Rep. Higgins Won’t Run for Senate

By Jim Ellis — Monday, March 24, 2025

Senate

Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins (R-Lafayette) / Photo by Joshua Sukoff

Five-term Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins (R-Lafayette) announced late last week that he will not challenge Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) in the state’s new partisan primary system scheduled to take effect next year.

While saying he believes Sen. Cassidy can be beaten in the ensuing Republican primary, Rep. Higgins indicated that he can better serve his country and party by continuing his career in the US House.

Higgins said, “Now, it is my considered determination that, current engagement in the House being incredibly significant, it may be ultimately more beneficial to the Republic that I remain in service to the MAGA America First agenda as a senior Republican in the House of Representatives,” according to a news report on The Washington Times news site.

The Congressman also cited his close relationship with the chamber’s top leaders, Speaker Mike Johnson and Majority Leader Steve Scalise both from Louisiana, as another benefit to remaining in the House. Higgins is also chairman of the Border Security and Enforcement Subcommittee of the House Homeland Security Committee, which he states is another strong reason to continue his current career.

The one published Louisiana Senate poll was released at the end of February, from the JMC Analytics & Polling, a Louisiana based survey research entity.

According to the JMC results at the time (Feb. 26-28; 600 likely Louisiana Republican primary voters), State Treasurer and former Congressman John Fleming, an announced Senate candidate, posts a 40-27 percent lead over Sen. Cassidy in a head-to-head pairing. When other potential candidates, state Sen. Blake Miguez (R-New Iberia) and Public Service Commissioner Eric Skrmetta, are added to the ballot test questionnaire, Fleming leads Cassidy 29-27 percent with the remaining individuals receiving respective six and two percent preference figures.

This is the first time Sen. Cassidy will face a partisan Republican primary. Last year, the state legislature, at the behest of Gov. Jeff Landry (R), changed the state law to reinstitute a partisan primary structure for certain offices, including all federal positions. Previously, all candidates were listed only on the general election ballot. If no one received majority support in a particular race, a runoff election between the top two finishers was held during the first week in December.

Critics of the previous system argued, especially for freshman federal office holders, that they were starting at a disadvantage in Washington since they were still campaigning when the rest of the new members were going through orientation. Additionally, they were ineligible to run for party leadership posts nor present at the critical time to lobby for coveted committee slots.

The new closed partisan primary where only registered party members are eligible to vote is scheduled for April 18, 2026. If no candidate receives majority support, the top two finishers advance to a May 30 secondary election.

Sen. Cassidy’s biggest negative, of which he will be reminded of many times during the primary campaign, is that he voted to impeach President Donald Trump at the end of the latter’s first term. He was also questioning a couple of the Trump cabinet appointees, in particular HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., but in the end voted in favor of all.

While a Trump endorsement for a Republican primary candidate is a major positive in crowded fields, it will likely be an even more important factor in this Louisiana Senate primary. Should the President endorse a candidate other than Sen. Cassidy, the incumbent could quickly become the underdog.

In the new primary configuration, it is likely the most conservative and pro-Trump supporters would dominate the voting bloc, a group where Sen. Cassidy could show weakness. Another negative for the incumbent may be the size of the candidate field. If more contenders enter the race, which is expected, the chances of Sen. Cassidy being forced to a runoff increase.

The runoff history of incumbents is not particularly favorable. Already, a majority of the primary voters would have chosen another candidate, thus giving the incumbent a smaller base from which to start. He or she must then convince a significant percentage of voters who supported a challenger in the first vote to return to his or her fold in the runoff election. Certainly, incumbents have recovered to win runoffs, but the typical outcome leans toward an incumbent loss.

The Louisiana race, along with the likely Republican primary challenge to Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), will be a closely monitored nomination battle as the election cycle matures.

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