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- <text id=91TT2444>
- <title>
- Nov. 04, 1991: Elections:The Duke of Louisiana
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 04, 1991 The New Age of Alternative Medicine
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 29
- ELECTIONS
- The Duke of Louisiana
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a state famed for bizarre politics, an ex-Klansman rides
- into the gubernatorial runoff on a wave of middle-class fear and
- loathing
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Riley/Metairie--With reporting by Don Winbush/
- Winnfield and Richard Woodbury/Lafayette
- </p>
- <p> Strychnine or arsenic, Louisiana? Pick your poison.
- That's about the only way to look at the state's gubernatorial
- race, which took on a noxious taint last week when former Ku
- Klux Klan leader David Duke began battling roguish ex-Governor
- Edwin Edwards for the keys to the executive mansion. The
- campaign threatens to bare the cantankerous soul of a state that
- is often derided as America's banana republic, a Third World
- realm of corrupt and crazy politicians, wild parties and bizarre
- customs. Yet even Louisiana has never seen anything this weird.
- Says John Maginnis, publisher of the Louisiana Political
- Review: "We're in a new dimension of time and space. We're in
- the twilight zone." Sadly, this excursion may well cost the
- state its future.
- </p>
- <p> The "race from hell," as Maginnis calls it, is opening old
- wounds of race and class in a possible preview of next year's
- ugly national politics. Duke, 41, is tapping into working-class
- frustrations about welfare and affirmative action, violent crime
- and failing schools, lost jobs and a stagnant economy that
- resonate broadly throughout the country. His rise is anathema
- to the national Republican leadership, which strongly repudiates
- him but now finds many of its most effective themes tainted by
- the ex-Klansman's use of them. In the 1992 presidential
- campaign, George Bush may find it dangerous to blast affirmative
- action and racial quotas--much less run Willie Horton-style
- ads--now that Duke has catapulted to national prominence under
- a Republican banner.
- </p>
- <p> Duke's opponent, three-time Democratic Governor Edwards,
- 64, is fighting to capture the post he lost four years ago
- after being indicted in a racketeering imbroglio. But no matter
- who wins, the whole state stands to lose. "It's clear that
- people are not looking forward to the next 10 years," says New
- Orleans pollster Edward Renwick. "They're looking to the past.
- But it's a past that no longer exists."
- </p>
- <p> The fellow to blame for this predicament is incumbent
- Buddy Roemer, a reform-minded technocrat who fancied himself a
- crusader for good government but ultimately fell on his own
- sword. Though a man of ample charm, Roemer managed to alienate
- voters with a haughty Harvard-bred hubris and a stubborn sense
- that only he knew what was best for the state. His sweeping
- reform policies, like restructuring the tax system and
- overhauling education, may have been Louisiana's castor oil, but
- voters refused to swallow it. That leaves them with a choice
- between Duke, who is currently a state representative, and
- Edwards, a high-stakes gambler with Gucci tastes, a
- greased-lightning wit and a reputation for skirt chasing.
- Bewailing the dilemma facing Louisiana voters the day after the
- Oct. 19 primary--in which Edwards got 34% of the vote, Duke
- 32% and Roemer 27%--the New Orleans Times-Picayune
- editorialized, "Of all the excesses that have made our state
- notorious, yesterday's will go into the history books. File it
- under S for shame."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever else could be said about the primary results, one
- thing was clear: Duke is for real. Elected to the state house
- of representatives in early 1989, he grabbed a surprisingly
- strong 44% of the vote in a failed bid for the U.S. Senate last
- year. Now political observers are speculating about Duke's
- presidential aspirations and comparing him to George Wallace,
- who transformed voter anger into a national populist movement
- two decades ago. Duke denies he has plans to run for the White
- House, but he warns that next year his "issues are coming to the
- forefront. I'll have an impact, certainly."
- </p>
- <p> Visitors to the state may feel they have stepped into a
- foreign country, a land of Mardi Gras, Cajun cooking and the
- Catahoula hound. The flags of six countries have flown over this
- state, where the Napoleonic Code still prevails and French is
- often the first language in the southwestern Cajun country.
- Louisiana has been home to trumpeter Louis Armstrong, disgraced
- televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, demagogue Huey Long and author
- Walker Percy. The state, which has the nation's widest gap
- between rich and poor, is a quirky mix of Catholic and
- Protestant, oil and sugarcane, jazz and Zydeco.
- </p>
- <p> Last week heated Duke-Edwards arguments reverberated
- throughout the state, from radio talk shows to restaurants, bars
- and business offices. A record 64,000 people turned out at the
- last minute to register to vote in the Nov. 16 runoff election.
- Audrey Triche, a computer operator in Jefferson Parish, near New
- Orleans, plans to vote for Duke. "We want a change," she says.
- "We need it, but where do we go for it? Everybody agrees with
- what he's saying. Why should you come to work when you can pick
- up a welfare check? That's why I'm going to vote for him." Her
- fellow office worker, Georgie Haggerty, will vote for Edwards.
- "He's crooked," she says, "but he's an honest crook." "We don't
- ask for free things because we're white or Catholic or have blue
- eyes," contends Robert Fruge, 29, of Metairie, the predominantly
- white New Orleans suburb that is Duke's stronghold. "Why should
- anyone else ask for them?"
- </p>
- <p> Similarly indignant questions are being echoed all over
- Louisiana. In the thick piney woods near Mansfield, in the
- rural, Protestant north, Duke recently gave some 150 white
- partisans at a local V.F.W. hall his well-modulated litany of
- how an inept government and its wasteful social programs are
- taking advantage of law-abiding middle-class folks. "There is
- no bigger problem we have in Louisiana and in the country than
- the rising welfare underclass," he told them. "We're never going
- to have fiscal reform in Louisiana until we have welfare
- reform."
- </p>
- <p> Though Duke has formally repudiated his Klan past, an
- undercurrent of racism lurks beneath his reasoned arguments.
- When he talks about welfare, crime, drugs or affirmative action,
- he is talking about race. "I believe in equal rights for all,
- special privilege for none," says Duke. That seemingly laudable
- concept is a thinly veiled appeal to frustrated whites who feel
- they are victims of reverse discrimination. It is a clever ploy,
- and one whose attraction stretches far beyond the racist vote.
- A master at driving wedges through the electorate by exploiting
- race-linked issues, Duke is moving these once taboo topics from
- the back room to the public forum. As one wizened Cajun in
- Donaldsonville puts it, "He tell it like it is. He ain't
- scared."
- </p>
- <p> Duke's approach has an enormous appeal--despite an
- unsavory past that he now writes off as a "wrong attitude." A
- swastika-brandishing neo-Nazi in college, he joined the Knights
- of the Ku Klux Klan in high school and worked himself up to the
- exalted rank of grand wizard before leaving the organization in
- 1979. Soon after, he founded a white supremacist group called
- the National Association for the Advancement of White People.
- The divorced father of two teenage daughters, Duke held no
- regular job before his election to the state legislature. He has
- supported himself as a seller of racist and anti-Semitic
- literature and as a professional fund raiser for his own
- right-wing causes.
- </p>
- <p> Duke, whose intense blue eyes betray an inner fanaticism,
- tries to shrug off his past. "I'm not a racist," he says during
- an interview in the two-story Metairie home that doubles as his
- headquarters. "I was too intolerant in an earlier time in my
- life. But I certainly am not now." Though his disavowal drips
- with disingenuousness, it is winning converts--particularly
- among educated middle-class voters who sense something is
- terribly wrong with the state. Duke, who fancies comparisons
- with Boris Yeltsin, appeals to the same kind of throw-the-bums-
- out impulse that the Russian leader has used to uproot the
- entrenched order in his country.
- </p>
- <p> Duke's disenchanted voters not only want to sweep out the
- old professional governing class; they want someone to crack
- down on crime, drugs and welfare cheats. In a time of high
- unemployment, they want assurances that their job security will
- not be further eroded by affirmative action and set-aside
- programs. Duke bristles at the suggestion that he exploits
- racial fear. But until he offers credible evidence of change,
- other than his professed embrace of the Christian faith, that
- protest rings hollow.
- </p>
- <p> Edwards, like Duke, has an image problem rooted in his own
- troubled past. Though his womanizing, high-rolling ways may
- endear him to many voters in a state that has always loved a
- good rascal, even Louisianians have a limited tolerance for
- corruption these days. During his previous term as Governor,
- Edwards was indicted twice on charges that he had conspired to
- rig state hospital approvals while out of office. Though he was
- acquitted, tales of extravagant gambling trips and debts paid
- off with cash-filled suitcases have continued to dog him. But
- they also spark his campaign for redemption. As the well-
- scrubbed, silver-haired Cajun traipses across the state like a
- visiting potentate, he exhorts supporters, "Lache pas la patate!
- [Don't drop the potato!] I made my mistakes, and I benefited by
- them. I'm running to complete the job I started."
- </p>
- <p> Whoever wins on Nov. 16 will inherit a spate of
- challenges: social, environmental, political and, above all,
- economic. For all the charm of the French Quarter and the
- sparkling new downtown hotels, New Orleans faces some of the
- worst urban problems of any U.S. city. With the local economy
- gripped by a decade-long recession, big industry is
- disappearing; the river port is languishing; schools are
- crumbling; the tax base is shrinking; the regional jobless rate
- stands at 6.8%. Drugs and crime run rampant in many
- neighborhoods, and the murder rate is among the nation's
- highest. "The jails are jam-packed; courts are jam-packed," says
- Mayor Sidney Barthelemy. "The police no longer have time to
- handle the minor calls. They're out on major crimes. To say the
- economy has had a devastating effect on the city is to put it
- mildly." Tourism and the promise of revenues from riverboat
- gambling offer some hope. But the specter of a Duke
- governorship chills many business leaders, who think tourists
- will stop coming and companies will leave the state if he is
- elected.
- </p>
- <p> New Orleans' problems reflect the stagnation of a state
- that relies on natural resources, from oil to sugarcane, as its
- main source of income. In the days of Huey Long, the populist
- strongman of the 1930s, oil money was the lubricant for a vast
- share-the-wealth program that provided the public with highways,
- charity hospitals, free textbooks and old-age pensions; largely
- shielded from taxes, the people tolerated the corruption that
- went along with the system. But that party is long since over.
- When oil prices went bust in the past decade, so did the state
- treasury, which now faces a projected $1 billion budget deficit
- for the coming year. Though things have gotten a little better
- since 1987, Louisiana still has trouble attracting new business.
- That's because business bears a heavier, and more unpredictable,
- tax burden than the state's residents, who have long gotten a
- nearly free ride.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his aloof style, Roemer tried hard to deal with
- Louisiana's problems. He started to clean up the environment,
- raised teachers' salaries, created trust funds for
- transportation and wetlands and sought to revise the tax
- structure. He managed to improve the state's bond rating and
- pushed through new campaign-finance laws that have drastically
- curbed the multimillion-dollar electoral extravaganzas of the
- past. Elected as a Democrat, he was a prize convert to the
- Republican Party when he defected last March. But Roemer may
- have moved too fast and too abruptly for his state. And in the
- end, he met the fate of most Louisiana reformers: he lasted one
- term.
- </p>
- <p>NOW THE HARD PART: PROBLEMS FOR THE NEXT GOVERNOR
- </p>
- <p>-- POLLUTION. Cancer Alley, a strip of petrochemical plants
- along the Mississippi, is known for its high cancer-death rates.
- The state ranks second in the nation for toxic-chemical releases.
- </p>
- <p>-- POVERTY. Louisiana ranks 49th in the country in annual per
- capita income ($8,961) and has the widest gap between rich and
- poor of any U.S. state. Black families, particularly in rural
- areas, fare the worst.
- </p>
- <p>-- OIL RECESSION. Petroleum once kept Louisiana afloat,
- accounting for more than 40% of the state's revenues; today it
- provides only 15%. The reason: depressed prices and sagging
- production.
- </p>
- <p>-- THREATENED WETLANDS. Swamps, bayous and marshes, typical
- of the Louisiana landscape, are vanishing at a rate of more than
- 30 sq. mi. a year--a problem aggravated by attempts to control
- the river's flow.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-