Louisiana
Live Results: Louisiana midterm state and congressional primaries
WASHINGTON (AP) — Louisiana voters will participate in a revamped and stripped-down state primary Saturday and decide the political fate of an embattled Republican U.S. senator targeted for defeat by President Donald Trump.
Sen. Bill Cassidy is running for a third term but first must overcome a Republican primary field that includes state Treasurer John Fleming and U.S. Rep. Julia Letlow, who was endorsed by Trump in January.
WATCH: Amy Walter and Jasmine Wright on Trump’s control of GOP lawmakers
The primary is the president’s latest opportunity to exact retribution from his perceived political enemies, including fellow Republicans he considers disloyal. Cassidy has been near the top of that list since his vote more than five years ago to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial following the insurrection by his supporters at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump was acquitted.
Louisiana is not among the states Democrats are targeting in their effort to retake the U.S. Senate. A Cassidy defeat in the primary would likely result in a Senate GOP caucus even more unified behind Trump and further demonstrate the strength of the president’s grip on the party.
Voters will also decide primary contests for state Supreme Court, Public Service Commission and state school board, along with five proposed state constitutional amendments.
Louisiana’s primaries for U.S. House were postponed after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the state’s current congressional map, which includes a majority Black district that favors Democrats. U.S. House races will still appear on ballots, but any votes cast in those contests will not be counted.
WATCH: Louisiana’s redistricting rush ignites debate over race and representation
In another key departure from previous Louisiana primaries, contenders in Saturday’s contests will run in separate party primaries, rather than in one jungle primary in which all candidates appear on the same ballot. State lawmakers adopted the new system for certain offices in 2024, but the law didn’t go into effect until 2026.
U.S. House races were originally slated to use the new primary system under the 2024 law, but state Republicans on Thursday adopted legislation to reinstate the jungle primary for U.S. House races, citing a compressed schedule after the Supreme Court decision. Just as in previous cycles, the jungle primary will be held on Nov. 3 alongside the general election.
East Baton Rouge Parish, home to Baton Rouge, and Jefferson and Orleans Parishes in the New Orleans area are the most populous in the state, but St. Tammany Parish, north of New Orleans along the Mississippi border, contributed the most votes in the 2016 and 2024 Republican presidential primaries.
Caddo Parish in the northwest, home to Shreveport, and Lafayette Parish also tend to play a bigger role in Republican primaries than in Democratic ones.
Trump narrowly won a four-way primary in 2016, powered in part by a large margin in Jefferson Parish and overcoming losses in East Baton Rouge and Caddo Parishes to Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz. He swept the state eight years later in the 2024 primary against former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, who had dropped out of the race by the time of the primary but was still posting stronger-than-expected showings in other states.
Cassidy’s previous victories in 2014 and 2020 were under the old primary system, in which his main opposition on the ballot came from Democrats.
Here are some of the key facts about the election and data points the AP Decision Team will monitor as the votes are tallied:
When do polls close?
Polls close at 8 p.m. local time (CT), which is 9 p.m. ET.
What’s on the ballot?
The Associated Press will provide vote results and declare winners in contested primaries for U.S. Senate, state Supreme Court, state Public Service Commission and state school board, as well as five statewide ballot measures.
Who gets to vote?
Registered party members may vote only in their own party’s primary. In other words, Democrats can’t vote in the Republican primary or vice versa. Independent or unaffiliated voters may participate in either primary. Voters registered with other parties may only vote on nonpartisan contests.
How many voters are there?
As of May 1, there were about 3 million registered voters in Louisiana. Registered Democrats and Republicans numbered about 1.1 million each, with registered Democrats at a slight advantage. About 813,000 voters were not registered with any party. The remainder were registered with other parties.
How many people actually vote?
Louisiana’s new primary system is closer in format to the 2024 presidential primaries than to previous state primaries. About 192,000 votes were cast in the Republican primary and about 167,000 in the Democratic contest. Each primary represented about 6% of registered voters.
How much of the vote is cast early or by absentee ballot?
About 41% of the Republican primary vote and about 45% of the Democratic primary vote in 2024 was cast before primary day.
As of Thursday, about 255,000 ballots had already been cast in Saturday’s election, about 44% from Democrats and about 41% from Republicans.
When are early and absentee votes released?
Results from early and absentee voting are usually released by each parish in the first vote update, as separate totals from in-person Election Day vote results.
How long does vote-counting usually take?
In the 2024 general election, the AP first reported results at 9:32 p.m. ET, or 32 minutes after polls closed. The last vote update of the night was at 11:56 p.m. ET, with more than 99% of total votes counted.
When will the AP declare a winner?
The AP does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow a trailing candidate to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why.
How do recounts work?
There are no automatic recounts in Louisiana, but a candidate may request and pay for a recount of absentee and early votes. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is subject to a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome.
Are we there yet?
As of Saturday, there will be 42 days until the June 27 primary runoff if needed, 171 days until Nov. 3 general election and the rescheduled U.S. House jungle primaries and 210 days until the Dec. 12 runoff.
— Robert Yoon, Associated Press
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Louisiana
Louisiana could use more of Sweden’s centuries-old and beloved fika tradition
A friend recently returned from a vacation to Sweden and shared photos from his trip, mentioning a word I hadn’t heard before: fika.
Something about the way he used the word on his social media post pulled me in. The word sounded like something I would appreciate.
Loosely translated, a fika is a Swedish coffee break.
I don’t drink coffee. I’ve never been to Sweden, but I was right about appreciating the word and what it represents.
I decided to contact my friend Erika Sunnegardh. She’s a Swede, an international opera soprano who made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 2006 — and my go-to source for all things Swedish.
I messaged her and learned she was on a boat off the coast of Portugal. Even so, she took the time to send me a voice message with her take on fika.
She said it’s been around for several hundred years, but the word itself took hold around 1910. Cleverly, the word came about by someone rearranging the letters of the Swedish word for coffee, kaffi. She said that it started as something women did, gathering over coffee to meet and talk. She used the word “lighthearted” to describe its origins.
Eventually, fika became a part of everyday Swedish life.
She emphasized that fika is about much more than coffee.
Logistically, sweet treats are mandatory. They call them fika bread — cinnamon rolls, cardamom buns, pastry or the like.
However, cookies are also a part of fika. She shared a detail that struck me as deeply Swedish.
“Tradition has it you should treat seven different kinds of cookies,” she said. “No less, because then you’re stingy, and no more, because then you’re showing off. Seven is the magic number.”
According to the Visit Sweden website, there are seven specific types of cookies that are the most traditional fika cookies: Brussels cookies, chocolate slices, dream cookies (a type of meringue cookie that melts in the mouth), raspberry caves, oat biscuits, nut biscuits and chessboards (two-tone shortbread cookies).
Sunnegardh told me that morning and afternoon fika are a part of daily life in Swedish workplaces. Work stops. Everybody leaves their desk. Someone may stay to cover the office phones, but fika happens, lasting 10 or 15 minutes — never more than 20. People bring their own treats and their personal phones are down. Tea is permitted for the noncoffee drinkers.
Lemon and chocolate Hubig’s Pies, cut open to show their fillings, make a decadent coffee break snack. Chocolate rejoined the lineup for flavors as the beloved New Orleans hand pie continues its gradual return to the full spectrum of flavors. (Staff photo by Ian McNulty, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune)
“It simply is what it is,” Erika told me from her boat. “It can’t be degraded or weirded out by any digital thing. I have never heard of anyone skipping fika just because the world has changed.”
I recognized fika from the start.
Not from Sweden, but from Mississippi.
My parents’ home was fika central.
Throughout the day — almost any day — usually mid-morning or mid-afternoon, people knocked on the door and were welcomed in. My mother would put on coffee. Somehow, there was almost always cake.
People sat down and visited, and the day went wherever it went. Now that I think about it, they usually stopped by in the mornings around 10 and in the afternoons around 2, which coincides nicely with the Swedish tradition.
My parents led productive, even busy lives, but I never remember Mom not sitting to visit when guests arrived — and my dad too when he was home.
They didn’t call it fika, of course. They didn’t call it anything. It was just how things were.
Things stayed that way for my parents until my dad died and my mother moved away from our family home to be closer to my youngest brother.
The tradition was not passed to the next generation. Dropping by unannounced is unheard of now. We rarely sit and visit without an agenda. We schedule coffee weeks out.
I do like calling it fika.
Names change things.
What was an interruption becomes a ritual. What felt like lost time becomes the point.
If fika is the word that gets people to put their phones down and sit with each other — really sit, with something sweet nearby and no particular reason to leave — then I am for it.
My mother never needed a word for it. She just opened the door.
Louisiana
Man wanted for kidnaping ex-girlfriend in Marshall before fleeing to Louisiana
MARSHALL, Texas (KETK) – A man is currently wanted after police said he kidnapped his ex-girlfriend in Marshall on Saturday, before fleeing into Louisiana.
The Marshall Police Department reported that their dispatch got a call requesting a welfare check at a property in the 1300 block of East Pinecrest Drive at around 7:29 a.m. on Saturday. Officers who responded to the scene met a woman who said she had just been kidnapped by her ex-boyfriend.
The officers determined that the woman had escaped from her ex-boyfriend and that he fled from the scene before they arrived. Marshall PD identified the ex-boyfriend as Jamichael Brown.
Brown’s vehicle was later found abandoned in Greenwood, La. Then, Marshall PD joined with the Joint
Harrison County Violent Crime and Narcotics Task Force, the Waskom Police Department, the Greenwood Police Department and the Caddo Parish Sheriff’s Office to conduct a joint search of the area near his vehicle but Brown was not found.
He’s currently wanted for prior warrants on charges of violation of bond conditions and assault of a pregnant person, along with a new warrant for aggravated kidnapping, which was secured by Marshall PD on Saturday.
Marshall PD said Brown should be considered armed and dangerous and they’ve asked the public not to approach him. Anyone who sees him is asked to call 911 or local law enforcement.
Anyone with information about this case is also asked to call the the Marshall Police Department Criminal Investigation Division at 903-935-4575.
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Louisiana
Louisiana drivers warned not to leave these 10 everyday items in parked cars as June heat builds
LOUISIANA (KNOE) – As June temperatures climb across Louisiana, safety experts are warning drivers to take certain everyday items out of their vehicles every time they park.
NOAA climate normals show typical June highs reach about 90°F in New Orleans, 91°F in Baton Rouge and 93°F in Shreveport. Research from Arizona State University found a car parked in direct sunlight on an 80°F day can reach 120°F inside within an hour. Dashboard temperatures can top 165°F on a 95°F afternoon.
That means a quick stop at a gas station in Monroe, a grocery run in Arkansas or a school pickup in Mississippi can damage belongings, spoil medicine and food, and increase the risk of a fire.
Below are 10 items Louisiana drivers should remove from their cars when they park.
1) Aerosol cans
Products such as hairspray, deodorant, spray sunscreen, dry shampoo and spray paint are pressurized. Many aerosol labels warn against temperatures above 120°F, a level ASU testing shows a vehicle can reach within 60 minutes on an 80°F day.
2) Medication
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says many medicines should be stored between 68°F and 77°F. Insulin products commonly carry guidance to stay below 86°F once in use. A 2024 Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology study found EpiPens lost 41.6% of epinephrine potency after three months at 122°F.
Drivers should not leave inhalers, antibiotics, thyroid medication, birth control or emergency allergy injectors in the glovebox.
3) Sunscreen
The FDA warns sunscreen containers should be kept out of excessive heat and direct sun. High heat can break down active ingredients, leaving users with less protection than the SPF label suggests.
4) Food and groceries
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) says perishable food should not sit in the 40°F to 140°F “danger zone” for more than two hours — or more than one hour when the outside temperature is above 90°F.
That one-hour limit can arrive quickly during Louisiana summers, especially for eggs, dairy, meat and seafood.
5) Eyewear
High heat can damage plastic frames and some lens coatings. Many optical materials become vulnerable once temperatures rise above about 130°F. ASU testing shows dashboards can exceed 165°F on a 95°F day, hot enough to warp frames or harm polarized, photochromic and anti-reflective coatings.
6) Lighters and matches
Disposable butane lighters often carry warnings to keep them away from heat above 50°C (122°F). That is below the dashboard temperatures measured in parked-car heat studies, making a lighter left near a windshield a preventable fire risk.
7) Glasses cases and clear water bottles
Fire services have warned that clear bottles and other magnifying objects can focus sunlight onto upholstery or paper. In demonstrations, focused sunlight has been measured above 200°F, which can scorch vehicle interiors.
8) Important documents
Passports, Social Security cards, laminated IDs, parking tickets and thermal receipts can warp, fade or blacken in extreme heat. Thermal paper commonly reacts around 150°F, a temperature that can be reached on a dashboard on a hot summer afternoon.
9) Pets and children
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says an average of 38 children die in hot cars in the U.S. each year, and KidsAndCars.org has tracked more than 1,170 child hot-car deaths since 1990.
The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) reports that on a 70°F day, a car can reach 89°F within 10 minutes and 104°F within 30 minutes.
Louisiana law allows certain emergency rescue actions for children or animals in distress, but safety groups stress the simplest rule: Never leave children or pets in a parked vehicle, even briefly.
10) Lithium-ion devices (including vapes)
Devices such as vapes, phones, laptops, power banks and e-bike batteries use lithium-ion cells that are generally designed to operate safely up to around 140°F — below the dashboard heat recorded in summer car tests.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) logged 89 lithium-battery incidents on U.S. aircraft in 2024, including 15 involving vapes or e-cigarettes. Anker recalled more than 1.1 million PowerCore 10000 power banks in 2025 over overheating risks.
Shane Margereson of Ecigone, which works with vape and lithium-battery products, said drivers should watch for warning signs such as swelling, a sweet chemical smell, discoloration or a device feeling warm when it has not been used.
“The simplest rule of all: treat it like your phone,” Margereson said. “Never leave it on the dashboard, in the glovebox or in direct sunlight.”
Heat-safety reminder
If you must leave items in a vehicle, move them out of direct sun, keep them low in the cabin, and shorten stop times. When possible, take heat-sensitive products inside with you.
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