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Ned Randolph

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edward G. "Ned" Randolph, Jr., is a veteran Democratic Party politician who has served five terms as the mayor of Alexandria in central Louisiana. Randolph was previously a member of the Louisiana State House of Representatives (1972-1976) and the Louisiana State Senate (1976-1984).

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[edit] Early years

Randolph was born in Alexandria in 1942 to Edward G. Randolph, Sr. (1911-1996), and the former Edith Beatrice Harrison (1910-2005). He graduated from Bolton High School in the Garden District of Alexandria in 1960 and from Princeton University in New Jersey in 1964. Thereafter, he graduated from the Tulane University Law School in New Orleans. He began practicing law with his father in Alexandria and was quickly bitten by the political bug.

[edit] Legislative service, 1972-1984

In 1972, Randolph was elected to the position of state representative for District 27. After he secured the Democratic nomination over a field that included the late Alexandria restauranteur J. Hampton Smith, Randolph polled 71.4 percent of the vote to 28.6 percent for Republican Clyde Connell, also of Alexandria. In the legislature, Randolph compiled a record of seeking to bring state funding and projects to central Louisiana, a previously neglected part of the state.

In 1975, he ran for the state senate, District 29, and unseated the 16-year incumbent, Cecil R. Blair (1916-2001), a fellow Democrat from Lecompte, in south Rapides Parish, in the first jungle primary held in Louisiana.

In 1976, as a new state senator, he and then State Representative John W. "Jock" Scott, a fellow Alexandria attorney and Randolph's successor in the state House, led the successful Rapides Parish campaign of Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter. A quiet, introspective man, Randolph learned how to get things done for his district. He served two terms in the state senate.

[edit] Two consecutive defeats

In 1982, Randolph launched an unsuccessful challenge to another fellow Democrat, U.S. Representative Gillis William Long (1923-1985) of the since defunct Eighth Congressional District. Long prevailed with 71,103 ballots (59.6 percent), to Randolph's 46,656 votes (39.1 percent), (A minor candidate polled 1.3 percent.) In that campaign, Randolph made appearances with popular soap-opera star Deidre Hall of NBC's Days of Our Lives, whom he was dating at the time after the breakup of his first marriage.

In 1983, Randolph was defeated in an upset in the jungle primary for reelection to the state senate by fellow Democrat William Joseph "Joe" McPherson, Jr., of Pineville, across the Red River from Alexandria. McPherson, who is still the state senator, was supported by both Congressman Gillis Long and Edwin Washington Edwards, who was making a successful bid in that same election for a third term in the governor's office.

Randolph's defeat is considered to have been a fallout from the gubernatorial fight between Edwards and Republican Governor David C. Treen. Other Treen allies in the Democratic Party also lost their seats, including Daniel Wesley Richey of Ferriday in Concordia Parish in eastern Louisiana near the Mississippi River.

In the primary, Randolph led with 13,501 votes (38.4 percent) to McPherson's 11,032 (31.4 percent). Former Senator Cecil Blair polled 6,096 votes (17.4 percent), and Alexandria Mayor John Kenneth Snyder, Sr. (1922-1993), in the second year of his second mayoral term, received 4,496 (12.8 percent). In the runoff -- officially the Louisiana general election -- McPherson won, 16,360 votes (53.9 percent) to Randolph's 13,973 (46.1 percent). Turnout was nearly 5,000 less in the runoff than in the primary, a fact that may have worked against incumbent Randolph. With two consecutive defeats, Randolph's political career seemed on the ropes.

[edit] Elected mayor of his hometown, 1986

Yet, in 1986, Randolph launched a successful political comeback. He won the first of his five consecutive terms as mayor of Alexandria. He defeated eight candidates outright in the jungle primary with a margin of 52.5 percent of the vote. In the four subsequent elections, Randolph won in the primaries and did not have to face an opponent in a general election.

The city is governed by a mayor-council form of government established in a new charter drafted in the middle 1970s. Ironically, Randolph's first wife, Sanna Aimee Randolph, was a member of the city charter commission that created the job description that he exercised for twenty years.

Alexandria's population shifted from a barely white city to a 55 percent black majority during Randolph's tenure. He worked closely with black community leaders, and many supported him in his mayoral campaigns. Randolph also has had a close working relationship with Clarence Fields, the black mayor of predominantly white Pineville.

[edit] Second bid for Congress, 1992

In 1992, just five years into his mayoral service, Randolph was again attracted by the lure of Congress. When the Eighth Congressional District was disbanded, Alexandria was temporarily placed in a new Sixth District, which included populous East Baton Rouge Parish. Randolph ran as the lone Democrat for the seat. Two Republican congressmen ran against each other, Richard H. Baker of Baton Rouge, and Clyde C. Holloway of Randolph's own Rapides Parish. Holloway led in the jungle primary, 52,012 (37 percent). Baker was second with 46,990 votes (33 percent). Randolph finished a close third with 42,819 (30 percent).

In the general election, Baker defeated Holloway by 2,728 votes even though Holloway polled majorities in fifteen of the seventeen parishes in the district. A majority of Randolph's supporters were believed to have gone to Baker. Turnout in the congressional general election, which accompanied the Clinton-Bush presidential contest, was 245,178, nearly double the 141,821 votes cast in the primary.

[edit] Randolph's legacy as mayor

Randolph announced on April 3, 2006, that he would not seek a sixth term. The Alexandria Daily Town Talk, his hometown newspaper, said that his 20-year leadership had lifted "the city's esteem and changed its direction."

Randolph succeeded John K. Snyder as mayor in December 1986. Snyder, a controversial figure who patterned his politics after the late Earl Kemp Long -- they even shared the middle initial "K" -- ultimately checked himself in to a mental health facility.

"I think one of the biggest things was that people were somewhat embarrassed to say they were from Alexandria," said Deborah A. Randolph, the mayor's third wife, in reference to the Snyder administration. Snyder had also served an earlier term from 1973-1977, under the former commission form of city government. He was defeated for reelection under the mayor-council charter in 1977.

By 1987, there were public relations campaigns "to try to make people feel good again about themselves and about ," said Mrs. Randolph. A former city council member, Marion Chaney, who works for an Alexandria architectural firm, said, "It was time for a change" by 1986. "I wouldn't say Alexandria was a laughingstock, but it definitely needed a change."

Snyder's erratic personality was so volatile that he was subject to say nearly anything about anybody at any time. Even powerful Governor Edwards was said to fear Snyder's unpredictability.

When Randolph was sworn in, Alexandria faced budget deficits and potential city employee layoffs. In the 20 years since Randolph assumed the office, Alexandria landed a tank car plant, completed the Riverfront Center, opened a performing arts center, and improved its drainage system. However, the city was hurt by the closing of the former England Air Force Base and a city police strike in the 1990s.

Randolph said that his "worst day" in office came early in 2003, when two young police officers, David Ezernack and Jeremy "Jay" Carruth, were shot to death. It was a trying week for the entire city.

[edit] Other political comments

Rarely had Republicans even bothered to contest municipal offices in this heavily Democratic city, but in 2006, two Republicans, Delores Brewer, Randolph's admnistrative assistant, and John Sams, a physician who also serves on the Rapides Parish School Board, both ran for mayor. Brewer advanced to the general election against attorney Jacques M. Roy (born 1970), a Democrat and the son of the veteran Alexandria lawyer Christopher J. Roy. Brewer received 2,523 votes (21 percent) to Roy's 3,986 (33 percent). Roosevelt L. Johnson, a black candidate, finished in third place, just seventeen votes behind Brewer. He received 2,506 votes (also 21 percent). Dr. Sams received 8 percent. Several other Democrats divided the remaining 17 percent of the vote. The total vote of the Democratic candidates in the primary was hence 71 percent; the two Republicans together polled only 29 percent. In the November 7 general election, Roy was the runaway winner, 9,116 (76 percent) to 2,928 (24 percent) for Mrs. Brewer. The Republican candidate had used negative advertisements in the campaign, one which compared Roy's legal career to that of a greedy pig, but voters soundly repudiated her candidacy. She received only 405 more votes in the second round of balloting than she had in the primary.

From 1972-1973, the city had a Republican mayor, the late Charles Edward "Ed" Karst, but he had been elected as a Democrat in 1969, when he defeated his then fellow Democrat Snyder. Karst, a native of New Orleans, did not seek reelection in 1973, when Snyder first won the position. Karst later returned to the Democratic Party and ran for governor in the 1991 jungle primary. He polled less than 1 percent of the vote.

Prior to his death, Snyder switched his party affiliation to Republican, something which would have been anathema to his icon, the late Earl Long, and endorsed the controversial David Duke for governor in 1991.

Preceded by:
Cecil R. Blair (D)
Louisiana State Senator (District 29 -- Rapides Parish)

Edward G. "Ned" Randolph, Jr. (D)
1976–1984

Succeeded by:
William Joseph "Joe" McPherson, Jr., (D)
Preceded by:
John Kenneth Snyder (D)
Mayor of Alexandria, Louisiana (Rapides Parish)

Edward G. "Ned" Randolph, Jr. (D)
1986–2006

Succeeded by:
Jacques Roy (D)

[edit] References

Billy Hathorn, "The Republican Party in Louisiana, 1920-1980," Master's thesis (1980), Northwestern State University at Natchitoches

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/763970/posts

AID=/20060404/NEWS01/604040309&SearchID=73240886299853

http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/news/state/14266242.htm?source=rss&channel=sunherald_state

http://www.pineville.net/archive/archive10.htm

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcpr&rqsdta=09300640

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcpr&rqsdta=11070640

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