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Jim Folsom Jr.

James Elisha 'Jim' Folsom Jr. (born May 14, 1949) is an American politician who was the 50th governor of Alabama from April 22, 1993, to January 16, 1995. He has also served as the lieutenant governor of Alabama on two occasions. He is a member of the Democratic Party.

Jim Folsom Jr.
50th Governor of Alabama
In office
April 22, 1993 – January 16, 1995
LieutenantVacant
Preceded byGuy Hunt
Succeeded byFob James
25th and 29th Lieutenant Governor of Alabama
In office
January 15, 2007 – January 17, 2011
GovernorBob Riley
Preceded byLucy Baxley
Succeeded byKay Ivey
In office
January 19, 1987 – April 22, 1993
GovernorGuy Hunt
Preceded byBill Baxley
Succeeded byDon Siegelman
Personal details
Born
James Elisha Folsom Jr.

(1949-05-14) May 14, 1949 (age 74)
Montgomery, Alabama, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMarsha Guthrie
Alma materJacksonville State University
Military service
Allegiance United States
 Alabama
Branch/serviceAlabama National Guard
Years of service1968–1970

Early life and education edit

Born in Montgomery, Alabama, he is the son of former First Lady of Alabama Jamelle Folsom and legendary two-term Alabama Governor James E. "Big Jim" Folsom Sr.[1] Jim Folsom Jr. is therefore known as "Little Jim" even though he is well over six feet tall. In 1974, he graduated from Jacksonville State University, where he presently serves as a trustee.

Early career edit

During his first run for a political office, he lost the primary to incumbent Democratic Congressman Tom Bevill by an overwhelming margin. However he was elected to the Alabama Public Service Commission in 1978.

Folsom unlike his father was a moderate-to-conservative Democrat. He won support from groups his father had long opposed, especially a group of conservative business people known as the Big Mules. In 1980, Folsom ran for the U.S. Senate and attacked the incumbent, Donald W. Stewart, as being too liberal for Alabama and called him a "puppet of the great Washington power structure." Although Stewart outspent Folsom $500,000 to $75,000, he very narrowly missed winning a majority in the primary and Folsom won the runoff.[2] In the general election, Folsom lost by a narrow margin to Republican Jeremiah Denton, who was aided by the Ronald Reagan landslide, which helped Republican candidates across the country.

Folsom was re-elected to the Alabama Public Service Commission in 1982.

James Folsom was elected Alabama Lieutenant Governor and served from January 19, 1987, to April 22, 1993 (being re-elected in 1990). During both terms, as a matter of law, Folsom was also President and Presiding Officer of the Alabama State Senate. He served under Governor H. Guy Hunt, the first Republican Alabama Governor since Reconstruction. Hunt and Folsom also happen to be from the same (Cullman) county. Folsom also was a member of the National Association of Lieutenant Governors.

Governorship edit

In 1993, Hunt was convicted of state ethics law violations regarding the funding of Hunt's second inaugural ceremonies. Like most states, Alabama's constitution prohibits convicted felons from serving in office. As a result, Hunt was forced to resign on April 22, 1993, and Folsom automatically became governor.

Only weeks after Folsom assumed the office, state officials were approached by Mercedes-Benz about the possibility of locating its first manufacturing plant outside its native Germany in Alabama. Over the following months, Folsom led Alabama's efforts to recruit the facility, culminating in an October 1993 announcement that Alabama had beaten 30 other states for the coveted facility. The prestige of the Mercedes plant opened the door for future automotive plants to locate in the state.[3]

Within six days after taking office Governor Folsom ordered the removal of the Confederate flag from the state capitol to a memorial.[4] His de facto Chief of Staff was his longtime friend and confidant, Charlie Waldrep, an attorney at Waldrep, Stewart & Kendrick, LLC. Governor Folsom also appointed a number of African Americans and women to his staff.[5]

In 1994, he ran for a full four-year term in his own right. Although some regarded Folsom as a popular governor, three candidates challenged him in the Democratic primary, the most serious being Paul Hubbert, the executive secretary of the Alabama Education Association and nominee for governor in 1990. Folsom after a fierce and sometimes nasty primary, fended off Hubbert's challenge with 54% of the vote. But Hubbert's primary challenge damaged Folsom, who in the General Election, was narrowly defeated by former Democratic Governor Fob James, who was running as a Republican. Even though 1994 was a tough year for Democrats and that Folsom was facing a popular former governor in James and had spent a lot of money to win his primary against Hubbert, the result was narrow. In fact, Folsom lost by less than 10,000 votes or 49.7%-50.3% to James.

Compared to other prominent Democratic incumbent Governors who lost that year such as Ann Richards in Texas, Bruce King in New Mexico, and Mario Cuomo in New York, Folsom ran much more strongly than they did. He also ran stronger than Democratic nominees in other Southern states with governor's races, such as Phil Bredesen in Tennessee (who eventually was elected there in 2002), Jack Mildren in Oklahoma, and Nick Theodore in South Carolina.

Post-governorship and return to politics edit

In 2006, Folsom reentered state politics, running again as the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor. He won the Democratic nomination unopposed, and in the general election, he narrowly defeated Republican lawyer Luther Strange for a third, nonconsecutive four-year term. Folsom is the longest-serving lieutenant governor in Alabama history with 10 years of service; his third term ended on January 17, 2011.

Folsom endorsed former U.S. Senator Bill Bradley of New Jersey in the 2000 Democratic presidential primaries, Governor of Vermont Howard Dean in 2004 Democratic presidential primaries, and U.S. Senator and future President Barack Obama of Illinois in the 2008 Democratic presidential primaries. In 2016, he was a strong supporter of former Governor of Maryland Martin O'Malley for president.[6]

He announced on April 1, 2009, that he would seek re-election as lieutenant governor in 2010 rather than run for the Democratic nomination for governor.[7] On November 2, 2010, Folsom was defeated by three percentage points in his re-election bid for a fourth term by the Republican nominee, Kay Ivey. Folsom explored a potential 2018 bid for governor.

Folsom is married to the former Marsha Guthrie. They have two children. He is an Episcopalian.

Electoral history edit

Democratic primary for the U.S. House of Representatives – AL 4th district, 1976

  • Tom Bevill (Inc.) – 90,168 (80.87%)
  • Jim Folsom Jr. – 21,335 (19.13%)

Democratic primary for the United States Senate, 1980

  • Donald W. Stewart (Inc.) – 222,540 (48.63%)
  • Jim Folsom Jr. – 163,196 (35.67%)
  • Finis St. John – 51,260 (11.20%)
  • Margaret E. Stewart – 20,582 (4.50%)

Democratic runoff for the United States Senate, 1980

United States Senate election in Alabama, 1980

  • Jeremiah Denton (R) – 650,363 (50.15%)
  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) – 610,175 (47.05%)

Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, 1986

Democratic runoff for lieutenant governor, 1986

  • Jim Folsom Jr. – 517,724 (57.49%)
  • John Teague – 382,836 (42.51

Election for lieutenant governor, 1986

  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) – 726,111 (61.85%)
  • Don McGriff (R) – 447,978 (38.16%)

Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, 1990

  • Jim Folsom Jr. (Inc.) – 510,814 (80.87%)
  • William McKinley Branch – 120,861 (19.13%)

Election for lieutenant governor, 1990

  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) (Inc.) – 768,988 (67.33%)
  • Bob McKee (R) – 373,072 (32.67%)

Democratic primary for governor, 1994

  • Jim Folsom Jr. (Inc.) – 380,227 (54.04%)
  • Paul R. Hubbert – 285,554 (40.59%)
  • Margaret E. Stewart – 24,254 (3.45%)
  • Tom Hayden – 13,532 (1.92%)

Alabama gubernatorial election, 1994

  • Fob James (R) – 604,926 (50.33%)
  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) (Inc.) – 594,169 (49.43%)

Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, 2006

  • Jim Folsom Jr. – unopposed

Election for lieutenant governor, 2006

  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) – 629,268 (50.61%)
  • Luther Strange (R) – 610,982 (49.14%)
  • Write-in candidates – 3,029 (0.24%)

Election for lieutenant governor, 2010

  • Kay Ivey (R) – 764,112 (51.47%)
  • Jim Folsom Jr. (D) – 718,636 (48.40%)
  • Write-in candidates – 1,945 (0.13%)

References edit

  1. ^ "Former Ala. first lady Jamelle Folsom dies at 85". Montgomery Advertiser. Associated Press. December 2, 2012. Retrieved December 30, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Alan Abramowitz, Jeffrey Allan Segal, Senate Elections. First thorough study of modern elections to the U.S. Senate, University of Michigan Press, 1992, ISBN 0-472-08192-6, ISBN 978-0-472-08192-9
  3. ^ "Mercedes Picks State for Plant," The Huntsville Times, September 29, 1993, p. A1
  4. ^ "Rebel Flag Could Have Cost State Mercedes Plant," The Huntsville Times, October 2, 1993, p.A2
  5. ^ "James E. Folsom Jr. (1993–95)". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  6. ^ Our Campaigns – Candidate – Folsom, Jr., James E. "Jim"
  7. ^ "Folsom won't run for governor in '10 | al.com". Blog.al.com. April 1, 2009. Retrieved September 4, 2010.

External links edit

  • official government site
  • Jim Folsom for Lt. Governor June 12, 2019, at the Wayback Machine official campaign site
  • Appearances October 10, 2012, at the Wayback Machine on C-SPAN programs
  • Alabama Governor James Elisha Folsom Jr. May 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine government profile
  • Profile at the Encyclopedia of Alabama
  • at the Alabama Senate
  • Alabama Democratic Party March 24, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
Political offices
Preceded by
Chris Whatley
Member of the Alabama Public Service Commission
for the 2nd seat

1979–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Alabama
1987–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Alabama
1993–1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of Alabama
2007–2011
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Alabama
(Class 1)

1980
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Alabama
1986, 1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Alabama
1994
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Alabama
2006, 2010
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United States Succeeded byas Former Governor

folsom, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article, talk, page. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Jim Folsom Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message James Elisha Jim Folsom Jr born May 14 1949 is an American politician who was the 50th governor of Alabama from April 22 1993 to January 16 1995 He has also served as the lieutenant governor of Alabama on two occasions He is a member of the Democratic Party Jim Folsom Jr 50th Governor of AlabamaIn office April 22 1993 January 16 1995LieutenantVacantPreceded byGuy HuntSucceeded byFob James25th and 29th Lieutenant Governor of AlabamaIn office January 15 2007 January 17 2011GovernorBob RileyPreceded byLucy BaxleySucceeded byKay IveyIn office January 19 1987 April 22 1993GovernorGuy HuntPreceded byBill BaxleySucceeded byDon SiegelmanPersonal detailsBornJames Elisha Folsom Jr 1949 05 14 May 14 1949 age 74 Montgomery Alabama U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseMarsha GuthrieAlma materJacksonville State UniversityMilitary serviceAllegiance United States AlabamaBranch serviceAlabama National GuardYears of service1968 1970 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Governorship 4 Post governorship and return to politics 5 Electoral history 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education editBorn in Montgomery Alabama he is the son of former First Lady of Alabama Jamelle Folsom and legendary two term Alabama Governor James E Big Jim Folsom Sr 1 Jim Folsom Jr is therefore known as Little Jim even though he is well over six feet tall In 1974 he graduated from Jacksonville State University where he presently serves as a trustee Early career editDuring his first run for a political office he lost the primary to incumbent Democratic Congressman Tom Bevill by an overwhelming margin However he was elected to the Alabama Public Service Commission in 1978 Folsom unlike his father was a moderate to conservative Democrat He won support from groups his father had long opposed especially a group of conservative business people known as the Big Mules In 1980 Folsom ran for the U S Senate and attacked the incumbent Donald W Stewart as being too liberal for Alabama and called him a puppet of the great Washington power structure Although Stewart outspent Folsom 500 000 to 75 000 he very narrowly missed winning a majority in the primary and Folsom won the runoff 2 In the general election Folsom lost by a narrow margin to Republican Jeremiah Denton who was aided by the Ronald Reagan landslide which helped Republican candidates across the country Folsom was re elected to the Alabama Public Service Commission in 1982 James Folsom was elected Alabama Lieutenant Governor and served from January 19 1987 to April 22 1993 being re elected in 1990 During both terms as a matter of law Folsom was also President and Presiding Officer of the Alabama State Senate He served under Governor H Guy Hunt the first Republican Alabama Governor since Reconstruction Hunt and Folsom also happen to be from the same Cullman county Folsom also was a member of the National Association of Lieutenant Governors Governorship editIn 1993 Hunt was convicted of state ethics law violations regarding the funding of Hunt s second inaugural ceremonies Like most states Alabama s constitution prohibits convicted felons from serving in office As a result Hunt was forced to resign on April 22 1993 and Folsom automatically became governor Only weeks after Folsom assumed the office state officials were approached by Mercedes Benz about the possibility of locating its first manufacturing plant outside its native Germany in Alabama Over the following months Folsom led Alabama s efforts to recruit the facility culminating in an October 1993 announcement that Alabama had beaten 30 other states for the coveted facility The prestige of the Mercedes plant opened the door for future automotive plants to locate in the state 3 Within six days after taking office Governor Folsom ordered the removal of the Confederate flag from the state capitol to a memorial 4 His de facto Chief of Staff was his longtime friend and confidant Charlie Waldrep an attorney at Waldrep Stewart amp Kendrick LLC Governor Folsom also appointed a number of African Americans and women to his staff 5 In 1994 he ran for a full four year term in his own right Although some regarded Folsom as a popular governor three candidates challenged him in the Democratic primary the most serious being Paul Hubbert the executive secretary of the Alabama Education Association and nominee for governor in 1990 Folsom after a fierce and sometimes nasty primary fended off Hubbert s challenge with 54 of the vote But Hubbert s primary challenge damaged Folsom who in the General Election was narrowly defeated by former Democratic Governor Fob James who was running as a Republican Even though 1994 was a tough year for Democrats and that Folsom was facing a popular former governor in James and had spent a lot of money to win his primary against Hubbert the result was narrow In fact Folsom lost by less than 10 000 votes or 49 7 50 3 to James Compared to other prominent Democratic incumbent Governors who lost that year such as Ann Richards in Texas Bruce King in New Mexico and Mario Cuomo in New York Folsom ran much more strongly than they did He also ran stronger than Democratic nominees in other Southern states with governor s races such as Phil Bredesen in Tennessee who eventually was elected there in 2002 Jack Mildren in Oklahoma and Nick Theodore in South Carolina Post governorship and return to politics editIn 2006 Folsom reentered state politics running again as the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor He won the Democratic nomination unopposed and in the general election he narrowly defeated Republican lawyer Luther Strange for a third nonconsecutive four year term Folsom is the longest serving lieutenant governor in Alabama history with 10 years of service his third term ended on January 17 2011 Folsom endorsed former U S Senator Bill Bradley of New Jersey in the 2000 Democratic presidential primaries Governor of Vermont Howard Dean in 2004 Democratic presidential primaries and U S Senator and future President Barack Obama of Illinois in the 2008 Democratic presidential primaries In 2016 he was a strong supporter of former Governor of Maryland Martin O Malley for president 6 He announced on April 1 2009 that he would seek re election as lieutenant governor in 2010 rather than run for the Democratic nomination for governor 7 On November 2 2010 Folsom was defeated by three percentage points in his re election bid for a fourth term by the Republican nominee Kay Ivey Folsom explored a potential 2018 bid for governor Folsom is married to the former Marsha Guthrie They have two children He is an Episcopalian Electoral history editDemocratic primary for the U S House of Representatives AL 4th district 1976 Tom Bevill Inc 90 168 80 87 Jim Folsom Jr 21 335 19 13 Democratic primary for the United States Senate 1980 Donald W Stewart Inc 222 540 48 63 Jim Folsom Jr 163 196 35 67 Finis St John 51 260 11 20 Margaret E Stewart 20 582 4 50 Democratic runoff for the United States Senate 1980 Jim Folsom Jr 204 186 50 60 Donald W Stewart 199 365 49 40 United States Senate election in Alabama 1980 Jeremiah Denton R 650 363 50 15 Jim Folsom Jr D 610 175 47 05 Democratic primary for lieutenant governor 1986 Jim Folsom Jr 331 527 37 72 John Teague 277 899 31 62 Hinton Mitchem 203 112 23 11 Melba Till Allen 66 439 7 56 Democratic runoff for lieutenant governor 1986 Jim Folsom Jr 517 724 57 49 John Teague 382 836 42 51 Election for lieutenant governor 1986 Jim Folsom Jr D 726 111 61 85 Don McGriff R 447 978 38 16 Democratic primary for lieutenant governor 1990 Jim Folsom Jr Inc 510 814 80 87 William McKinley Branch 120 861 19 13 Election for lieutenant governor 1990 Jim Folsom Jr D Inc 768 988 67 33 Bob McKee R 373 072 32 67 Democratic primary for governor 1994 Jim Folsom Jr Inc 380 227 54 04 Paul R Hubbert 285 554 40 59 Margaret E Stewart 24 254 3 45 Tom Hayden 13 532 1 92 Alabama gubernatorial election 1994 Fob James R 604 926 50 33 Jim Folsom Jr D Inc 594 169 49 43 Democratic primary for lieutenant governor 2006 Jim Folsom Jr unopposed Election for lieutenant governor 2006 Jim Folsom Jr D 629 268 50 61 Luther Strange R 610 982 49 14 Write in candidates 3 029 0 24 Election for lieutenant governor 2010 Kay Ivey R 764 112 51 47 Jim Folsom Jr D 718 636 48 40 Write in candidates 1 945 0 13 References edit Former Ala first lady Jamelle Folsom dies at 85 Montgomery Advertiser Associated Press December 2 2012 Retrieved December 30 2012 permanent dead link Alan Abramowitz Jeffrey Allan Segal Senate Elections First thorough study of modern elections to the U S Senate University of Michigan Press 1992 ISBN 0 472 08192 6 ISBN 978 0 472 08192 9 Mercedes Picks State for Plant The Huntsville Times September 29 1993 p A1 Rebel Flag Could Have Cost State Mercedes Plant The Huntsville Times October 2 1993 p A2 James E Folsom Jr 1993 95 Encyclopedia of Alabama Retrieved September 4 2010 Our Campaigns Candidate Folsom Jr James E Jim Folsom won t run for governor in 10 al com Blog al com April 1 2009 Retrieved September 4 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jim Folsom Jr Office of the Lt Governor official government site Jim Folsom for Lt Governor Archived June 12 2019 at the Wayback Machine official campaign site Appearances Archived October 10 2012 at the Wayback Machine on C SPAN programs Alabama Governor James Elisha Folsom Jr Archived May 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine government profile Profile at the Encyclopedia of Alabama Biography at the Alabama Senate Alabama Democratic Party Archived March 24 2005 at the Wayback Machine Political offices Preceded byChris Whatley Member of the Alabama Public Service Commissionfor the 2nd seat1979 1987 Succeeded byCharles Martin Preceded byBill Baxley Lieutenant Governor of Alabama1987 1993 Succeeded byDon Siegelman Preceded byGuy Hunt Governor of Alabama1993 1995 Succeeded byFob James Preceded byLucy Baxley Lieutenant Governor of Alabama2007 2011 Succeeded byKay Ivey Party political offices Preceded byDonald Stewart Democratic nominee for U S Senator from Alabama Class 1 1980 Succeeded byRichard Shelby Preceded byBill Baxley Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Alabama1986 1990 Succeeded byDon Siegelman Preceded byPaul Hubbert Democratic nominee for Governor of Alabama1994 Preceded byLucy Baxley Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Alabama2006 2010 Succeeded byJames Fields U S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byFob Jamesas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United States Succeeded byDon Siegelmanas Former Governor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jim Folsom Jr amp oldid 1214510977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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