Richard Alvin Tonry

Richard Alvin "Rick" Tonry (June 25, 1935 – July 3, 2012) was a Democratic Party politician from New Orleans, Louisiana.

Richard Alvin Tonry
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 1st district
In office
January 3, 1977  May 4, 1977
Preceded byFelix Edward Hebert
Succeeded byBob Livingston
Louisiana State Representative for District 103 (Orleans and St. Bernard parishes)
In office
January 1976  December 1976
Preceded byElmer R. Tapper
Succeeded byEdward S. Bopp
Personal details
Born(1935-06-25)June 25, 1935
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
DiedJuly 3, 2012(2012-07-03) (aged 77)
Lumberton, Mississippi
Resting placeSt. Bernard Memorial Gardens in Chalmette, Louisiana
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materSpring Hill College
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law
OccupationLawyer

Education

He graduated in 1962 from Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama. In 1967, he earned a law degree from Loyola University New Orleans College of Law. He practiced law in the New Orleans area for almost a decade before being elected to the Louisiana House of Representatives in the first-ever nonpartisan blanket primary held at the state level in the fall of 1975.

Politics

He served a year (1976) in Louisiana House District 103. In the state House, he was an unabashed supporter of organized labor and was particularly close to Louisiana AFL-CIO leader Victor Bussie. Tonry led the push to kill a right-to-work bill in the 1976 legislative session, but those efforts failed and the bill became law without the signature of Governor Edwin W. Edwards, like Tonry, a strong supporter of organized labor and close friend of Bussie. Thus Louisiana became the last southern state to adopt a right-to-work bill.

Shortly after taking his state House seat, Tonry declared his candidacy for the United States Congress from Louisiana's 1st congressional district after the 36-year Democratic incumbent, Felix Edward Hébert, announced his retirement. In the Democratic primary, Tonry upset New Orleans City Councilman James Moreau, then narrowly defeated Republican Bob Livingston, an assistant state attorney general, in the general election. It was one of the last congressional elections held before Louisiana adopted its nonpartisan blanket primary for Congressional elections in 1978.[1]

Allegations

Tonry was investigated by the U.S. Attorney Gerald J. Gallinghouse,[2] was accused of allowing subordinates to steal votes by stuffing ballot boxes in St. Bernard Parish, a suburb of New Orleans.[3]

He was charged with receiving illegal campaign funds beyond the $1,000 federal limit then imposed per contribution. These allegation ultimately led to his resignation, his guilty pleas of campaign finance irregularities, and a six-months prison sentence at the Federal Prison Camp in Montgomery, Alabama.[1]

Resignation

When Tonry resigned from Congress after four months in the office, a special election was called in August 1977. Tonry ran in the Democratic primary for that race, but lost to one of his former colleagues in the state legislature, Ron Faucheux, who was defeated by Livingston in the special election. This seat has remained in Republican hands since that time[1] and is currently held by Steve Scalise after formerly being held by David Vitter and Bobby Jindal.

In 1983, Tonry tried to return to the Louisiana House in District 103, but finished in fourth (dead last) in the nonpartisan blanket primary with 2,693 votes (17.8 percent). Victory went to the Republican Edward Ripoll, who defeated incumbent Edward S. Bopp in a runoff election. Bopp had succeeded Tonry in the state House in 1977.[4]

Death

Tonry died of natural causes in 2012 at the age of 77 and is interred at St. Bernard Memorial Gardens in Chalmette, Louisiana.[1][5]

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See also

References

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
Felix Edward Hebert
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 1st congressional district

1977
Succeeded by
Bob Livingston
Preceded by
Elmer R. Tapper
Louisiana State Representative from District 103 (Orleans and St. Bernard parishes)

Richard Alvin Tonry
1976

Succeeded by
Edward S. Bopp
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