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To: Mudboy Slim
Perhaps, although I believe what tipped it was a bunch of pissed-off folks who don't usually vote in midterm elections saying, "Enuff is ENUFF!!" and going to the polls and pulling the AnythingButDemonRAT lever!!

Sounds like yer on to somethin' there. Seems the turnout was extraordinarily heavy in many parts of the country for a mid term elections. It may just be the Pubbies turned out in record numbers??? I'm going to spend some time over the next few days trying to find some answers just to satisfy my curiosity. Regardless, the results could be very informative for future elections...

FGS

168 posted on 11/08/2002 1:15:24 PM PST by ForGod'sSake
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To: newslady; Patriot1; blam; Askel5; PhiKapMom
Storing for future reference...

FEBRUARY 13,  2002

  Duncan Spencer
   HillScape

SNELLINGS-LANDRIEU, REED
New mansions on the Hill set new grand high style

It’s taken nearly four years to custom-build a large brick mansion for Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and her lawyer-builder husband, Frank Snellings, and their two young children, Connor and Mary Shannon.

But the Snellings-Landrieu home will be a Capitol Hill showplace, neighbors agree. In fact, it’s expected to become a kind of embassy for the state of Louisiana in the 400 block of East Capitol Street. It is now close to completion, though tight-lipped owner and project manager Snellings declined to comment about their ambitious architectural effort. (The family has lived in a rented row house nearby during the long construction process.)

DUNCAN SPENCER 
New Landrieu-Snellings home

Its cost also remains a closely held number, although sources say it’s well over $1 million, in light of such delicate touches as hand-cut slates, copper roof work, stone lintels and much top-of-the-line custom carpentry. Snellings took over as contractor shortly after the walls started to rise, donning a hard hat and spending many hours at the site. He earned a reputation as an exacting boss who took great pains to perfect every aspect of the house. The designer is a New Orleans architect, David Waggoner.

The site, the last large close-in lot on the south side of the wide street, has only one drawback: lack of parking space. The family was able to circumvent city requirements that new houses include off-street parking by successfully filing an appeal for a variance with the Board of Zoning Adjustment.

So the Snellings-Landrieu family will have to rough it by parking on the street, although the senator’s workplace is within easy walking distance. She’s a member of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee and chairs its District subcommittee.

Landrieu, who had a career in real estate before rising in Louisiana politics, won a bitterly contested election in the 1996 cycle, winning by less than 6,000 votes. She’s considered vulnerable in November. During the campaign she portrayed herself as a fighter for the middle-class and the working poor. But her concern for ordinary folks comes from on high: The couple has reported assets of $1.85 million (Landrieu) and $4.2 million (Snellings) according to public filings.

Landrieu’s Senate campaign received considerable support from building trades’ unions. Nevertheless, Snellings used non-union labor on the mansion.


169 posted on 11/08/2002 5:01:10 PM PST by ForGod'sSake
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