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Margaret Lowenthal

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Preceded by
  
Harry Hollins

Name
  
Margaret Lowenthal

Spouse(s)
  
Joseph Lowenthal

Political party
  
Democratic

Succeeded by
  
Vic Stelly


Margaret Lowenthal Margaret Lowenthal for Louisiana district 7 Congress 1987 special

Born
  
July 9, 1929 Place of birth missing (
1929-07-09
)

Died
  
July 19, 2003(2003-07-19) (aged 74) Houston, Texas

Resting place
  
Big Woods Cemetery in Edgerly in Calcasieu Parish

Margaret Louise Welsh Lowenthal, listed on her grave marker as Margaret L. Welsh (July 9, 1929 – July 19, 2003), was the first woman to represent Calcasieu Parish in the Louisiana House of Representatives, with service in District 35 from 1980 to 1988. She ran unsuccessfully in 1986 for the United States House of Representatives for Louisiana's 7th congressional district, since disbanded.

Contents

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Career

Lowenthal, a long-term resident of Lake Charles, Louisiana, attended the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge but graduated with degrees in English and speech from Baptist-affiliated Baylor University in Waco, Texas. She worked as a radio and television announcer, owned a public relations agency, worked as a private counselor, and served on the Calcasieu Parish Police Jury until her election in 1979 to the state House of Representatives.

As a legislator, she authored numerous bills relating to the environment, the arts, health, education, family violence, taxation, juvenile delinquency, forced heirship, utilities, and women's issues. In 1983. she was named "Legislator of the Year" by the Louisiana Arts Council. She pushed for extra funds when Sam Houston High School in Lake Charles burned.

In 1985, Representative Lowenthal got into a public dispute with her fellow Democrat, Victor Bussie, the long-term president of the Louisiana AFL-CIO. While addressing the Lake Charles Optimist Club at its regular luncheon meeting, Lowenthal claimed that she had been told by an unidentified representative of Boeing that the firm had considered locating a manufacturing facility in Louisiana, but ultimately chose Mississippi because of Louisiana's unstable political climate and its longstanding problems with public education. Lowenthal said that she was told further by the Boeing representative that, "'As long as you have a man named Victor Bussie sitting in Baton Rouge, calling the shots for labor, we don't need to be in your state.'" Her remarks were telecast over Lake Charles television.

Bussie filed a defamation suit against Lowenthal and Boeing. He alleged that the statements were false and that they were made with malice. Bussie claimed that the statements damaged his reputation, held him up to public contempt and ridicule and caused him embarrassment, humiliation, mental suffering, and anxiety. Lowenthal claimed that the statements had been made to her while she was attending a cocktail party given by the Louisiana delegation to the National Conference of State Legislators. Ultimately, Victor Bussie lost the case, as the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled that the statement in question, even if it was actually made, was an opinion, not a statement of fact.

In 1986, when U.S. Representative John Breaux ran successfully for the United States Senate to succeed Russell B. Long, Lowenthal entered the 7th District House race to succeed him. The seat, however, went to another Democrat, later Republican convert, Jimmy Hayes, who defeated Lowenthal in a runoff election, In the nonpartisan blanket primary, Hayes led with 51,137 votes (30 percent) to Lowenthal's 42,839 (25 percent). In third place, state Representative James David Cain, another Democrat-later-Republican, polled 40,554 votes (24 percent), some 2,300 votes behind Lowenthal. Also in the running was Republican David Thibodaux of Lafayette, later a parish school board member, who finished with 21,082 votes (12 percent). Two other contenders shared the remaining 12 percent of the ballots cast.

Hayes then defeated Lowenthal in the 1986 general election, or runoff contest, 95,764 (56.3 percent) to 74,498 (43.8 percent).

Lowenthal lost her bid for a third term in the state House in 1987. A Republican, subsequently Independent, Vic Stelly of Lake Charles, ran for representative against Lowenthal and a second Democrat, Ken Brown. Stelly, the first Republican to represent Calcasieu Parish in the state House and subsequently the author of the since repealed Stelly Plan tax-transfer system, led in the first round of balloting, 6,717 (42.7 percent). He then went into the official general election with Lowenthal, who trailed with 5,802 (36.9 percent). Brown received 3,226 votes, a critical 20.5 percent. Stelly then unseated Lowenthal, 5,509 (55.9 percent) to 4,348 (44.1 percent).

Family and death

Lowenthal was married to a Jewish businessman, Joseph Lowenthal, (1925–2013), a native of Lexington, Kentucky, who owned One Hour Martinizing, a dry cleaning firm in Lake Charles. The couple had three children.

Lowenthal died ten days after her 74th birthday in a hospital in Houston, Texas. Her services were held at Trinity Baptist Church in Lake Charles. She is interred at Big Woods Cemetery in Edgerly in Calcasieu Parish. At the time of his death in Lake Charles at the age of eighty-seven, Joseph Lowenthal was married to the former Beverly Greenburg of Louisville, Kentucky.

References

Margaret Lowenthal Wikipedia