Background
Thomas was the son of Aroe Thomas (1930–1994) of Franklinton.
Thomas was the son of Aroe Thomas (1930–1994) of Franklinton.
He graduated from Thomas High School in Franklinton and received a Bachelor of Science degree from Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond in neighboring Tangipahoa Parish.
In 1979, at the age of twenty-six, Thomas was elected coroner of Washington Parish, the easternmost of the Florida Parishes in the southeastern portion of his state. He remained coroner from 1980 until he took his legislative seat in 1988. He received his Doctor of Medicine credentials from Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans.
Thomas was initially elected as a Democrat to the Louisiana House of Representatives in the nonpartisan blanket primary held in October 1987.
At the age of 34, Thomas unseated the long-term Democratic incumbent, Lawrence A. Sheridan of Angie in Washington Parish, who was 34 years Thomas" senior. District 75 still encompasses Tangipahoa and Washington parishes.
Thomas polled 9,266 votes (602 percent) to Sheridan"s 6,121 (398 percent). In 1991, Sheridan sought a comeback but again lost to Thomas by an identical percentage: 6,312 (398 percent) to 9,532 (602 percent).
Sheridan had been chairman of the House Retirement Committee during much of his 28-year tenure in the House.
In October 1999, Nevers was unopposed for Thomas"s former House seat. After only three years of service, the Republican Philosophy Short resigned from the seat to re-enter the United States Marine Corps. In the 1995 general election, Short had unexpectedly unseated the legendary B.B. "Sixty" Rayburn of Bogalusa.
Rayburn"s former district appeared to have turned solidly Republican in the special election of February 6, 1999, when the sole Democratic candidate, Stanley Middleton, polled only 9 percent of the vote.
Thomas completed the final year of his Senate term but did not run again in 2003. He has also been affiliated with the Chamber of Commerce, Rotary International, and the Washington Parish Livestock Association.
Thomas has been active in many community affairs, including the building of a new branch library in Franklinton, the seat of Washington Parish. Thomas served on the Senate committees of Agriculture, Transportation, Highways & Public Works, and Insurance.
He was credited with assuring state funding of hospitals within his district during a time of budget cuts for such facilities.
Thomas contributed to Republicans David Vitter and David C. Treen, when both contested the United States. House special election in 1999. He also donated to future United States. Senator Vitter as a congressman and to the gubernatorial campaigns of Bobby Jindal.
In 1995, Thomas won his last term in the House by defeating his successor in both the House and the Senate, Ben W. Nevers, an electrical contractor from Bogalusa. Republican-convert Thomas won the position outright in the first round of balloting with 51 percent of the vote. In October 1999, Thomas won the nonpartisan blanket primary for the full Senate term (2000–2004), again over Stanley Middleton, 76-24 percent. Instead in October 2003, Representative Ben Nevers won Thomas" former Senate seat with 43 percent of the primary ballots when the second-place candidate, Republican Richard E. Tanner (born 1942) of Covington, the seat of Saint Tammany Parish, trailed with 21 percent and then withdrew from the general election.
In 1999, Thomas switched to Republican affiliation to enter the special election for the District 12 seat in the state Senate from Saint Helena, Saint Tammany, Tangipahoa, and Washington parishes.
Thomas is a member of the First Baptist Church of Franklinton.