even many of Edwards’ ardent distracters agree.
Yes, Edwin Edwards is
an enigma. A complex mix of a Louisiana figure that, like Icarus,
flew so high with abundant success, then fell for many reasons, including some
of his own making.
Greek
tragedy? Maybe. But the final verse of Edwin Edwards’
life is far from written. Honeycutt’s original version of Edwards’s life covered
1600 pages. Edwards insisted much be left out, at least for the time
being.
Another book in the
making? Look for Edwards himself to have
a lot more to say in the years to come. In the meantime, the current Edwards’
biography fills the gap and paints a vivid portrait of the man who many feel is
the most dominant Louisiana political figure in the past century.
*****
“People say I’ve had brushes with the law. That’s not
true. I’ve had brushes with overzealous prosecutors.”
Edwin Edwards
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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