Political party strength in Louisiana

The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Louisiana:

The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:

For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.

The parties are as follows:   American Independent (AI),   Anti-Jacksonian (Anti-J),   Democratic (D),   Democratic-Republican (DR),   Independent (I),   Jackson Democrat (J),   National Republican (NR),   Republican (R),   States' Rights Democratic Party (Dix),   Unionist Democrat (UD),   Whig (W), and   a tie or coalition within a group of elected officials.

Before 2000

YearExecutive officesState LegislatureUnited States CongressElectoral College votes
GovernorLt. GovernorSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralTreasurerAuditor/ ComptrollerAg. and For. Comm.Ins. Comm.Comm. of ElectionsRegister of LandsSuperintendent of EducationState SenateState HouseU.S. Senator (Class II)U.S. Senator (Class III)U.S. House
1803 William C. C. Claiborne (DR)[1] no such office James Brown (DR)
1804 George W. Morgan
1805 John Graham (DR)
1806 James Brown (DR)
1807
1808
1809 Francois Xavier Martin
1810 Thomas B. Robertson (DR) Louis Moreau-Lislet
1811
1812 William C. C. Claiborne (DR) Louis B. Macarty [2] (DR) J. Montegut [2](DR) DR Majority DR Majority 1 DR James Madison and Elbridge Gerry (DR) Y
1813 Francois Xavier Martin(DR) James Brown (DR) Eligius Fromentin (DR)
1814 Jean Baptiste DeJean [2] (DR)
1815 Etienne Mazureau(DR) DR Majority DR Majority
1816 James Monroe and Daniel Tompkins (DR) Y
1817 Jacques Villeré (DR) Etienne Mazureau (DR) Louis Moreau-Lislet (DR) DR Majority DR Majority William C. C. Claiborne (DR)
1818 Silve Arnaud [2] 1 DR
1819 Thomas B. Robertson (DR) DR Majority DR Majority Henry Johnson (DR) [3] James Brown (DR)
1820
1821 Thomas B. Robertson (DR)[4] Pierre Derbigny (Anti-J) Etienne Mazureau (Adams-Clay Rep.) DR Majority DR Majority 1Anti-J
1822
1823 NR Majority NR Majority 2Anti-J, 1J
1824 Isaac Trimble Preston Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny
(Adams-Clay Rep.)
Josiah S. Johnston (Anti-J) John Quincy Adams and John C. Calhoun (Anti-J) Y
Henry S. Thibodaux (NR)[5]
1825 Henry Johnson (NR) NR Majority NR Majority
1826
1827 NR Majority J Majority
1828 Alonzo Morphy Francois Gardere [2] Andrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun (J) Y
1829 Pierre Derbigny (NR/Anti-J)[6] George A. Waggaman [2](Anti-J) 11W, 6D, 1? 26W, 21D, 3? Edward Livingston (J) 1J, 1W, 1Anti-J
Armand Beauvais (NR)[7]
1830 Jacques Dupré (NR)[5] George Eustis, Sr. (W)
1831 Andre B. Roman (W) W Majority W Majority[8]
1832 George A. Waggaman
(Anti-J)
Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren (J) Y
1833 George Eustis, Sr. (W) Etienne Mazureau (W) W Majority D Majority Alexander Porter (Anti-J)
1834
1835 Edward Douglass White, Sr. (W) Martin Blache W Majority W Majority[9]
1836 Robert C. Nicholas (J) Martin Van Buren and Richard Johnson (D) Y
1837 William C. C. Claiborne, Jr. D Majority D Majority Alexander Mouton (J) 2W, 1J
1838 Alfred E. Forstall
1839 Andre B. Roman (W) Henry Adams Bullard 10W, 7D[10] 31W, 17D, 2 No Party 3W
1840 William Pierce [2] (W) William Henry Harrison and John Tyler (W) Y
1841 Christian Roselius (W) William DeBuys [2] (W) 8W, 8D, 1?[11] 26W, 14D, 10? Alexander Barrow (W) Charles Magill Conrad (W) 2W, 1D
1842
1843 Alexandre Mouton (D) Isaac Trimble Preston 9W, 8D 34W, 26D Henry Johnson (W) 4D
1844 James K. Polk and George M. Dallas (D) Y
1845 9D, 8W[11] 34W, 26D Pierre Soulé (D)
1846 Isaac Johnson (D) Charles Gayarré (D) William Augustus Elmore (D) Joseph Marshall Walker [2] (D)
1847 20D, 12W[12] 55D, 43W[12] Solomon W. Downs (D)
1848 17D, 15W 51W, 47D Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore (W) Y
1849 P. E. D. Livaudais[2] (D) Pierre Soulé (D) 3D, 1W
1850 Joseph Marshall Walker (D) Isaac Johnson (D) Charles Greneaux[2] (D) 18D, 14W 54W, 43D
1851 2D, 2W
1852 George C. McWhorter[2] (D) 16D, 16W[13] 53W, 44D Franklin Pierce and William R. King (D) Y
1853 Paul Octave Hébert (D) W. W. Farmer (D) Andrew S. Herron (D) 19W, 17D[14] 50D, 41A[14] Judah P. Benjamin (W) 4D
1854 Isaac Edward Morse (D) 20D, 12W 60D, 37W John Slidell (D)
1855 Robert C. Wickliffe (D) Robert A. Hunter (D) 3D, 1A
1856 Robert C. Wickliffe (D) Charles Homer Mouton (D) Edwin Warren Moïse (D) 18D, 12A, 1 Anti-A, 1 vac. 47D, 41A James Buchanan and John C. Breckinridge (D) Y
1857
1858 23D, 9A 49D, 37A, 1IW, 1 tie
1859 William F. Griffin (D)
1860 Thomas Overton Moore (D) Henry M. Hyams (D) Pliny D. Hardy (D) Thomas Jenkins Semmes (D) B. L. DeFreeze (D) 21D, 6A, 3O, 1I, 1 vac. 59D, 18A, 9O, 9I, 3? John C. Breckinridge and Joseph Lane (D) N
1861 American Civil War
1862 Henry M. Hyams (D)[15] James Madison Wells (R)[16] American Civil War
Thomas Overton Moore (D)[15] George Foster Shepley (M/R)[16]
1863
1864 Benjamin W. Pearce (D)[15] Albert Voorhies (R)[16] F. S. Goode (D) No Electors Counted
Henry Watkins Allen (D)[15][17] Michael Hahn (R)[18][19]
1865
James Madison Wells (UD)[20][21][22] Stanislas Wrotnoski (UD)
1866 vacant Andrew S. Herron (D) Adam Giffin (UD) 32N 98N
1867
Benjamin Flanders (R)[21][23][24] George E. Bovee (R)[25] B. L. Lynch (R) John S. Harris (R) William Pitt Kellogg (R) 3R, 1D, 1 vac.
1868 Joshua Baker (UD)[21][23][26] Oscar Dunn (R) Antoine Dubuclet (R) Horatio Seymour and Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (D) N
Henry C. Warmoth (R)[27]
1869 Simeon Beldon (R) 20R, 16D 56R, 45D 4R, 1 vac.
1870 5R
1871 29R, 7D 74R, 29D, 2 vac. Joseph Rodman West (R)
1872 P. B. S. Pinchback (R)
P. B. S. Pinchback (R)[20] vacant F. J. Herron (R) vacant Ulysses S. Grant and Henry Wilson (R) Y
1873 John McEnery (D)[28] William P. Kellogg (R)[28] Caesar Antoine (R) Jack Wharton (R) Alexander Pope Field (R) [29] [30] 6R
William Pitt Kellogg (R)
1874 P. G. Deslonde (R)
1875 27R, 9D[31] 63D, 47R[32] 3D, 3R
1876 William H. Hunt (R) James B. Eustis (D) 4D, 2R Rutherford B. Hayes and William Almon Wheeler (R) Y
1877 Stephen B. Packard (R)[33] Francis T. Nicholls (D)[34] Louis A. Wiltz (D) Hiram R. Steele (D) 20D, 16R 64D, 42R, 4 vac. William Pitt Kellogg (R)
Francis T. Nicholls (D)
1878 Will A. Strong (D) Horatio Nash Ogden (D) Edward A. Burke (D) 6D
1879 26D, 10R 75D, 16R, 2G, 1I Benjamin F. Jonas (D)
1880 Louis A. Wiltz (D)[6] Samuel D. McEnery (D) Winfield Scott Hancock and William Hayden English (D) N
1881 William A. Robertson (D) James C. Egan (D) 32D, 4R[35] 74D, 24R[36]
Samuel D. McEnery (D)[37] 5D, 1R
1882 George L. Walton (D)
1883 Randall L. Gibson (D)
1884 Clay Knobloch (D) Oscar Arroyo (D) Milton J. Cunningham (D) 31D, 5R[38] 85D, 13R[39] Grover Cleveland and Thomas A. Hendricks (D) Y
1885 James B. Eustis (D)
1886 6D
1887
1888 Francis T. Nicholls (D) James Jeffries (D) Leonard F. Mason (D) Walter H. Rogers (D) William Henry Pipes (D) 33D, 5R 86D, 12R Grover Cleveland and Allen G. Thurman (D) N
1889 5D, 1R
1890
1891 Edward Douglass White (D) 6D
1892 Murphy J. Foster (D) Charles Parlange (D) T. S. Adams (D) Milton J. Cunningham (D) John Pickett(D) 38D 96D, 2R Donelson Caffery (D) Grover Cleveland and Adlai E. Stevenson I (D) Y
1893 Hiram R. Lott (D)
1894 Newton C. Blanchard (D)
1895 Robert H. Snyder (D)
1896 John T. Michel (D) Alexander V. Fournet (D) 32D, 4R, 2P 60D, 24R, 14P William Jennings Bryan and Arthur Sewall (4 votes) (D) and Thomas E. Watson (4 votes) (Pop) N
1897 Samuel D. McEnery (D)
1898
1899
1900 William Wright Heard (D) Albert Estopinal (D) Walter Guion (D) LeDoux E. Smith (D) 39D 98D William Jennings Bryan and Adlai E. Stevenson I (D) N
1901 Murphy J. Foster (D)
1902
1903 H. C. Cage (D) 7D
1904 Newton C. Blanchard (D) Jared Y. Sanders, Sr. (D) James M. Smith (D) James Benjamin Aswell (D) Alton B. Parker and Henry G. Davis (D) N
1905
1906
1907
1908 Jared Y. Sanders, Sr. (D)[40] Paul M. Lambremont (D) O. B. Steele (D) T. H. Harris (D) 41D 114D William Jennings Bryan and John Worth Kern (D) N
1909
1910 John R. Thornton (D)
1911
1912 Luther E. Hall (D) Thomas C. Barret (D) Alvin Hebert (D) Ruffin G. Pleasant (D) LeDoux E. Smith (D) 39D, 2I 118D Woodrow Wilson and Thomas Marshall (D) Y
1913 Joseph E. Ransdell (D) 8D
1914
1915 W. F. Millsaps (D) Robert F. Broussard (D) 7D, 1 Prog.
1916 Ruffin G. Pleasant (D) Fernand Mouton (D) James J. Bailey (D) Adolphe V. Coco (D) Henry Hunsicker (D) 36D, 5 Prog. 106D, 12 Prog.
1917 Walter Guion (D)
1918
1919 Edward James Gay (D) 8D
1920 John M. Parker (D) Hewitt Bouanchaud (D) Howell Morgan (D) 41D 118D James M. Cox and Franklin D. Roosevelt (D) N
1921 Edwin S. Broussard (D)
1922
1923
1924 Henry L. Fuqua (D)[6] Delos R. Johnson (D) Percy Saint (D) 39D 101D John W. Davis and Charles W. Bryan (D) N
Oramel H. Simpson (D)
1925
1926 Philip H. Gilbert (D)
Oramel H. Simpson (D)[20]
1927
1928 Huey Long (D)[41][42] Paul N. Cyr (D) Al Smith and Joseph Taylor Robinson (D) N
1929
1930
1931 Lucille May Grace (D) Vacant [43]
1932 Alvin Olin King (D)[20][44] John B. Fournet (D) E. A. Conway (D) Gaston L. Porterlie (D) Huey Long (D)[6] Franklin D. Roosevelt and John Nance Garner (D) Y
Oscar K. Allen (D)[6]
1933 John H. Overton (D)
1934
1935 James A. Noe (D)
1936 James A. Noe (D)[20] Earl Long (D) A. P. Tugwell (D) Rose McConnell Long (D)
Richard W. Leche (D)[45]
1937 Allen J. Ellender (D) [6]
1938
1939 Coleman Lindsey (D) James B. Ellison (D)
Earl K. Long (D)[20] Lessley P. Gardiner (D)
1940 Sam H. Jones (D) Marc M. Mouton (D) Jack P. F. Gremillion (D) Eugene Stanley (D) John E. Coxe (D) Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry Wallace (D) Y
1941
1942
1943
1944 Jimmie H. Davis (D) J. Emile Verret (D) Wade O. Martin, Jr. (D) Fred S. LeBlanc (D) Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman (D) Y
1945
1946
1947
1948 Earl Long (D) Bill Dodd (D) Bolivar Edwards Kemp, Jr. (D) Shelby M. Jackson (D) William C. Feazel (D) [2] Strom Thurmond and Fielding L. Wright (Dix) N
1949 Russell B. Long (D)
1950
1951
1952 Robert F. Kennon (D) C. E. "Cap" Barham (D) Fred S. LeBlanc (D) Allison Kolb (D) Dave L. Pearce (D) Ellen Bryan Moore (D) Adlai Stevenson and John Sparkman (D) N
1953
1954
1955
1956 Earl Long (D) Lether Frazar (D) Jack P. F. Gremillion (D) Bill Dodd (D) Sidney McCrory (D) Lucille May Grace (D) Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (R) Y
1957
1958
1959
1960 Jimmie Davis (D) Taddy Aycock (D) Roy R. Theriot (D) Dave L. Pearce (D) Rufus D. Hayes (D) Douglas Fowler(D) Ellen Bryan Moore (D) John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson (D) Y
1961
1962
1963
1964 John McKeithen (D)[46] Dudley Guglielmo (D) Bill Dodd (D) 103D, 2R[47] Barry Goldwater and William E. Miller (R) N
1965
1966 102D, 3R[48]
1967 101D, 4R[49]
1968 Mary Evelyn Parker (D) 105D George Wallace and Curtis LeMay (I) N
1969
1970 38D, 1R[50] 104D, 1R[51]
1971
1972 Edwin Edwards (D) Jimmy Fitzmorris (D) William J. Guste (D) Sherman A. Bernard (D) Louis J. Michot (D) 39D 101D, 4R Elaine Edwards (D) [2] Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew (R) Y
1973 J. Bennett Johnston (D) 7D, 1R
1974 Appointed Position
1975 6D, 2R
1976 Paul Hardy (D) Gil Dozier (D) Appointed Position J. Kelly Nix (D) 38D, 1R[52] Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale (D) Y
1977 99D, 6R[53]
1978 98D, 7R[54]
1979 5D, 3R
1980 Dave Treen (R) Robert "Bobby" Freeman (D) James H. "Jim" Brown (D) Bob Odom (D) Jerry Fowler (D) 39D 95D, 10R[55] Ronald Reagan and George Bush (R) Y
1981 6D, 2R
1982
1983
1984 Edwin Edwards (D) Thomas Clausen (D) 37D, 2R[56] 93D, 11R, 1I
1985
1986
1987 John Breaux (D) 5D, 3R
1988 Buddy Roemer (D) Paul Hardy (R) W. Fox McKeithen (D) Mary Landrieu (D) Douglas D. Green (D) Appointed Position 34D, 5R 88D, 16R, 1I George Bush and Dan Quayle (R) Y
1989 4D, 4R
W. Fox McKeithen (R)[57]
1990
1991 Buddy Roemer (R)[58]
1992 Edwin Edwards (D) Melinda Schwegmann (D) Richard Ieyoub (D) James H. "Jim" Brown (D) 33D, 6R 87D, 17R, 1I Bill Clinton and Al Gore (D) Y
1993 4D, 3R
1994
1995 5R, 2D
1996 Mike Foster (R) Kathleen Blanco (D) Ken Duncan (D) 26D, 13R 78D, 27R
1997 Mary Landrieu (D)
1998
1999
YearGovernorLt. GovernorSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralTreasurerAuditor/ ComptrollerAg. and For. Comm.Ins. Comm.Comm. of ElectionsRegistrar of LandsSuperintendent of EducationState SenateState HouseU.S. Senator (Class II)U.S. Senator (Class III)U.S. HouseElectoral College votes
Executive officesState LegislatureUnited States Congress

2000–present

YearExecutive officesState LegislatureUnited States CongressElectoral College votes
GovernorLt. GovernorSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralTreasurerAg. and For. Comm.Ins. Comm.State SenateState HouseU.S. Senator (Class II)U.S. Senator (Class III)U.S. House
2000 Mike Foster (R) Kathleen Blanco (D) W. Fox McKeithen (R)[59] Richard Ieyoub (D) John Kennedy (D) Bob Odom (D) Jim Brown (D)[24] 26D, 13R 74D, 31R Mary Landrieu (D) John Breaux (D) 5R, 2D George W. Bush and Dick Cheney Y
2001 J. Robert Wooley[60]
2002
2003 4R, 3D
2004 Kathleen Blanco (D) Mitch Landrieu (D)[61] Charles Foti (D) 24D, 15R 66D, 37R, 2I
2005 David Vitter (R) 5R, 2D
2006 Al Ater (D)[62] Jim Donelon (R)
2007 Jay Dardenne (R)
2008 Bobby Jindal (R) Buddy Caldwell (D) John Kennedy (R)[63] Michael G. Strain (R) 23D, 16R 53D, 50R, 2I 4R, 3D[64] John McCain and Sarah Palin (R) N
2009 53D, 50R, 2I[65] 6R, 1D
2010 Scott Angelle (D/R)[66]
2011 Jay Dardenne (R) Tom Schedler (R)[67] Buddy Caldwell (R)[68] 22R, 17D[69] 55R, 46D, 4I[70]
2012 24R, 15D 58R, 45D, 2I Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan (R) N
2013 5R, 1D
2014 26R, 13D 59R, 44D, 2I
2015 Bill Cassidy (R)
2016 John Bel Edwards (D) Billy Nungesser (R) Jeff Landry (R) 25R, 14D 61R, 42D, 2I Donald Trump and Mike Pence (R) Y
2017 Ron Henson (R)[71] 61R, 41D, 3I John Kennedy (R)
2018 Kyle Ardoin (R)[72] John Schroder (R)
2019 61R, 39D, 5I
2020 27R, 12D 68R, 35D, 2I Donald Trump and Mike Pence (R) N
2021 4R, 2 vacant
YearGovernorLt. GovernorSecretary of StateAttorney GeneralTreasurerAg. and For. Comm.Ins. Comm.State SenateState HouseU.S. Senator (Class II)U.S. Senator (Class III)U.S. HouseElectoral College votes
Executive officesState LegislatureUnited States Congress

Notes

  1. From 1804 to 1812, what would later become the State of Louisiana was known as the Territory of Orleans. The contemporary Louisiana Territory was to the north and did not include modern Louisiana.
  2. Appointed by Governor.
  3. Resigned to become governor.
  4. Resigned to take a seat on the United States District Court for the District of Louisiana.
  5. As president of the state Senate, acted as governor for unexpired term.
  6. Died in office.
  7. As president of the state Senate, acted as governor until his term as Senate president expired.
  8. Elected a Democrat, Alexandre Mouton, as a minority-party Speaker.
  9. Elected a Democrat, Alcée Louis la Branche, as a minority-party Speaker.
  10. May have been 11W, 6D.
  11. A Whig, Felix Garcia, was elected as Senate President.
  12. With the Constitution of 1845 going into effect, each legislator elected in 1846 only served a one-year term.
  13. With the Lt. Governor, Jean Baptiste Plauché, being a Democrat, he broke the tie and the Democrats organized the chamber.
  14. With the Constitution of 1852 going into effect, each legislator elected that year only served a one-year term.
  15. Of Confederate-held territory in Louisiana.
  16. Of Union-held territory in Louisiana.
  17. Removed from office after the Union took control of Louisiana following the surrender of the Confederacy; moved to Mexico City.
  18. Governor of Union-held territory in Louisiana.
  19. Resigned to take a seat in the United States Senate, but was denied his seat, Louisiana having not yet been readmitted to the Union.
  20. As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term.
  21. Reconstruction-era governor subordinate to U.S. military rule.
  22. Removed from office by General Philip Sheridan, who held Wells accountable for the unstable political conditions stemming from the granting of suffrage to blacks.
  23. Appointed military governor.
  24. Resigned.
  25. Was removed from office by Governor Warmoth for misfeasance
  26. When Louisiana was readmitted to the Union, Baker and General Winfield Scott Hancock, who had appointed him, were removed from power in the state.
  27. Impeached but never convicted; however, Warmoth was still removed from office with 35 days remaining in his term. All charges were later expunged.
  28. The State Returning Board declared McEnery the winner over William P. Kellogg in 1872, but a second election board was formed that declared Kellogg the winner. Both men were sworn into office on the same day by opposing legislatures. After armed skirmishes erupted, President Ulysses S. Grant stepped in, declaring Kellogg the winner on September 20, 1873.
  29. As mentioned in the gubernatorial note, there were two competing legislatures sworn in: one Democratic, and one Republican.
  30. As mentioned in the gubernatorial note, there were two competing legislatures sworn in: one Democratic, and one Republican.
  31. To resolve the conflict with the two competing legislatures in what was known as the Wheeler Compromise, control of the Senate was given to the Republicans by this margin.
  32. To resolve the conflict with the two competing legislatures in what was known as the Wheeler Compromise, control of the House was given to the Democrats by this margin.
  33. Packard was the Radical Republican candidate for governor in 1876. In a disputed outcome, both Packard and his Democratic opponent, Francis T. Nicholls, were inaugurated. Nicholls had led in the balloting by eight thousand votes, but the Republican-controlled State Returning Board cited fraud and declared Packard the victor. Pinchback, however, refused to support Packard and endorsed Nicholls.
  34. Won the 1876 election over Stephen B. Packard, but the Republican-controlled State Returning Board declared Packard the winner. Nicholls took office anyway and assembled a government that was eventually recognized by the federal government as the proper state government.
  35. Starting with this election, senators were all elected at the same time to 4-year terms.
  36. Starting with this election, representatives were all elected at the same time to 4-year terms.
  37. As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term and was later elected in his own right.
  38. Due to a state constitutional amendment, elections to the legislature were moved up to April every fourth year.
  39. Due to a state constitutional amendment, elections to the legislature were moved up to April every fourth year.
  40. Elected to the United States Senate but refused the seat, choosing to remain governor.
  41. Impeached on charges of bribery and corruption, but not convicted.
  42. Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate; was elected to the Senate in 1930, but did not take office until 1932, preferring to remain in office as governor.
  43. Governor Huey Long was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1930 but delayed taking office until 1932 so his Lieutenant Governor, Paul N. Cyr, would not take over as Governor
  44. Paul N. Cyr was lieutenant governor under Long and stated that he would succeed Long when Long left for the Senate, but Long demanded Cyr forfeit his office. King, as president of the state Senate, was elevated to lieutenant governor and later governor.
  45. Resigned due to a fraud scandal; was later convicted of mail fraud and served five years in prison. He was pardoned by President Harry S. Truman in 1953.
  46. First governor elected to consecutive terms after the 1921 constitution was amended in 1966 to allow governors to serve two consecutive terms.
  47. Morley Hudson and Taylor O'Hearn were the first Republicans elected to the Legislature in the 20th Century."Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 4, 2013. Retrieved July 8, 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  48. Roderick Miller was elected in a special election
  49. Edward Clark Gaudin was elected in a special election
  50. A.C. Clemons switched parties from Democrat to Republican, becoming the first Republican in the State Senate in the 20th Century.
  51. James Sutterfield was elected in a special election from Orleans Parish, becoming the first Republican to do so in the 20th Century.
  52. Edwards Barham became the first Republican elected to the State Senate in the 20th Century.
  53. A.J. McNamara and Lane A. Carson switched parties from Democrat to Republican.
  54. Michael F. Thompson switched parties from Democrat to Republican.
  55. Ed Scogin switched parties from Democrat to Republican just before the start of the new session.
  56. Ken Hollis was elected as a Republican, and Ken Osterberger switched parties after the election from Democrat to Republican.
  57. Incumbent Democrat McKeithen switched parties in 1989.
  58. Was elected as a Democrat in 1987 but switched parties to Republican in 1991.
  59. Died July 15, 2005
  60. Acting Commissioner from 2000 to 2003. Resigned February 15, 2006.
  61. Resigned May 3, 2010 to become Mayor of New Orleans.
  62. Acting Secretary of State through his entire tenure.
  63. Kennedy switched parties from Democratic to Republican on August 27, 2007.
  64. Republican Rep. Bobby Jindal and Richard H. Baker resigned in early 2008 to take other positions. Republican Steve Scalise and Democrat Don Cazayoux won special elections in May to succeed them, respectively.
  65. Michael L. Jackson switched from Democrat to Independent after the 2008 legislative session before a run for the United States House of Representatives elections in Louisiana, 2008
  66. Appointed Lieutenant Governor on May 12, 2010 as a Democrat, Angelle switched parties and became a Republican on October 26. His term as Lieutenant Governor ended on November 22, 2010.
  67. Resigned May 8, 2018.
  68. Caldwell switched parties from Democratic to Republican on February 11, 2011.
  69. Combination of special elections and party switches flip chamber to Republican control prior to the legislative session.
  70. Six Democratic representatives switched parties in the lead-up to the 2011 legislative session, giving the Republicans the majority in the chamber. One Republican representative switched to Independent.
  71. Acting Treasurer from January 9, 2018 to November 18, 2017.
  72. Acting Secretary of State from May 9 to May 23, 2018. Confirmed Secretary of State from then onward.

See also

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