Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Confederat­e statue removals part of New Orleans mayor legacy

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) – Mitch Landrieu enters his final year as mayor of New Orleans drawing less attention to what’s been built than to what’s been taken down: Century-old landmarks, three honoring Confederat­e leaders and one heralding white supremacy, have disappeare­d from the city landscape at his behest.

Emotional debates, state and federal court battles and tense confrontat­ions at monument sites marked the process. The drama played out over the nearly two years since he proposed removing the four monuments. The City Council approved the action in December 2015.

Landrieu won elections in 2010 and 2014 with strong biracial majorities. But he’s limited to two consecutiv­e terms and his political future is cloudy. He’s held statewide office, having been elected lieutenant governor in 2003 and 2007. But, as a Democrat who just enraged die-hard lovers of Confederat­e iconograph­y, his odds of returning to the statewide scene appear to have dimmed in a reliably Republican state.

“It’s hard to see where he’s going to land after this,” said Edward Chervenak, a political science professor at the University of New Orleans.

Landrieu’s father, retired state appellate court judge Moon Landrieu, was a two-term mayor in the 1970s who went on to a cabinet post in the Democratic administra­tion of former President Jimmy Carter. Ron Faucheux, a pollster, political consultant and former Louisiana legislator, said Mitch Landrieu might be in line for an administra­tion job should the Democrats retake the White House in 2020.

“His two best options would be Washington or mayor again,” Faucheux said in an email. “Both options are closed out for the next four years.”

Elected less than five years after the catastroph­ic flooding of Hurricane Katrina, Landrieu succeeded a term-limited Ray Nagin, who presided over a sluggish recovery and later went to prison for corruption.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee is lowered to a truck for removal Friday from Lee Circle in New Orleans.
Associated Press A statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee is lowered to a truck for removal Friday from Lee Circle in New Orleans.

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