Louisiana Government: What It Is and Why It Matters
Louisiana's state government operates as one of the more structurally distinct public administrative systems in the United States, shaped by a civil law tradition inherited from French and Spanish colonial rule rather than the English common law framework governing the other 49 states. This page covers the constitutional structure, regulatory reach, qualifying entities, and operational contexts of Louisiana's governmental apparatus across its three branches and 64 parishes. Professionals, researchers, and service seekers navigating Louisiana's public sector will find this site covers more than 90 in-depth reference pages — spanning executive agencies, legislative bodies, the judiciary, constitutional provisions, and parish-level administration. For answers to common definitional questions, the Louisiana Government: Frequently Asked Questions page addresses the sector's most frequently referenced points.
Boundaries and Exclusions
Louisiana state government authority is bounded by the Louisiana State Constitution, federal constitutional supremacy clauses, and the statutes codified in the Louisiana Revised Statutes. The Louisiana Constitution establishes the foundational grant of power, defines the three co-equal branches, and sets limits on delegation of authority to subdivisions and agencies.
Scope and coverage limitations are as follows:
- State authority applies to matters arising within Louisiana's geographic borders and to persons and entities subject to Louisiana law by domicile, registration, or activity.
- Federal law, administered through agencies such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Aviation Administration, and the Social Security Administration, operates in parallel but is not covered by this reference. Federal jurisdiction supersedes state action under the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution where direct conflicts arise.
- Interstate compacts — including the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision, to which Louisiana is a signatory — fall partially within state administrative scope but the interstate governance mechanisms are outside this site's coverage.
- Municipal ordinances adopted by incorporated cities such as New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and Shreveport operate beneath the state layer but carry their own distinct regulatory authority not fully addressed here.
- Tribal governance for federally recognized tribes with presence in Louisiana, including the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana and the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, operates under federal tribal sovereignty and does not fall within state government authority in most respects.
This site is part of the broader United States Authority network, which provides federal-level and multi-state reference content beyond Louisiana's jurisdictional scope.
The Regulatory Footprint
Louisiana state government administers regulatory authority across a range of sectors through a cabinet-level agency structure reporting to the Governor. The Louisiana Executive Branch encompasses the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and more than 20 cabinet-level departments and agencies. Key regulatory bodies include:
- Louisiana Department of Revenue — tax administration, compliance, and collection under Title 47 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes.
- Louisiana Department of Health — public health licensing, Medicaid administration, and environmental health standards.
- Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality — air, water, and solid waste permitting under delegated federal authority and state statute.
- Louisiana Public Service Commission — utility rate regulation for investor-owned electric, gas, telephone, and water utilities.
- Louisiana Gaming Control Board — licensing and oversight of the state's commercial casino, video poker, and sports wagering sectors.
- Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors — construction contractor licensure under Louisiana Revised Statutes Title 37.
The Louisiana State Agencies directory on this site catalogs the full agency landscape with individual agency profiles.
The Louisiana Legislative Branch — consisting of a 39-member Senate and a 105-member House of Representatives — enacts statutory authority through the Louisiana Revised Statutes and the annual legislative session structure. Regulatory rulemaking by agencies proceeds under authority delegated by the Legislature and is codified in the Louisiana Administrative Code.
The Louisiana Judicial Branch interprets and applies state law through a tiered court structure: the Louisiana Supreme Court (7 justices), 5 Courts of Appeal, and 42 judicial district courts.
What Qualifies and What Does Not
Louisiana state government authority applies to:
- State agencies and departments created by statute or executive order, funded through the state general appropriations process.
- Constitutional officers including the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and Commissioner of Agriculture — all elected statewide.
- The 64 parishes of Louisiana, which function as the primary political subdivisions equivalent to counties in other states. Parish governance structures vary: some operate under home rule charters, others under general law.
- Special districts — including levee districts, school boards, and port authorities — created under state law with delegated taxing or regulatory authority.
Louisiana state government authority does not apply to:
- Private entities except where they are licensed, regulated, or contracting with the state.
- Federal enclaves such as military installations, which operate under exclusive federal jurisdiction.
- Purely interstate commerce regulated by federal agencies absent a state nexus.
A key distinction exists between constitutional departments (established directly in the Louisiana Constitution and requiring a constitutional amendment to abolish) and statutory agencies (created by the Legislature and subject to reorganization by statute or executive order). The Louisiana Department of Education, for example, is a constitutional department with an elected State Superintendent, while the Department of Economic Development operates as a statutory executive agency.
Primary Applications and Contexts
Louisiana's governmental structure has direct operational consequence across professional licensing, public contracting, education, health services, infrastructure, and environmental permitting.
Professional licensing is administered through multiple agencies — the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, the Louisiana State Bar Association (subject to Supreme Court oversight), and the Louisiana State Licensing Board for Contractors, among the more than 50 occupational licensing boards operating under state authority.
Public education policy flows from the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) through the Department of Education, reaching Louisiana's approximately 700,000 public school students across parish-level school systems.
Infrastructure projects on state highways, bridges, and port facilities involve the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development, which administers a capital outlay process funded in part through the annual state capital budget and federal transportation allocations under programs such as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021.
Tax compliance obligations for businesses and individuals in Louisiana are administered through the Department of Revenue, with obligations governed by Title 47 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes — covering corporate income tax, individual income tax, and state sales and use tax at a base rate established by statute.
Parish-level administration intersects with state government through mandated programs, pass-through funding, and regulatory compliance requirements. The 64 parishes — from Caddo Parish in the northwest to Plaquemines Parish at the Mississippi River delta — each maintain elected governing bodies (police juries or parish councils) operating under state constitutional authorization.