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Daniel Ducote

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Daniel Ducote
Image of Daniel Ducote
Elections and appointments
Last election

October 12, 2019

Education

Bachelor's

Louisiana State University

Personal
Birthplace
Metairie, La.
Religion
Christian
Profession
Educator
Contact

Daniel Ducote (Republican Party) ran for election to the Louisiana State Senate to represent District 11. Ducote lost in the primary on October 12, 2019.

Ducote completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2019. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Ducote graduated from Louisiana State University in 2019 and attended Southeastern Louisian University and iTeach Louisiana beginning in 2019. His career experience includes being an educator.[1]

Elections

2019

See also: Louisiana State Senate elections, 2019


Louisiana elections use the majority-vote system. All candidates compete in the same primary, and a candidate can win the election outright by receiving more than 50 percent of the vote. If no candidate does, the top two vote recipients from the primary advance to the general election, regardless of their partisan affiliation.

General election

General election for Louisiana State Senate District 11

Patrick McMath defeated Reid Falconer in the general election for Louisiana State Senate District 11 on November 16, 2019.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Patrick McMath
Patrick McMath (R) Candidate Connection
 
55.6
 
27,801
Image of Reid Falconer
Reid Falconer (R)
 
44.4
 
22,198

Total votes: 49,999
(100.00% precincts reporting)
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for Louisiana State Senate District 11

Reid Falconer and Patrick McMath defeated Daniel Ducote in the primary for Louisiana State Senate District 11 on October 12, 2019.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Reid Falconer
Reid Falconer (R)
 
47.5
 
20,404
Image of Patrick McMath
Patrick McMath (R) Candidate Connection
 
40.1
 
17,248
Image of Daniel Ducote
Daniel Ducote (R) Candidate Connection
 
12.4
 
5,345

Total votes: 42,997
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Campaign themes

2019

Video for Ballotpedia

Video submitted to Ballotpedia
Released September 25, 2019

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Daniel Ducote completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2019. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Ducote's responses.

What areas of public policy are you personally passionate about?

1) Anti-corruption laws. I'm strongly opposed to corporations and lobbyists buying our politicians and manipulating them to betray their constituents in office and think we need to get money out of politics entirely. 2) Taxes. I'm vehemently against taxes that punish economically beneficial activities and think we need to completely abolish sales and income taxes. 3) Education. I know from firsthand experience that college has gotten too big for its britches and needs to be drastically downsized by losing a huge amount of its funding. We also need to cap tuition and fees that public universities are allowed to charge. It's outrageous what college costs these days and most of this money goes to overpaying professors and other wasteful attractions to make universities more flashy while not helping students get a better education or find good jobs. Student loan debt is a crisis facing the younger generations and needs to be addressed by streamlining the higher education process and implementing cost controls. 4) Healthcare. We need to repeal Obamacare and implement free-market solutions to high healthcare premiums. We should forgive medical debt, give consumers more choice over their health insurance plans, and use Medicaid as a tool to negotiate with drug companies to lower the prices of prescription drugs. We can also use government reinsurance plans to get the insurance companies to cover more expensive patients fully. These solutions will lower premiums and deductibles.

Who do you look up to? Whose example would you like to follow, and why?

I look up to my older brother, Matthew. He's only 25 years old and has spent the past three years of his life trying to start and grow small businesses in the technology and software industry all by himself. He's extremely intelligent and ambitious and already has a resume that a 50-year-old would covet. He's always been there for me when I needed help - whether that was homework help, relationship advice, or simply a companion to talk to while I was away at college. He understands all the nuances of the world, and particularly of politics, and has helped me think of plenty of great, revolutionary ideas for my campaign that will shake up politics as we know it and change the dynamics of our state's economy for the better. He's just all-around a great person and an amazing judge of character. I trust him with my life, and I'll consult him regularly in office for advice about how to handle the various conflicts that come up when dealing with other politicians and trying to be a good leader for my constituents. I also look up to my high school English teacher in grades 9 and 10, Melanie Plesh. She was such a unique, thoughtful, emotional, creative and passionate human being who had unconventional methods of teaching that really effected me and my development in high school and I would like to mirror these tactics as an educator myself. She passed away a few years ago, but I'll never forget her voice or her charismatic personality or all the things she taught me and all the emotional support she gave me at a difficult stage in my life. I still share her writing with friends and family so it lives on. Politically, I love Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida. A conservative guy who thinks for himself and won his race without the support of his party's political establishment by talking directly to the voters and offering them new and creative ideas to grow the state. I want to be like him in office.

Is there a book, essay, film, or something else you would recommend to someone who wants to understand your political philosophy?

Citizen Kane and All the King's Men. They basically demonstrate how regular people concerned about their government become corrupted by the system and become career politicians. Career politicians aren't bad people, but they are ruined by the system and we have to break it down by getting rid of money's influence on politics.

What characteristics or principles are most important for an elected official?

Honesty, integrity, sincerity, and intelligence. It's most important for a leader to just be honest about what they believe in, even if that means disagreeing with the majority opinion, so their constituents can know that they can trust them. Elected officials also need to be 100% beholden to the people - their constituents - not focused on pleasing the donors who got them elected so they can get re-elected in a few years, which all boils down to money in politics and how it distracts elected officials from focusing on the needs of their constituents.

What qualities do you possess that you believe would make you a successful officeholder?

I'm honest, caring and intelligent. I have strongly held principles and I'll defend them until the day I die. I'm affectionate with people I care deeply about and I'll do anything for the ones I love.

What do you believe are the core responsibilities for someone elected to this office?

The senator needs to always be there for his constituents. That includes being available 24/7 for constituents to text or call him with emergencies, even when the Senate is not in session. Mainly it's about making sure everyone in the district is squared away and doing well in life. Of course, attendance at all legislative sessions, making every vote, trying to fix the state's budget and get good legislation passed while listening to the concerns of the constituents is also what this job is all about. Basically, the senator should be the district's superhero and do whatever it takes to fix everyone's problems and fix the state's problems!

What legacy would you like to leave?

I'm not really concerned with my own personal legacy. I just want to get money out of politics, reform our tax code, cut higher ed funding, fix our healthcare system, and see our state prosper and our economy grow. Right now, we're last in basically everything, and I want to change that.

What is your favorite book? Why?

Flowers for Algernon and Ethan Frome are tied. Flowers for Algernon is just so beautiful with the way Charlie progresses and regresses and I literally cried at the end. Ethan Frome is a book I hated at first due to some repressed feelings about my own life, but a few years later I thought about it and realized it's actually a great book and the characters were right. Just check them both out.

If you could be any fictional character, who would you want to be?

Batman. He defends his values, even getting into violence to do so. I would've picked Rick Grimes from The Walking Dead, but all that bull shit about not killing Negan turned me off. All the Saviors should've had a trial, been found guilty, and gotten the punishment they deserved. Rick doesn't get to just make decisions for everyone else. They all fought the war, too! It's all the stupid "Carl asked me not to" nonsense that the AMC company did because they couldn't afford to keep paying Chandler Riggs. Again, money gets in the way of telling a good story.

What was the last song that got stuck in your head?

Songs don't get stuck in my head, but right now I'm on Cole Swindell's "Love You Too Late." Cole's a great guy and I really hope his song hits #1 in a few weeks. I think his "big push" is the week after the election, 10/13-10/20.

What is something that has been a struggle in your life?

I've dealt with depression, especially when I feel like my life is not going in the direction I want it to. However, I have a really good therapist and a really good psychiatrist right now who have helped me to cope with this through a combination of medication and counseling and I'm doing much better than I was in college.

Every state besides Nebraska has two legislative chambers. What do you consider the most important differences between the legislative chambers in your state?

The House is much easier for bills - both good and bad - to get through. Most of them die in the Senate because procedural rules allow the Senate to delay and filibuster legislation. This can be a positive tool because it blocks harmful legislation from becoming law, but it can also be detrimental to our state because good policy can be held up by a few bad actors in the Senate and end up dead. The Senate is also a place where more authentic debate on the issues can occur because bills take longer to get a vote. This allows for a genuine clash of ideologies that can be healthy for our public discourse and lead to serious amendments being made to bills. In a nutshell, the House is like McDonald's, where as the Senate is like fine dining. There are advantages and disadvantages to both. I'm running for the Senate, however, because folks in the House rarely have an opportunity to make much of a difference and usually just use it as a career-hopping point to run for higher office later, which isn't something I want to do since I'm not a career politician. The Senate's where all the action goes on and I want to be on the front lines of policy-making battles and really do everything I can to influence the legislation that gets passed. I can use the rules of the Senate to force votes on meaningful legislation and delay votes on bad stuff that corrupt politicians want to jam through in the dead of night without their voters knowing.

Do you believe that it’s beneficial for state legislators to have previous experience in government or politics?

To some extent, experience is good, but in this day and age, where politicians have been largely corrupted by donors and lobbyists, experience can generally be more of a bad thing that leads them to not listen to the will of their constituents. Career politicians tend to be more focused on building their own profiles and making money off of their positions than listening to the will of their constituents. Most folks I know look for the least experienced candidate in any given race when deciding who to vote for.

What do you perceive to be your state’s greatest challenges over the next decade?

The trial lawyer lobby has a tight hold on our government, as do other lobbies and big corporations. Our main challenge will be overcoming all of this corruption. Some analysts rank Louisiana the second most corrupt state in the country, next to New Jersey, which we all know is a mess after Chris Christie. We're going to have to fight to overcome the big money and get regular people in office who will listen to their constituents and focus on cleaning up our budget, growing our economy, bringing more and better jobs into the state, and improving our disastrous education system. Our economy is the second biggest challenge. It's frankly an embarrassment, through no fault of our own. It's 100% due to the corrupt politicians who don't listen to us and take bribes from donors and PACs. They've got to go before we can make any meaningful change to improve our state's standing in the country.

What do you believe is the ideal relationship between the governor and the state legislature?

The governor and the legislature should work together to get legislation passed. Essentially, the governor sets the agenda and the legislature should try to pass what he or she asks for, but the legislature should also interject if the governor is asking for bad ideas. The governor has the power to check the legislature by vetoing bad legislation, and the legislature also has the power to check the governor by investigating corruption, overriding a veto, and changing the governor's powers in the state's constitution if the governor has gotten out of control.

Do you believe it’s beneficial to build relationships with other legislators? Please explain your answer.

Yes, I believe it's necessary to build relationships with other legislators because we need their votes to get our agenda passed. That being said, I won't build a relationship that involves corrupt dealings or compromising my values or the agenda I was elected to do. If a legislator is stubborn and tries to block my agenda even after I try to compromise and listen to his or her concerns, I will campaign in his or her district to mobilize the constituents against the legislator and do a recall election if necessary.

If you are not a current legislator, are there certain committees that you would want to be a part of?

I would like to be on the Education, Judiciary, Insurance and Executive committees. The Education committee allows me to push for decreased funding for higher ed and more funding for grades K-8. The Judiciary allows me to push for judges on the courts who will interpret our laws as written rather than legislating from the bench. The Insurance committee allows me to push for my healthcare policy to lower insurance premiums and deductibles by giving consumers more freedom, using Medicaid to negotiate with drug companies for lower prices, and instituting government reinsurance plans to convince insurance companies to cover more expensive patients. The Executive committee is where all the general power to set the agenda lies. Therefore, I feel these committees give me the most power to get my agenda passed in the Senate.

If you are not currently a member of your party’s leadership in the legislature, would you be interested in joining the leadership? If so, in what role?

Yes, I want to be Senate President so I can set the agenda.

Is there a particular legislator, past or present, whom you want to model yourself after?

At the state level, there is not. I hear Sharon Hewitt is good, however. I also think Jeff Landry has done a great job as our attorney general. He's a political outsider who defends our values well. I also really like Governor Ron DeSantis and Senator Ted Cruz, as they're both political outsiders who are also quite effective at getting good policy ideas passed.

Are you interested in running for a different political office (for example, the U.S. Congress or governor) in the future?

Right now, I just want to focus on fixing Louisiana. If, in the future, I felt that there was a need for me to hold a higher office to fix our state, then I'd run, but at this time I think Trump is doing a fine job handling our nation's economy. We need to focus on Louisiana, and the best place to do that is in the State Senate.

Both sitting legislators and candidates for office hear many personal stories from the residents of their district. Is there a story that you’ve heard that you found particularly touching, memorable, or impactful?

Yes, a young woman (younger than me) has absentee parents who are addicted to drugs and she's working as many jobs as she can to support her siblings so they have clothes and food because her parents aren't doing it. Those are the kind of people we need to help. Regular, hard-working folks who are struggling.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.



See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted on Ballotpedia’s Candidate Connection form on September 25, 2019


Current members of the Louisiana State Senate
Leadership
Senate President:Cameron Henry
Senators
District 1
District 2
Ed Price (D)
District 3
District 4
District 5
District 6
District 7
District 8
District 9
District 10
District 11
District 12
District 13
District 14
District 15
District 16
District 17
District 18
District 19
District 20
District 21
District 22
District 23
District 24
District 25
District 26
District 27
District 28
District 29
District 30
District 31
District 32
District 33
District 34
District 35
District 36
Adam Bass (R)
District 37
District 38
District 39
Republican Party (28)
Democratic Party (11)