James H. "Jim" Brown

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James Harvey "Jim" Brown, Jr. (born May 6, 1940), is a political consultant and commentator based in Baton Rouge long active in Louisiana Democratic politics. In 1972, he was elected to both the Louisiana state Senate, to which he served two terms, and to the 1973 Constitutional Convention. He was secretary of state from 1980-1988, and he ran unsuccessfully for governor in the 1987 jungle primary. He was elected insurance commissioner in 1991 and served until his resignation in October 2000. Brown's political career closed with a six-month prison sentence for lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about the status of an insurance company. He has since, like the late Richard M. Nixon after Watergate, sought to redeem himself politically. His 2004 book entitled Justice Denied: How the Federal Justice System Failed Former Insurance Commissioner Jim Brown seeks to refute the charges of which he was convicted in federal court and to rehabilitate his reputation. Brown was barred from practicing law until at least the end of 2006.

Brown's daughter, Campbell Brown, is the co-anchor of NBC's Weekend Today and a former network White House correspondent and is married to Dan Senor of Fox News.

Contents

[edit] Early years, education, family

Brown was born in Ferriday in Concordia Parish, adjacent to the Mississippi River. He graduated from Ferriday High School in 1958. He obtained a bachelor's degree from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. An excellent athlete, he was a member of the U.S. track team from 1962-1963. He also studied for a time at Cambridge University in England. He completed law school at Tulane University in New Orleans and was admitted to the bar. He began his law practice in Ferriday in 1966 later operated primarily out of Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

Brown is married to the former Gladys Solomon. He is the father of three daughters, including Campbell Brown, and one son from his first marriage to Dale Campbell Fairbanks. He is Presbyterian.

[edit] State senator, 1972-1980

Brown, at 31, was among the youngest persons ever elected to the Louisiana Senate. He represented the 32nd District, which included the northeastern parishes of Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, Franklin, La Salle, and Tensas. After he secured the pivotal Democratic nomination in the fall of 1971, Brown defeated Republican nominee John Henry Baker (born 1934), of Franklin Parish in the March 1972 general election. Baker claimed Delhi in Richland Parish as his residence, but he lived in a rural section of northern Franklin Parish. Brown polled 17,151 votes (64.1 percent) to Baker's 9,587 (35.9 percent). Baker, however, noted that he won Brown's home precinct in Ferriday. Baker had been elected as a Democrat in 1968 to the Franklin Parish Police Jury (county commission in most states), but he had switched to the GOP in 1969.

In August 1972, Brown was elected on a nonpartisan ballot from his senatorial district as a delegate to the Louisiana constitutional convention, which met in 1973 in Baton Rouge. The convention produced the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, which replaced the document of 1921, and Brown was an active delegate in the proceedings. (Delegates were chosen from the 105 state House districts and the 39 state Senate districts.)

As a state senator, Brown supported openness in government. He worked to create some of the strongest laws in the nation to require open records and meetings. He also obtained legislative passage of landmark consumer protection legislation that offered Louisiana citizens greater financial privacy. He also made himself available to radio and television stations and newspapers to keep his Senate activities in the public eye.

[edit] Secretary of state, 1980-1988

Brown did not seek a third term in the state Senate in the 1979 primary. Instead, he ran for secretary of state to succeed the incumbent Paul J. Hardy, then a Democrat, but later a Republican, who, at 37, was running unsuccessfully for governor. Brown faced a formidable challenger, it appeared, in the popular Sandra Thompson of Monroe, who had been the highly regarded secretary of tourism, recreation, and culture in the administration of Governor Edwin Washington Edwards. Mrs. Thompson led rather comfortably the primary, but Brown ran sufficiently strong to gain a general election berth. Thompson polled 504,808 votes (40.8 percent) to Brown's 391,849 ballots (31.7 percent). A black candidate, Ben Jeffers, received 253,764 votes (20.5 percent). Republican candidate Dick Bruce, a New Orleans advertising executive who stressed tourism and international trade, polled 85,870 votes (only 6.9 percent).

Therefore, Brown had time to increase his support to that of an actual majority. Brown secured nearly all the votes obtained by Jeffers, and most of Bruce's supporters went with Thompson. The general outcome surprised Mrs. Thompson. Brown won with 665,608 votes (51.1 percent) to her 617,907 (48.9 percent). The percent for Brown and Jeffers from the primary was a combined 52.2 percent, or 1.1 percentage points more than Brown had finally received. Thompson and Bruce in the first round of balloting had a combined 47.7 percent, or 1.2 percentage points below what Mrs. Thompson finally received. For years afterwards, Thompson said that she could not understand how she lost the general election when she had led Brown by nearly ten percentage points in the primary.

Brown's Senate seat reverted to an intraparty opponent, the outspoken conservative Daniel Wesley "Dan" Richey (born 1948), also of Ferriday, who would hold the seat for one term. Years later, Brown and Richey would often be sparring rivals in blogs and columns. About all they had in common, it seemed, was a Ferriday background. The small town of Ferriday is also the birthplace of several famous Americans: the evangelist Jimmy Swaggart and his cousins, rock and roll singer Jerry Lee Lewis and Houston bar owner Mickey Gilley. Also from Ferriday were the late television journalist Howard K. Smith and the World War II hero Major General Claire Chennault, who, though born in Texas, grew up on a plantation near Waterproof in Tensas Parish but spent time in Ferriday as a youth. And there was the longterm (1948-1964) Louisana superintendent of education, Shelby M. Jackson, who grew up in the Monterey community near Ferriday.

As secretary of state, Brown proposed major legislation to update Louisiana's archaic election laws. He built what is considered the best state archives building in the country and made it convenient for researchers and historians seeking information from the files. And he streamlined the state’s corporation laws to make Louisiana more business friendly. The Shreveport Times called Brown "the best secretary of state in Louisiana history," and the Public Affairs Research Council labeled his office the most efficient in state government. Such accolades led to Brown being unopposed for a second term as secretary in the 1983 primary.

[edit] Gubernatorial aspirations, 1987

Brown did not seek a third term as secretary of state in 1987. Instead, he entered a crowded field for governor, including three-term incumbent Edwin Washington Edwards. Fourth District Congressman Charles E. "Buddy" Roemer, III, of Bossier Parish, then a Democrat, but later a Republican, emerged as the frontrunner. Brown and Roemer had both been constitutional convention delegates some dozen years earlier. Also in the race but making little headway was First District Republican Congressman Robert L. "Bob" Livingston of the New Orleans suburbs, only the third member of his party ever to be elected to the U.S. House from Louisiana since Reconstruction. Another candidate was the French-speaking Third District Congressman, then a Democrat, but later a Republican, Wilbert J. "Billy" Tauzin, II of Lafourche Parish. Even former Democratic Congressman and District Attorney Speedy O. Long of La Salle Parish, in Brown's former senatorial district, made a second quixotic gubernatorial bid that year.

Roemer led the primary balloting (33 percent) but lacked a majority and was hence forced into a potential general election with Edwards (28 percent). Brown ran an unimpressive fifth place with 138,324 votes (9 percent). Edwards withdrew from a second race and left Roemer in effect the governor-elect. It was noted that Roemer could not consolidate majority support because of Edwards' withdrawal. Some believe his "minority" governorship set the stage for a one-term administration. Roemer was eliminated from the 1991 general election by Edwards and former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.

Brown, in debate in 1987, had been asked if there were any circumstances in which he could support Edwards in the general election. He demurred a straight answer to the "hypothetical" question. Roemer, however, said flatly that he would not support Edwards in a second race regardless of Edwards' opponent. This was somewhat ironic in that Roemer's father had been Edwards' first commissioner of administration. The senior Roemer, however, had been convicted of bribery in 1980 and later served a prison sentence. Some think Roemer's answer to the question about possibly supporting Edwards gave him the needed momentum to overcome Livingston, Tauzin, and Brown. Ironically, though in 1991, Roemer did endorse Edwards over the unendorsed Republican candidate Duke.

[edit] First election as insurance commissioner, 1991

Brown resumed his law practice from 1988-1991, when he was again bitten by the political bug and ran for insurance commissioner. That office was in shambles from scandals that had occurred under two previous discredited Democratic commissioners, Sherman A. Bernard of Westwego in Jefferson Parish and Douglas D. "Doug" Green of Baton Rouge.

Brown led in the 1991 primary, with 572,719 votes (40 percent). He was forced into a general election with Republican city council member Peggy Wilson of New Orleans, who polled 435,355 votes (30 percent). Former Commissioner Bernard drew 270,749 votes (19 percent). Two other Democrats and two other Republicans shared another 11 percent of the vote. In the November 16, 1991, general election, in which Edwards defeated Duke for the governorship, Brown was a big winner over Mrs. Wilson. He polled 1,002,038 (60 percent) to Wilson's 674,097 (40 percent). Wilson did outpoll Duke, who was a drag on the other Republican candidates that year, by some 3,000 votes.

Brown took office early -- on December 4, 1991. Brown explained in a press release why he had assumed his office before the other elected constitutional officers were sworn in:

"I had initially planned to take office along with the other state elected officials in January. However, because of the continuing insurance crisis, especially in regards to the growing insolvency problem, I feel that I must address these issues immediately and put the department on the proper course. If we're going to get this mess under control, we're going to have to do it right. And most of the things we are going to do aren't going to be big surprises. I presented a 70-page plan of restructure and reform to the voters. Since the voters elected me based greatly on the strength of that proposal, I think it would be improper for me not to make every effort to put that plan into action as soon as possible."

[edit] Brown pushes for insurance reforms

The legislature permitted Brown to hire 85 additional employees and appropriated $2 million for the required reform efforts.

Under Brown's tenure, the department obtained accrediation from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Insurance officials nationwide credited Brown with making a dramatic turnaround in the office, compared to the troubles under Bernard and Green.

As commissioner, Brown hosted a weekly public affairs television program called Town Meeting Louisiana Style, which could be viewed on some fifty cable systems around the state.

Brown ordered a team of insurance examiners to audit all Louisiana-based insurance companies. He established an anti-fraud unit within the department. Both measures, early in his administration, were intended to improve the state's business climate so as to attract insurance companies desiring to conduct operations in Louisiana.

In July 1992, Brown appointed the Louisiana Health Care Commission, a panel that he created to propose legislation to address the problem of the affordability and availability of health care.

A month later, Hurricane Andrew struck, and Brown dispatched department personnel to five emergency relief centers in south Louisiana to expedite insurance claims by working with storm victims and insurance company representatives.

The Shreveport Times in June 1993, stated editorially that Brown "should be strongly commended for transforming one of Louisiana's most corrupt agencies into a hard working agency dedicated to protecting people - not picking their pockets."

Similarly, the Madison Journal in Tallulah in Madison Parish, declared in August 1993 that the office which Brown "took over was in shambles. Brown has worked diligently to bring stability to the insurance industry in Louisiana. He has cleaned house, and the people of the insurance industry are complimentary of his performance."

[edit] Reelection and more reforms, 1995-1999

His work for reform, reorganization, and modernization paid off at the ballot box. The department closed 21 failing insurance companies and made more than 160 referrals that led to indictments of individuals involved in questionable insurance practices.

Brown was reelected in the 1995 primary by the same margin that he achieved in the 1991 general election. He recevied 809,778 votes (60 percent) to 373,234 (28 percent) for Republican Sally Nungesser of New Orleans, a former press secretary to Treen and the niece of former Treen aide and later Republican state chairman (1988-1992) William "Billy" Nungesser. Several other candidates had shared the remaining 12 percent of the vote.

In 1997, Brown released a legislative plan that proposed a significant crackdown on driving while intoxicated and uninsured motorists since driver's licenses were first required in Louisiana in 1946. The legislature approved his bills to raise the driving age from 15 to 16, to limit the availability of uninsured motorists to recover losses from other drivers, the seize vehicles from multiple drunken-driving offenders, to lower the blood alcohol content for DWI, and to impound uninsured vehicles.

In 1998, Brown announced a new proposal to extend health care coverage to 100,000 Louisiana children through a federally-funded program within his department.

[edit] Troubles abound, 1999-2000

Late in 1999, just two weeks before the Louisiana primary election, Brown was indicted for lying to the FBI during a routine investigation. He still won a solid victory despite the indictment. Brown received 426,098 ballots (57 percent) to 319,124 for the Republican candidate, Allen I. Boudreaux, Jr., a New Orleans attorney who specialized in insurance law and was the director of the state Motor Vehicle Division under Republican Governor Murphy J. "Mike" Foster, Jr. Turnout was lighter in the 1999 primary than in earlier ones in which Brown had been a candidate for office because Foster was headed to an easy reelection. More than forty newspapers endorsed Brown's reelection that year.

Many came to Brown's defense. "People who know Brown or know his reputation, including members of the press, know the charges against him are politically motivated hooey," wrote the now defunct Shreveport Journal on October 15, 1999.

Brown was sworn in for his third term in January 2000. His crackdown on fraud netted the arrest of five insurance agents accused of fraudulent insurance activities.

As his time as commissioner wound down, Brown announced another accomplishment: Allstate Insurance lifted its freeze on issuing new homeowners insurance policies in Louisiana. Thereafter, Brown declared that State Farm would rebate $31.5 million to auto policyholders in Louisiana, and a few days later, the company pronounced a $19.5 million rate rollback. Brown cited measures that he implemented, such as "no pay, no play", impoundment, and a crackdown on drunk drivers as one of the reasons for the lower automobile rates.

Though he steadfastly denied having lied to an FBI agent during an investigation, Brown was convicted and served six months in federal prison in Oakdale in Allen Parish. He resigned and was succeeded by his first deputy, J. Robert Wooley, a Democrat, who in turn would win the seat in the 2003 general election. Wooley resigned as insurance commissioner on February 15, 2006, and was succeeded by his first deputy, James J. "Jim" Donelon of Jefferson Parish, a former Republican member of the Louisiana state House of Representatives. Donelon is pledged to restoring public confidence in the department. He was narrowly elected to the 15-month unexpired term for the position in the special election held on September 30, 2006. Donelon defeated two candidates, including a Republican state senator from Dry Creek in Beauregard Parish, James David Cain.

Brown writes extensively on Louisiana politics and public affairs through his Internet blog. Though his training is in law, his knowledge of Louisiana history and politics is seemingly unlimited. Brown sometimes teaches classes in Louisiana history, of which he is an undisputed authority, at both Tulane and Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.

Preceded by:
J.C. "Sonny" Gilbert (D)
Louisiana State Senate from District 32

James H. "Jim" Brown (D)
1972–1980

Succeeded by:
Daniel W. "Dan" Richey (D)
Preceded by:
Paul J. Hardy (D)
Louisiana Secretary of State

James H. "Jim" Brown (D)
1980–1988

Succeeded by:
Walter Fox McKeithen (D), then (R)
Preceded by:
Douglas "Doug" Green (D)
Louisiana Commissioner of Insurance

James H. "Jim" Brown (D)
1991–2001

Succeeded by:
J. Robert Wooley (D)

[edit] References

Billy Hathorn, "The Republican Party in Louisiana, 1920-1980," Master's thesis (1980), Northwestern State University at Natchitoches

Billy Hathorn, email exchange with Sandra Thompson, May 2006

http://louisdl.louislibraries.org/cgi-bin/viewer.exe?CISOROOT=/LHP&CISOPTR=735 with older black-and-white photo

http://www.jimbrownla.com/about_jim/accomplishments.htm

http://www.newshorn.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=223&Itemid=116

http://www.jimbrownla.com/about_jim/Jim's%20Bio.htm

http://www.jimbrownla.com/book.htm

http://www.jimbrownla.com/contactJim.htm

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=112099

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=102195

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=101991

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=111691

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=102487

http://boudreaux.org/campaign/bio.html

Who's Who in America, 1985-1986

http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&LastName=Brown&Middle=H&FirstName=James&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=66&x=21&y=23