Hunt Downer
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Huntington Blair "Hunt" Downer, Jr. (born April 28, 1946), is a Republican politician in the U.S. state of Louisiana who is the assistant adjutant general of the state National Guard and the first ever director of the new Louisiana Veterans Affairs Department. A former Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Houma, the seat of Terrebonne Parish in south Louisiana, Downer ran for governor in 2003 and finished in sixth place in the jungle primary.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early years
Downer graduated from Terrebonne High School in Houma in 1964 and first attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. He received his bachelor of science degree from Nicholls State University (then College) in Thibodaux in Lafourche Parish. He was named to Who's Who Among Colleges and Universities in 1967. He received his law degree from Loyola University New Orleans in 1972. He also did graduate work at LSU and studied at the U.S. Army War College in 1999.
While he was in college and law school, Downer held a number of odd jobs: oilfield roustabout from 1970-1971, legislative assistant from 1970-1972, and school bus driver from 1965-1970.
He joined the United States Army Reserve as an enlisted man in 1968. He obtained a commission in 1971 as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He then joined the National Guard as a First Lieutenant of the Judge Advocate General Corps. In time, Downer became a Lieutenant Colonel, Brigadier General, and currently a Major General. He served in Operation Desert Storm from October 1990 to May 1991. Downer has won more than a dozen military awards, including the Legion of Merit and the Kuwait Liberation Medal.
[edit] Career
Downer was first elected as a Democrat to the state House in the first ever jungle primary in the fall of 1975. He represented District 52 (Lafourche and his native Terrebonne parishes) until January 2004. In his penultimate term, 1996-2000, he was Speaker during the administration of Republican Governor Murphy J. "Mike" Foster, Jr.
In 1987, Representative Downer, as a Democrat, was named "Legislator of the Month" by the Louisiana Municipal Association. He was named "Outstanding Young Man of the Year" in 1977 by the Jaycees. He won the American Jurisprudence Award in 1971. During much of his legislative career through December 2003, Downer was affiliated with the law firm of Waitz & Downer in Houma.
In 2000, Downer endorsed the Republican presidential ticket of George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney. A year later, he formally switched parties, at Bush's invitation, and ran for governor.
Three Republican gubernatorial candidates dropped out early and endorsed Downer: former Governor David C. Treen of St. Tammany Parish, veteran state Senator Ken Hollis of Jefferson Parish, and Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Jack A. "Jay" Blossman, Jr., of Mandeville in St. Tammany Parish. However, the majority of Republican voters supported Bobby L. Jindal, then of Baton Rouge (later a congressman from the New Orleans suburbs).
Downer secured the endorsement of thirty-three members of the state legislature from both parties and both chambers, including Republican Representatives Carl Crane of Baton Rouge and Ernie Alexander of Lafayette as well as the Democrat Francis C. Thompson of Delhi in Richland Parish in northeast Louisiana. Yet, Downer received only 84,718 votes (6 percent) in the primary, compared to 444,389 ballots (33 percent) for Jindal. In turn, Jindal was defeated by the leading Democrat Kathleen Babineaux Blanco of Lafayette in the general election. Jindal is running again for governor in 2007, but Blanco declined to seek reelection. It was Governor Blanco who appointed Downer as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs, and later as her legislative director in the Office of the Governor.
Downer is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, the Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association, the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, and the United States Court of Military Appeals. He is married to the former Linda Faye Lee. Downer is Roman Catholic.
Preceded by John A. Alario, Jr., of Jefferson Parish |
Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives
Huntington Blair Downer, Jr., of Terrebonne Parish |
Succeeded by Charles W. "Charlie" DeWitt, Jr., of Rapides Parish |
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[edit] References
http://www.enlou.com/officeholders/houseofrepsindex.htm
http://www.la.ngb.army.mil/aag_army.htm
http://governing.com/poy/1997/ptdowner.htm
http://www.louisianaweekly.com/weekly/news/articlegate.pl?20030721h
http://jindal.house.gov/Photos/?PhotoID=35487
http://www.bestofneworleans.com/dispatch/current/news_feat4.php
http://www1.va.gov/vso/index.cfm?template=viewreport&Org_ID=144