Five Louisiana secretary of state candidates offer views in forum

(The Center Square) — Five candidates for Secretary of State laid out their positions on elections and business services on Thursday, offering competing visions for improving the agency.

The forum, hosted by the Public Affairs Research Council, featured Democratic candidates Gwen Collins-Greenup and former Orleans Parish Criminal Clerk of the Court Arthur Morrell and Republicans Nancy Landry, first assistant Secretary of State, Public Service Commissioner Mike Francis and business owner Brandon Trosclair.

Republican House Speaker Clay Schexnayder was unable to attend.

Several candidates highlighted a lack of public confidence in elections and low voter turnout as reasons to improve the system, though they offered different approaches.

Trosclair, owner of numerous businesses known for successfully challenging the Biden administration’s vaccine mandate at the U.S. Supreme Court, noted that Louisiana is the only state that doesn’t audit elections and was the only candidate to push for exclusively paper hand-counted ballots.

- Advertisement -

“I think we have terrible elections in Louisiana,” he said. “I’m definitely a proponent of hand-marked and hand-counted.”

Trosclair was also the only candidate to answer “no” to whether President Biden won the 2020 election.

Collins-Greenup questioned whether the state has “the infrastructure to support a hand-counted paper ballot system” she said has “not been proven” to reduce risk of fraud.

Collins-Greenup, Landry, Morrell and Francis would prefer to shift to an electronic voting system that produces an auditable paper trail.

“I think our systems are fine right now,” Francis said, though he said clerks of courts have highlighted issues with the age of the current voting machines and securing parts to repair them.

Francis, who touted his experience as a business leader, said he would hold a technology conference with state officials, local clerks of courts and election personnel to vet available technology and select an electronic system that works best for locals.

- Advertisement -

“I’m going to listen to the people at the bottom,” he said.

Morrell, who has overseen about 100 elections in Orleans Parish over 16 years, said he “would like to see something similar to what we have” now.

“In Orleans, we’ve had very few machines break down,” he said.

All of the candidates agreed the Secretary of State does a fair good job with business services, though Landry acknowledged the state’s website needs an update. Francis suggested the department could collaborate with business leaders to “see if they could make it more business friendly.”

Collins-Greenup suggested the department could do more to encourage businesses to report fraud and make the website American Disabilities Act compliant, while Morrell would send state officials to business conventions to recruit more businesses to relocate to Louisiana.

“It’s important we have some sort of visibility outside this state,” he said.

Other topics included consolidating museum management which is currently split between the Secretary of State and Lieutenant Governor’s office and early voting.

“Seven days is enough for people who know they’re going to be out of town to vote early,” Landry said. “It’s very, very expensive and the parishes have to share the cost of that.”

Trosclair also opposed expanding early voting, though he said Election Day should be a state holiday to ensure people have an opportunity to cast a ballot. Morrell “would like to see voting on Sundays,” while Collins-Green favored expanded early voting “if we have the infrastructure available.”

Francis also would “strongly support extending the early voting.”

Under Louisiana’s majority vote primary, all candidates will appear on the same ballot on Oct. 14. A candidate can win outright with more than 50% of the vote, but if that doesn’t happen the top two vote recipients head to a Nov. 18 general election.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

From Doctor To Patient: Lessons In Self-Advocacy From A Physician

Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah’s life took a turn when a...

Chernobyl doctor found not reliable to testify in cancer case

Lawyers hoping to convince juries that diesel exhaust causes...

Foxx: Higher ed ruling saves American taxpayers $559B

(The Center Square) – To the official termination of...

Advocates call for repeal of FACE Act over unequal enforcement concerns

(The Center Square) - After anti-ICE protests erupted in...

Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking

A federal judge won’t fully end a class action...

Illinois lawmakers want to end foreign language requirement in high schools

(The Center Square) – An Illinois lawmaker says removing...

Forbes: A record 989 billionaires are in the U.S., 88 are in Texas

The U.S. has the most billionaires in the world...

More like this
Related

From Doctor To Patient: Lessons In Self-Advocacy From A Physician

Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah’s life took a turn when a...

Chernobyl doctor found not reliable to testify in cancer case

Lawyers hoping to convince juries that diesel exhaust causes...

Foxx: Higher ed ruling saves American taxpayers $559B

(The Center Square) – To the official termination of...