In 1996, the Webster Parish Police Jury approved a $1,849,000 bid to the firm Finney Co. of Shreveport for construction of a new parish library facility on Est and West Street in Minden.
Voting performance Webster Parish is generally competitive in most contested elections. The parish voted for Republican
Barry Goldwater for president in 1964 and
George Wallace in 1968, when the former
governor of Alabama ran on the
American Independent Party ticket.
Richard Nixon won here in 1972, and
Jimmy Carter of
Georgia prevailed in 1976. In 1984,
U.S. President Ronald Reagan won the parish by a nearly two-to-one margin over former
Vice President Walter F. Mondale. In 2000,
Governor George W. Bush of
Texas won in Webster Parish with 9,420 votes (55.1 percent), compared to then Vice President
Al Gore's 7,197 (42.1 percent).
Patrick Buchanan of the
Reform Party held 183 votes (1.1 percent). In 2004, Bush again won the parish, having polled 11,070 votes (60 percent) to Democrat
John Kerry's 6,833 (37 percent). In 2008, U.S. Senator
John McCain of
Arizona carried Webster Parish with 11,417 votes (62.5 percent), compared to
Barack Obama's 6,610 (36.2 percent). Four years later in 2012, Republican
Mitt Romney led in the parish with 11,400 votes (61.9 percent), 17 fewer ballots than McCain had received. In 2012, President Obama polled 6,802 votes (36.9 percent), 192 more than his 2008 tabulation. The last Democrat hence to have won in Webster Parish at the presidential level was
Bill Clinton in 1996, who received 9,688 (55.3 percent), compared to Republican
Robert Dole's 6,153 ballots (35.1 percent).
Ross Perot, founder of the Reform Party, held 1,324 votes (7.6 percent). In that same election, the Democrat
Mary Landrieu carried Webster Parish in her successful U.S. Senate race against Republican
Woody Jenkins, 8,459 (51.3 percent) to 8,020 (48.7 percent). ==Education==