Louisiana voter turnout higher than expected for March 29 election
Apr 01, 2025
NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — Voter turnout for the March 29 election was higher than expected but less than half from November.
The Louisiana Secretary of State's Office is reporting that the unofficial turnout for the March election is 21%, which, according to political analyst Jeff Crouere, is high f
or this type of election.
“The governor was saying at the White House in a meeting, caught on a hot mic, that he thought the turnout would be between 12 and 18%, and it turned out to be 21%. So, that goes to show you it had a little bit more interest than people thought,” said Crouere.
All four constitutional amendments failed by a significant margin. Gov. Jeff Landry, who was in support of the four constitutional amendments, placed blame on "Soros and far left liberals" in an election night statement after voters rejected all amendments on the ballot.
"We realize how hard positive change can be to implement in a State that is conditioned for failure. We will continue working to give our citizens more opportunities to keep more of their hard-earned money and provide a better future for Louisianians," Landry said.
Gov. Jeff Landry, Louisiana officials react after March 29 proposed amendments fail
Pollster Silas Lee believes much of the reason is because of the work of the opposition and that the amendments lacked clarity.
“There was a lot of activity taking place on the ground and other initiatives that one, informed voters and two, voters were very confused by the amendments in the sense that they did not specify specifically how they would accomplish specific goals,” explained Lee.
Among the voters in the state who showed up to the polls Saturday, nearly 37% were Democrats, and about 35% were Republicans, but neither party favored the amendments.
“When we look at the fact that it failed in the home parishes of the governor, of the speaker of the house and also in parishes that supported [President] Trump overwhelmingly, that would indicate there was not a substantial difference,” said Lee.
As for the governor, it's back to the drawing board.
“Maybe they can do it just through legislation, as opposed through constitutional amendments,” said Crouere. “That's why, it'll be interesting now with the session starting just in a few weeks, whether this will now change what type of session we're going to have, and I think it will.”
The next election is scheduled for May 3. Early voting begins April 19.
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