Mike Francis (politician)

For the musician, see Mike Francis (musician).
Mike Francis
State Chairman of the Louisiana Republican Party
In office
1994–2000
Preceded by William Dudley "Dud" Lastrapes, Jr.
Succeeded by Francis Charles "Chuck" McMains, Jr.
Personal details
Born Michael Gordon Francis
(1946-11-27) November 27, 1946
Jena, La Salle Parish, Louisiana, USA
Spouse(s) Divorced from Diana Istre Francis
Occupation Businessman
High-powered businessman Mike Francis proved more adept as Republican party chairman than as a candidate for the Louisiana State Senate in 1996 and for Secretary of State of Louisiana in 2006, when he was defeated by fellow Republican Jay Dardenne.

Michael Gordon Francis, known as Mike Francis (born November 27, 1946), is a prominent Crowley businessman who was the chairman of the Republican Party in Louisiana from 1994 to 2000. A staunch fiscal and social conservative, Francis was an unsuccessful candidate for Secretary of State of Louisiana in a special election held on September 30, 2006. Francis indicated that he would seek the position again in the jungle primary on October 20, 2007, but he failed to file his qualification papers. "I will work to ensure the right to vote. I will fight to stop voter fraud, vote buying, and vote stealing," Francis vowed in his campaign for secretary of state.

As the Republican state chairman, Francis challenged the political order, including an effort to unseat most of Governor Edwin Washington Edwards' floor leaders in the Louisiana State Senate in the 1995 elections. In the 1996 Louisiana presidential caucus won by the journalist and commentator Patrick J. Buchanan, Francis worked for then U.S. Senator William Philip "Phil" Gramm of Texas, who soon left the race and deferred to the eventual nominee, former Senator Robert J. Dole of Kansas.

Francis had been mentioned as a potential Republican candidate for the District 4 seat on the Louisiana Public Service Commission, which was filled in a special election on April 4, 2008, to replace member Dale Sittig of Eunice, who resigned to become director of the Louisiana Offshore Terminal Authority. Ultimately, the Republican Clyde C. Holloway of Rapides Parish won the remaining nineteen months of Sittig's term.

Early years and business

Born in Jena, the seat of La Salle Parish in north Louisiana, Francis became wealthy in the oil processing business from his base in Acadiana. His company is based in Crowley, the seat of Acadia Parish, a rice-growing region in southwestern Louisiana, which produced two of the state's political giants of the late 20th century, Democrats Edwin Edwards and John B. Breaux. Francis also has a residence in Lafayette.

Francis is the chief executive officer for Francis Drilling Fluids, Ltd. FDF, one of the oldest drilling fluids companies on the Gulf Coast. He employs more than 350 people at locations in Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, and Wyoming. The corporate headquarters is located in Crowley.

State Senate race, 1996

When Republican Governor Murphy J. "Mike" Foster, Jr. named Democratic state Senator Cecil Picard as education secretary, a special election was held on August 24, 1996, to begin the process of choosing Picard's state senate successor. State Representative Gerald Theunissen, a Democrat who later switched to Republican affiliation, led the contest with 7,086 votes (29.5 percent). Francis, still state party chairman and the only Republican among the six candidates, finished in second place with 6,112 votes (25.5 percent). Four other Democrats shared the remaining but crucial 45 percent of the ballots.[1] In the runoff election on September 21, Theunissen defeated Francis, 20,320 (55.7 percent) to 16,172 (44.3 percent).[2]

Run for secretary of state

The secretary of state is Louisiana's top elections officer. The office maintains corporation and government records.

"We have had a lot of criticism about professional politicians in this state. . . . People are crying out for change. Most are demanding it. . . . Our problems are not Republican or Democrat problems. They are all our problems, and we need to face them together. We need sound business principles in Baton Rouge and not more politics. To attract business, we need leaders who know how to talk business, not politics," Francis said.

Francis had promised, if elected, that he would take a business approach to the secretary of state's office and work to create jobs and to ensure "clean elections," for which he noted Louisiana has often been lacking.

Loss to Jay Dardenne

Francis lost the race to fellow Republican Jay Dardenne, an attorney and state senator from Baton Rouge. The election was held to finish the fifteen months remaining in the term of Republican Walter Fox McKeithen, who died in the summer of 2005. Al Ater, a former Democratic member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Ferriday in Concordia Parish, had succeeded to the position because he was McKeithen's first deputy. The special election was held in conjunction with the jungle primary for other offices contested in 2006.

Francis ran third in the race, based largely on his support in mostly rural and small-town parishes in his native north Louisiana. He received 26 percent of the vote. Democratic state Senator Francis C. Heitmeier polled 28 percent, and Dardenne led the field with 30 percent. None of the other four candidates had more than 9 percent.

Dardenne was hence scheduled to face a runoff election with Heitmeier of New Orleans. In the meantime, Francis announced that he would not support Dardenne in the second balloting but would run himself for the position in 2007. Heitmeier pulled out of the race and left Dardenne unopposed. Heitmeier's decision was surprising in that 2006 was otherwise a banner year for Democrats nationwide. Heitmeier and Dardenne were term-limited in the state Senate and ineligible to have sought reelection in 2007. Heitmeier was succeeded by his brother, David Heitmeier, a New Orleans optometrist.

"Just because I’m third doesn’t mean I need to sign on with one of them," Francis said on the Monday after the Saturday special election. "When you look at the voting record and history of Dardenne and Heitmeier, they are very similar. I disagree with term-limited senators running for this office."

Francis' largely self-financed campaign ads and literature targeted what he called the senators’ "liberal" votes for taxes and abortion.

U.S. Senator David Vitter, a Republican from Metairie in Jefferson Parish, endorsed Dardenne when a runoff appeared likely. He praised Dardenne's pro-business, governmental reform record and his "dogged determination and persistence" for term limits and other fundamental changes. "There couldn’t be a clearer choice: reform versus the courthouse crowd", Vitter claimed.

Diana Istre Francis (born December 20, 1950) of Crowley, Francis's former wife of thirty-three years, donated $1,000 and volunteered to help Dardenne, having been quoted as saying that "God is at the head of my party."

Dardenne raised $722,631; Francis raised $149,637 and added $70,000 of his own funds for a total of $219,650. In his unsuccessful race, Francis carried the support of the 2008 presidential candidate, U.S. Senator John McCain of Arizona.

References

  1. "Louisiana special election returns, August 24, 1996". sos.louisiana.gov. Retrieved October 31, 2009.
  2. "Special election runoff returns, September 21, 1996". sos.louisiana.gov. Retrieved October 31, 2009.
Preceded by
William Dudley Lastrapes, Jr., of Lafayette (1992–1994)
Louisiana Republican State Chairman

Michael Gordon "Mike" Francis of Crowley
1994–2000

Succeeded by
Francis Charles "Chuck" McMains of Baton Rouge (2000)
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