





Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleOther
PartyRepublican
Political ideologyConservative Republican
Age67 years old (Oct 1, 1958)
GenderMale
LocationLouisiana
BackgroundAttorney
EducationBrother Martin High School (graduate)
Notable personal detailsEric Frederick Skrmetta is a Republican attorney and mediator who has represented District 1 on the Louisiana Public Service Commission since January 1, 2009. He earned a B.S. from Louisiana State University (1981), a J.D. from Southern University Law Center (1985), and an LL.M. in Admiralty/Maritime Law from Tulane University Law School (1986). He has also been active in Louisiana Republican Party politics and has run for higher office, including a U.S. Senate campaign in the 2026 cycle.
The candidate describes himself as a fiscal conservative who works to keep consumer utility costs low while allowing companies to earn a fair profit; he has directed utilities to pass through savings from the 2018 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to customers. He opposes large-scale Green New Deal–style policies and emphasizes lower costs, support for energy and oil-and-gas industries, and reducing inflationary pressures.
Supports stronger border security including construction of a border wall and backing measures to withhold state or federal funds from entities that do not comply with immigration laws. Campaign statements emphasize protecting the southern border and prioritizing border security and military investment.
The candidate identifies as pro‑life and supports policies that restrict abortion access while promoting alternatives such as expanding adoption credits and defunding Planned Parenthood. Public statements and campaign materials frame his approach as pro‑life policy priorities rather than supporting unrestricted access to abortion.
The candidate opposes expansion of statewide energy-efficiency mandates and emphasizes protecting ratepayers and keeping utility-run programs. He has expressed skepticism about new oversight or programs that could raise costs, and says renewable sources must compete on price with traditional fuels rather than receive special treatment.
Eric Skrmetta is being mentioned in the context of Louisiana’s Senate race as health insurance costs rise after the expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act premium credits. The change is driving higher premiums for many people and could become a campaign issue alongside coverage concerns, with estimates that millions could lose insurance by 2026.






Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
2026
LatestCycle 2026
Source: FEC
New updates coming soon
We're monitoring and will update when new data impacts the race.