Everything about Richard Baker Politician totally explained
Richard Hugh Baker (born
May 22 1948), an
American politician,
is a
lobbyist and former
Republican member of the
United States House of Representatives, having represented the 6th District of
Louisiana from 1987 to 2008. The district is based in the state capital,
Baton Rouge, and includes much of that city's metropolitan area.
Early life and career
The son of a
Methodist minister, Baker was born in
New Orleans and graduated from
Louisiana State University in
Baton Rouge. He stayed in Baton Rouge after graduation and founded a
real estate agency there. In 1971, just a year out of school, he was elected to the
Louisiana House of Representatives as a
Democrat from a predominantly
blue-collar district in Baton Rouge and served eight terms, having eventually become chairman of the Transportation Committee.
Congressional career
In 1986, Baker switched to the Republicans because of a long-running feud with
Governor Edwin Edwards. Soon afterwards, 6th District Republican Congressman
Henson Moore, announced that he was running for the
Senate seat being vacated by the retiring
Russell B. Long. (Moore was defeated in that race by 7th District Democratic Congressman
John Breaux). Moore encouraged Baker to run for the seat. Baker (51 percent) defeated Democrats, Tommy Hudson (45 percent) and Willis Blackwell (4 percent). He was reelected without opposition in
1988 and
1990. Baker quickly compiled a very conservative voting record, in marked contrast to his Democratic roots, as evidenced by Baker's lifetime rating of 0.5 from
Americans for Democratic Action, a progressive think tank.
In 1992, however, Louisiana lost a congressional seat as a result of
reapportionment after the 1990
Census.
Clyde C. Holloway of
Forest Hill in
Rapides Parish, who had represented the
Alexandria-based 8th District, was placed into Baker's district. Holloway had been elected along with Baker in 1986. The two Republicans had been the fourth and fifth members of their party to represent Louisiana in Congress since
Reconstruction, but the second and third Republicans to win undisputed victories over Democratic opponents. Holloway led in the
jungle primary with 37 percent. Baker received 33 percent and Democrat
Ned Randolph, then the
mayor of Alexandria, received 30 percent. In the November
general election, Holloway won fifteen of the district's seventeen. Baker, however, crushed Holloway in the two largest parishes,
Livingston Parish and his home base, East Baton Rouge Parish. This was enough to defeat Holloway by some 2,700 votes overall.
After being unopposed in 1994 and 1996, Baker faced
Marjorie McKeithen,
daughter of longtime Republican Louisiana Secretary of State
Fox McKeithen and granddaughter of former Democratic Governor
John McKeithen. Court-ordered
redistricting before the 1996 elections had drawn considerably more blacks into the district than Baker had previously represented. Amid a nationwide backlash against Republicans for what was seen as overzealous behavior during the
impeachment of
Bill Clinton, Baker just barely held onto his seat by about one thousand votes. He had a much easier time in 2000, winning 68 percent of the vote. Redistricting took some Democratic voters out of his district, including part of
Pointe Coupee Parish, which helped Baker win against no major-party opposition in 2002 and two weak Democrats in 2004. In 2006 his only challenger was Libertarian Richard M. Fontanesi, and Baker won with 82% of the vote.
Baker was a ranking member of the
House Financial Services Capital Markets Subcommittee, and a member of the
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee and
United States House Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
Hurricane Katrina
According to
The Wall Street Journal, Baker caused some controversy in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina when he was overheard telling
lobbyists: "We finally cleaned up
public housing in New Orleans. We couldn't do it, but
God did." Baker, a long time critic of the Housing Authority of New Orleans and the living conditions in New Orleans public housing, confirmed the quote and explained that his comment reflected his hope that the storm will provide an opportunity to move New Orleans's poor from decrepit public housing and into clean and safe housing.
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In the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Baker proposed a plan to rebuild Louisiana. Commonly known as "The Baker Plan," Baker introduced legislation to create the Louisiana Recovery Corporation. The LRC would have been initially financed by the issuance of federal government bonds and would use the funds to buy properties from homeowners and business in the most devastated areas of the state. The LRC would then clean the property and sell clean titles to developers, who would then redevelop the properties in accordance with plans developed by the local governments and civic groups. The proceeds of the sales to the developers would have been used to repay the bonds used to initial finance the LRC, paying the government back for their initial loan. The homeowners would have had the option to accept the buyout and walk away, accept the buyout and retain an option to return, or refuse to sell and repair their property themselves. On the advice of Recovery Tsar
Don Powell, President Bush killed the LRC when he publicly announced his opposition to the bill.
Resignation
On
January 15,
2008, Baker announced his intention to resign from Congress to take a lobbying position with the Managed Funds Association. He left office on
February 2,
2008. This triggered a
special election.
On February 2, the day of Baker's resignation from Congress, he and former congressional opponent Ned Randolph were inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in
Winnfield.
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