Professional Career: Insurance agent, 1990-93; Contractor, 1993-present.
Political Career: Jackson Parish Police Jury, 1972-87; President, 1980-87; LA House of Reps., 1988-2002.
Ethnicity: White/Caucasian
Religion: Baptist
Family: Married (Nancy); 3 children
The congressman from the 5th District is Rodney Alexander, who was elected as a Democrat in 2002 and switched parties to become a Republican in 2004. He attended Louisiana Tech and won election to the Jackson Parish police jury in 1972 at the age of 25. In 1988, he was elected to the state House, where he chaired the Health and Welfare Committee. Although he was a Democrat then, he was pro-gun rights and anti-abortion rights, and he favored prayer in the public schools. When the 5th District seat opened, the primary turned out to be a regional contest. Alexander led with 29% of the vote, carrying three hill counties in his legislative district and five African-American parishes along the Mississippi. Republican Lee Fletcher, outgoing Rep. John Cooksey’s chief of staff for five years, was second with 25%, carrying Monroe’s Ouachita Parish and three nearby parishes. Close behind, with 23%, was Republican Clyde Holloway, a former congressman from the old 8th District. Alexander attacked Fletcher as a Washington insider and contrasted his “blue jeans” supporters with Fletcher’s “blue blood” contributors. Alexander squeaked by with a 50.3%-49.7% victory, a margin of 974 votes. He carried two hill parishes, all of the Mississippi River parishes and all but one of the parishes in the southern end of the district. Read More
The congressman from the 5th District is Rodney Alexander, who was elected as a Democrat in 2002 and switched parties to become a Republican in 2004. He attended Louisiana Tech and won election to the Jackson Parish police jury in 1972 at the age of 25. In 1988, he was elected to the state House, where he chaired the Health and Welfare Committee. Although he was a Democrat then, he was pro-gun rights and anti-abortion rights, and he favored prayer in the public schools. When the 5th District seat opened, the primary turned out to be a regional contest. Alexander led with 29% of the vote, carrying three hill counties in his legislative district and five African-American parishes along the Mississippi. Republican Lee Fletcher, outgoing Rep. John Cooksey’s chief of staff for five years, was second with 25%, carrying Monroe’s Ouachita Parish and three nearby parishes. Close behind, with 23%, was Republican Clyde Holloway, a former congressman from the old 8th District. Alexander attacked Fletcher as a Washington insider and contrasted his “blue jeans” supporters with Fletcher’s “blue blood” contributors. Alexander squeaked by with a 50.3%-49.7% victory, a margin of 974 votes. He carried two hill parishes, all of the Mississippi River parishes and all but one of the parishes in the southern end of the district.
In the House, Alexander was a Democratic maverick who voted for the Republican’s prescription drug bill in 2003 and co-sponsored legislation to prohibit desecration of the flag and to bar gay marriages. Still, Democratic leaders worked to keep Alexander in the fold and helped him to raise money for his re-election. Alexander repaid these kindnesses by waiting until the last minute before the 2004 election filing deadline to switch parties, declaring himself a Republican. He claimed that had he remained a Democrat, the candidacy of Democrat Zelma Blakes, an African-American and a political neophyte, would draw votes away from him and leave him vulnerable to attacks from both the left and the right. His erstwhile Democratic friends were not sympathetic. “I’ve seen some cowardly things in my career, but this is the worst,” said Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu. Louisiana Democrats filed suit to reopen the qualifying period, but the state appeals court rejected their case. Alexander promised to return campaign contributions from Democratic colleagues, but failed to do so until the donors complained.
National Republicans quickly embraced Alexander. Democrats, meanwhile, coalesced around Blakes. But the election turned out to be an afterthought for both parties. It was overshadowed by other major happenings in Louisiana politics that year, including two hotly contested open seat House races and a serious contest for the Senate seat of retiring Democrat John Breaux. Alexander won 59% of the vote, to 25% for Blakes and 16% for former state Rep. Jock Scott, a Republican. He carried all of the parishes except for two on the riverfront near Baton Rouge.
Although Alexander and House Republican leaders insisted that they had made no deal before his switch, as soon as he arrived back in Washington as a Republican in January 2005 he got seats on the sought-after Appropriations Committee and its Agriculture Subcommittee, where he quickly secured funding for several road projects and a transportation and parking facility for the University of Louisiana at Monroe. He said that his views remained the same, but his voting record became markedly more conservative. He was among the first lawmakers to join the House Tea Party Caucus in 2010.
Alexander has bucked Republican conservatives trying to end the use of earmarks in appropriation bills. He continued to secure money for the low-income areas of his district, including rural development grants. “I don’t want my voters to be neglected,” he said. In 2010, according to watchdog groups, he secured more than $65 million in solo and collaborative earmarks—the most in his state’s delegation and 29th overall among House members. Alexander opposed President Obama’s $787 billion economic stimulus bill in 2009, not because it spent too much as other Republicans charged, but because it didn’t contain enough for transportation infrastructure. And he only reluctantly supported the House Republican earmark ban in the 112th Congress (2011-12).
Alexander improved his relationship with Landrieu, a fellow appropriator, when they worked together on the Next Autoworks project in Monroe. Also in recent years, Alexander has lobbied to end the trade embargo of Cuba, which could benefit Louisiana rice farmers.
In 2008, Alexander ran for re-election unopposed and in 2010 won with 79% of the vote. The increase in the district’s African-American population to 35% could pose some redistricting jeopardy for Alexander, who is white, though having key state lawmakers from his region overseeing the redistricting process should help.
National Journal’s rating system is an objective method of analyzing voting. The liberal score means that the lawmaker’s votes were more liberal than that percentage of his colleagues’ votes. The conservative score means his votes were more conservative than that percentage of his colleagues’ votes. The composite score is an average of a lawmaker’s six issue-based scores. See all NJ Voting
More Liberal
More Conservative
2012
2011
2010
Economic
43
(L) : 55 (C)
23
(L) : 73 (C)
12
(L) : 87 (C)
Social
45
(L) : 54 (C)
44
(L) : 55 (C)
(L) : 85 (C)
Foreign
20
(L) : 73 (C)
37
(L) : 63 (C)
29
(L) : 68 (C)
Composite
37.7
(L) : 62.3 (C)
35.5
(L) : 64.5 (C)
16.8
(L) : 83.2 (C)
Interest Group Ratings
The vote ratings by 10 special interest groups provide insight into a lawmaker’s general ideology and the degree to which he or she agrees with the group’s point of view. Some organizations provide just one combined rating for 2009 and 2010, the two sessions of the 111th Congress. About the interest groups.
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