Benjamin Casansa "Ben" Toledano (born
1933) is a
paleoconservative
author, activist, an attorney who was the unsuccessful
Republican nominee for
mayor of
New
Orleans in 1970 and for the
U.S. Senate from
Louisiana in
1972.
Prior to filing as the lone Republican
candidate for mayor, Toledano had been a member, first, of the
Democratic Party, and,
then, of the
States' Rights Party. He sought to
succeed the retiring two-term
Democratic Mayor Victor H.
Schiro in 1970. The Democrats had a slugfest for the office in two
primaries held in the fall of 1969. The more
liberal candidate, Maurice
Moon Landrieu was placed
in a runoff -- this was before Louisiana had its
jungle primary format
-- with the more
conservative City Councilman James E. "Jimmy"
Fitzmorris, Jr., who would thereafter be elected lieutenant
governor (1972-1980). When Landrieu defeated Fitzmorris with a vow
to carry on the liberal legacies of his predecessors,
deLesseps Story Morrison and
Schiro, Republicans sensed a rare opportunity in the Crescent City.
Toledano appeared initially to be a strong contender for the
position, for he picked up the support of many Fitzmorris leaders
and waged an intense, well-organized, and heavily-financed
campaign. Toledano noted that blacks had voted overwhelmingly for
Landrieu, who would later serve in the
Jimmy Carter administration as secretary
of housing and urban development, but he mostly stressed the
"need-for-a-change" theme always available for nearly any southern
Republican seeking office at that time. The 1970 mayoral race
concluded with the highest turnout until that time in the history
of the city, some 70 percent of registrants. Black participation in
the general election surpassed what it had been in the
Landrieu-Fitzmorris runoff. It was estimated that 80 percent of
blacks cast ballots, and 98 percent supported Landrieu, the father
of the state's current Democratic U.S. Senator
Mary Landrieu and
Lieutenant Governor
Mitch Landrieu. Indeed, the Landrieus built a
political dynasty of sorts in New Orleans, with their strength also
demonstrated statewide.
Moon Landrieu received 94,332 (59 percent)
votes, compared to 65,558 (41 percent) for Toledano. The Republican
won 60 percent of the votes of whites. Two shifts in the voting
behavior of whites in New Orleans, soon to become a distinct
minority of the city's population, occurred between the Democratic
runoff and the general election. A number of upper and middle
income precincts in the Uptown University area and in
Algiers,
switched from Landrieu to Toledano, mostly those which had voted
Republican for president in the past. The 25 white precincts with
the highest socio-economic status switched from Landrieu to
Toledano. The other white voter change occurred in the mid-city
area, where numerous middle-to-lower economic status precincts
which had favored Fitzmorris in the runoff remained with the
Democratic nominee in the general election. Otherwise, the Toledano
vote pattern was similar to that for Fitzmorris. Toledano's vote
was patterned more on that of the 1968
George C.
Wallace, Sr., support in
New Orleans than the
tabulation for the Republican ticket of
Richard M.
Nixon
and
Spiro
T. Agnew. Nixon had won 26.7 percent in
Orleans
Parish, compared to 32.7 percent for Wallace, and 40.6 percent
for Vice President
Hubert Humphrey. In the runoff, Landrieu
scored well with former Nixon supporters, but he lost to Toledano a
number of white precincts which Nixon had carried less than two
years earlier. Three Louisiana political scientists who analyzed
the New Orleans mayoral returns concluded that Republicans could
never become competitive unless they appealed to "the more moderate
instincts of the upper and upper-middle socio-economic status white
voters . . . as well as the black voters." Of course, the racial
composition of New Orleans changed drastically in the coming
decade, and the white vote was significant thereafter only as a
swing bloc vote between two black candidates. The political
scientists underestimated the attrition of the white population
from New Orleans. In 1978,
New Orleans elected its first black mayor, and
all mayors since that time have been blacks.
Toledano's showing
propelled him in 1972 to seek the U.S. Senate seat held by 36-year
incumbent Democrat
Allen J. Ellender. He filed as the Republican
candidate, and former state senator J.
Bennett Johnston,
Jr., of
Shreveport
challenged Ellender in the Democratic primary. Ellender died on
July 27, and Johnston was left as the <i>de facto</i>
Democratic nominee. Former Governor
John McKeithen then filed as an
independent
because the time had passed for Democrats to enter the primary.
Johnston entered the
general election as the prohibitive
favorite even though McKeithen had been the only governor up until
that time to serve two consecutive terms and even though
Richard
Nixon appeared to be coasting to an easy reelection and might
have some level of
coattails for a candidate like
Toledano.
Johnston polled 598,987 votes (55.2 percent);
McKeithen drew 250,161 (23.1 percent), and Toledano finished third
with 206,846 (19.1 percent). Hall McCord Lyons of
Lafayette, son of
Charlton Lyons, the
"grand old man of the Louisiana GOP," polled another 28,910 votes,
or 2.6 percent, as the nominee of
George Wallace's former
American Independent Party. Hall
Lyons had filed for governor earlier in 1972 on the AIP ticket but
was persuaded to withdraw in favor of Republican
David C. Treen. Treen would be
elected to the
United States House of
Representatives from the Third Congressional District in this
same 1972
general election.
Toledano's performance
was extremely weak. His best showing was a meager 30 percent in
Jefferson
Parish, which supported Treen for Congress and Nixon for
president. In previously inclined Republican parishes
Iberia and
Caddo, for instance, Toledano
failed to win even a fourth of the vote.
Toledano returned to
his law practice, with his political ventures seemingly in his
past. Years later, he emerged as a columnist, author, and political
thinker, writing for
William F. Buckley's
<i>
National Review</i> and Thomas
Fleming's <i>Chronicles Magazine</i>, a
paleoconservative
publication from
Rockford, Illinois. Paleoconservatives
generally follow the viewpoints of such individuals as the defeated
presidential candidate
Patrick J. Buchanan or
the late columnist
Samuel Francis. They believe that
"neoconservatives" in national Republican adminstrations have "sold
out" traditional Republican values to keep the United States
involved in endless war to promote "democracy" and to promote
international trade agreements which lead to outsourcing of
American jobs. Toledano hence writes in the Buchanan-Francis mold
by taking what the media would call "hard-right" positions on
issues. Over the years, Toledano alienated many politicians.
In
1981, Governor
Edwin Washington Edwards said that
he expected to draw considerable Republican support when he ran for
a third term in 1983 against sitting Republican Governor Treen.
But, Edwards clarified, "I would not want Ben Toledano supporting
me … he’s poison. I don’t want him involved in my campaign."
Toledano replied: "Most people don’t receive very many special
compliments in a lifetime. I am deeply flattered by Edwards’
remarks. Love me most for the enemies I have made."
In 2004,
Toledano wrote a review of
Kevin Phillips's <i>American Dynasty:
Aristocracy, Fortune and the Politics of Deceit in the House of
Bush</i>. Toledano was as critical of the Bushes as any
Democrat had been: "There was a time when people in high places
believed in avoiding even the appearance of impropriety. Phillips'
book suggest that the Bushes do not even know what propriety is."
Toledano continued, in reference to the religious conversion of
George W.
Bush: "I
choose not to question the sincerity of George W.’s conversion and
faith . . . Unlike his father, whose deeds defy and defile his
words, he may well be a true believer even if he uses his beliefs
to obtain political support and votes."
Toledano resides in
Pass Christian, Mississippi
(pronounced CHRIS CHE ANN), east of
New Orleans.
References
Billy
Hathorn, "The Republican Party in Louisiana, 1920-1980," Master's
thesis (1980), Northwestern State University at
Natchitoches
Mark T. Carleton et al, <i>Readings in
Louisiana Politics</i>,
1975
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/Chronicles/June2004/0604Toledano.html
http://www.bestofneworleans.com/archives/2001/0123/feat-letters.html
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_n12_v46/ai_15544254