The Title is Set, but Not the Tune

Everybody in School Finance Land seems to agree the state needs a new "broad-based business tax" to help buy down local property taxes. You can hear those four words from Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, and from House Speaker Tom Craddick. You'll hear them a lot more over the next six months.

But before you grab the leftover holiday champagne, see what they say about the details. Dewhurst has been most forthcoming, and most likely to say he's closest to a deal that his half of the Legislature would approve. At a pre-session lunch with reporters, he says he's looking at a "bold" plan that would lower property taxes to $1 — from a maximum of $1.50 now. That $1 could be in the form of a statewide property tax or a local property tax, depending on what lawmakers and voters will swallow. Local schools would be allowed to raise some local money, something between a dime and a quarter for every $100 in property value.

One math-equipped lobbyist we know points out that lowering it to a $1 and then allowing local enrichment is a lot like lowering taxes to $1.15 or $1.25. But when you put it that way, many lawmakers tell you it's not a big enough cut to sell voters on the state taxes needed to pay for it — they like calling it a one-third cut.

The ratio of state to local funding would flip; where the state now pays slightly less than 40 percent of the costs of public schools, it would pay "north of 60 percent" under the plan Dewhurst is talking about. If you're looking for a number to stick on here, that's about a $7 billion to $8 billion increase in state funding. The math isn't as tricky as the politics: the policymakers' hope is that voters would look at it as a swap instead of a tax hike. Craddick, in a separate interview, heard former Michigan Gov. John Engler say his state used state taxes to knock down some local property taxes, without costing any lawmaker at the ballot box.

Dewhurst says he would raise cigarette taxes. He's open to video lottery terminals (slot machines), and in code, he says they'd have to be at existing racetracks (what he actually said was that he's against expanding gambling in Texas beyond its current "footprint" and that VLTs could have a surprisingly positive impact on agriculture in Texas; we translate that to mean he'd support slot machines at racetracks that are already in business and if we hear different we'll return to this).

He says the school finance plan would leave the current balance of business and personal taxes more or less in place, but says more businesses would be paying taxes after the reforms. This is where you get the "broad-based business tax," and the story is similar from all corners. Current franchise taxes hit only one business in six. More businesses are figuring out legal ways not to pay those taxes, and the state needs more money and needs a fairer tax. Several flavors of broad-based business taxes have been examined here over the last few years: general taxes on gross receipts — the top line on a business income statement — on income, the bottom line — or on business activity, a tax on the overall proceeds of commerce. Most folks in the Pink Building are talking about business activity taxes. Within that are many variations: Dewhurst is apparently talking about a low-rate tax applied to business profits and employee compensation. Another variation adds in capital spending and subtracts depreciation. They're trying to raise somewhere between $3.5 billion and $5.5 billion a year with whatever variant they end up liking.

One version of the plan — we've seen several — includes a half-cent increase in taxes on sales and motor vehicle sales, and a 1.5 percent tax on real estate transactions. Some have suggested cutouts for "passive income," which would protect investment companies and venture capitalists and others from any "broad-based business tax." But you have to watch those exemptions: Dewhurst says he'll avoid a tax bill that would generate "intra-fraternal genocide," his term for what happens if one group has to pay a tax while another group escapes. Such arguments kill bills.

Craddick is also talking about knocking property taxes to $1, with room for local enrichment, and he says he's for a broad-based business tax. But he says he hasn't seen any consensus on the issue either inside the House or outside. Everybody's working together and playing nice, he says, but no deal is evident. Craddick says "most members think the system is broken," but is also aware of the Legislature's history of not solving problems like this one until the courts have had their say. The school finance system was ruled unconstitutional late last year, and the appeals to the Texas Supreme Court are less than two weeks old. It could be a while before the Supremes have loaded the gun that is pointed at the Lege's head.

Craddick's attention has been on what he calls the "reform side" of education, and he says the House leadership is pretty close — one or two issues remain — to having a bill ready for mass consumption.

It's the Senate's turn to start the budget and Dewhurst says it'll be done with the first round in early to mid-March. Sounding a little wary of the comptroller's pending revenue forecast, he says the Senate is assuming her numbers will be in line with estimates of personal income growth over the next two years — estimates issued late last year by the comptroller herself. When she speaks and the Legislative Budget Board lets loose its first draft of a spending plan, he thinks the shortfall will be between $1 billion and $2 billion. Craddick came up with the same numbers, and both men cautioned that they don't have a clue what Carole Keeton Strayhorn will say when she presents the biennial revenue estimate next week.

Dewhurst says he thinks state employees deserve a pay raise, particularly those in law enforcement. He says teacher pay is a problem, with young teachers leaving for other professions, and older teachers retiring earlier — at an average age of 56. He says he wants to restore cuts made to children's health insurance, reverting to 12-month application periods from six-month periods, reinstating coverage for vision, mental health and possibly extending dental benefits to beneficiaries.

Both he and Craddick say worker's compensation insurance is in for a fix, and both cited rates that are higher in Texas than in other states. The Senate will lay out a plan next week, and the House will work from the Sunset Committee's report.

Two more from Craddick. He says, first, that the two remaining election challenges in the House won't be a distraction from other business. And he shrugs off a question about distractions from the Travis County courthouse, where prosecutors and grand jurors continue to grind away on a two-year-old investigation of campaign finance in the 2002 House elections. "Nobody's talking to me about it," Craddick says. "The only people talking to me about it are the press."

Life and Death

The state's Child Protective Services agency needs a $329 million overhaul, according to the Health and Human Service Commission's report on problems there. CPS is part of the bigger agency and after revelations of injuries and deaths of children who should have been on the agency's radar, Gov. Rick Perry ordered HHSC to investigate and clean up the mess.

Their recommendations are done and Perry is putting some of them into effect and asking lawmakers to take care of others. The agency is opening an investigations division and asking the Legislature for money to hire caseworkers and lower caseloads by 40 percent, to add support personnel for caseworkers, to cut response times when abuse or neglect are reported, to privatize foster care, adoption and other case management services to "community-based organizations," to increase training, to undo a reorganization that changed CPS from nine regions to five, and to office CPS workers with law enforcement people and prosecutors when it's possible to do so.

HHSC looked at 2,221 CPS cases and found the agency had dropped the ball in one way or another in half of them.

To cut caseloads, the agency will have to hire 828 investigators. That would cut the number of cases per worker to 45 from 74.

The plan already came in for some criticism; the Center for Public Policy Priorities says HHSC is going in the right direction, but asking for too little. Scott McCown, who heads the CPPP, remembers former Gov. George W. Bush declaring the state's foster care in a state of crisis when the caseload average was 24, and calling for more caseworkers then. HHSC is now trying to cut it to an average of 45. McCown says the state would have to cut the load to 12 to 15 cases per worker to meet national accreditation standards.

The Gathering Storm

Add two names to the Kay Bailey Hutchison political squad: Chad Wilbanks, former political director for the Republican Party of Texas and a veteran of previous Hutchison campaigns, and Keats Norfleet, who most recently helped Louis Gohmert, R-Tyler, unseat U.S. Rep. Max Sandlin, D-Marshall, in Congress, and who worked for Rep. Dan Gattis, R-Georgetown, in the state Legislature. The two have signed on a political operativess for the senior U.S. senator from Texas (Wilbanks as a consultant, and Norfleet as a staffer). Hutchison is flirting with a run for governor next year against Rick Perry, the incumbent fellow Republican now in that spot, while also keeping open the option of running for reelection. Several of Wilbanks' former colleagues at the Texas GOP would be on the Perry side of the race, if such a thing comes to pass, including former chairwoman Susan Weddington, who heads a nonprofit started by Perry, Wayne Hamilton, former executive director of the Party, and Robert Black, flack for the GOP then and for Perry now.

Weddington was one of several well-known conservatives who announced they'll support Perry's reelection for a term that would make him the state's first ten-year governor. The rest: Cathie Adams, Texas Eagle Forum; Jim Cardle, Texas Club for Growth; Bill Crocker, Republican National Committeeman for Texas; Becky Farrar, Concerned Women of America PAC; Kay Goolsby, Texans for Texas; James Graham and Elizabeth Graham, Texas Right to Life PAC; Tim Lambert, Texas Home School Coalition; Norm Mason and Jeanne Mason, Texas Christian Coalition; Allan Parker, Texas Justice Foundation; Joe Pojman, Texas Alliance for Life; Marisa Rummell, Republican National Hispanic Assembly of Texas; Kelly Shackelford, Free Market Foundation; Janelle Shepard, Texans for Texas; Peggy Venable; and Kyleen Wright, Texans for Life Coalition.

The Perry gang is maneuvering for further signs of support. If they get the ducks lined up, they'll announce endorsements from other Republican statewide officials in the next few days; a list we're told could include almost all of the non-judicial elected honchos. Probably not on the list: U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, who'd have more to lose than to gain by getting involved, and Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, who is widely believed to be the third potential candidate in the governor's race. The Perry folks are also calling around to financial supporters, trying to compile a list of GOP heavies who'll say they're with Perry — and not Hutchison or Strayhorn — in the 2006 race for governor.

Sidebar: Nobody has successfully knocked off a sitting governor in a primary since John Hill beat Dolph Briscoe in the Democratic primary in 1978. Hill went on to lose to Republican Bill Clements...

Ground Rules

Melissa Noriega of Houston will represent HD-145 during the regular session, filling in for her husband, Rep. Rick Noriega, a major in the Army National Guard who's serving in Afghanistan, training soldiers for that country's army. She'll serve until he gets back or until his term ends, whichever comes first, and will have full voting rights as his proxy in the House.

There was some discussion about that among the House's rule-makers, and some question about the legality of her votes and of her pay for time in office (Major Noriega, by law, gets his daily legislative pay while he's on the front). The question is apparently resolved, at least where the votes are concerned. Rep. Joe Nixon, R-Houston, one of those who raised the issue, says he wanted her to get full legislative rights but first wanted to make sure it was legal. The other question — whether both Noriegas will get paid for the same gig — remains unanswered. The proxy issue was settled with a constitutional amendment voters approved last year, and though some members raised questions about whether Mrs. Noriega would have full privileges as a proxy, they've decided last year's amendment made it constitutional, as it was supposed to do. The pay question is something nobody thought to address before now and the lawyers are still researching and tinkering. That issue could arise next week when state reps vote on changes to their internal rules as the session gets underway.

That's not the only cloudy picture: The House will change its rules on record votes, but members who've been working on that haven't reached consensus on what changes to make.

Some types of legislation require record votes, usually when something more than a majority is needed to pass something. Constitutional amendments need 100 votes, for instance, and it takes a supermajority to get a bill to take immediate effect on passage. But on everyday stuff, record votes aren't required unless at least three members request a record vote. The Dallas Morning News has led other media outlets to bang the drums on the issue, and lawmakers are stuck between the rock of tradition and the hard place of ugly editorials back home. The papers want record votes on everything of substance, so they and their readers and other voters will know what their senators and representatives are doing when they're in Austin.

That's hard to argue against, and the House is considering several options, from record votes on everything to lower thresholds for requesting votes (something less than three members asking) to record votes on final passage of bills.

The rules people also talked about and then discarded the idea of sanctions against members who deny a quorum with organized walkouts or bus trips to Oklahoma or pilgrimages to Albuquerque that stifle redistricting and other issues. The House has apparently decided to leave that alone.

Game Over

Rep. Jack Stick dropped his challenge to the election that knocked him out of office, saying the voting was fouled up but that an election contest would be politically divisive and would leave the voters in HD-50 without effective representation for much of the legislative session that starts next week. The Austin Republican says he'll spend his time working over the elections process in Travis County to make sure future elections are kosher, and says more generally that he probably will run for office again sometime in the future.

That means Mark Strama, D-Austin, will take a seat in the Lege next week. Strama says he'll file papers asking Stick — who raised the challenge in the first place — to pay his legal fees. Strama didn't say how much he spent on attorneys. And he vented a bit about Stick's allegations of tainted voting and vote counting, saying he thought the election was clean and that he won it fair and square.

Stick says voter turnout was up in this election (over 2000), but that straight-ticket voting in Travis County rose by greater numbers than overall voting. And straight-ticket voting by Democrats, by his reckoning, outgrew similar voting by Republicans. But Strama pointed out that there were more straight-ticket Republicans than Democrats in the House district (though there were more Democrats than Republicans in the countywide totals).

Worse for Stick, Rep. Will Hartnett, R-Irving, who was assigned to ferret out the facts and present them to a committee for consideration, was sending ominous signals to the Stick camp.

In a mid-December email to the candidates and their lawyers, Hartnett told Stick he needed more info: "Unfortunately, other than the allegation of 72 duplicate votes, the amended petition, despite the passage of 43 days following the election, appears to be founded entirely on speculation.  I think I can say with confidence that neither I nor the Select Committee will consider any speculation in reaching a decision on this matter.  Please be prepared to discuss the amended petition’s allegations in detail during our conference tomorrow, and how Mr. Stick intends to meet his burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence within a short timeframe."

In an email a day later, he told the parties he wouldn't need to interview two witnesses unless Stick's case improved: "Unless Mr. Stick files a solid petition and discloses a solid list of alleged illegal or excluded voters quickly, however, there will be no need for the ladies to provide me any information." And two weeks later, he denied Stick's request for more time. Stick subpoenaed county officials for records, but didn't deliver the subpoenas in any official way, then wanted a continuance based on the lack of any answers to those unserved subpoenas.

Stick said he is withdrawing, in part, because the information he'd need to contest the election didn't appear to be forthcoming and that, in essence, he didn't want to drag it out.

Two Contests Remain in Overtime

Hearings on the remaining House election challenges are set for the third week of the session. Two more Republicans who lost their elections are challenging the Democrats who won them, and Hartnett plans to hold hearings on January 25-27 before writing his reports and recommendations to a House committee that will then take the contests to the full House. He had scheduled three days of hearings, but that was when the Stick/Strama duel was on, and we haven't seen a new schedule if there is one.

The House can throw out a challenge or try to figure out — from the election results, voter rolls, and other evidence — who won. If it can determine the winner, it has to seat that candidate. If it can't, it has to order a new election in that district, throwing the candidates back to the voters for another bite.

The headliner here is former Appropriations Chairman Talmadge Heflin, R-Houston, who lost his reelection bid to Democrat Hubert Vo. Heflin's lawyer says Vo's totals include votes from people who shouldn't have been allowed to vote; however it turns out, Heflin is out of the center chair on the budget-writing committee and probably out of the House leadership, at least for now. Committee chairs and other leadership positions will likely be doled out before the election contests are decided, and House Speaker Tom Craddick would have to decide if he wanted to rearrange the chairs again in the event of a Heflin win in the election contest. The facts of the case aren't yet clear, but the politics are: Heflin's challenge gives House Democrats a solid talking point in the Legislature's ongoing War on Bipartisanship.

The second jump-ball involves two newcomers: Republican Eric Opiela, R-Karnes City, wants the House to have another look at his loss to Yvonne Gonzalez-Toureilles, D-Alice. She beat incumbent Rep. Gabi Canales, D-Alice, in a primary runoff and then won the general election in November. He says the vote totals are suspect and is pressing forward. To prevail, a contestant has to show that enough of his voters were barred or that enough of his opponent's were illegitimate to overcome the margin of defeat. If the number of tainted votes is greater than the margin — and they can prove it — the House has to either overturn the result or order a new election. That's happened only once in recent history.

The documents filed in the three cases are available online at the Texas Legislative Council's website. When you're there, you'll see "Election Contest Documents" as one of the selections on the right side of the agency's home page.

While We Were Out

The news slowed down while we were on a year-end break, but it didn't stop. To wit:

• Sears, Roebuck and Co. became the second corporation to agree to help Travis County prosecutors' inquiry of campaign finance in the 2002 Texas House races. In return, the indictment against the company is being dropped. Meanwhile, political consultant John Colyandro filed documents asking for a dismissal of the indictments against him, saying the laws involved apply only to candidates, political committees and officeholders and that he is none of those things.

The inquiries began shortly after the 2002 elections. Prosecutors are investigating allegations of illegal coordination between campaigns and third party organizations and political action committees, and illegal use of corporate funds in those same elections. Sears, for instance, had been charged with making an illegal contribution to Texas for a Republican Majority PAC, one of several groups trying to win the first GOP majority in the Texas House since Reconstruction. Prosecutors have indicated that this will be the last year any of this could bring indictments: Most of the allegations have three-year statutes of limitations.

Two grand juries were working on that investigation during the last quarter of 2004. Their terms ended, and two new grand juries are being impaneled now. At least one will be working on this issue for the next three months.

Bob Richter, a veteran journalist who left newspapering to be House Speaker Tom Craddick's spokesman two years ago, got a pink slip over the holidays and is interviewing for a job set aside for him somewhere in the state's vast health and human services domain.

Richter was a victim of his own words, and of harsh media coverage of his boss, a prominent figure in the 2002 elections that are being investigated by grand juries and prosecutors in Travis County. We're admirers: Richter is honest, forthcoming, and has the sharp tongue of a former editorial writer. That last attribute can be a liability when used in the vicinity of politicians. His assistant, Kate Huddleston, was moved to another job in the Speaker's office. Neither saw it coming, apparently, but their replacements were interviewed and hired before the involuntary relocations took place, and the HHS people were drawn into the hunt for a new job for Richter early in December, well before he knew his fate.

In their places, Craddick hired Heather Tindell and Alexis DeLee. Tindell worked in a couple of hotspots: ERCOT (the Electric Reliability Council of Texas) and before that, at the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs. DeLee was most recently the spokeswoman for the Texas GOP, and before that worked in public relations with lobbyist Bill Miller; she was the spokesperson for a West Texas group seeking water rights that tussled with Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson and that included several Midland business people...

Sonny's Last Shot, a play by Austin writer Lawrence Wright, began a five-week showing down the street from the state Capitol through February 6. It's a spoof on the Texas Legislature, in case you need one.

Ron Kirk said he won't run for chairman of the national Democratic Party. The former Dallas Mayor, Texas Secretary of State and U.S. Senate candidate endorsed former U.S. Rep. Martin Frost, D-Dallas, who is actively seeking that job.

• The next election cycle started, with an invitation to a fundraiser at the home of Texas political guru Ben Barnes for one Eliot Spitzer, the New York attorney general who wants to be governor there. The hosts include several regular Democratic contributors — Ken Bailey, Joe Jamail, Harold Nix, Audre and Bernard Rapoport, Wayne Reaud, and Jack Martin. Of the group, Martin might be closest to that situation; the founder of Austin-based Public Strategies has been spending much of his time in New York City, working for clients there. Call this a hunch: If Texas Democrats don't mount serious candidates for state office in the face of Republican strength for the next couple of cycles, rich Texas Democrats could become prime financiers for out-of-state candidates.

Political People and Their Moves

James LeBas quit his job as the state's chief revenue estimator to take over as chief financial officer of the Texas Water Development Board. That move isn't as unusual as the timing: Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, LeBas' former boss, is uncorking the biennial revenue estimate next week, and she'll do it with a new forecaster. The new guy, John Heleman, is a veteran revenue estimator who started at the agency in 1988 and has survived three comptrollers. While he and his staff are forecasting state income over the next two years, LeBas will be working on bond and finance programs. That biennial revenue forecast tells legislative budgeteers how much money they can spend in their next budget without running an unconstitutional deficit. In recent years, legislators have accused Strayhorn of cooking the numbers for political reasons, and you might be hearing more about that in a week's time, when the new BRE comes out...

Dan Lambe decided to leave Texas Watch to take a job in his hometown of Lincoln, Nebraska, with the National Arbor Day Foundation. The new executive director here is Alex Winslow. Texas Watch is a consumer protection group that regularly lambastes insurance companies for high rates on home and auto policies...

Janice Steffes is the new chief of staff for state Sen. Troy Fraser, R-Abilene. She's been his legislative director for several years, and will replace Bill Scott, who had been the chief. Scott is leaving the Pink Building to become manager of public affairs in the Austin offices of Exelon, a Chicago-based electric utility with regulatory interests here. Bill Bragg, who worked for Rep. Jack Stick in the House and has done campaign work for Supreme Court Justice Scott Brister and others, is also joining Fraser's staff...

Susan Steeg, until recently the general counsel for the Texas Department of Health, is the new executive director of the Public Health Law Association, a relatively new group for people in that specialized area of law. She'll remain in Austin...

Damaris Barton, daughter of Texas GOP Vice Chairman David Barton, will be that party's new director of community partnerships. That announcement described her as a "grassroots outreach specialist"...

Deaths: Mack Kidd, a judge on the state's 3rd Court of Appeals in Austin and a former president of the Texas Trial Lawyers Association. He was 63... Roy Evans, former president of the Texas AFL-CIO. He was 79... Bill Stump of Georgetown, who served in the Texas Legislature back when Harry Truman was President of these United States. He was 93...

Quotes of the Week

Attorney General Greg Abbott, appealing a ruling that the state's school finance setup is unconstitutional: "Because this is a crucial matter of statewide importance, and because the students, parents, school districts and taxpayers need closure on this matter, we urge the Texas Supreme Court to hear the school finance case at the earliest possible date."

Clayton Downing of the Texas School Coalition, talking to The Dallas Morning News about legislative proposals to replace local school property taxes with state school property taxes: "A state property tax does not eliminate Robin Hood — it's just another version. It shifts the burden from the local districts to the local taxpayers who still have to pay it."

Rep. Jack Stick, dropping his challenge of the results of the election that lost him his state job: "To prove exactly what transpired in the last election will require a massive effort and will result in further political division. I have concluded it is not in the best interest of my constituents, the Texas House of Representatives or my family for me to pursue this election contest further."

Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle, quoted in the Texas Lawyer: "There is a basic rule that the Mafia follows and it is used as a template by most politicians that I have investigated: Deny the allegations and attack the allegator."

House Speaker Tom Craddick, in a pre-session interview with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: "I don't expect to be indicted. I didn't do anything wrong. I feel very comfortable about that."

U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp, R-Tennessee, quoted in The New York Times after House Republicans decided not to amend ethics rules to allow indicted members to remain in leadership positions: "It allows the Republicans to focus on the issues, the agenda that is before us and not to have Tom DeLay be the issue. I feel like we have just taken a shower."

Houston lawyer Pat Oxford, a longtime supporter of U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, talking to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram about a potential contest with Gov. Rick Perry: "If there is a Republican primary, Kay will win it. Kay Hutchison is one of the most conservative senators in the United States Senate. If they're going to try to beat Kay as being a liberal, they better bring their lunch with them."

Political consultant Jason Stanford, whose "Practice What You Preach" is a counter to efforts to ban gay marriage, quoted by the Associated Press: "Any fool could run the other side. When George Washington crossed the Potomac, no one gave him much of a chance, either. The really great stories in history are not written by slam-dunk favorites."

U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, quoted in the Waco Tribune-Herald: "I've got a lot of people saying anyone who can win in the heart of Bush Country should run statewide for Senate or something, but... I have no interest in running statewide."

Rep. Craig Eiland, D-Galveston, commenting in the Houston Chronicle after that paper reported on Texas Workforce Commission contracts given to people connected with former Mississippians Larry Temple, TWC's director, and Gregg Phillips, a former deputy commissioner at HHSC: "All their friends seem to be from Mississippi. At least they could get some friends here in Texas."

James LeBas, who quit his job as the state's chief revenue estimator two weeks before the new estimates of state income were to be announced, in the San Antonio Express-News: "I just found a job that I wanted."

Rep. Norma Chavez, D-El Paso, quoted by the Associated Press after getting the first "state official" plates ever issued for a motorcycle: "When I turned 40, I said I was going to get a Harley or a husband. I got a Harley and I still have the Harley."


Texas Weekly: Volume 21, Issue 28, 10 January 2005. Ross Ramsey, Editor. George Phenix, Publisher. Copyright 2005 by Printing Production Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. One-year online subscription: $250. For information about your subscription, call (800) 611-4980 or email biz@ texasweekly.com. For news, email ramsey@ texasweekly.com, or call (512) 288-6598.


 

The Week in the Rearview Mirror

House Speaker Tom Craddick, R-Midland, easily won reelection, getting 142 votes.Elizabeth Ames Jones, R-San Antonio, didn't vote. She declined to be sworn in (she's about to be appointed to the Texas Railroad Commission, and taking office would have made her ineligible). Melissa Noriega hadn't yet been sworn in as the substitute for her husband, Rep. Rick Noriega, D-Houston. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, voted "present" instead of yup or nope, and four members voted against Craddick's election to the high chair: Lon Burnam, D-Fort Worth, Jessica Farrar, D-Houston, Joe Moreno, D-Houston, and Paul Moreno, D-El Paso. And Yvonne Davis, D-Dallas, was there to be sworn in on Tuesday but was recorded as "absent" on the vote for speaker.

The three people who won't say they're running against each other in the GOP primary for governor next year have a total of about $20 million in the bank.Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn won't have the details of her report until next week -- it's not due until then -- but says she had $5.7 million in the bank on the last day of 2004. She says she raised more money in the last six months than in any similar time period in her political career. Gov. Rick Perry -- the only candidate who has definitely said he'll be running for Guv next year -- said earlier in the day he ended the year with $7.9 million in the bank. And U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison reported in October that she had $6.66 million cash on hand at the end of September. She's got a report coming out next week, but it's not expected to show significant change. That's $20.2 million in the three bank accounts. The filing date for that election is 50 weeks away, and the primary election will be in March 2006 -- 14 months from now. Strayhorn also named a new campaign finance chairman: Ken Banks of Schulenburg, president of International Muffler Co., and a member of the Texas Quarter Horse Association's board.

The Texas Legislature, expecting bumpy skies, got a smooth takeoff.Piece number one fell into place Monday, when Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn announced the state's financial fortunes have improved over two years ago and the ugly budget fight that ensued then might be avoided this time around. Budgeteers, nervous about Strayhorn's steady political attacks on Gov. Rick Perry, were braced for worse news. Instead, her numbers were within a hair's breadth of their own predictions about state income. Piece number two arrived on Tuesday, when the Texas Legislature came in for the opening of its 79th regular session, offering the media who cover the session twice every two years -- on the first day and the last -- enough pictures to last all the way to the end of May. We counted 25 TV cameras in the House at one point, or almost two dozen more than you'll see on a day in mid-session. They sent home video of House Speaker Tom Craddick winning a second term, of Melissa Noriega taking the oath to fill in for her husband, Rep. Rick Noriega, D-Houston, who is stationed in Afghanistan, and of Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, being elevated to the mostly honorary position of Senate President Pro Tempore, which puts her third in the government's line of succession and on center stage during "governor for a day" ceremonies later this year. Piece number three came on Wednesday, when Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, surrounded by senators, announced he had corralled unanimous agreement to principles for a public school package he said will include education improvements, property tax relief, fairer business taxes, and more. Now that they've eaten their spinach, the senators can line up for dessert: Dewhurst will spend the next few days working out who will get the committee assignments they requested. He got their signatures while holding those assignments back. And as we closed this issue, piece number four -- the Legislature's opening attempt at a new state budget -- was set to be announced on Friday. That'll be the first real look at what legislative leaders think the spending priorities ought to be, and it'll frame the finance fight -- at least the non-school part of it -- for the whole session. With all that out of the way, lawmakers ended their first week by taking a week off to allow travel time for the horde of legislators who want to watch George W. Bush's second inauguration in Washington, D.C. When they're back for the rest of the 20-week session, Perry has set out three emergency issues to be tackled: Mending the torn safety nets in Child Protective Services and Adult Protective Services, a $329 million plan outlined last week; and taking on education and school finance reforms. Lawmakers aren't allowed to act on legislation during the first 60 days of a session unless it's been declared emergency material by the governor. Also coming soon: Committee assignments in the House and the Senate, and two election challenges in the House. Enjoy the initial quiet.

Perry opens the bidding for the 2006 governor's raceGov. Rick Perry says he's not "wasting any time" worrying about politics, what with the state's senior U.S. senator and its comptroller of public accounts circling his Mansion with 2006 in mind. He adds that he was a Boy Scout and still heeds the "Be Prepared" motto. Thus, last week's announcement of support from several other statewide elected officials, the announcement before that of support from conservative leaders around the state, and the announcement this week of a finance committee and a campaign bank balance of nearly $8 million. Numbers for Kay Bailey Hutchison and Carole Keeton Strayhorn aren't yet available, but are due next week. State finance reports and the details within have to be filed with the Texas Ethics Commission next week; federal reports are due soon at the Federal Election Commission. Perry jumped the deadline to proclaim he raised $7.1 million during 2004 -- a year when he wasn't even on the ballot. The governor also uncorked the names of people who've agreed to serve on his campaign finance committee: • Austin: Gary Farmer, Steve Hicks, Rae & Richard Hill, Richard Salwen • Beaumont: Kent Adams • Blanco/San Antonio: Julianna Hawn Holt & Peter Holt • Brenham: John Barnhill, Howard Kruse • Brownsville: Nick Serafy • Bryan/College Station: Phil Adams • Buffalo Gap: Lisa & Tom Perini • Center: James Campbell, Rick Campbell • Corpus Christi: Glenda & Jerry Kane, Colleen McHugh • Crawford: Joe Hinton • Dallas: Beth Anderson, Julie & Louis Beecherl, John Gill, M.D., Phillip Huffines, Aman Khan, M.D., Robert Rowling • El Paso: Robert Brown, Paul Foster, Rick Francis, Ted Houghton, Woody Hunt • Euless: Neal Adams • Graham: Fred Gough • Harlingen: Anne & Bob Shepard • Houston: H. Scott Caven Jr., Chairman, Ned Holmes, Alfred Jackson, James Lee, Philip Leggett, M.D., William McMinn, John Nau III, Lynden Rose, Mike Rutherford, Kim & Michael Stevens, John White • Jacksonville: Robert Lee Nichols • Laredo: Margaret Martin • Lubbock: Mark Griffin, Nancy Neal, Windy Sitton, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Underwood, Morris Wilkes • Lufkin: John Parker • McAllen: Elvia & Adrian Arriaga, Noe Fernandez • Midland: Jose Cuevas Jr. • Mineral Wells: Chester Upham, Robert Upham • Missouri City: Massey Villarreal • Odessa: Bob Barnes • Plano: Bobby Ray • San Antonio: Lowry Mays, Red McCombs, Allan Polunsky, Gene Powell, Weisie & John Steen, Karl Swann, M.D. • Sugar Land: Helen & Carmelo Dichoso, M.D., James Wilson • Texarkana: Rebecca & George McWilliams • Tyler: Margarita & Thomas Grahm, René & Gaylord Hughey Jr., A. W. "Whit" Riter III • Victoria: Steve Holzheauser • Washington, D.C.: Raul Romero • Wichita Falls/Possum Kingdom: Carol Carlson Gunn & Robert Gunn

The special election to replace Elizabeth Ames Jones, R-San Antonio, in the Texas House will be held on Saturday, February 5, just three weeks from now.Jones, who would have been starting her third session, is Gov. Rick Perry's choice for a soon-to-be-open spot on the Texas Railroad Commission. Taking the oath to start the third term she recently won would have disqualified her, so she didn't do the swearing. That opened a spot in the Legislature and Perry picked the February 5 date. It's strongly Republican territory, and four people told the San Antonio Express-News they're looking: Joe Straus III and former Rep. George Pierce on the Republican side, and Melissa Kazen and Chip Haass on the Democratic side. Straus appears to have the early edge in the money race; radio magnate Lowry Mays put his name on the letterhead, as did Peter Holt and Jim Gorman, who were the co-chairs for Jones. He's also claiming the support of Bexar County Commissioner Lyle Larson, who had been mentioned as a potential candidate earlier in the week. It's on a fast track: The candidates have until the end of the day Tuesday, January 18, to file for the election. Early voting will run from January 25 through February 1. Chances are good that a replacement will be in the Legislature before any real lawmaking gets done this year.

Legislators expect to increase taxes because of school finance, but the economic/budget outlook is much improved over this time two years ago, according to the state's Comptroller of Public Accounts.The surplus/shortfall that matters is the one you'll see at the end of the week, when the Legislative Budget Board opens the curtains to reveal its starting budget for the session. The number the comptroller controls -- how much money is available -- is now in hand. But Carole Keeton Strayhorn has little say over how and how much state money is actually spent, just as the Legislature has little to say over how much revenue will flow into the treasury over the next two years. Use her numbers for income, theirs for spending; the politics are muddled, but at least the arithmetic works out. Two years ago, Strayhorn started the session by saying lawmakers would have $54.1 billion in general revenue to spend, or about $7.4 billion less than they had appropriated in the previous budget. The comparable numbers this time: $64.7 billion in general revenue will be available to spend, or $6.4 billion more than they appropriated the last time they wrote a budget. Another way to put it: This estimate says the state's general revenue income (federal and some other funds are left out) is up $10.6 billion over the estimate two years ago. And where started last session with $7.4 billion less than they needed to maintain spending, they're $6.4 billion ahead of the game at the moment. If we were in an auditorium full of budgeteers and political and lobby types right now, they'd be yelling and throwing calculators and beer bottles at the stage. So let us quickly acknowledge some Ifs, Yets, and Howevers. The $6.4 billion doesn't include what it would cost to extend current services in critical areas to new students, patients and other recipients. School enrollments, Medicaid caseloads and utilization rates, increased costs of this and that and the other thing all eat into the starting number. Which is why the LBB's budget is the thing to watch. Strayhorn says that stuff will eat up $6 billion, but the LBB's version is the one that counts. Two years ago, for example, the LBB started with a baseline budget that called for $64.6 billion in general revenue spending and $124.6 billion in all funds spending. Combining those with the comptroller's revenue estimates, the finger-wavers in the Lege came up with their $10.5 billion budget shortfall estimate. After they whittled spending and raised revenue (but not, they would insist, by raising taxes), the thing was in balance. Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and House Speaker Tom Craddick had predicted starting shortfalls of $1 billion to $2 billion, having seen the LBB numbers but not the comptroller's. Their guesses were based on what they think it'll cost to stay even, to fully or partially restore cuts to the Children's Health Insurance Program, and what it'll cost to bail the state out of its self-created scandals in the child and adult protective services programs. Strayhorn told reporters the state would begin with a surplus of $400 million, and that might turn out to be right. But it's not clear what all she added in and what she left out. Two years ago, she began by saying the shortfall was $10 billion after all those things were added in. When the Lege was finished raising money here and there and cutting programs here and there, it all balanced. The second part of the fight will be over what to add. Here, school finance could be the mechanism for a huge sleight of hand. If lawmakers reach an agreement on a school finance plan and a tax or revenue scheme to pay for it, they'll be able to hide revenue increases there. Who'll know in the end whether new revenue measures attributed to school finance raised 100 percent of what was needed, or 104 percent? That's not a conspiracy theory: Estimates of what new taxes would produce are usually conservative, and any overflow can be used for general spending. If, on the other hand, lawmakers get everything done during the regular session except for school finance, they can avoid tax bills and such by saying they'll do that and school finance together in a special session. They'll write specific budgets for everything else, write a "placeholder" budget for schools, and then figure out that education piece during a special session when the rest of the budget is locked up and kept away from the finance negotiators. Either way, Strayhorn wasn't likely to get any leverage. In the first case, a tax/fee/revenue bill resulting from school finance would cover any shortfall budgeteers might produce. In the second, the education "place-holder" can be sized to make the budget balance. That takes the suspense out of her session-end budget certification, and reduces any impulses from the comptroller's office or the Pink Building to politicize the numbers. Other Numbers • Strayhorn said the state will have a total of $130.5 billion available for the 2006-07 budget -- including federal funds, general revenue and everything else. That's up from the $114.2 billion she estimated at this point two years ago. • The numbers tend to grow during the legislative session, largely because lawmakers fiddle with tax and revenues on one hand, and spending patterns and federal matching funds and such on the other. When the comptroller revises the estimate at the end of the legislative session, she incorporates the changes made in the Pink Building, plugs in any new economic stuff she thinks is important, and spits out a new estimate. At the end of the 2003 legislative session, Strayhorn's final revenue certification estimated $58.4 billion in general revenue would be available, up from the $54.1 billion she predicted in January; the all funds revenue projection grew to $118.1 billion from $114.2 billion. It happens often. At the end of the 2001 session, she said general revenue sources would produce $61.6 billion and that all funds would total $109.4 billion. The corresponding January projections: $60.8 billion in general revenue, and $106.8 billion in all funds. • Strayhorn is forecasting a 3.2 percent annual increase in the state's economic output during the 2006-07 biennium, down from the 4.1 percent rate in the current two-year period. • Sales tax collections are expected to rise. Franchise taxes, which have been in an actual and rhetorical slump for several years, are expected to rise slightly. That's the tax in the headlights when you hear people talking about "broad-based-business-taxes" as a solution for school finance. Strayhorn and her estimators expect drops in the levies on natural gas, cigarettes, insurance, oil production and regulation, and inheritances. They're also expecting some non-tax revenue sources to go backwards, including the state lottery, and interest and investment income. Insurance taxes are dropping in spite of the number-crunchers' belief that rates are still rising; it's because of a lag between premiums paid the companies and taxes the companies pay to the state. The entire biennial revenue estimate is available on the comptroller's website if you want or need to read the fine print: www.window.state.tx.us.

The Senate's public school finance package doesn't include the kinds of details that will ultimately make the difference between rejection and acceptance, but it's a start.Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst got all 31 senators to sign off on the proposal, which generally calls for two major state taxes that would replace the money currently raised by local school property taxes. Much of it repackages options and ideas that you've seen in other forms before. Some highlights: • The Senate's version of a business activity tax -- there are endless permutations of this in the tax world -- would take a company's net pre-tax income, add back the compensation paid to their employees (with the first $30,000 for each employee deducted) and multiply that result by 1.95 percent. Sole proprietors wouldn't be subject to the tax, nor would small businesses whose compensation and net income totaled less than $150,000. It would raise about $7.2 billion over the first two years. • The local school property tax, which is at or edging toward the constitutional limit of $1.50 per $100 in valuation in most local districts, would be replaced with a $1 state property tax that could not be raised without a popular vote. Locals would be allowed to raise 15 cents on their own for local programs. Each of those changes would require constitutional amendments, and thus, voter approval. It would cost the state about $5.6 billion to replace local property taxes with state ones each year. • Sales taxes on consumer goods and on motor vehicles would increase, as would taxes on smokes, alcoholic beverages. This section was vague in the printed hand-outs given to reporters and lobsters (get your own copy at www.texasweekly.com/Documents/TexasChildrenFirst.pdf), but senators have talked about taxing real estate transactions at rates of up to 1.5 percent and are looking at extending current infrastructure taxes on telephone bills that are supposed to expire, at tighter enforcement of sales taxes on used car sales, and at improving the state's delinquent tax collections. That basket of taxes would produce an estimated $7.5 billion over the first two years. • It includes a higher standard of equity, meaning the differences in basic funding for schools in richer and poorer areas would shrink. School ratings would be linked to the success of their students on after-high school readiness tests, and students at lousy schools would have the option of transferring to better schools in the same areas. Teacher salaries would be raised -- no timetable was described -- to the national average. Schools would be pressed to lower dropout rates. And charter schools would have to meet tougher academic and financial standards. Without the teacher pay raise in there, Dewhurst & Co. put a $6.7 billion price tag on those and other items termed "educational improvements." Dewhurst and the senators were careful to say the plan would not raise taxes, since it would lower some and raise some others. The net effect on taxes would be zero. But the net effect on revenue would be fairly sizable. The new taxes and other revenue tricks would bring in more money, and the plan would result in more money going into education. That's not possible if the same amount of revenue is available, but it is possible if you don't call every source a tax, and if you don't refer to hidden revenue raisers -- like normal economic growth, and the growth of the values of the properties being taxes -- as new taxes. There's more money, but they'll insist taxes were, on average, flat. One more thing of note: The Senate plan doesn't include legalization of slot machines. That's still an option, but lawmakers have real doubts about the chances a conservative Texas House could muster the necessary 100 votes to allow so-called video lottery terminals in the state.

Political People and their Moves

Perry taps Jones for RailroadCharles Matthews hasn't bowed out, but his replacement has been named. Gov. Rick Perry started the first day of the session by say he intends to appoint Rep. Elizabeth Ames Jones, R-San Antonio, to Matthews' spot on the Texas Railroad Commission. As we noted last week, she can't take the appointment if she takes her oath of office for another legislative term. With lawmakers set to start swearing at noon, Perry's announcement frees her to do something else on the first day. Matthews is leaving elected office to be chancellor of the Texas State University System.

Texas Insurance Commissioner José Montemayor won't seek another two-year appointment when his term ends in May.Gov. Rick Perry will name a replacement, but early indications are that he won't do that until late spring. Put Deputy Insurance Commissioner Mike Geeslin's name into the hat and save it for later. Montemayor was the agency's number two man when Elton Bomer -- previously a legislator and Texas Secretary of State, now a lobbyist -- was the commissioner. He's been in the top spot for six years. During his tenure, the state tried to leash homeowners' and automobile insurance rates and to make medical malpractice insurance more available and affordable. Both efforts are still underway: home insurers were ordered to lower rates in 2003, giving back some of the increases they had put in place, and there are some early signs that more companies are offering medical malpractice insurance in Texas. Montemayor, a CPA, retired from the U.S. Air Force in 1993 (as a major) before joining TDI. He's originally from Brownsville. In his resignation letter, Montemayor said he'll stay around until Perry names a new commissioner. He didn't say there what he plans to do next.

Gov. Rick Perry had the appointments machine on full throttle as the legislative session began.• Perry named Ernest Angelo Jr., a Midland oilman who was Republican when Republican wasn't cool, to the Texas Public Safety Commission, which oversees the Department of Public Safety. He'll replace one of his neighbors -- Bobby Holt -- on that three-member board. • He named seven people to the Aging and Disability Services Council, one of several panels set up in the merger of the state's health and human services agencies to develop rules and policies for that elephantine organization. Terry Wilkinson of Midland will chair the council; she's worked on programs for the elderly there and is a former board member of the old Texas Department of Human Services. She'll be joined by Abigail Barrera of San Antonio, a doctor; Sharon Butterworth of El Paso, who was on the board of the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation; Jean Freeman of Galveston, who teaches public health courses at the University of Texas Medical Branch; Fran Brown of Carrollton, a former city council member and member of the former state Board on Aging who works at Lake Village Nursing Home; Thomas Oliver of Baytown, a CPA who chaired the Department of Aging's board; and David Young of Grand Prairie, an exec with Adapt of America, Inc. • Another of those new HHS panels, the State Health Services Council, gets seven members: Rudy Arredondo, a prof at the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center in Lubbock and the former chair of the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, will be presiding officer; Jim Springfield, president of Valley Baptist Health System in Harlingen and a Texas Hospital Association board member; Dr. Jaime Davidson of Dallas, president of Endocrine and Diabetes Associates of Texas; Dr. Jeffery Ross of Bellaire, director of the Medical Center for Foot Specialists and an assistant prof at Baylor College of Medicine; Beverly Barron, a former member of the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse who's been active in drug prevention; Dr. Lewis Foxhall of Houston, a health policy exec and professor at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center; and Glenda Kane of Corpus Christi, a former board member at MHMR. • Betty Pinckard Reinbeck got a weeks-long appointment to the Texas Building and Procurement Commission -- the agency that operates the state's property and real estate. When the term she's filling is complete at the end of this month, Perry intends to appoint her to a full six-year term. She's the executive director of the Tomball Economic Development Corp. • Taylor County Commissioner Stanley Egger of Tuscola will be the newest member of the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. That's another less-than-a-month gig to be followed by six years in a full term. • Perry reappointed John Ovard of Dallas as presiding judge of the First Administrative Judicial Region. • The Guv appointed Barbara Sheffield of Sugar Land to the Texas Credit Union Commission. She's the CEO at the Members Choice Credit Union and a trustee of the Texas Credit Union Foundation. • The One-Call Board -- a panel that makes sure utility and pipelines get marked before crews start digging -- gets three re-appointees and one new guy: Joseph Berry of Pearland, with Centerpoint Energy; Judith Devenport, who works for Merrill Lynch in Midland; and Janet Holland, who runs a hardward store in Mineral Wells, will remain on the board. John Linton of Lubbock, who works for Cox Communications (the cable wing of the company), is new on the board. • Perry named Audrey McDonald of Georgetown to the State Committee of Examiners in the Fitting and Dispensing of Hearing Instruments, which licenses hearing aids. • The state's Product Development and Small Business Incubator Board, part of the government's economic development apparatus, is getting nine new members: Jose Amador, director of the Texas A&M University System Agricultural Research and Extension Center at Weslaco; Michael Davis Jr. of Austin, a partner at the Haynes and Boone law firm; Richard Ewing, vice president of research at Texas A&M University in College Station and a professor there; Daniel Hanson of Dallas is the co-founder and principal of Technology Innovation Group; Neil Iscoe, director of the Office of Technology Commercialization at the University of Texas at Austin and an adjunct prof there; Dr. Mae Jemison of Houston, president and founder of BioSentient Corporation and The Jemison Group, Inc. and a former astronaut; David Margrave of San Antonio, an exec with BioNumerik Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Paul Maxwell, vice president for research and sponsored projects at the University of Texas at El Paso; and Harvey Rosenblum director of research of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. • Sada Cumber, chairman of SozoTek of Austin, and Jane Juett, president of Kitchen Gallery in Amarillo, are the newest members of the Texas Economic Development Corporation, another piece of the government's eco devo machine. • The Guv put three people on the Texas Small Business Industrial Development Corporation, which makes low cost loans to public entities: Nathaniel "Tan" Parker IV of Flower Mound, an exec with Computer Sciences Corporation, will chair the panel; A. Mario Castillo of San Angelo, president of the Aegis Group, Ltd., and principal of Pump Service and Supply Company; and Nancy Kudla of San Antonio, chairman and CEO of RDI Systems, Inc., and president of Core 6 Solutions, LLC. • Perry named Randall County Justice of the Peace Jerry Bigham of Canyon to the Texas County and District Retirement System.

Fisher, Dowd, Pollock, Davidson, Laine, Chick, Newton, and FortnerRichard Fisher, the Dallas financier who entered the public spotlight in 1994 for a kamikaze run for the U.S. Senate against Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison (he got just 38.3 percent of the votes), has been appointed to head the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Fisher, who was a deputy U.S. trade representative during the second Clinton Administration, will replace Robert McTeer, who left the school to become chancellor of the Texas A&M University System... Matthew Dowd came back to Austin right after helping get George W. Bush elected to a second term as president of these United States -- really, he was back for good by Thanksgiving. Now he's settled back in, and the polling and policy wonk has opened his own public affairs shop in Austin... Alan Pollock is the new chief in the Austin office of MGT of America, a Florida-based firm that does consulting work for government and government-related entities. He left the comptroller's office in 1996 to join that firm. Pollock will replace Jeffrey Ling, who moved to the mother ship in Florida. Donna García Davidson is the new general counsel to the Republican Party of Texas. She's a lawyer with Potts & Reilly in Austin, a former general counsel to Gov. Rick Perry and an assistant general counsel when George W. Bush was governor. She also worked for Perry when he was a mere Agriculture Commissioner. Rene Diaz had the GOP job until Perry made him a district court judge in San Antonio a few weeks ago... Dale Laine, who recently left Public Strategies to start his own consulting firm, signed on as president and COO of the Texas Cable & Telecommunications Association. He'll do that and keep the consulting thing, too. Laine is a reformed campaign worker whose former bosses include then-Gov. George W. Bush, U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and former Sen. Phil Gramm... The Texas Association of Realtors added Craig Chick to the in-house lobby team. He was a legislative aide to Sen. Kyle Janek, R-Houston, and to Rep. Fred Bosse, D-Houston, and has also worked on several campaigns... Will Newton takes over as Texas state director for the National Federation of Independent Business. NFIB also picked up lobster Lance Lively to help out during the legislative session. Newton had been the legislative liaison for Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn; she's replaced him with Monty Wynn, a former comptroller employee who worked in the Senate last session... Patrick Fortner is leaving the comptroller's office, where he's been part of the press shop through some thick and some thin, for the Texas Residential Construction Commission. He'll be the external communications guy there...

Eric Opiela, a Republican from Karnes City, dropped his challenge, citing unspecified pressures from within and without his own camp.He lost the election to Yvonne Gonzalez Toureilles, D-Alice. The decision in that race was clear, but Opiela questioned the legality of the voting in Jim Wells and Bee counties, and his inquiry triggered a grand jury inquiry and visits from investigators for Attorney General Greg Abbott. That criminal investigation is apparently still under way. He said afterwards that he thought the case was winnable, but that he didn't want to go through the lawsuits and other obstacles a win would require. Others have noted the institutional bias in the Legislature against challenges; despite the rhetoric you hear around these things, politicians get nervous about the appearance of overruling voters. Opiela would like to run for public office in the future, but said "until we solve the problems [in those two counties], there is no point in running for this seat." His attorney, Hector DeLeon of Austin, said a successful challenge would have likely resulted in another election, held in the same places where there were alleged problems in November. He said they'll hand their stuff over to investigators if asked, but said he and Opiela aren't involved in any criminal investigation.

Quotes of the Week

Bush, Strayhorn, Perry, and DickeyGeorge W. Bush, in The Wall Street Journal, on naming Allan Hubbard, a close chum at Harvard, as director of the National Economic Council: "He was the top of the class, which is why I'm the President and he's the adviser." Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, after announcing good news about state income and taking a pop at her most prominent rival, asked if she wants Gov. Rick Perry's job: "Today is certainly not the time for any speculation or announcements. Or at least not any announcements." Gov. Perry, reacting to the good revenue numbers, in the San Antonio Express-News: "I'm proud of the fact that I'm the governor of a state that over a two-year period of time went from a $10 billion budget (shortfall) to a $6 billion surplus." Barbecue honcho Roland Dickey, talking to The Dallas Morning News after KDFW-TV killed his cooking show, citing spouse Maureen Dickey's election to the Dallas County Commissioners Court: "Gosh, this is ridiculous. I'm on the air representing Dickey's Barbecue. I have nothing to do with her political stuff. Not that I don't support her."