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The Daily Review/Bill Decker
Clay Higgins appears at Morgan City Hall during a 2016 campaign stop.

'Cajun John Wayne' among incumbents who appear to be safe

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Former sheriff’s deputy Clay Higgins galloped into Congress two years ago in part on the strength of viral anti-crime videos in which he displayed the cowboy swagger that earned him his “Cajun John Wayne” nickname.
Back then, his outsider image helped separate him from a pack of fellow conservative Republicans running for an open seat in southwest Louisiana. Now, he’s an incumbent with an endorsement from President Donald Trump.
He’s also a target. At a recent Lafayette forum, attorney Josh Guillory, a fellow Republican, chastised Higgins for votes Guillory said raised the federal debt and for living outside the district he represents — the 3rd Congressional District covering southwest Louisiana. Higgins responded with indignation. “I represent the culture and communities that the Higgins family has lived within for 200 years and it’s somewhat personally offensive to me to suggest otherwise,” said Higgins, whose home in Port Barre is north of the district line.
Guillory is one of six challengers facing Higgins on the Nov. 6 non-partisan ballot. Four Democrats and a Libertarian round out the field.
Higgins’ camp boasts polling that shows him with more than 60 percent support, plenty more than the majority needed to avoid a December runoff. Campaign finance records show him with a significant fundraising advantage with more than $816,000 raised. His closest money-raising competitors: Guillory, who reports more than $200,000 raised plus a $127,800 self-loan; and Democrat Mimi Methvin, an attorney and former U.S. magistrate judge, who has raised nearly $184,000 plus a $51,000 self-loan.
Higgins’ solid 93 rating from the American Conservative Union and his Trump endorsement haven’t stopped Guillory’s attack from the right. And Guillory also has an endorsement from Trump’s personal lawyer and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Giuliani told The Advocate newspaper he learned of Guillory through Guillory’s finance director, Jennifer LeBlanc. New York media have linked Giuliani and Leblanc romantically.
Methvin criticizes Higgins’s vote for a tax cut that Democrats have long labeled as weighted to the wealthy, as well as his vote to kill the health care law passed under former President Barack Obama. She insists she’ll have a strong enough get-out-the vote effort to make it to a runoff with Higgins.
The challengers face a tough path says Joshua Stockley, political science professor at the University of Louisiana-Monroe. “I think the chances are good that he’s going to win outright,” Stockley said of Higgins.
The other five incumbents also have more money and name recognition than their little-known opponents.

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