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Louisiana gubernatorial election, 2011

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October 22, 2011
  
2015 →

65.8%
  
17.9%

673,239
  
182,925

Louisiana gubernatorial election, 2011

The Louisiana gubernatorial election of 2011 was held on October 22 with 10 candidates competing in a nonpartisan blanket primary. The incumbent, Bobby Jindal, was elected to a second term as governor of Louisiana. Since he received an outright majority of the vote in the blanket primary, a runoff election that would have occurred on November 19 was unnecessary.

Contents

Background

Elections in Louisiana, with the exception of U.S. presidential elections (and congressional races beginning in 2008 and ending after the 2010 midterm election), follow a variation of the open primary system called the jungle primary. 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. This scenario occurred in the 7th District congressional race in 1996, when Democrats Chris John and Hunter Lundy made the runoff for the open seat, and in 1999, when Republicans Suzanne Haik Terrell and Woody Jenkins made the runoff for Commissioner of Elections.

Candidates

On December 10, 2008, Jindal indicated that he would not run for president in 2012, saying he would focus on his reelection and that this would make transitioning to a national campaign difficult, though he later attempted to leave himself the opportunity to change his mind in the future.

Minister Dan Northcutt (I) was the only declared challenger to Jindal, but he eventually dropped out of the race. On October 22, Caroline Fayard's name surfaced on talk-radio program Think Tank with Garland Robinette, as a potential competitor for Jindal in his reelection campaign. The discussants cited Jindal's high approval ratings and already in-the-bank $7 million campaign fund as unapproachable assets for Democrats other than Fayard, who at the time of the program was seeking the office of lieutenant governor in a special election runoff against Republican secretary of state Jay Dardenne.

Republicans

  • Bobby Jindal, incumbent Governor
  • Announced

  • Cary Deaton, attorney
  • Tara Hollis, special education teacher
  • Androniki "Niki Bird" Papazoglakis, director for Baton Rouge-based victim advocacy group
  • Ivo "Trey" Roberts, high school teacher
  • Declined

  • Al Ater, former Louisiana secretary of state
  • Kathleen Blanco, former governor
  • Caroline Fayard, attorney and 2010 Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor of Louisiana
  • John Georges, businessman, 2007 Independent candidate for governor, unsuccessful candidate for Mayor of New Orleans in 2010
  • Robert M. Marionneaux, state senator
  • Ineligible

  • Edwin Edwards, former four-term governor. Wanted to contest election following 10-year prison term for racketeering and illegally selling casino licenses, but has not been pardoned
  • Libertarians

  • Scott Lewis, twice-unsuccessful candidate for Louisiana secretary of state
  • Independents

  • David Blanchard, former employee of the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals
  • Leonard "Lenny" Bollingham, Computer Engineer & Businessman
  • Ron Caesar
  • William Robert "Bob" Lang, unsuccessful candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2010
  • Dropped out

  • Dan Northcutt, minister
  • References

    Louisiana gubernatorial election, 2011 Wikipedia