Cecil Kay Carter, Jr. | |
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Louisiana State Senator from District 38 (Caddo and De Soto parishes) | |
In office 1972 – 1976 |
|
Preceded by | At-large delegation: |
Succeeded by | Virginia Kilpatrick Shehee |
Personal details | |
Born | ca. 1927 |
Political party | Democratic Party |
Residence | Shreveport Caddo Parish Louisiana, USA |
Occupation | Businessman |
Cecil Kay Carter, Jr., known as C. Kay Carter, Jr., or C. K. Carter (born ca. 1927), is a businessman from Shreveport, Louisiana, who served as a Democratic member of the Louisiana State Senate from 1972 to 1976.[1]
Carter was unseated in 1975 in Senate District 38 by twenty-three votes, having lost to a fellow Democrat, Virginia Kilpatrick Shehee, an officer of the Kilpatrick Funeral Homes and Life Insurance companies in Shreveport.[2]
On August 13, 1966, Carter finished a strong third in the race for the 4th Congressioal District seat on the Louisiana State Board of Education. The incumbent, Robert H. "Bob" Curry of Shreveport, who had twice been elected by his colleagues as the board president, was reelected.[3] In that race, Carter ran newspaper advertising showing him shaking hands with George C. Wallace, Jr., former governor of Alabama, who was preparing for a 1968 independent run for the American presidency. In the advertisement, Carter stressed his support for "local control of education," rather than federal intervention spurred by civil rights issues.[4]
In 1980, Carter was an unsuccessful candidate for the United States House of Representatives from the Louisiana Fourth District. He was eliminated in the nonpartisan blanket primary, and the position went to Buddy Roemer, later the governor of Louisiana. Roemer defeated his then fellow Democrat, the incumbent Buddy Leach in the 1980 general election.[5]
In 1983, Carter sought a senatorial comeback but was blocked by incumbent Democratic Senator Richard G. Neeson, who had unseated Shehee in 1979 after her single four-year term in office.[6]
A scholarship in the field of construction is endowed in Carter's name at the University of Louisiana at Monroe.[7]
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by At-large delegation: |
Louisiana State Senator from District 38 (Caddo and De Soto parishes)
Cecil Kay Carter, Jr. |
Succeeded by Virginia Kilpatrick Shehee |