Royal Alexander

Richard Royal Alexander
Born February 1966
Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
Alma mater

Louisiana State University in Shreveport

Oklahoma City University School of Law
Occupation Attorney; former congressional staffer
Political party Republican candidate for Louisiana attorney general in 2007

Richard Royal Alexander (born February 1966)[1] is an attorney and politician in his native Shreveport, Louisiana, who in 2007 was the Republican-endorsed candidate for state attorney general.

Education and career

The fifth of twelve children born to a prominent Shreveport businessman, Alexander was educated in private elementary and secondary schools. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Louisiana State University in Shreveport. He obtained his law degree from Oklahoma City University School of Law where he served on Law Review and Moot Court, both intramural and on the Benton National Moot Court Team.[2] He was a law clerk to Judge Rebecca F. Doherty of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. An appointee of former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, Doherty is based in Lafayette and Opelousas. Himself a former administrative law judge, Alexander has also been in private practice, handling both criminal and civil cases.[3]

Alexander was chief of staff to former U.S. Representative Rodney Alexander of Louisiana's 5th congressional district. The two are unrelated. In 2006, the Democrats in Washington, D.C., accused Royal Alexander and several others, including members of Congress, of having acted too slowly regarding the disclosure of the name of the congressional page who was sent inappropriate email messages by then U.S. Representative Mark Foley of Florida. (The page lived in Rodney Alexander's House district.) Evidence showed that Royal Alexander reported the inappropriate email messages to the staff of House leadership upon his learning of the information. No one, including Alexander, was punished, fined or sanctioned. The matter quickly died after the 2006 congressional election, in which Democrats gained control of both houses of Congress.

In 2006, Royal Alexander was accused of sexual harassment by Elizabeth Scott, a scheduler in Representative Alexander's office. Alexander maintained that Scott made her claims in retaliation for her having been demoted for poor performance in the job. She once sent Representative Alexander to the wrong city for a major event. Soon after Royal Alexander lost his race for attorney general, the case was summarily dismissed.

Alexander was a staff member to the late U.S. Representative Clyde C. Holloway of Louisiana's 8th congressional district, since disbanded, who also served on the Louisiana Public Service Commission[4]

Race for attorney general

A first-time candidate for public office in 2007, Alexander finished second to James D. "Buddy" Caldwell, then a Democrat, in the nonpartisan blanket primary for state attorney general. Alexander outpolled incumbent Democrat Charles Foti of New Orleans for the right to enter the general election against Caldwell, a five-term district attorney from Tallulah in northeast Louisiana.

Caldwell received 477,574 votes, Alexander 395,645 votes and Foti (previously the long-time sheriff of Orleans Parish) finished with 389,658. With only four weeks between the primary and the general election, the traditional Democratic political machine of sheriffs and district attorneys flocked to fellow Democrat Caldwell. Alexander was defeated in the second round of balloting when Foti's base switched to Caldwell. In 2011, Caldwell switched his affiliation to the Republican Party and won a second term.

Alexander's primary strength was demonstrated in Shreveport, Alexandria, and Monroe.

Caddo Parish assessor candidacy

Alexander was the unsuccessful Republican candidate in the October 22, 2011, primary for Caddo Parish tax assessor. He polled 16,255 votes (34.9 percent), while the incumbent Democrat, Charles Russell Henington, Jr. (born September 1957), received 30,310 votes (65.1 percent).[5] Henington last faced opposition in 1999, when he won the assessor's position by defeating an earlier Republican candidate, John W. Wessler, by a five-to-one margin.[6] Henington's father, Charles Henington, Sr. (1936-1986), and his step-grandfather, Albert Galloway Hammett, Sr. (1881–1974), previously served as the Caddo Parish assessor, having kept that office within the reach of one family for, through 2011, seventy-eight years. A. G. Hammet was the assessor from 1933 to 1964.[7]

According to KTBS-TV, an independent survey of property tax rates around the state by the demographer Elliott Stonecipher concludes that Shreveport and Caddo Parish residents pay the highest such taxes of any metropolitan area in Louisiana. Alexander said that the assessments are inflated and had pledged had he been elected to reduce them. Alexander also accused Henington of not informing senior citizens that they retain the option of freezing their property taxes once they reach the age of sixty-five.[8]

References

  1. "Richard Alexander, February 1966". Louisiana Secretary of State. Retrieved June 16, 2017.
  2. http://sbmag.net/april-2014/, page 76.
  3. Royal Alexander | Attorney General
  4. http://www.lpsc.louisiana.gov/DistrictMapPage.aspx
  5. "Louisiana election returns". staticresults.sos.la.gov. Retrieved October 22, 2011.
  6. "Louisiana primary election returns, October 23, 1999". staticresults.sos.la.gov. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  7. "Albert Galloway Hammett". findagrave.com. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
  8. The Moon Griffon Show, October 18, 2011
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