The real monkey business; it was Gary and Billy, not Gary and Donna.

AuthorGaltney, Liz
PositionGary Hart, Billy Broadhurst, Donna Rice

The Real Monkey Business by Liz Galtney

Billy Broadhurst's 15 minutes of fame began May 2, 1987, the night The Miami Herald staked out Gary Hart's townhouse. While Hart took only a few questions before retreating inside, the Louisiana lobbyist tracked down the Herald reporters to set the story straight. But Broadhurst, a political associate and close friend to Edwin Edwards, the Louisiana governor who was investigated by seven grand juries, was unable to wring the story from the headlines. By the end of the week, it seemed as if he was a line in every article, op-ed, and soundbite as the press pored over the itinerary of the trip he had arranged for Hart and a couple of friends to take to Bimini.

But that's about all America saw of Billy Broadhurst. While reporters have tailored their inquiries to Hart's womanizing, little has been said about the man Hart met through a political consultant in 1984 and came to know as a close friend and campaign adviser. "A fine, upstanding citizen," Hart said of Broadhurst last September, describing the man with whom he had taken vacations and put on his national finance board. For his part, Edwin Edwards spoke ddifferently of his former law partner and close friend, telling a state senator: "Billy was more careful when he was pimping for me."

Among Louisiana politicos, Broadhurst is notorious as a lobbyist's lobbyist, having parlayed his close ties to Edwards into a lucrative law practice. During Edwards's reign, the state's major interests -- gas, oil, minerals -- became Broadhurst's. Those ties proved useful outside Louisiana, too. His clout and his connections made him important to Hart and his debt-ridden campaign. Around campaign headquarters. Broadhurst's reputation as a man who could tap campaign donors earned him the title of "Mr. Deep Pockets." The two were close enough, recalled former Hart adviser Peter Tauber in an article in The New York Times Magazine, that when he asked for a moment alone with Hart, the candidate said, "This is alone," pointing to Broadhurst, his wife, and two other aides. Looking back on Broadhurst's career and his closeness to Hart, it becomes clear that the real monkey business had nothing to do with Donna Rice.

The bayou connection

The path that took Broadhurst to the Hart campaign began in Crowley, Louisiana in the heart of Acadia, the oil-gas-and-gumbo region that is home to Louisiana's Cajuns. In 1963, this son of an established accountant and graduate of Louisiana State University Law School took a job with one of the town's most prominent lawyers, Edwin Edwards, his senior by a dozen years.

As close as they were and as close as they've stayed, ther have different personalities, say those who know them. One of Edwards's favorite quips is "laissez les bontemps roulez" -- let the good times roll. While Broadhurst also became known for the way he wined and dined people -- not just in Bimini but in Baton Rouge, where he threw an annual crawfish and duck luncheon for state capitol reporters -- he came by his partying less naturally than his senior, Edwards. "He's whatever he needs to be at the time," said one, lawyer who knows him.

Over the next decade the two of them, along with Edwin's brother Nolan, built a business as Edwin built a political career, rising from the Crowley city council to Congress. By 1972, Edwin Edwards was governor, and Broadhurst was on his way to building his own practice, never straying far from his mentor.

"I'd put him in the category of five people who were closest to the governor," says Bob d'Hemecourt, former head of Edwards's New Orleans office and a Hart delegate in 1984. "You can't get any closer than that five. Billy got to see Edwin s much as he wanted." He clearly envisioned having...

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