'Mary Loretta Landrieu' (born
November 23,
1955) is the Senior
Democratic United States senator from the state of
Louisiana, as well as the first, and as of
2007, only woman from that state to be elected to the Senate. She is the daughter of former
New Orleans mayor
Moon Landrieu and the sister of current Louisiana
Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu. By national standards, Landrieu is one of the more conservative Democrats in the U.S. Senate. She is a member of the
New Democrat Coalition, and is one of only five Democrats currently within the U.S. Senate representing a former Confederate state. (As opposed to 17 Republican Senators from the former Confederate states.) She is up for re-election in 2008 in what is expected to be a tight race.
Personal life
Landrieu was born in
Arlington, Virginia to Verna Satterlee and former
New Orleans mayor
Maurice Edwin Landrieu,
[1] and raised in
New Orleans, Louisiana. She was raised as a
Roman Catholic and attended
Ursuline Academy of New Orleans. She graduated from
Louisiana State University in
Baton Rouge in
1977 where she was a member of
Delta Gamma sorority. She was a member of the
Louisiana House of Representatives from
1980 to
1988. She then served as Louisiana state treasurer from 1988 to
1996. Landrieu was an unsuccessful candidate in the
1995 gubernatorial race in Louisiana — she finished third in the state's
qualifying primary (sometimes referred to as the "jungle" primary) — thus failing to make the
run-off, which effectively becomes the
general election in Louisiana. The eventual winner was Democrat-turned-Republican
Murphy J. "Mike" Foster, Jr..
Landrieu and her husband,
attorney Frank Snellings (born
1949), who grew up in
Monroe, have two adopted children, Connor and Mary Shannon.
Disputed Senate election
Landrieu was elected to the
U.S. Senate seat previously held by
John Bennett Johnston, Jr., in 1996. She defeated the
Republican candidate
Woody Jenkins of Baton Rouge by 5,788 votes out of 1.7 million cast, the narrowest national result of the 33 races for the U.S. Senate that year and one of the closest election margins in Louisiana history. At the same time, Democrat
Bill Clinton carried Louisiana by a considerable margin — 927,837 votes to 712,586 cast for Republican
Bob Dole.
Jenkins refused to accept defeat and charged massive election fraud, orchestrated by the Democratic political organization of New Orleans, which provided Landrieu's narrow margin of victory. He took his case to the Republican-majority U.S. Senate and petitioned for nullification of the results of the Senate election and ordering new balloting. In a hearing, carried live by
C-SPAN, the
Senate Rules Committee in a party-line 8-7 vote agreed to investigate the charges. The decision briefly placed Landrieu's status in the U.S. Senate under a cloud.
The investigation dragged on for over ten months, angering the Democrats and exacerbating partisan friction in the day-to-day sessions of the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee to which Landrieu was assigned as a freshman member of the
105th Congress. Finally, in October
1997, the Rules Committee issued a report noting numerous instances of major electoral irregularities, but concluding that a new election at that late stage would place too onerous a burden on the state of Louisiana and recommended letting the election result stand.
The Landrieu-Jenkins contest was not the only U.S. Senate election in
20th century Louisiana in which the results were hotly disputed. Future Senator
John H. Overton of
Alexandria, the seat of
Rapides Parish, claimed the renomination and hence reelection of Senator
Joseph E. Ransdell of
Lake Providence, the seat of
East Carroll Parish, was tainted. In
1932, Senator
Edwin S. Broussard of
New Iberia claimed that his primary defeat by Overton was fraudulent. In both cases, the Senate seated the certified winners, Ransdell and Overton, respectively.
Landrieu as senator
Landrieu narrowly won re-election in the
2002 mid-term election. She defeated
Suzanne Haik Terrell of New Orleans. Without her large base from
Orleans Parish, Landrieu would have been unseated. Some experts and pundits had considered Landrieu as a possible running mate for presidential candidate
John Kerry in the
2004 election before Kerry's selection of then Senator
John Edwards of
North Carolina. With the departure of
John B. Breaux from the Senate in December 2004, his seat being taken by Republican
David Vitter, Landrieu became Louisiana's senior senator. She faces voters again in
2008. Terrell ran for Louisiana
attorney general in 2003 and was defeated by
Charles Foti, a Landrieu supporter from Orleans Parish.
Gang of 14

Sen. Landrieu (center) joins Women of the Storm from the
Gulf Coast .
On
May 23,
2005, Landrieu was among the
Gang of 14, the group of moderate senators who forged a compromise on the use of the judicial
filibuster and blocked the Republican leadership's attempt to implement the so-called
nuclear option over the organized filibustering by Senate Democrats of judicial nominees in the U.S. Senate. Under the agreement, the Democrats would retain the power to filibuster a Bush judicial nominee only in an "extraordinary circumstance" and the three most conservative Bush
appellate court nominees (
Janice Rogers Brown,
Priscilla Owen and
William Pryor) would receive a vote by the full Senate.
Landrieu supports eliminating the
estate tax permanently, and voted for the
tax cut passed in 2001. On
November 17, 2005, she was one of only four Democrats to vote against repealing the portions of the tax cuts passed in 2001 and 2003 that more liberal Democrats have charged unfairly benefit the wealthy. She voted for the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 and the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act. In 2004, Landrieu was one of only six Democrats to vote against renewing the
ban on
semi-automatic firearms. She has also been one of the few Democrats to support drilling in the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Landrieu voted for the confirmation of Chief Justice
John Roberts in 2005, but in
2006, she opposed
Samuel Alito, though she did vote in favor of
cloture to send the nomination to an up-or-down vote.
Subsequent to the 2006 midterm election, in which the Democratic Party gained control of both houses of Congress, Landrieu announced (along with Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine) the formation of a "centrist coalition" of moderate senators of both parties, the goal of which they announced to be reducing partisan rancor in the new Senate.
Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina destroyed Landrieu's lakeside New Orleans home. The senator has become a national spokeswoman for victims of the hurricane and has complained of "the staggering incompetence of the national government."
[2] In an interview with
Chris Wallace, Landrieu called the evacuation of New Orleans prior to Hurricane Katrina "the best evacuation." She also commented that "most mayors in this country have a hard time getting their people to work on a sunny day."
Critics have condemned Louisiana's representatives over the state's handling of the Katrina crisis. However,
FEMA contracted with Innovative Emergency Management for the now-infamous "
Hurricane Pam" exercise, which predicted a 70 percent evacuation rate in New Orleans. State officials ended up coordinating the evacuation of 80 percent of the city
[3], exceeding professionally-projected figures.
Other Controversy
On August 3, 2007, Landrieu created much controversy when she and Louisiana Rep
Charlie Melancon broke ranks with Democrats and sided with Republicans and the Bush Administration in
voting for the
Protect America Act, an amendment to the
USA Patriot Act further expanding wiretap powers, authorizing torture and suspension of rights of American citizens that some in the media argue is
unconstitutional, however the courts have not come to that finding.
Election History
'United States Senator, 1996'
Threshold > 50%
First Ballot, September 21, 1996
| 'Candidate' | 'Affiliation' | 'Support' | 'Outcome' |
| Woody Jenkins | Republican | 322,244 (26%) | Runoff |
| Mary Landrieu | Democratic | 264,268 (22%) | Runoff |
| Richard Ieyoub | Democratic | 250,682 (20%) | Defeated |
| David Duke | Republican | 322,244 (12%) | Defeated |
| Others | n.a. | 249,913 (20%) | Defeated |
Second Ballot, November 5, 1996
| 'Candidate' | 'Affiliation' | 'Support' | 'Outcome' |
| Mary Landrieu | Democratic | 852,945 (50%) | Elected |
| Woody Jenkins | Republican | 847,157 (50%) | Defeated |
'United States Senator, 2002'
Threshold > 50%
First Ballot, November 5, 2002
| 'Candidate' | 'Affiliation' | 'Support' | 'Outcome' |
| Mary Landrieu | Democratic | 573,347 (46%) | Runoff |
| Suzanne Haik Terrell | Republican | 339,506 (27%) | Runoff |
| John Cooksey | Republican | 171,752 (14%) | Defeated |
| Tony Perkins | Republican | 119,776 (10%) | Defeated |
| Others | n.a. | 41,952 (3%) | Defeated |
Second Ballot, December 7, 2002
| 'Candidate' | 'Affiliation' | 'Support' | 'Outcome' |
| Mary Landrieu | Democratic | 638,654 (52%) | Elected |
| Suzanne Haik Terrell | Republican | 596,642 (48%) | Defeated |
Footnotes
1. http://www.wargs.com/political/landrieu.html
2. La. Senator Returns to Capitol to Denounce Bush
3. Governor: Everyone Must Leave New Orleans
External links
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United States Senator Mary Landrieu 'official Senate site'
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Landrieu for US Senate official 2008 re-election campaign website
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Federal Election Commission — Mary Landrieu campaign finance reports and data
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New York Times — Mary Landrieu News collected news and commentary
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On the Issues — Mary Landrieu issue positions and quotes
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OpenSecrets.org — Mary Landrieu campaign contributions
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SourceWatch Congresspedia — Mary Landrieu profile
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About.com Profile of US Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana