Education
University of Louisiana at Monroe. Tulane University Law School.
University of Louisiana at Monroe. Tulane University Law School.
A resident of Bossier City, Thompson ran without opposition in the nonpartisan blanket primary held on November 4, 2014, to succeed the retiring Division B Judge Ford East. Stinson, Junior., a Democrat, on the 26th District Court. A graduate of Jena High School in Jena, Louisiana Central Louisiana, Thompson obtained degrees in real estate and insurance from the University of Louisiana at Monroe (1988) and the Juris Doctor from Tulane University Law School in New Orleans (1995). He was affiliated with Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
While living in Monroe, he was from 1989 to 1992 the ULM (then Northeast Louisiana University) Associate Director of Development.
He was also a reserve officer with the Monroe Police Department and an insurance agent for Troy & Nichols Mortgage Company. After obtaining his law degree with honors from Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana, he relocated to Bossier City to engage in the practice of law and is active in the bar association.
He is affiliated with the National Rifle Association and was a district director of the Norwela Council of the Boy Scouts of America. In 2004, he was the president of the Bossier Chamber of Commerce.
Thompson was elected to the House in 2011, when the term-limited incumbent, fellow Republican Jane H. Smith of Bossier City, ran instead, unsuccessfully, for the Louisiana State Senate.
Thompson defeated fellow Republican, Duke Lowrie, 4,991 (568 percent) to 3,803 (433 percent). Smith, meanwhile, was defeated by the Republican businessman Barrow Peacock of Shreveport for the Senate seat vacated by B. L. "Buddy" Shaw. In 2008, Thompson was an unsuccessful candidate for the United States House of Representatives from Louisiana"s 4th congressional district.
The seat opened when the incumbent Jim McCrery stepped down to become a lobbyist.
Thompson finished in third place in the primary. The position went to the Republican physician and businessman John C. Fleming of Minden, who still holds the seat.
In the spring of 2012, Representative Thompson amended an anti-bullying bill sponsored by Patricia Smith, a Democrat from Baton Rouge. Thompson offered an amendment, which removed those sections of the bill that specify prohibitions against bullying in regard to only sexual orientation, disabilities, and race.
Smith said that the Thompson amendment effectively killed the focus of the legislation, and she withdrew it from further consideration.
Thompson opposed bullying in schools for any reason and worked to protect the educational opportunities of all children. Representative Thompson served on the House Education, Homeland Security, Ways and Means, and Military and Veterans Affairs committees. He also sits on the Joint House and Senate Committee on Homeland Security.
Thompson was a leader in the Louisiana legislature to address the over 17 millions pounds of propellant improperly and illegally stored at Camp Minden near Doyline, Louisiana.
The couple has two children, Lillie and Rowe Thompson. Mike Johnson, a Republican lawyer from Benton, was unopposed in the special election held in February 2015 to choose Thompson"s successor in the House.
He is a member of the large Cypress Baptist Baptist Church of Benton.