Mitch Landrieu

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Mitch Landrieu
Mitch Landrieu

Mitch Landrieu, 1st March 2007


Incumbent
Assumed office 
January 11, 2004
Governor(s) Kathleen Blanco
Preceded by Kathleen Blanco
Succeeded by Incumbent

Born August 16, 1960 (age 46)
Broadmoor, Louisiana
Political party Democratic
Spouse Cheryl P. Quirk
Profession Lawyer

Mitchell Joseph Landrieu (born August 16, 1960) is the Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana. A Roman Catholic, he is the son of former New Orleans mayor Moon Landrieu and the brother of Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu. He is a member of the Democratic Party.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Landrieu was born the fifth of nine children born to Moon and Verna Landrieu. He grew up in the Broadmoor neighborhood of New Orleans. After graduating from Jesuit High School (New Orleans) in 1978, he enrolled at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. where he majored in political science and theatre. In 1985 he earned a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Loyola University Law School in New Orleans.

Landrieu is married to Cheryl P. Landrieu, also an attorney. They have five children: Grace, Emily, Matthew, Benjamin, and William. They reside in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Landrieu has been a practicing attorney for fifteen years and is president of International Mediation & Arbitration, Ltd. He is a member of the Supreme Court Task Force on Alternative Dispute Resolution which was responsible for developing the pilot mediation program in Orleans Parish. Landrieu is trained in mediation and negotiation by the Harvard Law School Negotiation Project, the American Arbitration Association, and the Attorney Mediator's Institute. Landrieu has also taught alternative dispute resolution as an adjunct professor at Loyola University Law School.

[edit] Political career

[edit] Legislator

Landrieu was elected to the Louisiana House of Representatives in 1987 where he served for sixteen years in the seat previously held by his sister and his father.

Landrieu led the legislative effort to reform Louisiana's juvenile justice system with a focus on rehabilitation and reform, not punishment and incarceration. He continues to chair the Juvenile Justice Commission, the entity created by the legislation to implement the reforms. In January, 2004, Governor Kathleen Blanco endorsed the Commission's recommendations.

Landrieu led the effort by a coalition of artists, venue owners, and other interested parties who were successful in repealing the Orleans Parish "amusement tax", a 2% tax on gross sales at any establishment that features live music. As an attorney, Landrieu brought a case to court that resulted in the tax being ruled unconstitutional. He continued the fight by bringing the issue to the New Orleans City Council, who voted to repeal the tax. As a legislator, Landrieu sponsored a bill to repeal the law that allowed the tax to exist.

Landrieu crafted legislation to fund the Louisiana Cancer Research Consortium of New Orleans, a partnership between the Louisiana State University and Tulane University Health Sciences Centers. The cancer center will house state-of-the-art cancer research equipment and laboratories, significant because Louisiana has the nation's highest cancer mortality rate according to the American Cancer Society.

[edit] 1993 New Orleans Mayoral candidacy

In 1993 Landrieu made an unsuccessful bid for the office of Mayor of New Orleans; the office went to Marc Morial, the son of another former mayor (the contest between sons of former mayors prompted some commentators to joke about establishing a tradition of primogeniture for the city's top office).

[edit] Lieutenant Governor

Mitch Landrieu's 2003 campaign for Lieutenant Governor was his first bid for statewide office in Louisiana. In a field of six candidates, Landrieu garnered 53% of the vote and won outright in the Louisiana open primary, thus avoiding a run-off.

[edit] 2006 New Orleans election

In February of 2006, Landrieu officially announced he would run for mayor of New Orleans in the 22 April election. Before Hurricane Katrina the incumbent Ray Nagin was widely expected to be reelected with little difficulty, but post-disaster problems and controversies had left many New Orleanians interested in new leadership.

In the election of 22 April, preliminary results showed Landrieu with the second most votes, with 29% of the vote to Nagin's 38%. Nagin and Landrieu faced each other in a run off election on 20 May. Had Landrieu won, he would have been the first caucasian mayor of New Orleans since his father left office in 1978.

With unofficial results showing 53% of the vote for Nagin, Landrieu conceded defeat shortly before 10:30 pm on election night.

[edit] Spike Lee's Documentary

Landrieu was one of the participants to Movie Director Spike Lee's documentary When The Levees Broke: A Requiem In Four Acts.

[edit] Future plans

Louisiana will hold its next gubernatorial election in 2007, which Landrieu was widely expected to enter prior to entering the New Orleans mayoral election. With Landrieu's unsuccessful mayoral bid concluded, political pundits around the state have alleged that the Lt.Governor is regrouping and preparing to run for Governor against the incumbent, Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, bearing in mind that the office of Lt. Governor in Louisiana is a separately-elected office from that of the Governor.[citation needed]

[edit] Election History

State Representative, 90th Representative District, 1987

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, October 24, 1987

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 4,525 (50%) Elected
Lyn "Mrs. Woody" Koppel Democratic 2,973 (33%) Defeated
Others n.a. 1,484 (17%) Defeated

State Representative, 89th Representative District, 1991

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, October 19, 1991

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 8,522 (63%) Elected
Marilyn Thayer Republican 4,939 (37%) Defeated

Mayor of New Orleans, 1994

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, February 5, 1994

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Donald Mintz Democratic 56,305 (37%) Runoff
Marc Morial Democratic 49,604 (32%) Runoff
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 14,689 (10%) Defeated
Others n.a. 32,104 (21%) Defeated

Second Ballot, March 5, 1994

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Marc Morial Democratic 93,094 (54%) Elected
Donald Mintz Democratic 77,730 (46%) Defeated

State Representative, 89th Representative District, 1995

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, October 21, 1995

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 6,692 (57%) Elected
Jeff Crouere, Jr. Republican 3,049 (26%) Defeated
Others n.a. 2,057 (17%) Defeated

State Representative, 89th Representative District, 1999

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, October 23, 1999

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 6,575 (70%) Elected
Randy Evans Republican 2,765 (30%) Defeated

Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana, 2003

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, October 4, 2003

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 674,803 (53%) Elected
Clyde Holloway Republican 249,668 (19%) Defeated
Melinda Schwegmann Republican 215,402 (17%) Defeated
Others n.a. 141,006 (11%) Defeated

Mayor of New Orleans, 2006

Threshold > 50%

First Ballot, April 22, 2006

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Ray Nagin Democratic 41,561 (38%) Runoff
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 31,551 (29%) Runoff
Ron Forman Democratic 18,764 (17%) Defeated
Robert "Rob" Couhig Republican 10,312 (10%) Defeated
Others n.a. 6,160 (6%) Defeated

Second Ballot, May 20, 2006

Candidate Affiliation Support Outcome
Ray Nagin Democratic 59,460 (52%) Elected
Mitch Landrieu Democratic 54,131 (48%) Defeated

[edit] External link

Preceded by
Mary Landrieu (D)
State Representative, 90th Representative District
19881992
Succeeded by
Pete Schneider, III (R)
Preceded by
James St. Raymond (R)
State Representative, 89th Representative District
19922004
Succeeded by
Tim Burns (R)
Preceded by
Kathleen Blanco (D)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana
2004Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Current lieutenant governors of states of the United States  v  d  e 

AL: Jim Folsom, Jr. (D)
AK: Sean Parnell (R)
AR: Bill Halter (D)
CA: John Garamendi (D)
CO: Barbara O'Brien (D)
CT: Michael Fedele (R)
DE: John C. Carney, Jr. (D)
FL: Jeff Kottkamp (R)
GA: Casey Cagle (R)
HI: James Aiona (R)
ID: Jim Risch (R)
IL: Pat Quinn (D)

IN: Becky Skillman (R)
IA: Patty Judge (D)
KS: Mark Parkinson (D)
KY: Steve Pence (R)
LA: Mitch Landrieu (D)
MD: Anthony G. Brown (D)
MA: Tim Murray (D)
MI: John D. Cherry (D)
MN: Carol Molnau (R)
MS: Amy Tuck (R)
MO: Peter Kinder (R)
MT: John Bohlinger (R)

NE: Rick Sheehy (R)
NV: Brian Krolicki (R)
NM: Diane Denish (D)
NY: David Paterson (D)
NC: Beverly Perdue (D)
ND: Jack Dalrymple (R)
OH: Lee Fisher (D)
OK: Jari Askins (D)
PA: Catherine Baker Knoll (D)
RI: Elizabeth H. Roberts (D)

SC: André Bauer (R)
SD: Dennis Daugaard (R)
TN: Ron Ramsey (R)
TX: David Dewhurst (R)
UT: Gary R. Herbert (R)
VA: Bill Bolling (R)
VT: Brian Dubie (R)
WA: Brad Owen (D)
WI: Barbara Lawton (D)