Simone Champagne

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Simone Becnel Champagne​


Louisiana State Representative
for District 49 (Iberia
and Vermilion parishes)​
In office
January 2008​ – 2014 ​
Preceded by Troy Hebert​
Succeeded by Blake Miguez

Born December 27, 1954​
Jeanerette, Iberia Parish
Louisiana ​
Political party Democrat-turned-Republican (July 2010)​
Spouse(s) Gary Paul Champagne, Sr. ​
Children Five children, including​

Gary Champagne, Jr.​

Occupation Banker

Simone Becnel Champagne (born December 27, 1954) is a Republican former state representative for District 49 (Iberia and Vermilion parishes) in south Louisiana. ​ ​ In 1971, she graduated from Jeanerette High School in Jeanerette in Iberia Parish. Thereafter, she studied banking in continuing education programs.[1]

Champagne resigned her House seat late in 2014 to accept appointment as the chief administrative officer in 2015 with the city of Youngsville near Lafayette.[2]

Political life

House tenure

From 2002 to 2007, Champagne was the chief administrative officer for the combined Iberia Parish and city of New Iberia government. She resigned to run for state representative and faced no opposition. The incumbent Democrat, later Independent, Troy Hebert, also of Jeanerette, vacated the seat because of term limits and instead was elected to the state Senate. Champagne won her House race as a Democrat, but in July 2010, she switched party allegiance.[3][4]

Representative Champagne served on the House committees on (1) Appropriations, (2) Municipal, Parochial and Cultural Affairs, (3) Natural Resources and Environment, (4) House Executive Committee, and (5) Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget. She was a member of the Acadiana delegation, the Legislative Women's Caucus, the Republican legislative delegation, and the Louisiana Rural Caucus.[1] In 2009, Champagne was rated 100 percent by the Louisiana Right to Life Federation and the conservative Louisiana Family Forum and 65 percent by the trade association, the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry.[4]​ Champagne won reelection to a full term which she did not complete in the primary election held on October 22, 2011, having amassed more than two-thirds of the ballots cast over both Democratic and Republican opponents.[5]

In a special election in 2015 to choose a successor for the year remaining in Champagne's House term, attorney Blake Miguez of Iberia Parish was elected to succeed Champagne.[6] On January 13, 2019, Miguez is slated to become the House Majority Leader, replacing Lance Harris of Alexandria​.

Special Senate election

Champagne ran in a special election for the state Senate but lost to a House colleague, Fred Henry Mills, Jr., a banker and pharmacist from St. Martin Parish. Mills also switched from Democrat-to-Republican in 2010.[7] ​ ​ In a campaign statement for the Senate race, Champagne said:

Government spending and growth is the problem, it hinders our ability to grow our economy and small businesses. Now more than ever we need a true conservative in the State Senate, and that is why I decided to run for this important seat . . . If we want to create jobs we must get government out of the way. No more moratoriums, no more regulations and we can’t afford higher taxes. As a mother of five and grandmother of three, I’ve stretched a budget and done more with less. Shouldn’t our government do the same? . . . If we have learned anything in the past two years it is that we cannot afford to allow government to run rampant and continue the out-of-control spending. That is why I voted against the bloated Louisiana budget last year and supported legislation that allowed Louisiana to opt out of Barack Obama's costly health-care mandate.[8]

​ Mills polled 12,812 votes in the special Senate election, or 60 percent of the total cast in the first round of balloting. Champagne finished second with 4,040 votes (19 percent).[7] Champagne campaigned as a "Reagan Republican" and had the open support of Republican U.S. Senator David Vitter.[9] Independent David Groner finished third with 2,534 votes (12 percent). The remaining ballots favored two other Republican candidates and a second Independent hopeful. No Democrats contested the position.[7]

Race for Lafayette Mayor-President

While still in city office in Youngsville, Champagne ran to succeed Joel Robideaux in the race for the mayor-presidency of Lafayette in the primary election held on October 12, 2019. Her platform stressed the needs of those burgeoning communities in the parish but outside the city limits. She finished a strong third in the race with 16,102 votes (24 percent). In the runoff held on November 16, Champagne endorsed fellow Republican Josh Guillory, who led in the primary with 31 percent of the vote and went on to defeat the No Party candidate, Carlee Alm-LaBar.[10]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Rep. Simone B. Champagne. house.louisiana.gov. Retrieved on February 20, 2011; material no longer on-line.
  2. Marsha Shuler (December 12, 2014). State Rep. Herbert Dixon resigns House seat. The Baton Rouge Advocate. Retrieved on December 13, 2014.
  3. Membership in the Louisiana House of Representatives, 1812-2012. legis.state.la.us. Retrieved on February 20, 2011.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Representative Simone B. Champagne (LA). Project Vote Smart. Retrieved on February 20, 2011.
  5. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, October 22, 2011.
  6. Zane Hill (February 22, 2015). Miguez a state rep. The Daily Iberian.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns, January 22, 2011.
  8. Simone B. Champagne (January 5, 2011). Why I'm Running for Senate District 22. The Daily Iberian. Retrieved on February 26, 2011.
  9. Nathan Stubbs (January 19, 2011). Can anyone knock out frontrunner Fred Mills in the District 22 state Senate race?. theind.com. Retrieved on February 26, 2011.
  10. Louisiana Secretary of State, Election Returns (Lafayette Parish), October 12 and November 16, 2019.

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