Our American Shakespearean drama

INDIANAPOLIS — A Shakespearean tragedy is characterized by death and disaster, involving characters of high societal status: Prince Hamlet, King Lear, Julius Caesar, Lord Macbeth.

Macbeth lamented in Act 4, Scene 3: 

I think our country sinks beneath the yoke;


It weeps, it bleeds; and each new day a gash

is added to her wounds.

Americans are now witnessing a Shakespearean drama in the 2024 presidential race. But the historic anomaly is that it will be you, dear voter/citizen, who will write its final chapters.

This drama began as the Joe Biden vs. Donald Trump rematch from their 2020 showdown began evolving. The Democrat won by more than 7 million votes and an Electoral College victory of 306 to 232 over President Trump. While the three-time Republican nominee is still saying that election was “rigged” and “stolen,” he lost more than 60 court cases challenging the results. His own administration (including Attorney General Bill Barr) characterized it as a fair, accurate election. Republicans such as Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger vouched for the results.

President Trump, in an attempt to remain in power despite losing the election, unleashed a mob on Jan. 6, 2021, that ransacked the U.S. Capitol, erecting gallows while chanting, “Hang Mike Pence!” It was a coup attempt, Donald Trump-style, designed to thwart certifying the election.

In this year’s drama, Act 1 found a decrepit 81-year-old President Biden believing that only he could vanquish Trump a second time. It reached a crescendo during the June 27 debate with Trump when Biden’s ghostly pallor and halting delivery created a political disaster and impending doom at the ballot box. This political damage came despite some 30 false claims uttered by Trump

Act 2 was the assassination attempt on Trump in Pennsylvania. He recounted it at last week’s Republican National Convention: “There was blood pouring everywhere, and yet in a certain way I felt very safe because I had God on my side.” When Trump and legions of Republicans left the Milwaukee convention hall, they were convinced a divinely inspired victory was just four months in the offing, and it still may be.

Act 3 occurred at 1:46 p.m. last Sunday when President Biden became the latest American Cincinnatus, the Roman statesman who voluntarily sheathed his sword and gave up power. Biden joined Presidents George Washington in 1796 and Lyndon B. Johnson in 1968 in relinquishing power. “While it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term,” Biden wrote.

“Everyone was stunned by the news,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who as mayor of South Bend ran against Biden in the 2020 Democratic primary. “It’s really important to note just how world-historically rare it is for the most powerful person in the world to set aside that power. That’s only happened a handful of times.”

Act 3, Scene 2 came 20 minutes later in a second bombshell: “My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my vice president, and it’s been the best decision I’ve made,” Biden posted on X. “Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump.”

Thus, after the Republican National Convention had ended with U.S. Sen. JD Vance on the Trump ticket, after Sunday talk shows concluded, Biden completely scrambled the story line. Trump and the GOP had been lambasting Biden by name, as well as his age and physical condition. By mid-Sunday, it was now Trump who seemed elderly and incoherent during his speeches and rallies. And Biden, while relieving the Democratic Party of his infirmities, completely outmaneuvered party henchmen seeking a truncated, open convention. 

Biden passed the torch to a new generation, but he did it on his terms, at a time of his choosing.

Act 4 found Vice President Harris quickly consolidating the Democratic nomination that will take place virtually on Aug. 10, less than two weeks before the Democratic National Convention gathers in Chicago.

And Act 5?

In an Oval Office address Wednesday night, Biden drew up the new skirmish lines: “I revere this office, but I love my country more. It’s been the honor of my life to serve as your president. But in the defense of democracy, which is at stake, I think it’s more important than any title. This sacred task of perfecting our union is not about me. It’s about you, your families, your futures. It’s about we the people. Nothing — nothing — can come in the way of saving our democracy. That includes personal ambition.

“America is an idea — an idea stronger than any ocean, more powerful than any dictator or tyrant,” Biden said in a remark aimed at Trump for his saying he would be a strongman only on “day one” if he is elected. 

“I have decided the best way forward is to pass the torch to a new generation,” Biden continued. “That is the best way to unite our nation.

“Our republic is now in your hands.”

That will be Act 6, determined by you.

Brian A. Howey is senior writer and columnist for Howey Politics Indiana/State Affairs. Find Howey on Facebook and X @hwypol.

State Department offering $10M for info on North Korean hacker indicted in Kansas

The State Department is offering up to $10 million for information on a North Korean man indicted for conspiring to commit computer fraud against a Kansas hospital. 

A grand jury indicted Rim Jong Hyok Wednesday on charges of conspiracy and conspiracy to commit money laundering. The charges were brought by Kate Brubacher, U.S. Attorney for the District of Kansas.

Rim is associated with a cyber group within North Korea’s intelligence agency, the Reconnaissance General Bureau, according to the charging document. He and his co-conspirators are known to the private sector as “Andariel,” “Onyx Sleet” and “APT45.”

“Rim Jong Hyok and those in his trade put people’s lives in jeopardy,” Brubacher said in a news release Thursday. “They imperil timely, effective treatment for patients and cost hospitals billions of dollars a year.”

Rim conspired to target computer networks of “critical infrastructure — specifically hospitals and healthcare companies” using malware that encrypts a company’s computers.

The hackers’ victims included an unnamed Kansas hospital, which suffered a ransomware attack on May 4, 2021. The North Korean group used custom malware known as “Maui” or maui.exe.

“Until the Kansas hospital regained access to those encrypted computer servers, its medical services were limited and it had to cancel some patient appointments,” the indictment said. In a note, the hackers demanded a ransom paid in bitcoin.

Money made from ransoms then funded “computer intrusions into government agencies, military bases and companies supporting the military, including with missile, aerospace and uranium processing technology,” according to court documents.

In 2022, the FBI seized $500,000 of the hackers’ proceeds, including some funds from the Kansas hospital, and returned it to the victims.

The Kansas district attorney’s office’s announcement Thursday coincided with a joint statement from the NSA, FBI and other agencies warning of a North Korean cyber espionage campaign against the U.S. and other countries.

The U.S. Department of State’s Rewards for Justice program is offering up to $10 million for information on Rim and Andariel’s hacking efforts. According to the department, the hacking group’s victims include five health care providers, four U.S.-based defense contractors and two U.S. Air Force bases.

Brett Stover is a Statehouse reporter at State Affairs Pro Kansas/Hawver’s Capitol Report. Reach him at [email protected] or on X @BrettStoverKS.

Highway department starting 1st speed camera use next month

The Indiana Department of Transportation will start its first use of cameras to enforce work-zone speed limits as allowed under legislation approved last year.

The camera technology will be activated starting Aug. 14 in an Interstate 70 construction zone in Hancock County east of Indianapolis, the highway department announced this week.

The use of cameras to enforce speed limits has faced significant opposition among Indiana legislators for many years despite the adoption of such technology in other parts of the country in efforts to improve safety.

House Enrolled Act 1015, approved during the 2023 session, allows the state highway department to use speed cameras in up to four work zones in a calendar year under the pilot program. The agency must submit a report about the impact of the speed cameras to the Legislature by July 2028.

Department of Transportation Commissioner Mike Smith said the goal of the Indiana Safe Zones program is to “slow drivers down, reduce crashes, and most importantly, save lives.”

“Speed continues to be a factor in work zone crashes, and changing driver behavior is crucial to making work zones safer for drivers and road workers,” Smith said in a statement.

Warning notices will initially be issued to owners of vehicles determined to be traveling at least 11 mph faster than the speed limit, the department said. After the initial period ends, tickets of up to $150 for multiple violations can be issued.

The highway agency will post signs notifying drivers that an automated system is monitoring the work-zone speed limits. Fines can be issued only when workers are present in the zone.

Over the past decade, 269 people have been killed in crashes in highway worksites or in worksite backups in Indiana, according to the highway department.

In 2023 alone, 33 people were killed and more than 1,750 were injured in state highway department work zones. Four out of five people killed in work zones were drivers or their passengers.

Tom Davies is a Statehouse reporter for State Affairs Pro Indiana. Reach him at [email protected] or on X at @TomDaviesIND.

Anne Hathaway shines at RNC

INDIANAPOLIS — There was one clear winner at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee last week, and it wasn’t Donald J. Trump or even JD Vance. It was former Indiana Republican Chair Anne Hathaway.

Hathaway chaired the RNC’s arrangements committee and thus was responsible for convention logistics and optics. On the latter, the video presentation on the stage, the jumbo screens and lighting, and the programming were excellent.

Hathaway welcomed delegates on July 16. “Over the next few nights you are going to hear from the best and brightest from our party and our movement have to offer,” she began. “From candidates to elected officials, to leaders, business luminaries, to grassroots activists, to everyday Americans who power our party, united in our common goal to make America safe again, to make America wealthy again, to make America strong again and to make America great again.

“Teddy Roosevelt famously said, ‘It’s not the critic who counts. The credit belongs to those who are actually in the arena, whose faces are marred by dust, sweat and blood.’ Ladies and gentlemen, this is the arena,” Hathaway continued. “Just by participating in this convention, whether you are a speaker or a delegate or a viewer at home, you have the ability to engage in the fight for a better future for our children. 

“So I ask you, as you watch this convention and hear these incredible speakers over the next few days, to listen, to share the message that resonates with you and your friends and your families and to help us channel the incredible energy of this convention into a resounding victory in November, up and down the ballot, starting with electing Donald J. Trump as president and JD Vance as vice president,” Hathaway said. “Make sure your family, friends and neighbors are registered to vote. Get your yard signs. Make a plan to get to the polls. The fate of the free world depends on us giving everything we’ve got and making sure we elect America-first candidates up and down the ballot to every office.”

Indiana delegate Mary Trausch-Martin put it this way on Facebook: “Someone I truly admire is Indiana’s very own Anne Hathaway. She works her ass off 24/7 for not only the Indiana Republican Party, but the national Republican Party. Her goal was to keep us safe and provide us with a fabulous delegate experience.”

Former legislator Kevin Mahan added, “I want to put a shout-out to Anne Hathaway for a great job on the RNC convention. I know you put your heart and soul into this big event for a long time. A historic event that will be remembered for decades! You should be proud that your fingerprints will forever be left in Milwaukee!”

Ohio delegate Carol Porter added on Facebook: “From my zip code this week, the RNC was a triple home run!!! The Gold Star Families, the music, the overall programs, the numerous motivational testimonials, the staging and arena … what an awesome accomplishment you led!”

Former RNC Committeeman John Hammond III, who also served on the arrangements committee, told State Affairs/Howey Politics Indiana: “The 2024 Republican convention went off without a hitch and has been widely hailed as the best in recent memory for GOP delegates. This was all due to Anne Hathaway.”

Hammond continued, “She was born to do this job, and the trajectory of her career inside the RNC led her to this moment. She did an extraordinary job, all while serving as the interim chair of the Indiana Republican Party for 10 months. Remarkable.”

Anne Applebaum, writing in The Atlantic, observed, “The Republican convention was a carefully curated, meticulously planned presentation.”

But Hathaway’s slick presentation may have been squandered by Trump, who entered the hall to the tune of James Brown’s misogynistic anthem It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World.” It was a curious music choice for the first post-Dobbs presidential election where abortion restrictions vs. rights could determine who wins in November.

In an election that could be decided by independent suburban women, RNC viewers instead were treated to Hulk Hogan and Kid Rock and then a rambling 93-minute acceptance speech by Trump.

“I am running to be president for all of America, not half of America, because there is no victory in winning for half of America,” Trump said early on in what was a pitch for unity. “So tonight, with faith and devotion, I proudly accept your nomination for president of the United States.”

He described the assassination attempt on him in Pennsylvania on July 15. “As you already know, the assassin’s bullet came within a quarter of an inch of taking my life,” Trump told the rapt audience. “So many people have asked me what happened: ‘Tell us what happened, please.’ And therefore, I will tell you exactly what happened, and you’ll never hear it from me a second time because it’s actually too painful to tell.

“I’m not supposed to be here tonight. Not supposed to be here,” Trump said. 

The audience responded, “Yes, you are!” 

Trump added, “And I’ll tell you, I stand before you in this arena only by the grace of almighty God. 

“The attacker in Pennsylvania wanted to stop our movement, but the truth is, the movement has never been about me — it has always been about you,” Trump continued. “It’s your movement; it’s the biggest movement in the history of our country by far. It can’t be stopped. It has always been about the hard-working, patriotic citizens of America. For too long, our nation has settled for too little. We settled for too little. You’ve been told to lower your expectations and to accept less for your families. I am here tonight with the opposite message. Your expectations are not big enough.”

Thus, the first 30 minutes of Trump’s speech were riveting. But the final hour turned into a typical deflating Trumpian stream of consciousness. 

“They’re destroying our country. We have to work on making America great again, not on beating people, and we won,” he said. “We beat them all, we beat them on the impeachments, we beat them on indictments, we beat them.”

It all petered out as the 78-year-old Trump, now the oldest presidential nominee in history, digressed from his prepared remarks. “They’re coming from prisons. They’re coming from jails,” he warned, in echoes of his 2016 “I alone can fix it” speech in Cleveland that prefaced his first “American carnage” term. 

“They’re coming from mental institutions and insane asylums,” Trump droned on. “I — you know the press is always on me because I say this. Has anyone seen ‘The Silence of the Lambs’? The late, great Hannibal Lecter. He’d love to have you for dinner. That’s insane asylums. They’re emptying out their insane asylums. And terrorists at numbers that we’ve never seen before. Bad things are going to happen.”

CNN reported there were 20 false claims in the speech, while The Washington Post described it as “a nod to unity, same dark themes.”

It prompted Bill Kaplan to write in a WisPolitics column: “The coronation of Trump at the Milwaukee GOP Convention took place after the horrifying near-assassination of Trump by a registered Republican with unknown motives. It was Trump first and America last: ‘There was blood pouring everywhere, and yet in a certain way I felt very safe because I had God on my side.’ Unlike Lincoln’s 2nd Inaugural Address, only a morally blind politician such as Trump has the temerity to claim God is on their side.”

Trump promised delegates he was “only going to use the term once” in reference to “Biden.”

Two days later, President Biden was gone, folding his reelection bid after saying earlier this month he could leave the race due to word from “God almighty.”

Vice President Kamala Harris, a former prosecutor, is poised to win the Democratic presidential nomination in August. At her Wilmington campaign headquarters on Monday, she said she took on perpetrators of all kinds during her long career as a prosecutor. “Predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain,” she said. “So hear me when I say: I know Donald Trump’s type.”

And that gets us to the other RNC optic that contrasted with the GOP’s long adherence to advocacy for the so-called rule of law.

Trump has been convicted of 34 felonies and is scheduled to be sentenced in a Manhattan court in September. He is the first former U.S. president to face criminal charges. RNC speakers included former Trump economic adviser Peter Navarro, who showed up at the convention hall straight after being released from prison after a contempt of Congress conviction for ignoring a subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

“I went to prison so you won’t have to,” Navarro declared. He received a standing ovation from delegates.

Wandering the convention floor was former 2016 Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort, who was sentenced to seven and a half years in prison on charges including bank fraud, tax fraud, money laundering and witness tampering. Trump pardoned Manafort in 2020, calling him a “political prisoner.” So, too, was Roger Stone, also convicted and pardoned after the congressional investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Missing was Steve Bannon, another former adviser, who reported to federal prison on July 1 for a Jan. 6 contempt of Congress conviction.

Most curiously, also seen was former Democratic Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, convicted on 17 criminal charges, including bribery, fraud and extortion, stemming from an attempt to sell Barack Obama’s former Senate seat. President Trump commuted Blagojevich’s 14-year sentence in 2020.

Brian A. Howey is senior writer and columnist for Howey Politics Indiana/State Affairs. Find Howey on Facebook and X @hwypol.

A consequential DNC speech 20 years ago

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The inspirational keynote speech at a national political convention 20 years ago was instrumental in bringing a landslide election of a president, even though the presidential nominee of that convention went down to defeat.

That speech was delivered on July 27, 2004, by Barack Obama, then a little-known state senator from Illinois. Yes, a state senator. He had not yet been elected to the U.S. Senate. His name was funny sounding, his governmental credentials slim.

While most Americans couldn’t recall the names of other past keynoters for any Democratic or Republican convention, most of those who listened to Obama’s speech will never forget it.

The speech, drawing a wildly enthusiastic response from Democratic National Convention delegates in Boston and from viewers nationally, had these memorable lines:

“There’s not a Black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America; there’s the United States of America.

“The pundits like to slice-and-dice our country into red states and blue states — red states for Republicans, blue states for Democrats. But I’ve got news for them, too. We worship an awesome God in the blue states, and we don’t like federal agents poking around our libraries in the red states.”

To rising cheers, Obama said that even though Americans could differ on war in Iraq, “We are one people, all of us pledging allegiance to the Stars and Stripes, all of us defending the United States of America.”

After a time of hope and seeming progress, it appears that Obama has been proven wrong, the pundits proven right.

There is a Red America, a Blue America, more brightly colored and divided now than when Obama spoke so hopefully about a united United States.

Enthusiasm for Obama and his message didn’t propel John Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee, to victory over President George W. Bush in 2004.

It wasn’t Obama’s fault that Kerry lost. It was Kerry’s fault that he blew a lead over a president with lagging popularity.

The inspiring keynote — Obama telling of living the American dream, with his diversity of heritage — was about the only convention speech drawing much enthusiasm around the nation.

Kerry strategists assumed mistakenly that they should avoid anything negative that might alienate voters. All speakers were ordered not to attack President Bush and take a positive approach. They did. Positively boring for many watching the convention on TV.

Kerry expected the traditional bounce in the polls after a convention. No bounce. He actually dropped in the Gallup poll.

Bush successfully went on the attack. The Republican convention, with strong mockery of Kerry and Democrats, did get some bounce.

Even Kerry’s service in Vietnam was ridiculed. He didn’t hit back, assuming nobody would believe that stuff. But Kerry’s high-road approach came across for many voters as haughty, out of touch. Negative works. 

After that keynote speech, Obama’s political future was bright. He won for the U.S. Senate in Illinois while Kerry went down to defeat. Obama for president? Well, 2008 seemed too soon. But still.

Not every Democrat was thrilled with Obama’s sudden rise to stardom. Not Hillary Clinton. And I recall that Indiana delegates at the convention, though hailing the great keynote speech, lamented that Obama’s star could be rising higher than that of Indiana’s own Sen. Evan Bayh, also viewed as a rising star.

Obama wisely didn’t wait. He ran for president and won in 2008. He won by more than 2 to 1 in the Electoral College. He even carried Indiana. Yes, Indiana.

If he had not been a surprise pick to deliver that keynote speech or if it had been a more typical convention speech, he would not have had that opening to run in 2008. Maybe later. Maybe not.

What would be the reaction now, 20 years later, to a convention speaker, either party, saying there are no red or blue states, just a red, white and blue United States? 

Jack Colwell has covered Indiana politics for over five decades for the South Bend Tribune. Email him at [email protected].

Wake Up Call for Thursday, July 25, 2024

Court to hear arguments on abortion ballot wording Arizona Capitol Times Abortion access supporters and Republican lawmakers are sparring over whether  “unborn human being” is an impartial term that can be used in a description for a ballot measure that would legalize abortions up to fetal viability.  Mitchell, Mayes fight over who gets to execute inmates Capitol Media Services Attorney General Kris Mayes insists that she is “the state.” But Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell says she, too, can be “the state.” So, she said, is every other prosecuting agency. Police org revokes endorsement of Justine Wadsack for ‘impugning’ policePolice org revokes endorsement of Justine Wadsack for ‘impugning’ police AZ Mirror A police organization has rescinded its endorsement of a Republican state senator after she accused police of politically targeting her after issuing her a speeding ticket for driving more than 70 miles per hour on a road with a 35 mile per hour speed limit. Three Arizona groups to Democrats: Pick Sen. Mark Kelly for vice president ABC15 Three Arizona organizations that work with voters of color are urging Democrats to select Sen. Mark Kelly as their nominee for vice president. JD Vance to make 1st Arizona appearance as Donald Trump’s running mate next week KTAR Republican U.S. Sen. JD Vance will hold his first Arizona rally as Donald Trump’s running mate in the West Valley next week, the campaign announced Wednesday. Arizona AG demands Phoenix apartment complex fixes A/C Phoenix Independent The Buenas on 32nd apartment complex in Phoenix has received a cease-and-desist letter from Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes to fix an air-conditioning problem that is affecting up to 400 units during one of the hottest summers on record. Senate Democrats say Mark Kelly would be a 'superb' VP pick. But there's some anxiety. NBC News Numerous Democratic senators are heaping praise on Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., as a potential running mate for Vice President Kamala Harris — but the prospect of his seat being vacated is stoking some anxiety. Another Southwest Gas rate hike many families can’t afford Arizona Capitol Times Just last year, Southwest Gas and its stockholders celebrated the largest revenue increase in company history, thanks to the company’s back-to-back rate hikes on Arizona customers in 2022 and 2023.  Judge is right to toss ex-Trump enforcer's attack on Mesa transgender kids Arizona Republic This seems to happen a lot in Arizona. An outsider with loads of cash and an axe to grind finds a local shill to push a toxic agenda. Sen. Speedy Wadsack gets dumped by police. Entitlement, like crime, doesn't pay Arizona Republic Sen. Justine Wadsack — having tried every which way to duck a ticket for criminal speeding — insists she still “back(s) the blue.” But the blue is hurtling away from her like a speedy senator in her trusty Tesla.

 

They Said It (07.25.24)


“There’s not a single Democrat who does not feel better this afternoon than they did this morning.” —Democratic strategist and pundit James Carville, on President Joe Biden dropping out of the race, in The Advocate

“I would color that doubtful.” —Former Congressman Cedric Richmond, on stories he’s being vetted for vice president on the Democratic ticket, to Fox 8

“[The task force] seems to have not even done what was required of it — which was producing a report recommending ways that the Legislature could address the potential negative impacts of [carbon capture and sequestration] on communities.” —Jackson Voss, climate policy coordinator for the Alliance for Affordable Energy, talking about a carbon capture and sequestration legislative committee in The Illuminator

“We have a governor who’s behind Northwestern. He’s powerful and when he gives you his word, he means it.” —Associate Supreme Court Justice James Genovese, touting his connection to Gov. Jeff Landry prior to becoming president of Northwestern State University, in The Illuminator

“There’s an open-door policy everywhere at Northwestern. I could never ask [Genovese] something comfortably.” —Lyla Monroe, an online student who serves as an orientation leader at Northwestern State, in The Illuminator

“It’s actually a flex for Democrats who can have more influence with Johnson if he knows his continued time as speaker is, in part, thanks to them.” —Political consultant Mary-Patricia Wray on the fact that Democrats did not field a challenger to Speaker Mike Johnson, in The Illuminator

Our History: The birth of Abbeville


On today’s date in 1843, Père Antoine Désiré Mégret, a Capuchin missionary, purchased the land that was to become Abbeville for $900. 

Formerly called La Chapelle, Father Megret named the town after Abbéville, his hometown in the Picardy region of France. 

Two people were living on the land at that time, Joseph LeBlanc and his wife Isabelle Broussard, whose former home Megret converted into the first Church. The original church burned down in 1854 and St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church now stands at the same location.

The residents who settled the town were descendants of the Acadians from Nova Scotia who moved to the area around 1766 to 1775.  It was incorporated in 1850 and is the parish seat of Vermilion Parish, which calls itself “the most Cajun place on Earth,” claiming the highest concentration of residents with Acadian ancestry.

Father Megret modeled his original plan for the village after a French Provincial village. In a map he made in 1846, the town was 38 to 40 acres, bounded on the north by St. Victor Boulevard, on the south by Lafayette Boulevard, on the east by “the Sisters of Charity,” and on the west by Bayou Vermilion.

Around 12,000 people live in Abbeville today. A statue in memory of Father Megret stands in Magdalen Square downtown, near the Vermillion Parish Courthouse. 

Abbeville is home to several festivals, including the Giant Omelette Celebration, which will be held for the 40th time this year on Nov. 2 and 3. 

According to legend, when Napoleon and his army were traveling through the south of France, they decided to rest for the night near the town of Bessieres. Napoleon feasted on an omelette prepared by a local innkeeper. 

He liked it so much, he ordered the townspeople to gather all the eggs in the village and to prepare a huge omelette for his army the next day. From this beginning, the omelette became a tradition to feed the poor of the village at Easter. 

In April of 1985, three members of the Chamber of Commerce (Emery “Bichon” Toups, Tracy Kays and Sheri Meaux) attended the Easter Omelette Festival in Bessieres. They returned home with the determination to bring Abbeville closer to its French Heritage by hosting an omelette festival and joining the sisterhood of cities that celebrate the omelette. 

The event kicks off on Saturday morning, and on Sunday afternoon, some 5,000 eggs (plus one for each year the festival has been held) are used to create a massive omelette. Other ingredients include 50 pounds of onions, 75 bell peppers, 52 pounds of butter and 15 pounds of crawfish tails.  

A Children’s Omelette, featuring a mere 600 eggs, also is prepared by junior chefs as part of the festivities. 

Editor’s note: The information for this piece came from the City of Abbeville and the Giant Omelette Celebration

News You Can Use (07.25.24)


Campaigns & Elections: How to craft the perfect fundraising message post-RNC

Campaigns & Elections: Deepfake detection effort aims to help campaigns authenticate digital content

Governing: Homeless camp cleanups aren’t a permanent solution

Governing: The escalating argument over historic preservation

The Advocate: New Louisiana laws could make it tougher to vote absentee

The Advocate: La. Supreme Court grants public access to Stanford Trust Ponzi trial

Illuminator: Fines might not deter abuse at La. facilities caring for the disabled

Fox 8: Louisiana to ban cell phone usage in school; some teachers question enforcement

The Advocate: Louisiana students still behind in math and science after COVID, 2024 LEAP scores show

Government Technology: Lack of broadband may be stifling rural Louisiana business

Field Notes (07.25.24)


— SPECIAL SESH DEATH KNELL? Speaker Phillip DeVillier has informed House members that a special session in August is off the table, though related oversight meetings are planned. So it appears the Article VII-focused special session that Revenue Secretary Richard Nelson had urged lawmakers to consider may suffer the same fate as Gov. Jeff Landry’s proposed constitutional convention. 

— PSC COMMISH BACKS CONTROVERSIAL TRANSMISSION RULE: Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Davante Lewis has co-authored an op-ed touting new federal rules about transmission planning, and is the only regulator from the Deep South to add his name to a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission expressing support for the rule. Meanwhile, the PSC has asked the Fifth Circuit to review the rule; Lewis says staff and consultants for the commission made the filing without his prior knowledge, and he will object to ratifying the decision in August. The rule requires transmission companies to look at least 20 years ahead when planning projects and update those plans every five years, among other changes. Supporters say it facilitates better regional planning to meet the energy grid’s future needs, while detractors say it usurps state authority to benefit clean energy developers. 

— CAMERON BACKS JP: Senate President Cameron Henry has endorsed Sen. Jean-Paul Coussan’s bid to replace Craig Greene on the Public Service Commission. Coussan also announced the support of Jefferson Parish Sheriff Joe Lopinto. Republican Julie Quinn, a former state senator, and Democrat Nick Laborde also are in the race. 

— GREEN, HUGHES ATTEND SUMMIT FOR RISING LAWMAKERS: Rep. Kyle Green and Rep. Jason Hughes planned to attend this week’s Future Summit in Washington D.C., a conference hosted by Future Caucus “for the country’s most promising, effective young lawmakers” who have shown the ability to work across the aisle, the organization announced. Hughes and Sen. Thomas Pressly co-chair the Louisiana Future Caucus, the group says.

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