Explore about the Famous Politician Neil Riser, who was born in United States on April 25, 1962. Analyze Neil Riser’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Neil Riser dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Neil Riser?
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Neil Riser Biography
The 32nd district included Catahoula, Concordia, Caldwell, Franklin, La Salle, and West Feliciana parishes and portions of Avoyelles, Ouachita, Rapides, and Richland parishes.
He is president and owner of Riser Funeral Homes in Caldwell and La Salle parishes. Since 1934, the Riser family has operated the funeral home, which was begun by Riser’s grandfather. Riser also serves as a board member of Caldwell Bank and Trust in Columbia. He is a past president of Pelican State Life Insurance Company. He was previously in the timber business, having worked in logging at the age of fourteen.
Riser’s grandfather, A. Hartwell Riser, was a city alderman from 1942 to 1950 in Ruston in Lincoln Parish. Riser was born in Columbia to Hartwell Neil Riser, Sr. (1934–1985), and the former Lillian Marie Gore (born 1937), who married in Caldwell Parish in 1956. After her husband’s death, Lillian Riser married Herschel Gentry, Jr., of Monroe. Neil Riser graduated in 1980 from Caldwell Parish High School in Columbia.
Hartwell Neil Riser Jr., known as Neil Riser (born April 25, 1962), is a funeral home owner in Columbia in Caldwell Parish in northeastern Louisiana, who is a Republican member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for the 20th district, serving since 2020.
Riser is the first Republican since Reconstruction to have won this Senate seat. John Henry Baker of Delhi was the first Republican to have sought the seat, but in the general election held on February 1, 1972, Baker fell well short of victory.
Located south of Monroe in northeastern Louisiana, Columbia was also the home of Governor John McKeithen and McKeithen’s son, Louisiana Secretary of State W. Fox McKeithen. In 1984, Riser earned a Bachelor of Science degree in business management from the University of Louisiana at Monroe (then Northeast Louisiana University).
Riser is married to the former Vicki Smith, the daughter of Glen and Carolyn Smith of the Fort Necessity community in Franklin Parish. She taught at River Oaks High School in Monroe. The couple has two daughters, Emilie (born 1988) and Allison (born 1992).
From 1996 to 2000, Riser was a member of the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee.
In 2007, State Senator Noble Ellington, then a Democrat, did not seek reelection to the Senate. Riser hence ran for the Louisiana Senate’s 32nd district, based in the northeast portion of the state. In the open nonpartisan blanket primary, Riser ranked first with 49 percent of the vote and fell just short of an outright victory. Riser attributed his success to “a good grassroots system that helped us. We did it one vote at a time…We truly were able to win against an embedded political system.” In the November general election, Riser defeated former State Representative Bryant Hammett, a Democrat from Concordia Parish. Hammett, a former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, was the outgoing secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries under Governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco. Riser defeated Hammett 55-45 percent.
Riser promised to file legislation to roll back the state income tax hike that became law when voters approved the Stelly Plan, named for former Republican State Representative Vic Stelly of Lake Charles. The rollback took effect early in 2009. Riser maintains that voters were misled when they ratified the Stelly Plan, which cut certain taxes and raised others.
In 2011, Riser won re-election to a second term unopposed.
Riser was a major candidate for the U.S. House seat vacated in September 2013 by Republican Rodney Alexander. Alexander announced on August 6, that he would not seek a seventh term in the office that he had held since 2003 and then a day later confirmed that he would resign the House seat effective September 27 to join the administration of then Governor Bobby Jindal. Riser declared himself “100 percent in the race. It’s a decision I’d already made. I already represent ten of the twenty-four parishes in the district; so I’m confident I have a connection with the people in it and with their conservative priorities. Riser was endorsed by U.S. Representatives John C. Fleming of Louisiana’s 4th congressional district, Charles Boustany of Louisiana’s 3rd congressional district and Steve Scalise of Louisiana’s 1st congressional district.
Between 2008 and 2020, Riser was a member of the Louisiana State Senate for the 32nd district. He was an unsuccessful candidate in the 2013 special election to fill Louisiana’s 5th congressional district seat vacated by Rodney Alexander. He was defeated in the runoff election held on November 16, 2013, by fellow Republican Vance McAllister, a political newcomer from Swartz, who held the seat for only thirteen months.
On September 16, 2014, Forgotston and Ruston journalist Tom Aswell, who broke the story, were vindicated when Janice Clark, a state court judge in Baton Rouge, declared the “Edmonson Act” unconstitutional. The successful suit challenging the law was brought forward by State Senator Dan Claitor, an unsuccessful Republican candidate for Louisiana’s 6th congressional district seat in the November 4 primary election.
On July 2, 2014, Riser pushed through an amendment on the last day of the legislative session which would have increased by $55,000 annually the retirement pay of Colonel Mike Edmonson, the superintendent of the Louisiana State Police and a Republican appointee of Governor Jindal. Another state trooper from Houma would also inadvertently been similarly affected by Riser’s amendment. Legislative rules prohibit a conference committee report from being considered on the last day of a session. However, both chambers voted by the two-thirds majority to suspend the rules and pass Riser’s amendment, which became known in the media as the “Edmonson Act”. Louisiana State Treasurer John Neely Kennedy has urged the state police retirement board, of which he is an ex officio member, to litigate the constitutionality of Senate Bill 294, which was promptly signed into law by Jindal.
After the married McAllister was caught on his office security video kissing his congressional aide, he announced in April 2014, that he would not seek a full House term in the primary scheduled for November 4. He then hesitated about the decision, reversing himself afterward. Despite that, Riser confirmed that he would not run again for the congressional seat. Those in the race for the full term included Monroe Mayor Mayo once again, Republican physician Ralph Abraham, former Grant Parish District Attorney Ed Tarpley, Monroe attorney Harris Brown, and Public Service Commissioner Clyde C. Holloway. Mayo and Abraham met in the runoff, with Abraham emerging the easy winner.
Riser ran unopposed for reelection to his third and final term in the state Senate in the October 24, 2015, primary election.
Riser was a candidate for state treasurer to succeed John Neely Kennedy, the U.S. senator from Louisiana. A special election was held to choose Kennedy’s successor as treasurer on October 14, 2017. The eventual winner in that race was another Republican, former State Representative John Schroder of St.Tammany Parish in suburban New Orleans.
Meanwhile, the late government watchdog and Hammond attorney C. B. Forgotston claimed that Riser’s amendment would have applied to “hundreds of thousands” of current and future retirees in all departments of state government and would have increased taxpayer liability by millions of dollars in additional accrued expenses. Forgotston said that Riser flatly lied to him in first denying the authorship of the amendment. “Riser has now said, ‘Yeah, it was me …’ He should have apologized to the public. He should have apologized to the other five members of the conference committee. He threw them under the bus. He definitely owes an apology to his staff member – he threw her under the bus.”
In April, 2018, Riser was one of 10 senators who voted against criminalizing sexual abuse of animals. Despite Riser’s opposition, the bill passed with 25 votes in favor of the ban.
Term-limited in the state Senate in the nonpartisan blanket primary scheduled for October 12, 2019, Riser is instead expected to qualify for the District 20 seat in the Louisiana House of Representatives being vacated by the two-term Republican Steve Pylant of Franklin Parish, who along with Republican John Stephens of LaSalle Parish and possibly Democratic state Representative Andy Anders of Concordia Parish, may contest Riser’s seat.
What's Neil Riser Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Neil Riser Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |