Republican victory in Louisiana signals hard-right turn for once bipartisan state
Governor-elect Jeff Landry opposes minimum wage, pollution controls, protections for women, LGBTQ+ and Black people
When Louisiana's attorney general, Jeff Landry, won the open gubernatorial primary on 14 October, it not only ended eight years of relatively productive bipartisan control of the state's government: it marked a hard-right shift in Louisiana's politics that could set back environmental policy and human and civil rights for decades to come.
Landry's outright victory in the jungle primary - a system unique to Louisiana, in which all voters, regardless of party, vote on all candidates at the local, state and federal levels - shocked voters and pundits in the state alike. Landry was long favored to triumph, but it was expected he would be forced into a runoff. Ultimately, the state's Democratic party offered no meaningful resistance to Landry's campaign, and he cruised to a win, capturing more than 50% of the votes cast in a low-turnout race.
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