Los Angeles Times

Democratic governor is reelected in Louisiana

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BATON ROUGE, La. — Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards has stunned Republican­s again, narrowly winning a second term Saturday as the Deep South’s only Democratic governor and handing President Trump another gubernator­ial loss this month.

In the heart of Trump country, the moderate Edwards cobbled together enough cross-party support with his focus on bipartisan, state-specific issues to defeat Republican businessma­n Eddie Rispone.

Coming after a GOP incumbent’s defeat in the Kentucky governor’s race and the party’s loss of control of Virginia’s Legislatur­e on Nov. 5, the Louisiana result seems certain to rattle Republican­s as they head into the 2020 presidenti­al election. Trump fought to return the seat to the GOP, making three trips to Louisiana to rally against Edwards.

The president’s intense attention motivated not only conservati­ve Republican­s, but also powered a surge in anti-Trump and black voter turnout that helped the incumbent.

Democrats who argue that nominating a moderate presidenti­al candidate is the best approach to beat Trump are certain to point to Louisiana’s race as bolstering their case. Edwards, a West Point graduate, opposes gun restrictio­ns, signed one of the nation’s strictest abortion bans and dismissed the impeachmen­t effort as a distractio­n.

Still, while Rispone’s loss raises questions about the strength of the president’s coattails, its relevance to Trump’s reelection chances are less clear. Louisiana is expected to easily back him next year, and Edwards’ views in many ways are out of step with his own party.

In the final days as polls showed Edwards with momentum, national Republican­s beefed up assistance for Rispone. That wasn’t enough to boost the GOP contender, who wasn’t among the top-tier candidates Republican leaders hoped would challenge Edwards as they sought to prove that the Democrat’s long-shot victory in 2015 was a fluke.

Rispone is a longtime political donor who was littleknow­n when he launched his campaign, had ties to unpopular former Gov. Bobby Jindal and offered few details about his agenda. Edwards also proved to be a formidable candidate, with a record of achievemen­ts.

Working with the majority Republican Legislatur­e, Edwards stabilized state finances with a package of tax increases, ending the deficitrid­dled years of Jindal. New money paid for investment­s in public colleges and the first statewide teacher raise in a decade.

Edwards expanded Louisiana’s Medicaid program, lowering the state’s uninsured rate below the national average. A bipartisan criminal sentencing law rewrite he championed ended Louisiana’s tenure as the nation’s top jailer.

Rispone, the 70-year-old owner of a Baton Rouge industrial contractin­g company, hitched his candidacy to Trump, introducin­g himself to voters in ads that focused on support for the president in a state Trump won by 20 percentage points.

But the 53-year-old Edwards, a former state lawmaker and former Army Ranger from rural Tangipahoa Parish, reminded voters that he’s a Louisiana Democrat, with political views that sometimes don’t match those of his party’s leaders.

“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.”

Rispone framed himself in the mold of Trump, describing himself as a “conservati­ve outsider” whose business acumen would help solve the state’s problems.

Rispone poured more than $12 million of his own money into the race. But he had trouble drawing some of the primary vote that went to Republican U.S. Rep. Ralph Abraham, after harshly attacking Abraham in ads as he sought to reach the runoff.

Rispone avoided many traditiona­l campaign events and sidesteppe­d questions about his plans if elected. He promised tax cuts, without saying where he’d shrink spending, and he pledged a constituti­onal convention, without detailing what he wanted to rewrite.

 ?? Matthew Hinton Associated Press ?? THE WIN by Gov. John Bel Edwards, right, is the latest electoral blow this month for Republican­s.
Matthew Hinton Associated Press THE WIN by Gov. John Bel Edwards, right, is the latest electoral blow this month for Republican­s.

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