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Louisiana Politics: Business group taking new approach to state elections

If you think you know the election operations of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry, think again.
Yes, the heart and soul of LABI’s election arm still resides with its four regional PACs, all of which achieved so-called “Big PAC Status” for the year, which means larger donations.
But now there’s also a front-end component that has been incubating for the past 12 months, an emerging on-the-ground super PAC that will make independent expenditures and a new focus on judicial seats.
A super PAC, or political action committee, can accept unlimited contributions, thanks to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, and caselaw on the state level is stacking up to in regard to how such committees can and cannot operate.
The Louisiana Free Enterprise Institute is among the most notable additions to LABI’s arsenal, and it has been hosting “bootcamps” around the state to recruit conservative candidates; offer them a continuing policy and political education; and streamline messaging for the 2019 legislative races.
“We’ve trained nearly 80 people and we aim to at least triple that in the next two months,” said Marie Centanni, LABI’s director of public affairs and the head of the LFEI.
The association’s four regional PACs will still get the final say on which candidates are endorsed, but they will have a much larger pool of contenders to vet.
“Our four PACs are going to have more choices,” said LABI President Stephen Waguespack. “We had to do something different, given what’s at stake in both chambers this cycle due to turnover and term limits… If you keep going to the same hunting grounds, you’ll keep getting the same kind of candidates. This is a different approach. We realized coming into this current term that we couldn’t just sit on our hands.”
This will also be the first cycle that LABI unleashes its “Free Enterprise Super PAC.” Unlike the regional PACs that provide candidates with direct donations, the super PAC will position LABI’s election arm, for the first time, to make independent expenditures in races that are already underway.
PAC director Bo Staples estimated the super PAC is currently holding $128,000, a figure that’s expected to grow in quick order.
Finally, Waguespack said LABI is in the process of rolling out another new operation that will focus solely on judicial seats. While a report card system will be implemented to mirror the grading of legislators, recruiting and continuing education are taking place, too.
And while LABI has a long tradition of filing amicus briefs, the judicial program will allow the association to be more proactive than ever on that front, Waguespack added.

Political History: Ed Steimel story
In the long history of Louisiana politics, few figures have left as much of an impact as Edward Joseph Steimel Sr., the man who effectively made PAR a major player at the Capitol and created LABI. In an era when loud voices, huge personalities and big egos dominated that inside the rails, Steimel’s quiet and bookish demeanor stood out.
Despite spending most of his career in the Bayou State, Steimel was actually born and raised in Arkansas. He graduated from Arkansas State University with a degree in journalism before taking a job with the Baton Rouge Chamber of Commerce in 1949.
Proving to be an effective communicator and fundraiser, Steimel joined the staff of PAR before becoming the executive director in 1954.”I knew almost nothing about government when I went to the Public Affairs Research Council,” Steimel would later joke with audiences.
He was a quick study and proved to be one of the most effective leaders at the Capitol. According to "The Politics of Reform" by John Maginnis, Steimel’s crowning achievement came in the fall of 1971, when PAR redrew all 144 legislative districts only weeks before voters went to the polls.
“The lights blazed late in the PAR offices at 300 Louisiana Avenue in Baton Rouge,” Maginnis wrote.
After guiding PAR through the 1973 Constitutional Convention, Steimel departed to help form a new group, the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry. The following year, LABI won a huge legislative victory with the passage of the landmark Right-to-Work law. According to LSU political scientist Wayne Parent in Unmasking the Carnival, it was during the late 1970s and 80s that Steimel and LABI became a dominant force in the Legislature.
Steimel retired from LABI and politics in 1989 and spent the rest of his career as a fundraiser for LSU. He passed away in 2016.
Introducing Steimel for LPB’s "Louisiana Legends," Gus Weill remarked, “He was probably and often the lone voice for decency and good government in Louisiana for decades.”
They said it
“I play poker with friends, but I still cut the cards.” —U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, on the spending bill, on KALB-TV
“I can’t say there is anything I disliked about it.” —House Speaker Taylor Barras, on serving in the lower chamber’s top job, in The Daily Iberian
For more Louisiana political news, visit www.LaPolitics.com or follow Alford and Rabalais on Twitter via @LaPoliticsNow.

Jim Brown: Overlords of outrage work full-time on blackface photos

Blackface mania has consumed voters in Virginia and is seeping into other states. Are their closeted politicians in Louisiana who are perusing their old yearbooks and scrapbooks to see if there are any blackface photos lurking in their past? Actually, no, since blackface parodies have been part of the Louisiana mode de vie for a number of years.
If you have been down the bayou at your fishing camp and have not stayed current on the national news, there are daily reports concerning the governor and the attorney general in Virginia who have admitted wearing blackface in their younger years. Both are democrats, and most of the other democratic elected officials are calling for the two office holders to step down. It’s right down chaotic in Virginia now, since you have the governor and the attorney general admitting blackface, the lieutenant governor is accused of sexual assault, and the next in line speaker of the House who got his job by having his name picked out of a bowl. They really have it all together in what has been called the most progressive state in the South. If there is a confederacy of dunces, it’s Virginia, not the Bayou State.
The Virginia governor now is backtracking and says that’s not really him in the blackface photo taken back in 1984. Not much of a memory, but other than that, he seems like a decent guy. In his race for governor, he was endorsed by every black legislator in the state.
For years, the white Democratic governor has belonged to a predominantly black church with a black pastor. As a physician before becoming governor, he served in a volunteer capacity as the medical director of a children’s hospice, and as an Army doctor, he treated Gulf War casualties for eight years. By any reasonable measure, he seems to have made a longtime commitment to racial justice and public service. But it’s all about that blackface, isn’t it?
When l was serving as secretary of state in the 1980s, Louisiana legislators, at the end of their legislative sessions at the state capitol, performed a self-parody making fun of their work and themselves. It was called “The Opera” where black legislators wore whiteface and white members wore blackface. No one seemed offended, and one of the most enthusiastic participants was the Rev. Avery Alexander, a black civil rights leader and the founder of the Legislative Black Caucus. There was give and take, all in good fun.
Mardi Gras Day is just a few weeks away, and one of largest organizations to march through the city of New Orleans is the Krewe of Zulu. It’s a black krewe that often invites white friends to participate.
But there is one requirement. A white participant must wear blackface. A Caucasian friend of mine was invited to ride in Zulu, but he told the group he would not wear black face because he did not want to offend anyone. Sorry, the black organization told him. No blackface, no riding in Zulu.
In Baton Rouge this week, a 1993 photo was discovered showing two white police officers in blackface. The officers were involved in an undercover narcotics sting operation to get drugs off the streets. The Baton Rouge mayor was appalled and issued a strong statement condemning the operation. She apparently feels it is better to let drug dealers continue to operate rather than offend anyone.
Here is a short list of entertainers who have worn blackface. Jimmy Kimmel, Dan Aykroyd, Bing Crosby, Billy Crystal, Ted Danson, Robert Downey Jr., Alec Guinness, Sophia Loren, Bob Hope, David Niven, Will Rogers, Frank Sinatra, Shirley Temple, John Wayne, Gene Wilder, the list goes on and on.
With a wave of political correctness sweeping the country, blackface on any level would be inappropriate. But should someone today be held accountable for something they did without malice 30 or 40 years ago? How far back do we go in one’s past before we forgive poor judgment? Would St. Paul have passed such a test after he admittedly persecuted Jews and followers of Jesus Christ before he became a Christian? Or should such degraded souls be eternally ashamed and be reconciled to make perpetual amends?
Let me submit that America, with all its warts, is a pretty decent country that has been able to adapt, revise, adjust and yes, forgive. It’s time for the overlords of outrage to put their intolerance aside let the nation to move on.
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 of his columns at www.jimbrownusa.com.

NEIL JULES “BEAR” LOCKETTE

Neil Jules “Bear” Lockette, 62, a resident of Lafayette, La. and a native of Lydia, La., passed away on Thursday, February 7, 2019 at 4:23 p.m. at Lafayette General in Lafayette, La.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday, February 16, 2019 from 9 a.m. until the recitation of the rosary at 10 a.m. at the St. Nicholas Catholic Church 7809 Weeks Island Road Lydia, La. 70569. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. with Father Gregory Chauvin serving as the Celebrant. Burial will follow mass services in the St. Nicholas Catholic Church Cemetery.
Memories of Neil will forever remain in the hearts of his daughter, Mrs. Wayne (Daidre) Bernard; his grandchildren, his sisters, Pamela Lockette of Lydia, La., Mrs. Felton (Edna) Mallery, and Mrs. Earl (Shelia) Williams both of New Iberia, La., Mrs. Warren (Shirley) Archield of Patoutville, La. and Mrs. Felix ( Lisa) Enadeghe of Houston, TX; his brothers, John C. Lockette, Donald P. Lockette, and Tony S. (Christine) Lockette all of New Iberia, La., and Rodney J. Lockette of Lydia, La. and a host of nieces, nephews, great nieces and nephews other relatives and dear friends.
Neil was preceded in death by his parents, three brothers, one sister, and a nephew, and a niece, and both his maternal grandparents, and his paternal grandparents.
The Jones Funeral Home, Inc. has been entrusted with arrangements. Condolences can be sent to the family by logging on to www.jones-funeral-home.com

LORRIANE “ARAINE” HAWKINS GAUNO

Lorriane “Araine” Hawkins Gauno, 62, a native of Terrebonne Parish and a resident of Houma, La., passed away peacefully at 8:33 a.m. on Monday, February 11, 2019.
A public viewing will be conducted from 3 p.m. until wake services beginning at 6 p.m. on Friday, February 22, 2019 at the church. Public viewing will resume at 9 a.m. until funeral time at 11 a.m. on Saturday, February 23, 2019 at New Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 922 Goode Street in Houma. Burial will follow in Southdown Cemetery.
She is survived by her sons, Keith Gauno, Jr. (Angela) and Keith Harvey; daughters, Kershawn Gauno and Stephanie Kenny of Houma; thirteen grandchildren; five great grandchildren; brothers, Dalton, Milton and Terry Hawkins (Shannon), Pastor Ronnie Williams Sr. (Shayna) of Houma, Earl Hasley Sr. (Glenda) of Morgan City; sisters, Donna H. Matthews (Pastor Larry), Geri R. Parker, Lucinda Thomas (Anthony), Judy L. Williams (Roland); and a host of other relatives and friends.
She was preceded in death by her husband, parents, brother, ; paternal grandparents, maternal grandparents, and devoted friend.
Arrangements entrusted to Jones Funeral Home of Houma-Franklin-Jeanerette-Morgan City.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

VERNAL JAMES FRANCIS

Vernal James Francis, 61, a resident of Patterson, La., passed away on Thursday February 14, 2019 at 5:04 p.m. at the Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson, La.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday, February 23, 2019 at the Jones Funeral Home, 715 Sixth Street, Morgan City, La., from 9 a.m. until funeral services at 10 a.m.
Memories of Vernal will forever remain in the hearts of his wife, Pamela B. Franics of Patterson, La.: his son, Vernal J. (Tiffany) Francis of Patterson, La.; five daughters, Kesha Bennett, Vernesha (Kiefer Smith) Francis, Nariya Francis, Rashada Pilate all of Patterson, La. and Lucy Bennett of Lafayette, La.: six grandchildren, and a host of siblings, nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Vernal was preceded in death by his parents, and a grandchild.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Jeanerette-Houma in charge of arrangements.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

LISKA MARIE “L.K.” MORRIS KEMP

Liska Marie “L.K.” Morris Kemp, 60, a resident of Morgan City, La. and native of Berwick, La., passed away on Friday February 15, 2019 at 2:50 a.m. at the Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson, La.
Visitation will be observed on Saturday February 23, 2019 at the Siracusaville Recreation Center, 1110 Grace St., Morgan City, La. from 9 a.m. until funeral services at 12 noon. Burial will follow services in the Berwick Cemetery in Berwick.
Memories of Liska, or “L.K.,” as she was known to many, will forever remain in the hearts of her three sons, Ryan Kemp and Brice Kemp both of Patterson, La. and Bryan (Natalie) Kemp of Orange, TX; her siblings, Evelyn C. (Patrick) Levine, Barry (Dina) Walker, Belinda Hollins, Beverly Granger, Booker (Patricia) Hollins, Jr. all of Morgan City, La., Veronica (Marvin Sr.) Francis Keith Walker all of Opelousas, La., Flora Coleman of Roundrock, TX; six grandchildren and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Liska was preceded in death by her parents, and one sister, and one brother.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Jeanerette-Houma in charge of arrangements.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family

PETER LOUIS SR.

Peter Louis Sr., 85, a resident of Franklin (St. Joseph Community), La. and native of St. Martinville, La., passed away on Saturday February 16, 2019 at 7:39 p.m. at the Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson, La.
Visitation will be Friday, February 22, 2019 at Jones Funeral Home in Franklin, La., from 9 a.m. until 12 noon. Tributes and expressions will start at 12 noon until the recitation of the rosary beginning at 1 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 2 P.M. at the St Jules Catholic Church in Franklin, La. with Father Peter Emusa serving as the Celebrant. Burial will follow in the Perpetual Park Cemetery in Franklin, La.
Memories of Peter will forever remain in the hearts of his children, Peter (Onedia) Louis, Jr. of Verdunville, La., Diane Spain of Centerville, La., Johnnie (Ethel) Louis of Jeanerette, La., Jerry (Ann) Lewis of Centerville, La., Rose Mary Elaine (Joseph) Garrison of Franklin, La., Gabriel Louis of St. Joseph, La., Tony (Monica) Gibson and Jimmy (Ruth) Gibson both of Baldwin, La., Warren (Linda) Span of Patterson, La. and La Tonya (Ezekiel, III) Anderson of Franklin, La.; three sisters, Lucille Thomas, Mary Ann May, and Kathleen Rollins all of New Orleans, La.; twenty-eight grandchildren, forty-six great grandchildren, and three great-great grandchildren, and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Peter was preceded in death by his wives; his parents, one son, seven brothers, and two sisters.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Jeanerette-Houma in charge of arrangements.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

GERMANY DEMOND “PUP” BROUSSARD

Germany Demond “Pup” Broussard, 39, a resident and native of Morgan City, La., passed away on Saturday February 16, 2019 at his residence.
Visitation will be observed on Thursday February 21, 2019 at the Siracusaville Recreation Center, 1110 Grace St., Morgan City, La. from 9 a.m. until funeral services at 11 a.m. Burial will follow services in the Morgan City Cemetery.
Memories of Germany or “Pup,” as he was known to many, will forever remain in the hearts of his two sons, Tre’ Deonte’ Delaune and Germany Demond Broussard, Jr. both of Morgan City, La. ., mother, Deborah Broussard (Stanley) Jones of New Orleans, La.; his fiancé, Richelle Briscoe; four brothers, Michael (Krystal) Ledet, Jr. Stanley L. (Erica) Ledet both of Hammond, La., Durwyne (Shayla) Canty of New Orleans, La. and Theophilus Gaines of Marietta, GA; one sister, Tyinna Marie (Joshua) Jones-Singleton both of Marietta, GA; his fiancé’s mother, Veronica (Herman)Hawkins-Jones of Morgan City, La. and a host of aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Germany was preceded in death by his grandparents, paternal and his maternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City-Franklin-Jeanerette-Houma in charge of arrangements.
Visit www.jones-funeral-home.com to send condolences to family.

Four local teams will host first-round playoffs

Franklin, West St. Mary, Centerville and Hanson Memorial will all host first-round games in the 2019 LHSAA Boys Basketball Playoffs after the brackets were released Monday afternoon.
First round games must be played by Friday with the Hanson Memorial Tigers set to play its bi-district game on Wednesday at the Billy Gene Talbot Gym.
The No. 11 seeded Hanson Memorial Tigers (11-9) will play host to the No. 22 seeded St. Edmund Blue Jays (3-21) in the opening round of the Division IV game on tonight at 6 p.m. at the Billy Gene Talbot Gymnasium.
In Class 2A, the No. 9 seed Franklin Hornets (19-9) will host No.24 seed Oakdale (15-9) on Friday at the Franklin High School Gym.
Also in Class 2A, the No. 12 seed West St. Mary Wolfpack (15-8) will play host to No. 21 Capitol (17-13) on Friday at 6:30 p.m. at the WSM Gymnasium,
The No. 10 Centerville Bulldogs (17-9) will host No. 23 seed Northwood-Lena in the first round of the Class A playoffs on Friday at the CHS Gym.

Centerville Lady Bulldogs topple FHS Lady Hornets

CENTERVILLE Centerville Lady Bulldogs pitchers Chelsi Hebert and Kayla Businelle combined to pitch a three-inning perfect game Monday as the Centerville Lady Bulldogs toppled Franklin 19-0 here at Lady Bulldog Field.
Hebert started in the circle and, striking out the first six batters she faced over the first two innings of the game.
Businelle appeared in relief in the third frame, striking out the first two batters she faced while also enticing a ground ball to short stop for the last out of the game.
Centerville took advantage of a few walks mixed in with some timely hits combined with a few errors from the young Franklin team.
CENTERVILLE HOSTING BASH ON THE BAYOU TOURNEY
Centerville will host the annual Bash of the Bayou Tournament beginning Friday at Lady Bulldog Park.
Action opens on Friday with Centerville playing Jeanerette at 4 p.m. prior to Covenant Christian battling Franklin at 6:30 p.m.
A total of six games will be played on Saturday beginning at 10 a.m.with Covenant Christian playing Lacassine. At noon, Centerville will square off against Lacasine. The 2 p.m. contest will pit Covenant Christian against Jeanerette. At 4 p.m., Franklin will take on Abbeville. The 6 p.m. contest will have Centerville squaring off against Abbeville prior to Jeanerette playing Franklin in the finale at 8 p.m.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
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Morgan City Review
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