W. Fox McKeithen

W. Fox McKeithen

Walter Fox McKeithen (September 8, 1946 – July 16, 2005) served five terms as Secretary of State of Louisiana between 1988 and 2005. He is best remembered for merging the state's election divisions into one department and for the promotion of historical preservation.

on of a governor

He was born Walter Fox McKeithen in Columbia, to John Julian McKeithen and the former Marjorie H. Funderburk. McKeithen graduated from Caldwell Parish High School as class president in 1964, the same year that his father was elected governor of Louisiana. He went to Louisiana Tech University in Ruston in Lincoln Parish to obtain a bachelor's degree in history and social studies.

After graduating from Louisiana Tech, McKeithen returned to Caldwell Parish High School as a civics teacher and coach. He also set up three businesses in Caldwell Parish.

Democrat for secretary of state, 1987

In 1983, McKeithen was elected as a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives as a Democrat. In 1987, he was elected as secretary of state for his first term. In the jungle primary, McKeithen led with 462,965 votes (34 percent) to 365,151 (27 percent) for his principal challenger and fellow Democrat, Mike Cutshaw. Two Republican candidates shared 13 percent of the vote, and two other Democrats had a combined 19 percent. Three "no party" candidates polled 8 percent. In the general election, McKeithen only narrowly prevailed over Cutshaw, 490,190 (51 percent) to 467,582 (49 percent).

Republican for Secretary of State, 1991

Two years later, he switched to the Republican Party, despite opposition from his father and daughter, Marjorie A. McKeithen (born 1965). McKeithen faced an even closer race in 1991. Two Democrats, Mary Chehardy (later a Republican) and Doug Schmidt, challenged him. McKeithen led in the jungle primary, with 629,237 votes (46 percent) to Schmidt's 387,243 (28 percent.) Close behind was Chehardy with 357,173 (26 percent). Schmidt, who used the expression "Get the Fox out of the Henhouse," advanced to the general election with McKeithen. McKeithen won the race by 9,151 votes, a margin similar to David C. Treen's plurality over Democrat Louis Lambert in the 1979 gubernatorial contest. Returns gave McKeithen 827,506 votes to Schmidt's 818,355.

In subsequent elections, McKeithen would often be endorsed by the Democrats and worked well with members from both parties. His folksy manner meant that he was generally popular with voters despite adopting such unpopular positions as raising the pay of elected officials. In his last race in 2003, he even carried the endorsement of organized labor, which rarely supports Republicans.

McKeithen is best remembered for combining the elections department with the secretary of state's position in January 2004. When voting machines were slow to arrive in New Orleans in the 2004 elections, he helped deliver them himself. He also helped to renovate and restore the Old State Capital.

The premature obituary

After a fall in the garage of his home in Baton Rouge in February 2005, he was paralyzed from the neck down and was hospitalized for months. McKeithen returned to a Baton Rouge hospital on June 21 with a serious infection caused from the fall. He resigned the office on July 15 2005, and died just a few hours later. He left his state pension to his former wife, Yvonne Y. McKeithen.

Alan Ray Ater, a former state representative from Ferriday in Concordia Parish became the acting secretary of state on McKeithen's death by virtue of being the first deputy secretary of state. Ater did not seek the position in the September 30, 2006, special election held to fill the remaining fifteen months of McKeithen's term. Late in 2006, Ater hence turned over the office to Republican state Senator Jay Dardenne (pronounced DAR DEN) of Baton Rouge. Dardenne was declared the winner of the special election after the runner-up candidate, outgoing Democratic state Senator Francis C. Heitmeier of New Orleans withdrew from a special election runoff which would have coincided with the November 7 national general election. In the September 30 election, Dardenne led with 30 percent of the vote. He ran up large margins in the greater Baton Rouge area and finished second in other portions of the state. Heitmeier, who ran best in liberal and labor areas of the state, trailed with 28 percent.

A third candidate, the conservative former Louisiana Republican State Chairman Mike Francis of Crowley in Acadia Parish, finished with 26 percent of the ballots. He ran well in Acadiana and his native north Louisiana -- he is originally from Jena, the seat of La Salle Parish -- but trailed badly in Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and the Florida Parishes. Francis announced that he would contest the position against Dardenne for a regular four-year term in 2007. When a Dardenne-Heitmier race seemed imminent, Francis said that he could support neither man.

Fox McKeithen's legacy according to John Maginnis

Political writer John Maginnis offered the following analysis of McKeithen's career:

"Though born in the first year of the Baby Boom, McKeithen more belonged to the bygone era of Louisiana politics, of stump speeches, election tickets and country hams given to voters. He grew up in that world of his father, former Governor John McKeithen, and of former Governor Earl Long, who indeed was young Fox's "Uncle Earl".

"McKeithen was the last living link to that colorful era, and perhaps Uncle Earl wouldn't mind us calling Fox another of the 'last of the red hot poppas.'

"He was one of the last of a few other things, such as North Louisiana politicians at the state level, going back to when governors hailed from Winnfield and Beech Springs and his hometown of Columbia.

"McKeithen was the most consistently successful Republican elected official, the only one holding statewide office in state government.

His daddy called it "crazy" when Fox became a Republican midway during his first term as secretary of state, and Big John wasn't far off. His next election, against Democrat Doug Schmidt in 1991, was his closest. The top Republican on the ballot was David Duke, and McKeithen was nearly buried in Edwin Edwards´ Democratic landslide. He survived by 9,000 votes, partly due to the support of the Morial political organization in New Orleans, a returned favor going back to John McKeithen's appointing Dutch Morial a state judge in the 1960s, the future mayor's first political office.

"It was his own family ties that caused Fox McKeithen to campaign for his daughter Marjorie, a Democrat, in her near-miss challenge to Congressman Richard Baker, R-Baton Rouge, in 1998. Some GOP officials wanted to censure Fox, but since McKeithens were winning elections in this state before Republicans were, they got over it. He won his last two elections easily.

"In a final act of non-partisanship, hours before he died, he resigned and turned over his office to his first assistant and longtime friend, Democrat Al Ater.

"Fox McKeithen came from a time when friendship and kinship counted for more than party, and one wonders if those days haven't passed with him."

References

* [http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050716/NEWS/50716001 "Shreveport Times" report on death July 16 2005]
* [http://www.sec.state.la.us/admin/biography.htm Biography as Secretary of State]
* [http://www.bayoubuzz.com/articles.aspx?aid=4515]

http://www.sos.louisiana.gov:8090/cgibin/?rqstyp=elcms2&rqsdta=101991


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