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John Maginnis (Louisiana political writer)

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Cause of death
  
Blood disorder

Religion
  
Roman Catholic


Children
  
No children

Name
  
John Maginnis

John Maginnis (Louisiana political writer) httpslapoliticscomwpcontentuploads201405

Born
  
March 17, 1948 (
1948-03-17
)
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA

Residence
  
Baton Rouge, Louisiana New Orleans, Louisiana

Occupation
  
Journalist; Author; Commentator

Spouse(s)
  
Jackie Drinkwater Maginnis

Role
  
Louisiana political writer

Died
  
May 25, 2014, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Books
  
The Last Hayride, Cross to Bear, The Politics of Reform: Par - 50 Years of Changing Louisiana

Alma mater
  
Catholic High School, Louisiana State University

John James Maginnis (March 17, 1948 – May 25, 2014) was a writer of columns and commentaries on current political events in his native Louisiana. Maginnis' column, always the most current analysis of a political event in Louisiana, appeared in newspapers and other sources statewide. His web site is read by political analysts nationwide as a barometer of governmental trends and events in Louisiana.

Contents

Background

Maginnis was one of four children born in Baton Rouge to Edward Joseph Maginnis and the former Inez Blancq. He was married to the former Jackie Drinkwater; his surviving siblings are Renee Maginnis Dole of Baton Rouge; Kathleen Maginnis Bierman and her husband, Leslie, of Weston, Connecticut; and Dr. Michael John Maginnis and his wife, Mary Kendall, of Baton Rouge. Maginnis attended in Baton Rouge Sacred Heart Catholic School and later Catholic High School and Louisiana State University, where he was the editor of the student newspaper, The Daily Reveille. In 2000, he was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the LSU Douglas Manship School of Mass Communications.

He served in the United States Navy in the Philippine Islands during the Vietnam War.

Career

After military service, Maginnis became a correspondent in Baton Rouge for The Catholic Commentator.He began his coverage of Louisiana political events in 1972. He has written three books: (1) The Last Hayride (1984) concerned the rise of Democrat Edwin Edwards to a then-unprecedented third nonconsecutive term as governor by unseating Republican David C. Treen in 1983; (2) Cross to Bear (1992) narrated the controversial general election of 1991 when Edwards, thought to be politically finished, re-entered the governorship for a fourth term by coming up as the remaining alternative to David Duke, and (3) The Politics of Reform.

Maginnis was the publisher of Gris Gris magazine, The Baton Rouge Enterprise and later Louisiana Political Review, which led to The Fax Weekly in 1993, renamed LaPolitics Weekly.

In 2008, Maginnis began touting Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal as a potential Republican contender for President or Vice President of the United States. He also questioned whether Jindal's potential for those offices was taking up too much time from state duties in Louisiana. Maginnis particularly observed Jindal's lack of enthusiasm for the Obama administration's economic "stimulus package" prior to Jindal's speaking to the nation as the Republicans' chosen responder to Obama's first address to Congress on 2009 February 24.

Maginnis has been interviewed by Robert Siegel on National Public Radio (NPR) concerning Louisiana political trends, and he was Andrea Seabrook's main source of commentary when NPR analyzed the unexpected defeat on December 6, 2008 of Louisiana Democrat U.S. Representative William J. Jefferson by Republican newcomer Joseph Cao in Louisiana's 2nd congressional district.

Apparently to maintain himself as a political Independent, Maginnis was not a registered voter in Louisiana, according to the Louisiana Secretary of State voter portal website.

Death

Maginnis died at his condominium in New Orleans, where he sometimes spent weeks away from Baton Rouge, his official residence. He had a heart attack several years ago and was undergoing treatment for a blood disorder at the time of his sudden death.

In February 2015, Maginnis will be inducted posthumously, along with the late Judge Charles A. Marvin of Minden, into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield.

References

John Maginnis (Louisiana political writer) Wikipedia