Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Fritz Windhorst

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Preceded by
  
William J. Guste

Role
  
Attorney

Political party
  
Republican

Party
  
Republican Party


Occupation
  
Attorney

Name
  
Fritz Windhorst

Children
  
Stephen J. Windhorst

Full Name
  
Fritz Heinrich Windhorst

Born
  
January 31, 1935 (age 89) (
1935-01-31
)

Spouse(s)
  
Not first wife: Barbara Turner Windhorst

Parents
  
Richard E. and Jenny Mary Windhorst

Alma mater
  
Redemptorist High School of New Orleans

Education
  
Redeemer-Seton High School

Residence
  
Gretna, Louisiana, United States

Succeeded by
  
Francis C. Heitmeier

Fritz Heinrich Windhorst (born January 31, 1935) is an attorney from Gretna, Louisiana, who served from 1972 to 1992 as a member of the Louisiana State Senate for Jefferson and Orleans parishes, originally District 8, and later District 7. Windhorst was a conservative Democrat from 1972 to 1985, when he switched to Republican affiliation. His son, Stephen J. Windhorst, served as a Republican member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 2000, when he resigned to accept a state court judgeship.

Contents

Family background

Windhorst was born to a Roman catholic couple of German and Italian extraction, Richard E. Windhorst, Sr. (1913–1985), and the former Jenny Mary Motto (1916–2001), a native of Donaldsonville, the seat of Ascension Parish near Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She was the daughter of Carmello Motto and the former Angelina Latino. His brother is Richard Windhorst, Jr., and his sister was Angela Windhorst Tripkovich (1938–1999) of Metairie in Jefferson Parish.

Windhorst graduated from the Roman Catholic Redemptorist High School in New Orleans. He is currently married to the former Barbara Turner (born c. 1941), and the two are particularly active in civic and community matters.

Conservative senator

Senator Windhorst worked to restrict access to abortion in Louisiana. On June 27, 1990, near the end of his Senate tenure, the Louisiana State Legislature penned the strongest pro-life law in the nation, sponsored by Democratic Senator Mike Cross of Baker in East Baton Rouge Parish. Because it provided no exceptions for impregnations stemming from rape and incest, the measure was vetoed by Governor Buddy Roemer, a Democrat, who switched parties the following year. The state House overrode Roemer’s veto, but the state Senate fell three votes short of the required two-thirds majority to enact the measure over Roemer’s objection.

Windhorst said that the bill was an outgrowth of the failure of the United States Supreme Court to clarify regulations by the states on abortion: "We are here today because the U.S. Supreme Court did not have the courage or the resolve to be decisive." The Louisiana bill included an 1855 law that made abortion a felony punishable by imprisonment; the sole exception permitted was to save the life of the mother in a medical emergency.

Windhorst also voted with economic conservatives in the Senate. In a special session in 1988, he joined his colleagues in giving newly elected Governor Roemer the power to slash as much as 20 percent from department budgets, abolish or suspend certain programs, and to close institutions if necessary to keep the state financially solvent. Windhorst said that the powers transferred to Roemer were necessary: "It is either this or a much greater evil. If we don't like what he does, we can undo it during the regular session."

Other political matters

Windhorst’s later Senate tenure corresponded with the administration of Mayor Sidney Barthelemy, the second African American to head the municipal government in New Orleans. Windhorst described the Democrat Barthelemy, originally elected with considerable white support, accordingly: “Sidney doesn’t whine or complain when things go badly ... He doesn’t threaten people who cross him. Just having him as mayor has sharply reduced the anti-New Orleans feelings in the legislature.”

Windhorst was a delegate to the 1988 Republican National Convention which met in New Orleans to nominate the George Herbert Walker Bush and J. Danforth Quayle ticket.

When Windhorst retired in 1991, two-term Democratic State Representative Francis C. Heitmeier was elected to the position with 55 percent of the vote in the nonpartisan blanket primary against five opponents. The lone Republican candidate hoping to succeed Windhorst finished with fewer than 17 percent of the ballots. Because African-American influence in the Westbank increased throughout the 1990s, Heitmeier won with 58 percent of the vote in the 1995 primary and faced no opponents in 1999 and 2003. Heitmeier was term-limited in 2007.

Windhorst is Roman Catholic. He is also a member of the West Bank Rotary International.

References

Fritz Windhorst Wikipedia