Obama backlash endangers Landrieu

U.S. senator from Louisiana attempts to regain lost support as runoff nears

Sen. Mary Landrieu (right), D-La., is shown Nov. 19 on Capitol Hill, a day after the Keystone XL Pipeline bill she supported was voted down in the Senate.
Sen. Mary Landrieu (right), D-La., is shown Nov. 19 on Capitol Hill, a day after the Keystone XL Pipeline bill she supported was voted down in the Senate.

THIBODAUX, La. -- President Barack Obama may not be on Louisiana's Senate runoff ballot, but it's clear his widespread unpopularity in the state stands as Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu's biggest hurdle to a fourth term.

Landrieu led an eight-candidate primary, but her 42 percent was only 16,000 votes ahead of Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy and far short of her 2008 totals when she won without a runoff. Exit polls explain the collapse: Landrieu got votes from 18 percent of whites, while nearly three out of four white voters said they strongly disapprove of the president.

"It's not so much a Mary thing as it is a Democrat thing and Obama thing," said restaurant owner Dean Gehbauer of Thibodaux.

That makes Cassidy, a Baton Rouge congressman, the favorite Saturday. A Cassidy win would push Republicans' new Senate majority to 54 seats in January and complete the GOP's sweep of top statewide offices from the Carolinas westward to Texas.

Election returns offer little to suggest Gehbauer is wrong. In the past six years, Landrieu lost ground to Republicans in every Louisiana parish. In 2008, she defeated Republican John Kennedy by 121,111 votes statewide. This time, Cassidy and third-place finisher Rob Maness, a Tea Party favorite who has since endorsed the congressman, combined to lead Landrieu by 186,207 votes, a net swing of 307,318.

Thibodaux's surrounding parish -- Lafourche -- illuminates the shift as one of 12 parishes that Landrieu won in 2008 but lost Nov. 4. She defeated Kennedy in Lafourche by 265 votes in 2008, running about 8,000 votes ahead of Obama. This time, she trailed Cassidy by 3,277. Adding Maness' support, her deficit was 8,922.

Landrieu never has surpassed 52.1 percent statewide, and the 2014 midterms always promised difficulty. In the presidential elections of 1996 and 2008, she benefited from strong Democratic turnout, particularly among blacks, that typically wanes in midterm elections. She ran in the 2002 midterms as a moderate who worked with Republican President George W. Bush, who twice carried Louisiana.

But this year, she faces a midterm electorate with the Oval Office occupied by a Democrat who is widely unpopular in her state, a circumstance that led to defeats for Democratic incumbents in North Carolina, Arkansas and Alaska.

"This has been, first and foremost, a referendum on Barack Obama and then only secondarily on Mary Landrieu," said Thibodaux attorney Matthew Block, one of Landrieu's financial backers. "After that, it was just a question of which Republican would catch fire."

Like her defeated colleagues, Landrieu has tried to distance herself from Obama. She touted her energy committee chairmanship as a boon to the oil-rich state and noted her role in increasing Louisiana's royalties from offshore exploration.

In mid-November, after Democrats' national thrashing, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid allowed floor debate on construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline. The procedural vote fell one shy of the 60 needed to allow a final vote. Instead of Landrieu affirming her influence, Republicans crowed that she's of little value with Obama and Reid in charge.

"I don't think folks see her as an ineffective senator," Thibodaux Mayor Tommy Eschete said, "but that demonstrates why a lot of people have a problem with this administration."

Landrieu still highlights her work securing federal aid after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005. That garnered endorsements from several local Republican leaders in 2008, but many of them are now mum. Similarly, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce abandoned Landrieu after endorsing her six years ago, although the powerful lobby stopped short of backing Cassidy.

The senator has focused her television advertising on Cassidy's support for Republican budgets that would curtail Social Security and Medicare benefits. Yet exit polls still show she claimed 36 percent among voters ages 65 and older, and 41 percent among voters ages 45-64. Landrieu managed 50 percent among 18- to 29-year-olds, but that group accounted for an estimated 12 percent of the electorate.

"I thought of Sen. Landrieu as what we used to call a conservative Democrat," said Robert Levy, a district attorney whose jurisdiction includes Lincoln Parish, which also shifted out of Landrieu's win column. "But I think people in this state are wanting even more conservatives, and they want them to be conservative Republicans."

Information for this article was contributed by Melinda Deslatte of The Associated Press.

A Section on 11/30/2014

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