Following the Money

Democrat Chris Bell is suing Republican Rick Perry and the Washington, D.C.-based Republican Governor's Association over the provenance of $1 million in campaign money in last year's gubernatorial election.

Bell's suit, filed in Travis County, says the Perry campaign reported $1 million in contributions from an RGA political action committee that wasn't registered to operate in Texas, and thus hid the actual contributor of the money from voters before the elections.

According to the suit, RGA accepted more than $1 million in contributions from Houston builder Bob Perry before making the contribution to Gov. Perry (no relation). But because of the way the donations operated, there was no way for voters to know that before they voted. The lawsuit implies the money was earmarked, but offers no proof of that.

Perry reported receiving the money, according to the suit. But RGA didn't make a Texas filing, so there was no way for voters to follow the money back to its source. In the lawsuit, Bell alleges both RGA and the Perry campaign broke the law: RGA for not filing with the Texas Ethics Commission, and the Perry campaign for accepting money from an outfit that wasn't legally doing business in the state.

Randall "Buck" Wood, Bell's attorney, said the RGA should have filed in Texas, and should have kept its corporate donations and non-corporate donations in separate legal entities. And the Perry camp should have checked before it took two contributions totaling $1 million. "They have a responsibility for making sure it's kosher," he said. "You can't take that money. It's not legal."

The lawsuit asks for double damages, and with two transactions — giving and receiving — that's $4 million.

Bell's lawsuit started a back-and-forth.

A spokesman for the RGA called it a frivolous lawsuit, and said that outfit "complies with both state and federal laws." An aide to Perry called it "a paperwork error" and said the campaign made a mistake in referring the committee as a PAC. "We'll refile it the right way," said Robert Black.

Black wasn't done. He sent reporters a Bell letter to Perry asking to be considered for the state's Washington lobby contract, and suggested Bell sued because he didn't get that lobby gig.

Black also disputed claims that the $1 million came from Bob Perry, saying the governor's contribution came from the RGA and that there was no illegal earmarking of Bob Perry's contribution to RGA — no agreement to pass that along to the Texas governor.

At the time, Perry's campaign was blasting Bell for more than $2 million in campaign loans from Beaumont lawyer John O'Quinn. Getting $1 million from the Houston builder might have taken the starch out of the governor's attack, but Black said that's not what happened.

"If we were going to take money from Bob Perry, we'd just take it," he said. "I don't think there's any comparison between this and O'Quinn."

Holding Down the Fort

Like the state Senate District 11 contest between Mike Jackson and Joe Jaworski, the SD-10 race pits a potentially well-funded Democratic challenger, fresh out of city council, against a potentially better-funded Republican incumbent.

Like Jaworski, Democrat Wendy Davis is putting her money on purplish demographics in the district and constituents fed up with an out-of-touch officeholder. Republican Kim Brimer, like Jackson, remains confident in the continued redness of his region and a voting record his consultant says speaks for itself.

SD-10 encompasses the majority of Fort Worth and much of the suburban area wrapping around the city from the southwest to the northeast.

Tarrant County native Davis is a graduate of Texas Christian University and Harvard Law School. Davis is CEO of a title company. She wants to take her hands-on style of municipal governance — honed by more than eight years on the Fort Worth City Council — to the state political arena. Her campaign will focus on public education, healthcare costs, transportation issues, and utility rates, she says.

Brimer has been working in Austin since 1988, serving 14 years in the House before being elected to the Senate in 2002. He's the chair of the Sunset Advisory Commission and the Senate Administration Committee and sits on a handful of other committees. "It's arguable that not any other single legislator had more impact on economic development legislation in Texas than Kim Brimer," consultant Bryan Eppstein says.

In addition to economic development, Brimer's campaign will highlight his efforts to increase funding for highways and roads, his tough-on-crime stance and his work to "preserve constitutional rights and individual freedoms," says Eppstein.

In contrast, Davis, according to Eppstein, "likes to trample on constitutional rights" of property owners, gun owners and crime victims. "This is a population that doesn't take very kindly to that," he says.

Brimer, says Davis, suffers from "ethical lapses."

"What I hear repeatedly from people is, they don't know him," she says. "He's not working with them. What they feel is a sense of disenfranchisement between themselves and that representative."

To make that point, Davis points to the results of a poll by the Lone Star Project, which calls itself a "non-ideological" group dedicated to thwarting "the rhetoric and misinformation typically provided by the current Republican State Leadership in Texas and Texas Republicans in Washington." LSP is a spin-off of the Lone Star Fund, started by Matt Angle, a Democratic congressional staffer and political advisor to former U.S. Rep. Martin Frost, D-Dallas. Most of its targets have been Republicans.

The poll, conducted by Opinion Analysts in May, showed that about 18 percent of likely SD-10 voters gave Brimer a favorable rating, 7 percent were unfavorable, and 25 percent were neutral. The rest didn't know him.

"After 19 years in Austin, half the voters knew so little about him they couldn't rate him," Davis said. "Those that did know him didn't think very favorably of him."

"That's just hogwash. People know who Kim Brimer is, and they have a strong opinion of him," Eppstein says. "Outside of [Davis's] city council district, people don't know who she is."

Eppstein says the Brimer campaign's polling paints a different picture from the Lone Star Project's. "How do you know they didn't make the numbers up? It looks like they made the numbers up to me," he says.

Jeff Smith, president and owner of Opinion Analysts, assures that they did indeed conduct a survey: "Yes, we ran the poll, and they were likely general election voters."

"I've never been accused of making up the numbers, or not even running the poll," says Smith. "Yeah, it was a real poll."

Davis says her city council district comprises about 60 percent Democrats and 40 percent Republicans. Citing a 2006 race for district attorney, she says SD-10 is "trending much more toward a 50/50 split."

Eppstein predicts that if Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee for President (which Eppstein thinks she will be), Clinton will lose SD-10 "by more than 20 points," and that Davis's open support for Clinton will hurt Davis within the district.

Tarrant County Democratic Party Chair Art Brender isn't convinced that the presidential candidates will help or hurt either party. "They want to take Clinton? I'll take Giuliani," he says.

On the flip side, Brender doesn't think that Clinton's gender will boost the numbers of fellow female Davis. The sort of people who make their minds up to vote for someone on the basis of one factor, such as gender, normally don't take the time to learn much of anything about the candidates, he says: "So I don't know if Davis has an advantage running against a 'Kim Brimer.'"

Eppstein believes Davis would have trouble in a general election because of her opposition to the collective bargaining rights of Fort Worth firefighters and police officers.

And he's not so sure that Davis will even make it out of the Democratic Primary, though she doesn't have a declared opponent.

Brender briefly considered running for the Senate spot, and he says his opposition to Davis isn't based on personal differences, but is "issue-based." Brender, too, thinks that Davis's opposition to collective bargaining could come back to haunt her, either in the general election or primary.

And he echoes Eppstein about potential Democratic candidates: "People have inquired, but they do not want to announce that they are inquiring."

Brender is concerned that Davis voted in the 2006 GOP primary and in April donated $500 to U.S. Rep. Kay Granger, R-Fort Worth. According to the Federal Election Commission's website, Davis has given $1,500 total to Granger since 2004, $250 to George W. Bush in 1999, $500 to former Democratic U.S. Rep. Martin Frost in 2004 and $1,000 to Clinton in 2007. (The same database shows that Brimer gave $500 to the Tarrant County Republican Victory Fund in 2004.)

"I don't know when she turned around and decided to run as a Democrat for state Senate," he says.

For her part, Davis says the idea began incubating during this past legislative session, and hatched after several prominent Democrats in the community talked to her about running.

"I think I bring something to the table that is fairly unique for a Democratic candidate," she says. "I'm very much a moderate Democrat. I have a very strong history of working with the business community."

Financially, Brimer has a big head start on his challenger, reporting nearly $1 million in the bank in July. However, Davis says she "will not be outworked on the campaign trail," and plans to raise $2 million during the campaign.

"Senate campaigns generally cost upwards of $1 million or $2 or more million," says Eppstein. "We are anticipating that type of campaign."

— by Patrick Brendel

Cook Won't Run

Rep. Robby Cook III, D-Eagle Lake, says he won't run for reelection next year, ending a six-term tenure in the House and opening a seat in one of the few districts where Democrats and Republicans have equal competitive footing in a general election.

Cook is one of the House's WD-40s — White Democrats Over 40 — a group of relatively conservative rural legislators who managed to hang onto seats that GOP strategists had painted red. Cook and others managed to remain in office while their voters were supporting Republicans for other things. And they stuck with the Democrats once in the House, scurrying off to Ardmore to hinder Republican redistricting efforts, and voting to depose House Speaker Tom Craddick last year, an effort that fell short but that defines House politics at the moment.

Cook said there wasn't a particular trigger for his decision. He wants to spend some time working on his family farm and to take a break from politics. He was a city council member and a mayor before he ran for the House. He doesn't have a replacement in mind and says he wanted to make his announcement early enough so that others could decide whether to run. He's got a wish, though: "I've never been a very partisan person... and I hope whoever replaces me isn't a partisan person."

Cook won his HD-17 post by 415 votes last year, netting less than 49 percent in a contest with a Republican and a Libertarian. In 2004, after flirting with a party switch, thinking about quitting, and finally running for reelection as a Democrat, he got 53.7 percent of the vote, again in a three-way contest. He won with 56.4 percent in 2002, with 63.3 percent in 2000, with 64.6 in 1998, and with 54.9 percent in 1998. With the exception of that first race, it's gotten tighter each time. Most Republicans did a little better in Cook's House district than they did statewide, but there's an independent streak: Both Carole Keeton Strayhorn and Kinky Friedman, running as Independents, did better in the district than statewide, and Rick Perry and Chris Bell — the Republican and Democrat in the governor's race — underperformed their statewide numbers.

Cook is the eighth state representative to call it quits this year. One — Anna Mowery, R-Fort Worth — quit this summer. And a half-dozen more have announced they won't seek reelection: Dianne White Delisi, R-Temple, HD-55; Fred Hill, R-Richardson, HD-112; Rick Noriega, D-Houston, HD-145; Mike O'Day, R-Pearland, HD-29; Robert Puente, D-San Antonio; and Robert Talton, R-Pasadena, HD-144. Noriega and Talton are running for federal offices. Everyone else on the list is, for now, hanging up their running shoes. If you're looking at this through the Tom Craddick lens, four of the nearly departed are supporters of the speaker, and four come from the opposition.

Work for Tinkers

If everyone in the HD-97 special election had done on Election Day what they did in early voting, your runoff candidates would be Democrat Dan Barrett and Republican Bob Leonard.

Barrett, the only Democrat in a seven-candidate field, finished first in early and Election Day voting. The only candidate to break 30 percent, he got into the runoff.

But Leonard's fortunes turned, as did those of Republican Mark Shelton. Leonard dropped from 21.8 percent of the vote to a final tally of 18.6 percent. Shelton got 19.3 percent early, but finished with a total of 22.9 percent. If they'd each maintained their early percentages, Leonard would have finished with 560 more votes than he got. Shelton would have finished with 640 less. Nobody else's swings were close.

What happened? Leonard's team puts some of the blame on Election Day anonymous automated calls reminding voters of a Leonard vote for a tax bill in the late 1980s. There's talk of making formal complaints to the Public Utility Commission, which has jurisdiction over phone spam, as well as to local prosecutors. The spam complaint would probably hone in on two things: Some of the calls were made before 9 a.m., and they didn't identify their makers in the first 30 seconds. Both of those are no-nos, which is why the carpet-cleaners call you at dinnertime and say who they are.

The Shelton team credits a ground campaign that had his fellow doctors and their cohort hitting the phones and knocking on doors.

Either way, look at the long game. The runoff election will be next month, and the winner will serve for about a year. The primary elections for a full term are in March. The filing period for those primaries opens on December 3 and ends January 2. If the noise gets loud enough over those phone calls, they could be an issue in both elections. And if Shelton gets roughed up, it could encourage some of the Republicans he beat to try again. A bold challenger could even file before the runoff election.

What's with the headline? It's from a nursery rhyme: "If 'ifs' and 'ands' were pots and pans, there'd be no work for tinkers."

The Money Shot, Remixed

Bob Leonard's campaign didn't fill in that box for loans outstanding on his campaign finance reports — a $100,000 omission.

Leonard's campaign cost more than it first appeared. His campaign finance reports didn't include a $100,000 loan balance in their summary pages, and the Republican — who finished third in a special election in HD-97 — had that much more at his disposal than it first appeared.

Leonard reported the personal loan to his campaign, made on September 1 as he began running for Rep. Anna Mowery's spot in the House. But he didn't report that as an outstanding loan at the end of that month or in the 8-day report he filed a week before the election. The reports left the impression he had no loans outstanding.

But he did.

So we're amending the chart that went with our original story on the election results. Since final expenditures won't be reported until the end of the year (that's the next reporting deadline for the candidates who didn't make the runoff), we added contributions and loans outstanding to get an idea of the resources available to each campaign. Leonard had it twice as good, financially, as we first reported.

A spokesman for Leonard suggested the problem was with filing software at the Texas Ethics Commission and not the campaign. Two other candidates in the HD-97 race — Mark Shelton and Jeff Humber — correctly reported their loan balances in their filings. They apparently didn't have the same problem, and officials with the Ethics Commission say they were using the same version of the software Leonard's campaign used.

State law gives Leonard 14 days to fix the mistake, and if he signs a form saying it was a "good faith" error, there's no penalty.

Here's our chart, with the corrected numbers:

The Racing Sheet

Democrat Victor Morales is trying to get the lightning back in the bottle; the former candidate is plotting a run for state Legislature. Morales, who defeated three better-known Democrats in a bid for U.S. Senate in 1996 before falling to Republican Phil Gramm, wants the House seat now held by Rep. Betty Brown, R-Terrell. She's also got a Republican primary opponent in Wade Gent. Since that 1996 race, Morales has lost a Democratic primary for Senate and two congressional races.

Dee Margo, an El Paso Republican who lost a challenge to Sen. Eliot Shapleigh last year, has bought the land for a new house, a move that would take him out of Rep. Paul Moreno's House district and put him in Pat Haggerty's House district. Haggerty's telling local reporters he expects a challenge. And Margo told the El Paso Times he is moving so his longtime housemaid can work in a one-story house instead of the three-story he and his family call home now.

Diane Trautman says she'll take another stab at a House seat. The Kingwood Democrat ran against Rep. Joe Crabb, R-Humble, in HD-127 last year. She got 40 percent of the vote, losing by more than 6,000 votes. But she out-performed statewide Democrats in the district — most got 26-30 percent of the vote — and she'll try again in 2008. Trautman is an assistant professor of education at Stephen F. Austin State University.

• Officially: Democrat Art Hall of San Antonio will run for Texas Railroad Commission. The former city councilman and one-time mayoral candidate is an investment banker and wants a shot at the incumbent, Republican Michael Williams... Rep. John Zerwas, R-Richmond, will run for reelection... Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, kicked off his reelection campaign. He's got a rematch with Democrat Eddie Saenz, the guy he beat 64-36 in the Democratic primary in 2004... Republican Lee Jackson — not the former state rep — will challenge Rep. Bill Zedler, R-Arlington. This Lee Jackson is a Fort Worth policeman, and opened his campaign with a blast at school voucher programs and a call for change in eminent domain laws to make it more difficult to seize private property... Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, will seek another term and he's launched his campaign and his website...

• Republicans aren't forfeiting Dallas County, where Democrats swept local elections last year. They'll have a high-profile candidate for sheriff, who starts with an endorsement from the Dallas Police Association. Irving Police Chief Lowell Canaday will challenge Democratic Sheriff Lupe Valdez next year, if he beats Charlie Redmond, a Mesquite police officer, in the March primary. And a couple of Democrats have talked about challenging the incumbent, which would keep her busy in March. The DPA endorsement is early for that group, but they say they're unhappy with problems at the county jail and elsewhere that have persisted through Valdez' first term. They were joined by police associations from Grand Prairie, Irving, and Wylie.

Campaign Notes

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, is making a campaign swing through Texas, doing a fundraiser this week for U.S. Rep. Ciro Rodriguez, D-San Antonio, and a border tour with U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo. Rodriguez has one certain GOP challenger — Francisco "Quico" Canseco — and a potential one in the wings — Bexar County Commissioner Lyle Larson.

• Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo has two funders in Texas next week. The first is in Heath — east of Dallas — on Monday, and the second's in Houston on Tuesday. And Republican Mike Huckabee of Arkansas hits Austin next week on a fundraising jaunt.

• It's rumor season, so we'll drag out Attorney General Greg Abbott's sixth official opinion (GA-0006), from 2002. It's the one that says you can't be appointed to a position that requires the confirmation of the Senate if you're a legislator whose term has not run out. Remember when Elizabeth Ames Jones, R-San Antonio, ducked her swearing in for a new term to the House so she could be appointed to the Texas Railroad Commission? The present case in point is a rumor that Rep. Mike Krusee, R-Round Rock, is in line for an appointment to the Texas Transportation Commission. Spike that one.

Bobby Vickery — the Republican challenger to Rep. Byron Cook, R-Corsicana — isn't a political virgin. We missed it last week, but he ran for a spot on the Frost school board in May and came in fourth, with 32 votes.

Horse Race Coverage

Rudolph Giuliani is leading Hillary Clinton in Texas at the moment, according to a poll done for the Texas Civil Justice League.

The Fort Worth-based Eppstein Group did the poll, and says the Republican has the support of 51 percent of the state's registered voters, while the Democrat has 34 percent.

They didn't make the entire poll public, but trickled out a couple of other bits. U.S. Sen. John Cornyn leads Democratic challenger Rick Noriega 53 percent to 27 percent (in fairness, Cornyn's run several statewide campaigns and Noriega has run only in Houston and so is less well-known).

And they found Texans want more tort reform and don't like trial lawyers. About 61 percent agree that "additional lawsuit reform is needed"; only 35 percent agreed that "trial lawyers in Texas do a good job of helping protect consumers from injustices of big businesses and bad products"; and 67 percent think "lawsuit abuse is costing jobs and hurting the economy."

Details: 1,001 registered voters "with a history of voting" were polled Nov. 1-6, and the error margin was +/- 3.15 percent.

Lucky Number

Retired teachers will get a 13th check this year. After their actuaries said the money is available, the board of the Teacher Retirement System voted to pay a 13th check (beneficiaries usually get one per month) this year. Those will go out on the last day of the year. Caveats: They don't go to teachers who retired this year, and the check amounts won't exceed $2,400. The TRS board is a rubber stamp on this: The Legislature required the extra check if the money was available. Once the actuaries were done, the machine was in gear.

Political People and Their Moves

Paul Hudson and Barry Smitherman are trading chairs at the Public Utility Commission. Hudson is stepping aside as chairman but will remain a member of that three-member panel. And Gov. Rick Perry named Smitherman to head the commission. Hudson, who's been on the dissenting end of a couple of recent 2-1 decisions, papered the change in a letter to the governor's office last week, saying he thinks it's a good idea to change the occupant of the middle seat from time to time.

Another guard change: James Huffines, who'd been chairman of the board of regents of the University of Texas System, becomes a regular member while regular regent H. Scott Caven Jr. becomes chairman.

Gov. Rick Perry appointed Christopher Antcliff of El Paso to the 448th District Court. He's a private practice attorney and a former federal law clerk. That's a new court.

The Guv named R. David Kelly of Dallas to the TRS board, the agency announced. He's with Carleton Residential Properties.

Perry named Brenda Pejovich of Dallas and Robert Wingo of El Paso to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. She's a CPA and the president of BFG Management Co. He's CEO of Sanders/Wingo Advertising.

Veronica Obregon joins the Texas Department of Agriculture as chief communications officer. She was most recently at the Austin Community College District.

Quotes of the Week

Former Alaska House Speaker Pete Kott, a Republican, talking to a lobbyist on tapes made by the FBI in an ongoing bribery investigation there, quoted by the Washington Post: "I had to cheat, steal, beg, borrow and lie. Exxon's happy. BP's happy. I'll sell my soul to the devil."

Rep. Jim Keffer, R-Eastland, quoted in the Houston Chronicle on the House split over Speaker Tom Craddick: "If you talk to Texans, they don't want Austin to become Washington, D.C. They don't want a sterile political climate down there, where nobody can agree on anything and policy is put to the side and it's in-your-face politics and if you don't think exactly the way the leadership does you're going to hell."

Dr. Ron Anderson, CEO of Parkland Memorial Hospital, quoted in The Dallas Morning News on the state's failure to send money from red-light fines to health care, where they said they wanted it to go: "The state wanted something to watch the cities to make sure they didn't get out of control. Maybe someone needs to watch the state."

Clayton Downing, president of the Texas School Coalition, talking to The Dallas Morning News after 92 school districts won voter approval to raise taxes: "My hat's off to those districts that got their voters to go along with a higher tax rate. The results are going to stimulate others to hold their own elections next year, particularly with more and more districts being put in the position where they have to do it because they're hurting financially."

Chris Ulcak, acting principal at Barton Middle School in Kyle, on a new hugging ban there, on Austin's KVUE-TV: "We're not worried about the hugging part. We’re worried about not getting to class on time, and hugging has been the issue that’s causing that."


Texas Weekly: Volume 24, Issue 22, 19 November 2007. Ross Ramsey, Editor. Copyright 2007 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 (512) 302-5703 or email biz@texasweekly.com. For news, email ramsey@texasweekly.com, or call (512) 288-6598.

 

The Week in the Rearview Mirror

The runoff for the special election in Fort Worth's House District 97 will be on December 18. Early voting will run December 10-14.Democrat Dan Barrett will face Republican Dr. Mark Shelton in that race to replace Rep. Anna Mowery, a Republican who resigned earlier this year. There's also a runoff for a seat on the Fort Worth City Council in a district with a significant overlap of HD-97 (they're running to replace Wendy Davis, a Democrat who quit the council to run against Sen. Kim Brimer, R-Fort Worth). Mowery's district has been Republican territory, but some Democrats are hoping the local government race will draw out enough donkeys to keep it competitive. Barrett finished first in the first round. He was the lone Democrat in a field of seven candidates.

Bloggers are imparting a Texas twang to Presidential political commentary this week. They're also squawking about the legal showdown between the top-two vote-getters in the 2006 gubernatorial race, buzzing about a hypothetical move by the House Transportation Chair and leveling diverse attacks and commentaries at and about various individuals. At the end, there are some posts that didn't fall into neat categories.

* * * * *

Hocus POTUS

Several blogs documented Barack Obama's return to Austin: Texas Politics, the Houston Chronicle's blog, says an initial crowd of about 2,000 was augmented by 1,500 late arrivals. Political Junkie, Cue's blog, live-blogged the event and has a video. Trail Blazers, the Dallas Morning News's blog, comments on Obama's clothing and opening acts. (Here's our two cents.)

Burnt Orange has a couple of polls on whom Texans like for President. Looks like good news for Hillary Clinton, comments McBlogger.

[Mike] Huckabee and the Clintons will soon be tromping through Texas, writes Postcards from the Trail, the Austin American-Statesman's blog. Postcards also has word from Mitt Romney's Texas finance team, while Trail Blazers blogs about two new "Mittites" — U.S. Reps. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio, and Kay Granger, R-Fort Worth. And Trail Blazers reports on an upbeat John McCain and a disillusioned Matthew Dowd.

Gov. Rick Perry has been stumping out in Iowa for Rudy Giuliani. Texas Politicshas the skinny on the Gov's schedule. Houtopia is just glad Perry's out of Texas, and Burnt Orangereports that Perry is obviously aiming to become Giuliani's running mate. Caption this! commands Trail Blazers, also offering up some pre-captioned photos.

* * * * *

So Sue Me

In case you're interested in the million-dollar lawsuits filed by Chris Bell against Perry and Republican Governors, here's initial coverage by Texas Politics, and here's some by Political Junkie.

Half-Empty says Perry's actions amount to money laundering and merit arrest. Travis County Attorney David Escamilla plans to look into it, says Texas Politics. And Off the Kuff says scrutiny of the transactions might uncover more misdeeds.

Meanwhile, PinkDome wonders why the individual Bell had to take action, rather than the Texas Ethics Commission.

* * * * *

Krusee, or Not Krusee

Austin Political Report set the rumor mill into motion this week by floating the idea that state Rep. Mike Krusee, R-Round Rock, might retire in favor of a place on the Texas Transportation Commission. (Our take on that notion — that it's unlikely and, for now, illegal — is here.)

Nevertheless, Capitol Annex corroborates the rumor with the anonymous testimony of "several tipsters," and muckraker does likewise with "whispers from sources," also tossing out the idea that Round Rock Mayor Nyle Maxwell could toss his hat in the ring. "The heck you say," adds WilcoWise, while Muckraker teases he'll have inside insight later on.

Burnt Orange says Democrat Diana Maldonado will make the race for Krusee's House District 52 worth watching, while Eye on Williamson still thinks Krusee could draw an opponent in the GOP primary, despite the recent truce between Krusee and House Speaker Tom Craddick. And Political Junkie has a running tally of retiring state reps, purported and confirmed.

* * * * *

This Time, It's Personal

State Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, goes on the offensive against opponent Eddie Saenz for what he calls a dirty trick by Saenz consultant Kelly Fero.

Burnt Orange lauds Texas Monthly's Paul Burka for a story on Cornyn, while alleging that the subject of said article is "such a tool." In response, Greg's Opinion is that "BOR's Phillip Martin seems to have a little something on his nose" and that Burka's article is "a bit more vapid than normal." More from Greg on Burka here, while McBlogger titters at the gauge of Cornyn's shotgun.

Burnt Orange takes some extra time to biographize on its own three senior members, to attack embattle Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Sharon Keller and to promote the website SharonKiller.com. Here's a legal update by Texas Lawyer Blog.

One of the Professors-R-Squared will provide expert commentary on a film about Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski (grandfather of SD-11 candidate Joe Jaworski).

BurkaBlog has a triumvirate of posts on who will become the main man at Texas A&M University, mentioning Gov. Perry and retired Gen. T. Michael Moseley, as well as an unrelated item on the state of the House Speaker.

The Capitol Crowd's Person of the Week is "Renaissance Man" Walt Roberts. And Grits for Breakfast laments the passing (into other employment) of Elizabeth Pierson Hernandez, the lone Austin Bureau reporter for the Valley Freedom newspaper group.

* * * * *

Et Cetera

Is the new Virginia the future Texas? wonders Professors.

Democrat Diane Trautman is challenging HD-127 incumbent Joe Crabb, R-Atascocita, again, says BurkaBlog.

There's going to be a big bloggers' convention in Austin in July, writes Trail Blazers.

Trail Blazers shares some thoughts from former San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros.

Notwithstanding the retirement of Rep. Robby Cook, D-Eagle Lake, the Democratic Party is still strong in rural Texas, says Burnt Orange.

Former U.S. Senate candidate Barbara Ann Radnofsky is backing Larry Joe Doherty in CD-10, says Burnt Orange, and former U.S. Senate candidate Victor Morales will challenge state Rep. Betty Brown, R-Terrell, says Annex.

Rick Perry vs The World analyzes the CD-22 race, predicting dire results for incumbent Nick Lampson, D-Stafford.

Walker Report relays a post by the South Texas Republicans confirming the unofficial intent of Lyle Larson to run in CD-23.

Finally, in case you were wondering what Tom Delay is up to these days, Trail Blazers has the details.


This edition of Out There was compiled and written by Patrick Brendel, who hails from Victoria and finds Austin's climate pleasantly arid. We cherry-pick the state's political blogs each week, looking for news, info, gossip, and new jokes. The opinions here belong (mostly) to the bloggers, and we're including their links so you can hunt them down if you wish. Our blogroll — the list of Texas blogs we watch — is on our links page, and if you know of a Texas political blog that ought to be on it, just shoot us a note. Please send comments, suggestions, gripes or retorts to Texas Weekly editor Ross Ramsey.

Six Fort Worth Republicans are asking for an investigation of automated phone calls they say might have swung the results of a special election earlier this month.

In their letter to Tarrant County District Attorney Tim Curry, they complain that the anonymous calls ran afoul of campaign laws that prohibit people from trying to damage a candidate or campaign by misrepresenting the source of any communication or by misrepresenting a person's identity. And they say it broke the rules for robo-calls, which can't be made anonymously or during certain hours of the day.

The letter was signed by former Rep. Anna Mowery, former Rep. Bob Leonard, current Rep. Charlie Geren, former Tarrant County GOP Chairmen Steve Hollern Jr. and Warren Russell, and James Dean Schull, a Benbrook city councilman who, with Leonard and three others, was defeated in the first round of the special election.

Curry's office is already investigating complaints about flyers that were posted in Democratic and minority areas of town encouraging people to vote in the "Saturday elections." The actual elections were held on Tuesday, and local Democrats  say someone was trying to suppress Democratic votes.

The pre-recorded calls started as early as 7:00 or 7:30 a.m. on Election Day. The announcer, saying his information was from "Craig Goldman supporters," criticized then-Rep. Bob Leonard's vote on a tax bill in the late 1980s. Those two were widely expected to finish in front of other Republicans in the seven-man race. But when the election was over, Democrat Dan Barrett was in first place and Republican Mark Shelton was in second. They'll be in a runoff December 18.

The source of the calls wasn't revealed, and all of the campaigns have disavowed any knowledge of them. And the expense of making such calls doesn't appear on the campaign finance reports filed by any of the candidates.

The full text: "This is a voter alert. Please pay close attention. Bob Leonard does not want you to hear this message. Craig Goldman's supporters recently revealed that, as a state representative in the mid-1980s, Bob Leonard voted to raise your taxes. One of his last votes was to increase taxes on most household goods, cars, guns. Almost anything you can think of, Bob wanted to tax. Maybe that is why he quit to become a lobbyist after making that vote. Today, cast your vote for Texas and against Bob Leonard."

The complaints started the day after the election last week and crested this week with the filing of the complaint. They're fighting so hard you'd think they're fighting for a full term. And you'd probably be right.

The winner of the next month's runoff will get the job until January 2009. But if enough dust gets kicked up about the special election, it could take the joy out of incumbency and give one of the losers a reason to ask voters for a second look. And the complaint itself, even if Curry doesn't investigate, could start that dust cloud.

A reader pointed out another oddity while poking through the reports. Goldman's campaign reported an in-kind contribution of $2896.84 from the Empower Texans PAC. But the PAC didn't report giving him anything.

That's apparently because of a newly created hole in the state's campaign laws. The PAC didn't give the money directly to the campaign. They made the contribution in the final days of the campaign — after the last pre-election report was due. And because they didn't have any contributions of more than $5,000, they didn't have to file a special report.

Bottom line: They sent 4,000 postcards endorsing Goldman and won't have to report who gave them the money to pay for those until January, long after the special election and the runoff. Goldman reported receiving the contribution, but isn't required to say — or even to know — who gave to the PAC and made the mailing possible.

The group's director, Michael Quinn Sullivan, also was a prominent opponent of Proposition 15 — the constitutional amendment that allows the state to sell $3 billion bonds to fund cancer research. But he says that was incidental to his other work at Texans for Fiscal Responsibility — blogging and emailing to supporters — and didn't amount to a campaign. "We're not required to report that," he says.

• You remember the flap over contracts at the Texas Education Agency? The inspector general there issued a report saying friends of top execs there were getting contracts, that the contract and grant processes were "regularly and systematically manipulated," and that the agency sometimes ignored its own procedures. That prompted State Auditor John Keel to have a look and now his report is out. Bottom line: The contracting system at TEA's regional education service centers doesn't always rely on competitive bidding but rather on the recommendations of TEA staff and outside parties. "This practice resulted in the appearance of less than arm's-length transactions," the report says. The auditor's recommendation? The agency ought to use competitive bidding for contracts worth more than $25,000.

• A group that tried to block the Texas Association of Counties from lobbying wants another bite at the apple. Americans for Prosperity won a court ruling saying TAC can't use taxpayer-funded dues money for lobbying, but the judge ruled the group can use money it makes from insurance and other services. The group's president, Peggy Venable, calls that a "hollow victory" and says the group will ask the judge to modify his ruling.

• The Texas Department of Insurance approved rate increases for the state's windstorm insurance pool. Residential rates will go up 8.2 percent and commercial property rates will rise 5.4 percent. The Texas Windstorm Insurance Association had asked for 10 percent increases in both lines. The new rates hit on February 1 of next year. TDI says the rate hike on an "estimated average annual premium" will be $84, taking the total price to $1,107.

• Put Jim Shepherd on your candidate list. He's a lawyer who served on the Richardson City Council for 12 years and on the Richardson school board for four years before that. He'll be in the Republican primary against at least two others — Angie Chen Button and Randall Dunning. They all seek the HD-112 seat Rep. Fred Hill, R-Dallas, is giving up at the end of this term. 

• Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham, says officially that she'll seek a fifth term in the House...

Dan Grant, one of two Democrats plotting challenges to U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Austin, has an anti-war ad up on YouTube (it also had a short run on TV) and on his website. It features Grant, a former civilian contractor in Iraq, talking over footage of caskets of soldiers killed there while a lone bugler plays taps: "Washington politicians don't want us to see the true cost or their failed policies in Iraq. I've been to Iraq, and I think we've paid enough, and that's why I'm running for Congress."

• Political bloggers from all over the country will be in Austin next July for their annual convention (they work inside, in the air conditioning, apparently). Netroots Nation — which began as the YearlyKos Convention — will be July 17-20. They hope to draw political candidates and consultants and pundits in addition to their core Laptop Liberals. Their last convention, in Chicago, attracted seven of the Democratic presidential candidates.

• The Texas Federation of Teachers endorsed Rep. Juan Garcia, D-Corpus Christi, a so-far unchallenged incumbent who's expecting the worst. He upset a longtime incumbent last year and Republicans have him on their target list. So far, though, they don't have a candidate. Among those still pondering is former Rep. Todd Hunter, who says he'll make up his mind over the holidays. Garcia's bulking up: He claims $214,000 in his campaign bank account.

Dean Hrbacek says he's got more than 40 Fort Bend GOP precinct chairs endorsing his bid for Congress in CD-22. The former Sugar Land mayor is one of several Republicans angling to challenge U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Stafford in Tom DeLay's old district.

• Austin lobbyist and political consultant Jill Warren has taken to the little screen: She's the host of something called Big Red Tent TV, an online effort to promote conservative candidates for federal office. And she's doing online interviews on that outfit's website, at www.bigredtent.org.

• Democrat Dan Barrett picked up two endorsements in the runoff race in HD-97 in Fort Worth. The Texas Parent PAC and the Texas League of Conservation Voters both say he's their choice. Parent PAC's endorsement is based on his position against publicly funded vouchers for private schools — Republican Mark Shelton favors vouchers — and the TLCV prefers Barrett's positions on environmental issues.

Political People and their Moves

Rep. Fred Hill, R-Richardson, won't seek another term next year.He says he decided not to see an 11th term, that he's thought about leaving the Legislature before, and that his decision was influenced by the timing of the sale of his company this summer. He's run it for more than three decades and is ready to retire. Hill, chairman of the House Local Government Ways & Means Committee, is a key member of the House on property taxes — he's opposed to state-imposed caps on local government revenues. City and county officials around the state credit him, among others, for fending off property tax appraisal and tax rate caps. "I was effective in keeping some things from happening that I didn't want to see happen," he said. The news broke in The Dallas Morning News' editorial blog, in a posting made while their writer was still on the phone with Hill. In an interview with us just a few minutes later, he said he was surprised at how fast word spread: "I guess I'm a little naive about how these things work." Hill was an early supporter of House Speaker Tom Craddick, but left Craddick's side during the latest legislative session and joined members calling for a new speaker. For a time, he was touted as a possible "interim speaker" who could serve between a Craddick departure and the election of a new speaker in January 2009. That plot fell apart in the last days of the session. Hill says he still admires Craddick and likes him personally, but thinks Craddick has put members in too many tight spots and that it's time for a change in management. He hopes someone will continue the fight against what he calls "the irrational attention on the part of some of my colleagues in the Republican Party to put restrictions on local government," which he sees as antithetical to GOP philosophy. "I just don't understand it. I'm a Republican. I've never voted for a Democrat. This is about local control, and Republicans have always been for that. "It sounds great to say we're going to put caps on appraisals, or on rates... but when you analyze the impact, you see that it's not a great idea," he says. "But that message is not getting to the governor and not getting to the speaker. "It doesn't make any sense to me. Texas is pretty well run when it comes to local government," Hill says. He also mentions transportation as an issue that tempted him to stay around for a while. "We need to resolve that problem now, so that it won't be a horrendous problem in 20 years," he says. Hill says he won't pick a favorite for his replacement — Jim Shepherd, a Richardson City Council member and former school board trustee, has been mentioned. And while he thinks HD-112 is a Republican district, he thinks it could be competitive in the general election. "It's a Republican district, but in this day and age when the Republicans are having all of these problems, anything could happen."

Mauricio Celis, a prolific political contributor from Corpus Christi, was indicted on charges of impersonating a lawyer, impersonating a public servant, perjury and theft, according to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. Celis is fighting this war on other fronts. Attorney General Greg Abbott has civil actions underway on the allegations that Celis impersonated a lawyer. And that office issued a statement when the indictments were made public. This, from Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for Abbott: "With its indictments of Mauricio Celis, a Nueces County grand jury took a meaningful step toward protecting the integrity of our legal system. Practicing law without a license is illegal in the State of Texas. Investigators with the Office of the Attorney General will continue working with Nueces County District Attorney Carlos Valdez to ensure his office has all the investigative resources it needs to prosecute this case. We will also continue pursuing our civil enforcement action as we seek to prevent Celis or CGT Law Group from violating Texas law."

Celis has given $293,500 in cash and in-kind contributions to Texas political causes in the last five years. His favorites, by amount, include 2006 Democrat gubernatorial candidate Chris Bell, $64,500; Rep. Abel Herrero, D-Robstown, $50,500; Good Government Political Action Committee, $50,000; Save Texas Courts, $50,000; Rep. Solomon Ortiz Jr., D-Corpus Christi, $25,000; Rep. Juan Garcia, D-Corpus Christi, $17,000; former Rep. Vilma Luna, D-Corpus Christi, $10,000; 13th Court of Appeals Justice Gina Benavidez, $5,000; unsuccessful state Senate candidate Barbara Canales-Black, $5,000; state District Judge Robert "Bobby" Galvan, $5,000; state District Judge Marisela Saldana, $4,500; 13th Court of Appeals Justice Linda Yañez, now a candidate for Texas Supreme Court, $3,000; state District Judge Sandra Watts, $2,500; and the Texas Democratic Party, $1,500.

Save Texas Courts was a political action committee set up to fight caps on medical malpractice damages in lawsuits. The Good Government Political Action Committee was set up by attorney Mikal Watts — the main contributor — and was a major booster of Juan Garcia's campaign against Rep. Gene Seaman, R-Corpus Christi; it spent money on his behalf rather than contributing directly to his campaign. Point of interest: Sandra Watts is Mikal's mom.

The three active state reps — Garcia, Herrero, and Ortiz — each gave to charity $1,000 of the money they received from Celis. That covers his most recent contributions to those three, but far short of the totals they received.

State candidates sometimes listed him as a lawyer — as in one of Yañez' 2002 reports — and sometimes as "partner" in the CGT Law Firm — as in one of Garcia's 2006 report. Others — Bell is one example — list him as self-employed attorney. Candidates aren't required to verify occupations, or in some cases, even to list them. But that's what was on their filings.

Celis has played in federal elections, too, and he's identified as a lawyer in the "occupation" blank on campaign finance reports filed by candidates with the Federal Election Commission. From 2002 to the present, he's contributed $91,846 individually, and got joint fundraising contribution credit for $27,000 to Kerry Victory 2004, and $25,000 to the Democratic National Committee in 2004. His wife, Rosa Celis, was listed giving like amounts to those two funds (her name doesn't appear in online campaign finance filings with the Texas Ethics Commission, where state candidates report and where there are no contribution limits).

Celis' federal giving went to presidential candidates John Edwards, $2,000, John Kerry, $2,000, and Hillary Clinton, $2,300. He opened his accounts to U.S. Senate candidates Ken Salazar of Colorado, $8,300, Claire McCaskill of Missouri, $4,200, Robert Menendez of New Jersey, $2,100, and to three Texans: Barbara Ann Radnofsky, $5,000, Ron Kirk, $1,000, and Mikal Watts, $4,600. He gave to U.S. House candidates Solomon Ortiz, $3,000, Nick Lampson, $4,600, and Ciro Rodriguez, $2,000, all from Texas, and to Jenny Oropeza of California, $2,300, and John Salazar of Colorado, $2,000. And Celis gave $9,946 to the Texas Democratic Party and $28,500 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

Rosa Celis contributed $14,600 from 2004 to now, giving $2,000 to Ortiz, $4,000 to McCaskill; $6,600 to Ken Salazar, and $2,000 to Menendez.

Tom Mason got the top job at the Lower Colorado River Authority, replacing the retiring Joe Beal. Mason was that agency's general counsel and his promotion puts an end to rumors that the job would go to someone with a political resume, like former Sen. Ken Armbrister, D-Victoria.

The U.S. Senate confirmed Reed O'Connor of Dallas for a spot on the federal bench. He'll be a federal judge in the Northern District of Texas, replacing Judge Joe Fish, who's taking senior status. O'Conner has been both a state and federal prosecutor.

Gov. Rick Perry appointed Elizabeth Anderson of Dallas to one of the three open seats on the state's Public Safety Commission — the board that oversees the state police. She's a marketing and IT consultant, and replaces Louis Sturns, who left when Perry appointed him to a state district judgeship in Fort Worth.

Perry filled four spots on the Texas Workforce Investment Council, naming Karen Bonner of Corpus Christi, Wes Jury of Arlington, Paul Mayer of Garland, and Danny Prosperie of Bridge City to that panel. Bonner is vice president for philanthropy at CHISTUS Spohn Health System Foundation. Jurey and Mayer are the presidents, respectively, of their local chambers of commerce. And Prosperie is the training director for the Beaumont Electrical Joint Apprenticeship and Training Committee.

The governor named Betty Pinckard Reinbeck, executive director of the Tomball Economic Development Corp. and the former mayor of Sealy, the chair of the Texas Facilities Commission.

Gloria Hicks and Dr. Robert Schmidt are the governor's newest appointees to the Texas Racing Commission. Hicks is CFO of Ed Hicks Imports in Corpus Christi. Schmidt is an orthopedic surgeon in Fort Worth, a partner of the Texas Hip and Knee Center, and chief of staff at Plaza Medical Center.

James Cooley is leaving the House after three legislative sessions with Rep. Dianne White Delisi, R-Temple, and will be landing soon at the Health and Human Services Commission. He'll do Medicaid policy research there, he says.

Quotes of the Week

Kimbrough, Cascos, Cook, Arduengo, and Stanford

Former Texas Youth Commission conservator Jay Kimbrough, on hiring a controversial former state official as a consultant there, quoted in The Dallas Morning News: "It doesn't matter to me if Gregg Phillips was on the grassy knoll in Dallas, Texas, if he has a solution that is good for the youth of TYC."

Cameron County Judge Carlos Cascos, talking with the Associated Press about state efforts to increase border security: "At some point [lawmakers] are going to have to put in money for additional personnel. The boots on the ground are great, but the boots get tired."

Rep. Byron Cook, R-Corsicana, quoted in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram on funding delays to the Texas State Railroad that followed his opposition to House Speaker Tom Craddick: "If this railroad was in Midland, they probably would have added another 100 miles of track right now."

University of North Texas student Sebastian Arduengo, quoted by the Austin American-Statesman after a political rally in the capital city: "If the Texas primary actually mattered, I'd be inclined to vote for Obama."

Jason Stanford, campaign manager for Democrat Chris Bell's gubernatorial campaign last year, on Kinky Friedman's book on that contest, quoted in the San Antonio Express-News: "I will give him kudos for message discipline. He's still selling the same jokes."