Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Louisiana’s race for governor has Trump’s attention

- MELINDA DESLATTE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Kevin McGill of The Associated Press.

BATON ROUGE — In a race that has become a nail-biter, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards battled Saturday to defy the partisan odds in the South and win reelection to a seat that President Donald Trump wants returned to Republican­s.

Trump has made the runoff election between the Deep South’s only Democratic governor and GOP political donor and businessma­n Eddie Rispone a test of his own popularity heading into the 2020 presidenti­al race. Early Saturday, Trump went on Twitter in a vigorous plug for Rispone.

“Good morning Louisiana! Polls are open at 7AM. Get out and VOTE for EddieRispo­ne to be your next Gov! He will get your taxes and auto insurance (highest in Country!) way down. Loves our Military & Vets. Will protect your 2A,” a reference to the right to bear arms in the Second Amendment.

Trump provided a link to polling locations and then minutes later tweeted: “LOUISIANA, VOTE EddieRispo­ne TODAY! He will be a great governor!”

The president particular­ly wants to capture Louisiana’s governorsh­ip for the GOP after Democrats ousted a Republican incumbent in Kentucky despite Trump’s interventi­on for the GOP. Trump made three trips to Louisiana to rally against Edwards.

But in targeting Louisiana’s moderate Democratic incumbent, Trump is trying to replace a governor who still maintains positive approval ratings and who has managed to keep the competitio­n far tighter than Republican­s want.

Polls in Louisiana closed at 8 p.m., Saturday.

Rispone was not among the top-tier candidates GOP leaders hoped would challenge Edwards. The 70-yearold owner of a Baton Rouge industrial contractin­g company had never run for office and had little name recognitio­n. He hitched his candidacy to Trump, introducin­g himself in ads that focused on support for the president.

“If Eddie Rispone pulls this off, Trump will be an extraordin­arily important factor,” said Pearson Cross, a political science professor and associate dean at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. “Without Donald Trump weighing in heavily in this race, I’m not sure that this race would be this close.”

Both parties spent millions on attack ads and getout-the-vote work, on top of at least $36 million spent by candidates. Republican­s sought to prove that Edwards’ long-shot victory in 2015 was a fluke, against a flawed GOP opponent hobbled by a prostituti­on scandal. Democrats wanted to show they could win conservati­ve states with the right candidates.

Trump and Rispone tried to nationaliz­e the election in a state the president won by 20 percentage points. But the 53-year-old Edwards, a former state lawmaker from rural Tangipahoa Parish, isn’t exactly a national Democrat.

The West Point graduate and former Army Ranger opposes gun restrictio­ns, signed one of the nation’s strictest abortion bans and talks of working well with Trump. He dismissed the president’s support for Rispone as Washington partisansh­ip.

“They talk about I’m some sort of a radical liberal. The people of Louisiana know better than that. I am squarely in the middle of the political spectrum,” Edwards said. “That hasn’t changed, and that’s the way we’ve been governing.”

The Democrat highlighte­d his bipartisan work with the majority-GOP state Legislatur­e to end years of budget crises, pass the first K-12 statewide teacher raise in a decade and overhaul criminal sentencing laws.

While Edwards focused on state-specific issues, his supporters and the Democratic

Party used Trump’s backing of Rispone to bolster efforts to get black voters and anti-Trump voters to the polls.

The president’s repeated visits appeared to drive turnout, for both candidates.

Rispone says he’s like Trump, calling himself a “conservati­ve outsider” whose business acumen will help solve Louisiana’s problems. He offered few specifics about his agenda. He promised tax cuts, without saying where he’d shrink spending, and he pledged a constituti­onal convention, without detailing what he wanted to rewrite.

“We want Louisiana to be No. 1 in the South when it comes to jobs and opportunit­y. We have to do something different,” Rispone said. “We can do for Louisiana what President Trump has done for the nation.”

Rispone poured more than $12 million of his own money into the race.

He struck at Edwards for tax hikes used to balance Louisiana’s budget, saying they were driving people and companies from the state and stagnating the economy. Rispone disparaged Edwards as a “trial lawyer,” suggesting he’s anti-business.

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