Louisiana gubernatorial election, 1995
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Louisiana gubernatorial election of 1995 resulted in the election of Mike Foster as governor of Louisiana, after defeating Cleo Fields in the runoff.
Contents |
[edit] Background
In 1995 all elections in Louisiana—with the exception of U.S. presidential elections—followed a variation of the open primary system called the jungle primary (the system has since been abandoned for all federal elections but remains in use for state and local elections). Candidates of any and all parties are listed on one ballot; voters need not limit themselves to the candidates of one party. Unless one candidate takes more than 50% of the vote in the first round, a run-off election is then held between the top two candidates, who may in fact be members of the same party.[2] In this election, the first round of voting was held on October 21, 1995, and the runoff was held on November 18, 1995.
[edit] Candidates and Campaign
The early field included eight individuals considered to be "major" candidates. These were state Representative Robert Adley, U.S. Representative Cleo Fields, state Senator Mike Foster, U.S. Representative William J. Jefferson, incumbent state Treasurer Mary Landrieu, former Governor Buddy Roemer, incumbent Lieutenant Governor Melinda Schwegmann, and former Governor David Treen.
The makeup of the field led some analysts to dub this the "twins election", as each major candidate had a rival who appealed to a similar constituency or voter base. The sets of "twins" were: two mainstream Republican former governors (Treen and Roemer); two moderate Democrat female state-wide office holders with ties to New Orleans (Landrieu and Schwegmann); two conservative Democrat state legislators (Foster and Adley); and two liberal, black Democrat U.S. representatives (Fields and Jefferson).
Treen and Jefferson eventually chose not to officially enter the race, and Foster switched his party identification to Republican at the time of qualifying. Also, attorney Phil Preis entered the race as a Democrat, and with a self-financed campaign was able to enter the top tier of candidates. Eight minor candidates also qualified for the ballot.
[edit] Results
First voting round, October 21
| Candidate | Party affiliation | Votes received | Percentage of votes cast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mike Foster | Republican | 385,267 | 26% |
| Cleo Fields | Democrat | 280,921 | 19% |
| Mary Landrieu | Democrat | 271,938 | 18% |
| Buddy Roemer | Republican | 263,330 | 18% |
| Phil Preis | Democrat | 133,271 | 9% |
| Melinda Schwegmann | Democrat | 71,288 | 5% |
| Robert Adley | Democrat | 27,534 | 2% |
| Arthur D. "Jim" Nichols | None/Other | 16,616 | 1% |
| Gene H. Alexander | Democrat | 5,688 | 0% |
| Kenneth Woods | None/Other | 4,964 | 0% |
| Darryl Paul Ward | None/Other | 4,210 | 0% |
| Belinda Alexandrenko | Democrat | 3,161 | 0% |
| Lonnie Creech | None/Other | 2,338 | 0% |
| Ronnie Glynn Johnson | None/Other | 1,884 | 0% |
| Anne Thompson | None/Other | 1,416 | 0% |
Runoff, November 18
| Candidate | Party affiliation | Votes received | Percentage of votes cast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mike Foster | Republican | 984,499 | 64% |
| Cleo Fields | Democrat | 565,861 | 36% |
| Preceded by 1991 gubernatorial election |
Louisiana gubernatorial elections | Succeeded by 1999 gubernatorial election |
[edit] Sources
Secretary of State Elections Division. Official Election Results Database

