Louisiana
Louisiana holds ‘unprecedented’ power in U.S. House led by Speaker Mike Johnson of Shreveport
Louisiana has amassed “unprecedented” power in the U.S. House of Representatives led by a one-two punch of Republican Speaker Mike Johnson of Shreveport and Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Jefferson Parish.
Despite having a relatively small delegation of six members, Louisiana wields an enormous amount of influence up and down its delegation, including Republicans Johnson, Scalise, Clay Higgins of Lafayette and Julia Letlow of Start and Democrats Troy Carter of New Orleans and Cleo Fields of Baton Rouge.
“It’s an unprecedented amount of power,” said Pearson Cross, a professor of political science at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. “Louisiana is punching way above its weight. It has more concentrated power than California (with 52 representatives).”
Never before has one state held the top two positions in the House with Johnson holding the speaker’s gavel and Steve Scalise as majority leader.
Both also have become prolific fundraisers, with Johnson reporting raising a record $24 million during the first quarter for his Grow the Majority committee as House Republicans seek to hold their slim majority during the 2026 elections.
“After we successfully defended our majority in 2024, the American people are enthusiastic about keeping House Republicans on offense in 2026,” Johnson said in a statement. “While we deliver our commonsense America First agenda, we are also building a massive campaign war chest by hitting the ground running in the first quarter. … I look forward to continuing to lead the fight ensuring House Republicans are ready to grow our majority this cycle.”
But besides Johnson and Scalise, Louisiana has a deep bench of members in leadership roles.
Higgins is chairman of the House Oversight Panel’s Subcommittee on Federal Law Enforcement in the 119th Congress.
He also has a seat on the House Armed Services Committee as Louisiana’s only representative on that panel, critical to support Barksdale Air Force Base and Fort Johnson, and House Homeland Security.
Letlow sites on the powerful Appropriations Committee that controls the nation’s purse strings and was elected to the panel that determines what Republicans get plum committee seats in the House.
She has recently been mentioned as a possible challenger to Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, a fellow Republican, but has not confirmed interest in the race.
After Letlow won a seat on the House Republican Steering Committee in November, prominent Capitol reporter Jake Sherman of Punchbowl News tweeted: “Louisiana… has an insane amount of influence in Congress.”
Meanwhile, Carter was elected to serve as first vice chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, increasing the state’s unmatched clout. As a member of the House Transportation Committee, he was among those who crafted the final language in the House on the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Act.
He also serves on Homeland Security as the ranking member over Emergency Management and Technology.
Fields was elected last fall to represent the state’s new Black-majority 6th Congressional District that includes Baton Rouge and Shreveport as the population centers. Fields is back in Congress after first serving three decades ago. He serves on the House Financial Services Committee.
Greg Hilburn covers state politics for the USA TODAY Network of Louisiana. Follow him on Twitter @GregHilburn1.
Louisiana
Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Davante Lewis arrested on DWI count, State Police say
Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Davante Lewis was arrested on a count of driving while intoxicated over the weekend, a Louisiana State Police spokesperson said.
Lewis, 33, was arrested in West Baton Rouge Parish, officials said.
It is the West Baton Rouge Parish jail’s policy to not book first-offense DWI offenders, therefore Lewis was not held.
First offense DWI is a misdemeanor charge.
State police said Lewis was initially stopped for driving without headlights.
In a statement, Lewis said he “will be working with lawyers to contest the charge.”
“I have great respect for the men and women who serve our community in law enforcement, and I believe everyone, myself included, is accountable to the law,” he said. “I appreciate the professionalism shown during the encounter.”
Lewis said he understands “the gravity of the situation” and why the community is concerned.
“As I always have, I plan to remain accountable through both my words and my actions, not just through my words,” he said in the statement. “My hope is that our focus remains on the consistent, good work we have accomplished advocating for Louisiana’s citizens.”
The five-member Public Service Commission regulates utilities in Louisiana, like electricity, water, gas and some telecommunications. Lewis’ district covers majority-Black communities stretching from New Orleans up to West Baton Rouge Parish.
Lewis, a Democrat, is the first openly gay person elected to state office in Louisiana. Since ousting longtime commissioner Lambert Boissiere III in a 2022 election, he has been a prominent critic of Entergy and other utilities.
Lewis is also a frequent foe of Gov. Jeff Landry. In February, the PSC board voted to remove him from his role as vice chair after he called Landry an “a**hole” on the social media app X in response to a post Landry made mocking a transgender Department of Health Official in former President Joe Biden’s administration. Lewis argued he was being held to a different standard because he is Black.
Louisiana
Trump announces Louisiana Governor as envoy to Greenland
Trump says he has ‘no problem’ informing Congress of Venezuela attacks
President Donald Trump said he has ‘no problem’ informing Congress of future attacks regarding Venezuela.
President Donald Trump announced Sunday he is appointing Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry as the special envoy to Greenland.
In a Truth Social post on Dec. 21, Trump said “Jeff understands how essential Greenland is to our National Security, and will strongly advance our Country’s Interests for the Safety, Security, and Survival of our Allies, and indeed, the World,”
It was not clear whether Landry, who became governor in January 2024, would need to step down to assume this role.
Louisiana
Last of three inmates who escaped Louisiana jail by breaking through wall captured
Louisiana authorities captured the third and final inmate who escaped from St. Landry Parish Jail following a weeks-long manhunt.
In early December, three inmates — all 20-somethings jailed on “charges of a violent nature” — removed the mortar and concrete blocks of a deteriorating part of a jail wall, then used sheets and other materials to scale the side of the building, dropped to the first-floor roof, and escaped, the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office has said.
The last remaining escapee, 24-year-old Keith Eli, was apprehended Friday without incident in Opelousas by narcotics detectives and SWAT, the sheriff’s office said. Eli faces one count of attempted second-degree murder.
Eli’s capture comes weeks after authorities apprehended Johnathan Jevon Joseph, 24, on December 8. Joseph had been jailed on charges of principal to first-degree rape, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, among other counts. “Numerous tips” and “intelligence gathering” led authorities to find the escapee, the sheriff’s office said.
Days earlier, Joseph Allen Harrington, a 26-year-old in custody on numerous felony counts, including home invasion and cruelty to juveniles, died by suicide after authorities found him, Port Barre Police Chief Deon Boudreaux told the Associated Press.
A tipster had recognized Harrington, who was pushing an e-bike. Authorities found the e-bike at the home and then used a loudspeaker to urge the individual to come out of the house. They later heard a gunshot and authorities found his body inside with a hunting rifle, Boudreaux said.
Authorities announced the inmates had escaped on December 3.
Maj. Mark LeBlanc, of the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office, told the AP that he hadn’t heard of anyone escaping from the jail in this manner before.
“These three were just a little more creative than in years past,” he told the outlet.
However, the three men’s jailbreak came months after 10 inmates at another Louisiana jail — the Orleans Justice Center — in May.
The group was able to open a faulty cell door inside the New Orleans-area jail, squeeze through a hole behind a toilet, and then scale a barbed-wire fence to freedom. They escaped in the early hours of May 16.
Authorities found a message drawn around the hole: an arrow pointing at the gap and the words “To Easy LoL.”
While nine of the escapees were captured within six weeks of their jailbreak, the final inmate — who had the most violent criminal record of the group — wasn’t found until October.
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