ถถา๕h

Skip to main content
You are the owner of this article.
You have permission to edit this article.
Edit

Wade Rousseย was selected by the LSU Board of Supervisors as the 29th LSU president, signaling a shift toward a corporate-oriented leadership after past presidents with lengthy academic backgrounds.ย ย 

James Dalton was selected by the board to serve as the system's vice president and chancellor.

Under the proposed structure laid out by Rousse in his acceptance speech, external affairs, governmental affairs and athletics will report to Rousse. Operations on the flagship campus, the AgCenter, the two health science centers and the Pennington Biomedical Research Center will report to Dalton.

The pair replaces former LSU President , who left for Rutgers University. The roles of president and chancellor were combined but have now been separated by the Board of Supervisors.ย 

As a ถถา๕h native and president of McNeese State University, Rousse positioned himself in interviews as a candidate with a nontraditional background who would shake up the university. Before joining McNeese in 2019, he spent significant time in the private sector, including co-founding a marine logistics firm.

The LSU Board of Supervisors voted 12-1 for Rousse and Dalton with Laurie Aronson voting no. Political insiders said Rousse was Gov. Jeff Landryโ€™s favored candidate for the job and had an inside track with the board.

Business background

Rousse graduated from Nicholls State University in 1993 and went into the marine transportation business, according to and LinkedIn page. He earned a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Illinois at Chicago, worked for two years at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and founded an alternative investment company.

Beginning in 2015, he served as an associate dean at Northern Arizona University before joining McNeese in 2019 as dean of the College of Business. He moved up through that universityโ€™s administration before being appointed president in July 2024.ย 

A new chancellorย 

James Dalton, the executive vice president and provost of the University of Alabama, had positioned himself as taking a โ€œstudent-centricโ€ approach during the interview process. He was one of three finalists for the president role, and was chosen by the board to work alongside Rousse.ย ย 

At Alabama, Daltonย assisted with student and faculty programs, meets with faculty every week, watches faculty research, and oversees a $1.3 billion budget. During the interview process, Dalton said the university needed to prioritize student success through academic support programs and enrollment management.ย 

This is a developing story.ย 

Email Christopher Cartwright at christopher.cartwright@theadvocate.com.