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/* Later political activities */
In 1984, Spooner spearheaded an unsuccessful movement to draft Treen to run against Senator [[J. Bennett Johnston, Jr.]] Spooner was also chairman of security for the 1984 Republican National Convention in [[Dallas]]. In 1986, Spooner devised an effective "Get Out The Vote" plan that has been used by a number of Northeast Louisiana Republicans to win elective offices. In 1996, two decades after his own congressional race, Spooner was the campaign chairman for Republican John Cooksey, a Monroe ophthalmologist, in a successful bid for the 5th congressional district seat.<ref>''Louisiana History'', p. 347.</ref>
Spooner found himself at odds with Treen and Cade in 1985 regarding the removal of state Party Chairman George Joseph Despot (1927-1991) of Shreveport. Spooner, and then State Representative [[Charles Lancaster]], of Jefferson Parish, stood with Despot, whom Spooner called "the best chairman we ever had". Such divisions hurt the state party in 1986, when Henson Moore opposed Democrat [[John Breaux]] in the U.S. Senate race to succeed Russell Long, who retired after thirty-eight years in office. Spooner later said that Moore's defeat for the Senate was his own "greatest disappointment" in politics.<ref>''Louisiana History'', p. 348.</ref>
Over the years, Spooner has supported former Governor [[Bobby Jindal]], former U.S. Senator [[David Vitter]], elected as Breaux's successor in 2004, and former U.S. Representative Rodney Alexander, who held the seat that Spooner contested from 2003 to 2013, by which time the district had expanded far south into Rapides and Avoyelles parishes and even into the Florida Parishes east of Baton Rouge. In 2004, Spooner contributed to Alexander's unsuccessful intraparty rival, former State Representative John Wyeth "Jock" Scott (1947-2009) of Alexandria.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.city-data.com/elec/elec-MONROE-LA.html|title=Monroe, Louisiana (LA) Political Contributions by Individuals|publisher=city-data.com|accessdate=September 17, 2013}}</ref> In 2007, Spooner donated to the presidential campaign of former Governor [[Mike Huckabee]] of Arkansas because he wanted a candidate with executive experience.<ref>''Louisiana History'', p. 353.</ref>