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Louisiana Freedom Caucus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US ultra-conservative political group
For the Freedom Caucus in the United States House of Representatives, seeFreedom Caucus.
Louisiana Freedom Caucus
ChairwomanBeryl Amedee
FoundedApril 2023
Split fromHouse Republican Caucus
Ideology
Political position
National affiliationRepublican Party
Seats in theState House
5 / 105

TheLouisiana Freedom Caucus is a legislativecaucus in theLouisiana State Legislature that promotes ultra-conservative policies that promotes limited governance and a traditional social agenda on issues such as crime, immigration, and public welfare. It is affiliated with theState Freedom Caucus Network. Its members all belong to theRepublican Party.

History

[edit]

In an effort to promote ultra-conservative policies in state legislatures, theConservative Partnership Institute launched the State Freedom Caucus Network, which provides training and resources to state lawmakers who launch or join a Freedom Caucus in their state legislature.[1][2] Three Republican Louisiana state Representatives created the Louisiana chapter of the Freedom Caucus in April 2023, becoming the eleventh state to launch such a caucus.[1][3]

The caucus helped establish the Louisiana Freedom Caucus political action committee the same month, but has distanced itself from controversial voter outreach tactics the PAC used in the 2024 election, such as criticizing a gay Republican running for astate House seat.[4][5]

Political positions and involvement

[edit]

The caucus claims to have authored 27 of the bills signed into law at the end of the 2024 legislative session, which saw a rightward tilt following the election of RepublicangovernorJeff Landry, replacing his Democratic predecessorJon Bel Edwards.[6]

Spending

[edit]

In April 2024, now-Chairwoman, Rep.Beryl Amedee, sponsored a bill that would prohibit government-funded services from being marketed or labelled as "free". Amedee argued that reducing reliance on government services requires a "change [in] the vocabulary" to reflect the role of taxpayers.[7]

Vaccines

[edit]

In March 2024, founding Caucus memberKathy Edmonston sponsored a bill that would have required schools to inform parents of their right to opt-out of vaccine requirements, in response to her perception that schools failed to inform parents of such an option during theCOVID-19 pandemic.[8][9]

Membership

[edit]

Caucus membership is not published, and is invitation only.[1] Members may disclose their membership, however.[1]

Current members

[edit]

Former members

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdO'Donoghue, Julie (2023-04-05)."Louisiana House conservatives form new Freedom Caucus • Louisiana Illuminator".Louisiana Illuminator. Retrieved2025-12-23.
  2. ^Nitzberg, Alex (2025-08-20)."'There are 50 swamps': State Freedom Caucus Network helps conservatives fight the 'uniparty'".Fox News. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  3. ^Beimfohr, Jeff (2023-04-06)."Arklatex politics: Louisiana Freedom Caucus & Insulin".KTBS. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  4. ^abcO'Donoghue, Julie (2024-01-24)."Louisiana elected officials helped fund PAC that sent anti-LGBTQ+ texts to voters • Louisiana Illuminator".Louisiana Illuminator. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  5. ^abO'Donoghue, Julie (2023-10-22)."PAC's anti-LGBTQ+ text on Election Day causes 'number of problems' for Freedom Caucus • Louisiana Illuminator".Louisiana Illuminator. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  6. ^Picket, Kerry (2024-06-10)."Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry pushes through conservative overhaul in first legislative session".The Washington Times. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  7. ^O'Donoghue, Julie (2024-04-20)."Louisiana House votes to ban 'free' to describe government giveaways • Louisiana Illuminator".Louisiana Illuminator. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  8. ^ab"Rep. Kathy Edmonston announced candidacy for re-election in District 88".Gonzales Weekly Citizen. 2023-04-17. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  9. ^Hilburn, Greg (2024-03-24)."Should Louisiana lawmakers protect businesses, students, employees from vaccine mandates?".The Times. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  10. ^STAFF (2024-01-19)."LA Freedom Caucus Announces Election of New Officers".The Times of Houma/Thibodaux. Retrieved2025-12-24.
  11. ^Service, The Drum News (2025-06-13)."Ahead of 'No Kings Day,' Freedom Caucus says citizens have a right to defend themselves on our roads".DrumBeatsLa. Retrieved2025-12-24.
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