Bob Livingston | |
|---|---|
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| Chair of theHouse Appropriations Committee | |
| In office January 4, 1995 – January 3, 1999 | |
| Preceded by | Dave Obey |
| Succeeded by | Bill Young |
| Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromLouisiana's1st district | |
| In office August 27, 1977 – March 1, 1999 | |
| Preceded by | Richard A. Tonry |
| Succeeded by | David Vitter |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Robert Linlithgow Livingston Jr. (1943-04-30)April 30, 1943 (age 82) |
| Party | Republican |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 4 |
| Relatives | Livingston family |
| Education | Tulane University (BA,JD) |
| Military service | |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch/service | |
| Years of service | 1961–1963 (active) 1963–1967 (reserve) |
Livingston on the day's legislative schedule andfast track trade authority. Recorded October 22, 1997 | |
Robert Linlithgow Livingston Jr. (born April 30, 1943) is an American lobbyist and politician who served as a U.S. representative from Louisiana from 1977 to 1999. ARepublican, he was chosen asNewt Gingrich's successor asSpeaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, a position he declined following revelations of an extramarital affair. He served as a U.S. representative from Louisiana from 1977 to 1999 and as thechairman of the Appropriations Committee from 1995 to 1999. During his final years in Congress, Livingston was a strong supporter ofBill Clinton's impeachment. He is currently aWashington, D.C.–basedlobbyist. Livingston's memoir,The Windmill Chaser: Triumphs and Less in American Politics, was published in September 2018.[1][2]
Livingston was born inColorado Springs, Colorado. He is a descendant of theLivingston family ofNew York, whose members includePhilip, a signer of theUnited States Declaration of Independence; ChancellorRobert R. Livingston, a co-author of the Declaration and author of theLouisiana Purchase; his younger brother,Edward, Aide de Camp and laterSecretary of State to PresidentAndrew Jackson, and who had earlier in his career held the same Congressional seat (La-1) as Bob Livingston.[3] Livingston is a direct descendant ofHenry Livingston, who was probably the (then anonymous) author of the poem,The Night Before Christmas,[citation needed]and French AdmiralFrançois Joseph Paul de Grasse, who together with GeneralGeorge Washington cornered and defeated British GeneralCornwallis in theSiege of Yorktown, Virginia, thereby concluding theAmerican Revolutionary War. De Grasse's daughter, Sylvie, married Henry Walter Livingston, ancestors of the Congressman.
Livingston was married in 1965 to the former Bonnie Robichaux (also born 1943), a native ofRaceland inLafourche Parish. Bonnie's grandfather, Alcide Robichaux, served in the Louisiana State Senate, and her uncle, Philip Robichaux, was Lafourche Parish coroner for decades. Livingston's father, a Roman Catholic, and his mother, an Episcopalian, were divorced when Livingston and his sister were quite young. Raised first as Roman Catholic and later as anEpiscopalian, he returned to his wife's religion,Roman Catholicism, in later years. The Livingstons have three biological sons, Robert, Richard and David, and an adopted daughter, SuShan a/k/a Susie. They have nine grandchildren. In July 2006, their son Richard died after being electrocuted by a live wire while trimming a tree damaged byHurricane Katrina inNew Orleans.[4]
As an undergraduate at Tulane University,he was a member ofDelta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Graduating fromTulane University Law School in 1968, Livingston joined the law practice ofDavid C. Treen, who would become Louisiana's first Republican congressman andgovernor sinceReconstruction. Treen had been an active Republican in the days when the party barely existed in Louisiana, and this connection allowed Livingston to make valuable contacts in GOP circles. He was a delegate to all Republican conventions between 1976 and 2000. Between 1970 and 1976, Livingston worked forU.S. Attorney for theLouisiana's Eastern DistrictGerald J. Gallinghouse,Orleans Parish District AttorneyHarry Connick Sr., and Louisiana State Attorney General,William J. "Billy" Guste Jr.

Livingston resigned his position as head of the state attorney general'sorganized crime unit in 1976 when he won the Republican nomination for Louisiana's 1st Congressional District, encompassing roughly half of New Orleans and many of its surroundingsuburbs. The seat, which had been trending Republican for some time at the national level, had opened up when 36-year incumbent Democrat and formerHouse Armed Services Committee chairmanF. Edward Hébert retired. Livingston narrowly lost to one-term state legislatorRichard Tonry ofChalmette inSt. Bernard Parish. Livingston was denied victory when a third-party candidate, former Sixth District CongressmanJohn Rarick, formerly ofSt. Francisville inWest Feliciana Parish, filed as an independent in the last days of the race. Rarick, who had been one of the mostconservative Democrats in Congress during his tenure, siphoned off roughly 9% of the votes cast, enabling Tonry to win with a plurality.
Allegations, however, surfaced of "tombstone" votes for Tonry in both the primary andgeneral election. Tonry was forced to resign in May 1977 and run again in thespecial election for his seat. However, he lost the Democratic nomination in August toState RepresentativeRon Faucheux. While Faucheux may have been hindered by a split in the Democratic vote due to Sanford Krasnoff, who ran as an Independent challenger from theleft, Livingston won the seat with a majority, 51%, of the votes cast (56,121 votes to Faucheux's 40,862, and Krasnoff's 12,665), becoming the first Republican to represent a significant portion of New Orleans in Congress since Reconstruction.[5][6] Faucheux later lost an attempt to unseat New OrleansMayorDutch Morial in 1982, and was named Secretary of Commerce byGovernorEdwin Washington Edwards in 1984.
Livingston was aided by a cadre of dedicated Republican volunteers, including the newly installed National CommitteewomanVirginia Martinez ofKenner.[7] In 1978, Livingston won a full term with 86 percent of the vote. He was reelected eleven times, dropping below 80 percent of the vote only once, in 1992. He was completely unopposed in 1986, 1996 and 1998. His district became even more Republican after the 1980 census, when most of the district's share of New Orleans was shifted to the 2nd District. It was replaced with some heavily Republican territory inJefferson Parish. After the 1990 census, Livingston's district gained conservativeWashington andTangipahoa parishes from the 6th district while relinquishing equally conservativeSaint Bernard andPlaquemines to the3rd district.
Although well known in Louisiana, Livingston was a relatively low-key congressman for his first eighteen years in Washington. However, early in his career, he landed a spot on the powerfulAppropriations Committee. This, together with his conservative stances on most issues, made him popular with his constituents, most of whom had never been previously represented by a Republican.
Livingston first came to national attention in 1995, when he was named chairman of the Appropriations Committee after theRepublican takeover of the House. This instantly made him one of the most powerful members of Congress. During one committee session, he brandished an alligator skinning knife, a Bowie knife, and amachete to demonstrate his seriousness as a budget-cutter.
During theMonica Lewinsky scandals, Livingston was one of many Republicans who demanded PresidentBill Clinton's resignation, and laterimpeachment, forperjury. AfterNewt Gingrich announced that he would resign asSpeaker (in part because of Republican losses in the1998 elections, and in part because of revelations of an extramarital affair with a congressional employee 23 years his junior[8][9]), majority leaderDick Armey and majority whipTom DeLay had opted not to contest the Speaker's chair. Livingston subsequently announced that he was not only running for Speaker, but had lined up enough support to win. He was nominated as the Republican candidate for Speaker without opposition, and as the GOP had retained a narrow majority in the House, this effectively made him Speaker-elect. Although the Speaker is formally elected by the entire House, in practice the majority party's candidate is all but assured of winning that vote.
In 1998,Hustler Magazine publisherLarry Flynt offered up to $1 million for anyone providing tips about unflattering sexual stories regarding members of Congress or high government officials.[10] Livingston learned late on the night of December 15, 1998—just days before the full House of Representatives was about to begin debating the impeachment of President Clinton—that Flynt had been in contact with at least one woman with whom he had had an extramarital affair.[11] Two days later, December 17, 1998, in a closed-door evening conference of his House Republican colleagues, Livingston said, "I very much regret having to tell you that I've been Flynted!"[12] The same day, Flynt released a press release saying he was investigating tips about four alleged affairs Livingston had had.[10] Two days later, on December 19, 1998, during the final impeachment debates in the House of Representatives, Livingston reiterated his call for Clinton to resign. Saying that he could only make this call "if I am willing to heed my own words," he announced that he would not only stand down as Republican candidate for Speaker, but would leave the House as well. He announced that he would resign his House seat "approximately six months into the 106th Congress."[13][14][15][16] (Privately, Livingston told colleagues that, if had he sought the speakership, it would have been more difficult for the House Republicans to carry out their agenda.[17]) In a subsequent speech, hurriedly written after consultation with the White House, Minority LeaderDick Gephardt ofMissouri proclaimed "We need to stop destroying imperfect people at the altar of an unobtainable morality", and praised Livingston and encouraged members to applaud him, which they did, giving the Louisianan standing ovations. Gephardt had previously urged Livingston to reconsider his resignation, having pledged not to make an issue of the extramarital affair if he became Speaker.[18]
Following Livingston's announcement of his resignation, House Republicans settled on Chief Deputy WhipDennis Hastert (who would later be convicted of crimes relating to sexually abusing minors[19]) to succeed Gingrich as Speaker of the House—a decision Livingston would later describe, in memoirs published in 2018, as "a disaster."[20] Years later, Livingston recalled giving Hastert "a foot-thick binder" filled with notes intended to help him become a successful Speaker, "and if he read any part of the thing, I'd be surprised."[20]
Livingston resigned from the House on March 1, 1999, two months into his 13th term.[21]
In 1985, Livingston had called for the resignation of Governor Edwin Edwards, who faced indictment and trial on charges ofracketeering and fraud. "He shouldn't continue to drag the image of our state down with his legal problems," Livingston said of Edwards.[22]
In 1987, Livingston ran for governor himself and declared, "You can lay our problems at the hands of politicians." He questioned the state's poor performance regarding school drop-outs, unemployment, and credit rating. He even noted that Louisiana had a high number of cancer patients, a factor that was often attributed to environmental hazards. Livingston continued:
I'm prepared to clean house.... The rest of the nation has the impression that Louisiana doesn't want to work... that Louisiana will tolerate corruption... that Louisiana is not serious about improving its quality of life....[23]
Despite polls that had generally showed that Livingston would face the incumbent governor,Edwin Edwards, in a second round of balloting, Livingston finished third of the nine candidates. Because of a last-week surge to his fellow U.S. representative, Buddy Roemer ofLouisiana's 4th congressional district, Livingston fell ten points short of a runoff berth. Roemer was slated into arunoff election officially the Louisianageneral election. Two other major candidates finished behind Livingston: the Democratic (later Republican) representativeBilly Tauzin ofLouisiana's 3rd congressional district and the outgoingSecretary of StateJames H. "Jim" Brown.
Despite his showing in the gubernatorial race, Livingston remained popular in his district and went on to win easy re-elections as he moved up the leadership ladder in the House.
Since resigning from Congress, Livingston has worked as a lobbyist.[24]
Soon after retiring from public life he foundedThe Livingston Group, a lobbying group inWashington, D.C. Some of their noted accomplishments include Congressional approval of aMorocco–United States Free Trade Agreement and Congressional normalization of relations between the US andLibya following the Libyan abdication of nuclear technology and settlement of claims by family members for people killed inPan Am Flight 103 and other violent incidents in the 1980s.
The Livingston Group's clients have includedCitigroup, theUnited States Chamber of Commerce, andVerizon Communications.[25] Another important client was theRepublic of Turkey, on whose behalf the Group lobbied until March 2008. Critics contend that this lobbying was a form ofgenocide denial, asTurkey does not recognize theslaughter of up to approximately a million million Armenians as a genocide, and does not want the American Government to recognize these events as genocide either.[26][27]
The Livingston Group has also represented the government ofEgypt until March 2012. Acting aslobbyist for Egypt Livingston "helped stall a Senate bill that called on Egypt to curtail human rights abuses" in 2010.[28] His stated role is to enhance relations between the United States and the Republic of Egypt, which he perceives as critical to a resolution of tension in theMiddle East.
Livingston emerged as a "behind-the-scenes player" in the impeachment inquiry against President Trump, apparently having urged a Trump administration official to oust the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.[29] On October 30, 2019, U.S. State Department employeeCatherine Croft noted in her opening statement to the congressional committees conducting theimpeachment inquiry against Donald Trump:
During my time at the NSC, I received multiple calls from lobbyist Robert Livingston, who told me thatAmbassador Yovanovitch should be fired. He characterized Ambassador Yovanovitch as an "Obama holdover" and associated withGeorge Soros. It was not clear to me at that time-or now-at whose direction or at what expense Mr. Livingston was seeking the removal of Ambassador Yovanovitch.[30]
Livingston declared his support forDonald Trump in March 2016, comparing him toRonald Reagan.[31]
In 2003, Livingston was inducted into theLouisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame inWinnfield.
Livingston testified in the 2009 trial ofMose Jefferson, who was convicted on four counts related to bribery. In response to a comparison made byJames Gill[32] between Livingston and formerU.S. representativeWilliam J. Jefferson (convicted of 11 felonies), Livingston defended theLivingston Group as having no relation to Jefferson's activities, but rather to the extent that they may have represented the same client, performed their own services in an entirely legal manner.[33][34][35]
From 2011 to 2014, Livingston became Treasurer of the Louisiana Republican Party.[36] Livingston said taking the fundraising assignment for the Louisiana GOP would not in any way undermine the work of The Livingston Group.[36]
Livingston is also a member of the board of theInternational Foundation for Electoral Systems, a non-profit involved in international elections,[37] and he is a Knight of theSovereign Military Order of Malta.
{{cite news}}:|first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)| U.S. House of Representatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Member of theHouse of Representatives fromLouisiana's 1st congressional district 1977–1999 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Chair of theHouse Appropriations Committee 1995–1999 | Succeeded by |
| New office | Chair of the House Ethics Reform Task Force 1997 Served alongside:Ben Cardin | Position abolished |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Republican nominee forGovernor of Louisiana 1987 | Succeeded by |
| U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial) | ||
| Preceded byas Former U.S. Representative | Order of precedence of the United States as Former U.S. Representative | Succeeded byas Former U.S. Representative |