Melinda Schwegmann

Melinda Schwegmann
49th Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana
In office
January 13, 1992  January 8, 1996
Governor Edwin Edwards
Preceded by Paul Hardy
Succeeded by Kathleen Babineaux Blanco
Louisiana State Representative for District 98 (New Orleans Lakefront)
In office
1997–2003
Preceded by Garey Forster
Succeeded by Cheryl A. Gray
Personal details
Born (1946-10-25) October 25, 1946
Austin, Texas, U.S.
Nationality American
Political party Republican (2003–present) Democratic (1982–2003)
Spouse(s) John F. Schwegmann
Relations John G. Schwegmann (father-in-law)
Children Three children

Melinda B. Schwegmann (born October 25, 1946) is a former lieutenant governor of the U.S. state of Louisiana. With service from 1992 to 1996, she is the first woman to have held the position. She made an unsuccessful run for governor in 1995. In 1997, she won a special election to the Louisiana House of Representatives for District 98 in the Orleans Parish Lakefront, a predominantly African-American area, previously represented for fifteen years by a conservative Republican Garey Forster. Schwegmann was elected to a full House term in 1999. In 2003, she relinquished the seat, which was dismembered by reapportionment. Formerly a member of the Democratic Party, she switched affiliation in 2003 to the Republican Party in a fruitless effort to regain the lieutenant governor's position.

Biography

Melinda Schwegmann was born in Austin, Texas. Prior to her entry into politics, she was a teacher and a real estate developer. She attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, but her bachelor's degree in education is from the University of New Orleans. She is an alumna of Phi Mu fraternity. She is married to former Louisiana Public Service Commissioner John F. Schwegmann of Metairie. She is a past president of the Louisiana Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She was also a board member of the defunct Schwegmann Giant Supermarket chain, which was started by her late father-in-law John G. Schwegmann of Metairie. John G. Schwegmann was a former state representative, state senator, and public service commissioner. John F. Schwegmann succeeded his father as chairman of the supermarket board and as a member of the PSC. The junior Schwegmann was elected to the PSC in 1981 and served until his defeat in 1996. John F. Schwegmann began his political career as a Democrat but switched to Independent designation in 2002.

Unseating Republican Paul Hardy, 1991

Mrs. Schwegmann, as a Democrat without any previous political experience—she called herself "a housewife and a nonprofit volunteer" – upset incumbent Republican Lieutenant Governor Paul Hardy, a former Democrat originally from St. Martinville, in the 1991 general election.

In the 1991 jungle primary, Hardy and Schwegmann virtually tied, 624,371 (43 percent) for Schwegmann and 620,199 (also 43 percent) for Hardy. In the general election, Schwegmann scored a large victory, 1,009,026 (59 percent) to Hardy's 693,412 (41 percent). There was speculation that Schwegmann benefited from coattails of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Edwin Washington Edwards, who won his fourth nonconsecutive term as governor in that same election over David Duke, a former member of the Ku Klux Klan who was opposed by the GOP leadership. Hardy had opposed Duke and was unable to conduct an independent campaign that would have enabled him to compete effectively with Schwegmann.

As lieutenant governor, her primary responsibility was to manage the Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation & Tourism. Schwegmann also sought to address the concerns of seniors citizens, children, and the disabled. She promoted an anti-littering campaign to clean up areas along highways and on state lands. Litter, she contended, distracts from tourism, economic development, and pride in the state. She proposed that penalties for littering be lowered on the theory that law-enforcement officers would be more willing to issue tickets for violations. She determined that state police were not issuing many citations for littering because the fines were considered excessive.[1]


A weak gubernatorial showing, 1995

Melinda Schwegmann interpreted her big victory at the age of 45 in 1991—she exceeded 1 million raw votes—as a sign that she should run for governor in 1995.

Yet, another Democrat woman also entered the governor's race, state Treasurer (and later U.S. senator) Mary Landrieu. Neither woman gained a general election spot. Landrieu's father, Moon Landrieu had been a sharp critic of John G. Schwegmann in the 1960s and 1970s. The 1995 race hence featured Schwegmann-Landrieu competition that resulted in a third-place finish for Landrieu, with Schwegmann in an embarrassing sixth place.

Melinda Schwegmann polled 71,288 ballots (only 5 percent) in the gubernatorial primary; even her father-in-law John G. Schwegmann had run better in the 1971 Democratic primary for governor, eventually won by Edwin Edwards. Mary Landrieu drew 271,938 votes (18 percent); she was approximately 1 percentage point short of winning a second-place position, which would have placed her in the general election. Former Democratic State Senator Murphy J. "Mike" Foster of St. Mary Parish converted to Republican allegiance during the early portion of the primary campaign. He entered the general election, popularly called the "runoff" in Louisiana, against the young black Democratic U.S. Representative Cleo Fields of Baton Rouge. Foster defeated Fields by a margin of 64–36 percent. Schwegmann was succeeded as lieutenant governor by another Democratic woman, Kathleen Babineaux Blanco of Lafayette, who served two terms in the second-position.

Election to the state legislature, 1997

On October 25, 1997, Melinda Schwegmann, in a special election won a seat from the New Orleans Lakefront in the state House of Representatives. She defeated the Republican George Simno, 4,479 (63.3 percent) to 2,599 (36.7 percent). She was elected to a full term in 1999 but surrendered her position in 2003 in order to run once again for lieutenant governor. Schwegmann had to rent an apartment in New Orleans, away from the family home in Metairie, to meet the residency qualification for being a state representative.

A second campaign for lieutenant governor, 2003

The longstanding competition between the Landrieu and Schwegmann families cropped up again in the 2003 lieutenant governor's race. The big primary winner (no general election contest was required) was Democratic State Representative Mitch Landrieu of New Orleans, the brother of Senator Mary Landrieu and later the mayor of New Orleans. Mitch Landrieu defeated five Republican rivals to win the right to succeed Blanco as lieutenant governor. Blanco was instead elected governor—the first woman to hold the position in Louisiana.

Melinda Schwegmann "pulled a Foster" in this race in that she switched to Republican affiliation to make the lieutenant governor's race. On June 24, 2003, she became the then 50th Republican member of the 105-member Louisiana House. Schwegmann said that she had received more encouragement from Republicans than she had from Democrats in whether she should run again for lieutenant governor. However, another Republican who announced his candidacy thereafter, former U.S. Representative Clyde C. Holloway of the since defunct 4th congressional district and a resident of rural Forest Hill in Rapides Parish received most of the pro-life and conservative vote. Neither Schwegmann, Holloway, nor an African American Republican, Kirt Bennett of Baton Rouge, was competitive against Mitch Landrieu. Official results from the October 4, 2003, contest showed Landrieu with 674,803 votes (53 percent), compared to Holloway's 249,668 ballots (19 percent), and Schwegmann's 215,402 votes (17 percent). Three other Republicans shared another 10 percent of the vote.

Schwegmann's support for gay rights

Republicans did not coalesce behind Schwegmann in part because most of the focus was on the governorship. Her "gay rights" position also was unpopular with many within the GOP rank-and-file. Schwegmann in fact polled a considerable Republican vote considering that she had supported homosexual rights while in the legislature. A gay rights publication, Southern Voice, called both Schwegmann (and Landrieu as well) "gay-friendly." The magazine noted that Mrs. Schwegmann in the legislature had opposed Louisiana's anti-sodomy laws.

On May 13, 1999, the Louisiana House Labor Committee in an eight-to-three vote killed Mrs. Schwegmann's bill to prohibit workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation. All who supported the bill were Democrats at a time, when Schwegmann was herself a Democrat. Religious groups lobbied against Schwegmann's measure.

In 1997, Mrs. Schwegmann was inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. "Lieutenant Governor slams litter", Minden Press-Herald, November 12, 1992, p. 1.
  2. "Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame". cityofwinnfield.com. Archived from the original on July 3, 2009. Retrieved August 22, 2009.

References

Louisiana House of Representatives
Preceded by
Garey Forster
Louisiana State Representative for District 98 (New Orleans Lakefront)

Melinda B. Schwegmann)
1997–2004

Succeeded by
Cheryl A. Gray
Political offices
Preceded by
Paul J. Hardy (R)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana

Melinda B. Schwegmann (D)
1992–1996

Succeeded by
Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D)
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