Late Hits

We take you now to Runoff Land, where a handful of candidates are still smacking each other for a chance at their party's nomination.

Fred Roberts is after Ken Legler for using his Social Security number in a mailer. The Legler gang says it was a mistake, but Roberts says he's filing criminal complaints and civil suits as a result. He says it'll lead to identity theft. The risk in bringing it up: Roberts brings attention to a Legler mailer that attacked him for unsettled federal tax debts. That's a GOP runoff, in HD-144.

Late money for Roberts came from the Texas Parent PAC, $10,000. Legler got runoff help from Houston builder Bob Perry, $25,000; Beer distributor John Nau III, $10,000; Dallas billionaire Robert Rowling, $10,000; and Empower Texans PAC, $6,901.

Ralph Sheffield, with third-party help, took a swing at Martha Tyroch for her spending during a Washington, D.C., trip she took while on the Temple City Council. The details: She upgraded to a $450 per night room at the Mayflower Hotel and had a $30, seven-block cab fare on her expense report. The allegations didn't come from the Sheffield camp, but from Austin-based Texans for Fiscal Responsibility. The two Republicans are in a runoff in HD-55.

The only late money in that race was a $10,000 check to Sheffield from Dr. James Leininger of San Antonio, who's also one of the biggest backers of TFR. Tyroch's biggest helpers are the Texas Association of Realtors PAC, which gave $33,541 since the primary election.

Tryon Lewis hasn't been able to get a debate scheduled with Rep. Buddy West in HD-81. "We have a number of differences," says Lewis, a former district judge currently in private practice as an attorney in Odessa. "Mainly public education, the gross margins tax and immigration."

Lewis says his opponent voted for the 2006 gross margin tax (which pays for cuts in school property taxes). He thinks it should be "eliminated or strongly changed." He hasn't proposed an alternative. Lewis isn't a fan of the TAKS test, but says West sponsors it. He also criticizes his opponent's position on giving drivers licenses and in-state tuition to illegal immigrants. He says he hasn't attacked anything about West but his voting record. We called West — he's not available for interviews, according to aides. Jesse Gore and Randy Rives — the other two primary candidates – are backing West.

Notable: West's post-primary contributors include a half-dozen of his House colleagues: Byron Cook, $500; Delwin Jones, $1,000; Edmund Kuempel, $2,000; Tommy Merritt, $1,000; Jim Pitts, $10,000; and Allan Ritter, $2,500.

• The HD-112 race — a remarkably hard-fought race to succeed Fred Hill in the House — has a mess of interesting money floating around. Since the primaries cut the field from three to two, Angie Button got money from Sen. John Carona, $5,000; Texas Instruments Chairman Thomas Engibous, $10,000; Hyperion CEO Albert Huddleston, $5,000; Diodes Inc. CEO Keh-Shew Lu, $10,000; former Texas Republican Party Chair Fred Meyer, $2,500; and finally, a $150,000 loan from the candidate herself, bringing her total loan balance to $310,000. Randy Dunning's purse isn't as large. He got $5,000 from Bob Perry, $10,000 from the Texas Home School Coalition PAC, and $7,569 from Empower Texans PAC (which makes in-kind expenditures instead of giving money).

At the end, Dunning lost the support of one of the state's best-known conservative financiers. Button, gleefully announced that Dr. James Leininger of San Antonio decided to get off the Dunning bandwagon. According to Button, Leininger called to say he won't give further support to Dunning and didn't give any specific reason other than saying he'd been misled.

Her camp is stepping up the attacks in these last days before the start of early voting. They're also shooting at Dunning for a letter to The Dallas Morning News in which he blasted the federal government for its handling of the Branch Davidian standoff near Waco. In a press release, she referred to Dunning's "fascination with the lunatic fringe" and his "ravings."

Leininger has given $15,000 to Dunning's campaign. Among his other contributions this cycle is a $100,000 donation to Empower Texas PAC, a group that "continues to proudly support" Dunning, according to Michael Quinn Sullivan, the exec there.

In a written statement, Dunning acknowledged the Leininger defection without naming him, saying, "our campaign is not and has never been about the agenda of one person." And then he renewed his attacks on Button for supporting Democrats — like Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk — in past elections.

Gunplay in Williamson County

With less than a week to go, the candidates in HD-52 are finally arguing about something.

Both Dee Hobbs and Bryan Daniel have capitalized on their positive, clean campaigning. They debate the issues, shake hands and make jokes. But on Mar. 25, Daniel sent out a mail piece showing the Texas State Rifle Association's rating of the candidates — "A" for Daniel and "hostile toward 2nd Amendment issues" for Hobbs. Then, Hobbs responded with an e-mail defending what he said was an A rating for himself, too. A letter from TSRA dated Mar. 19 proves that. Wait, there's more. On the 27th, Daniel sent out another mail piece with a side-by-side comparison of the candidates on issues and endorsements. It mainly shows how Daniel's got big conservative PACs — like Texas Right to Life and Texans for Fiscal Responsibility — on his side and Hobbs doesn't. It also repeats TSRA grade of "hostile." So, Hobbs sent another retort.

Alice Tripp, the legislative director for TSRA PAC, says the NRA mails the candidate questionnaire in January to every state candidate and asks for it to be returned to TSRA Feb. 4.

"Daniel and 99.9 percent of the other candidates got it in immediately," Tripp says. "That cutoff date is to build a sense of urgency."

Tripp says she wanted to get the info on the Web site by Feb. 19, on the 14, she noticed the one from Hobbs was missing. Apparently, he was the only Republican that hadn't returned the questionnaire. She couldn't get a hold of him, so she had to give him a rating of "?" which on their legend equals "should be considered hostile to 2nd Amendment issues."

"I didn't assign him that title," Tripp says. "He took it on himself."

Hobbs and Tripp e-mailed some and eventually, he got the questionnaire in on the 19. The same day, Tripp sent Hobbs a letter saying his answers gave him an "A" rating. But, she didn't change the voter's guide on the TSRA PAC site right away. She didn't change it until the early morning hours of the 28th — there's a footnote explaining Hobbs' tardiness there, too.

Daniel says when he sent both mail pieces, the voter's guide still showed "?" next to Hobbs. Anyone could find that info by checking the site. He checked it again after sending the mail pieces on the 27th and found an "A" next to his opponent's name and says he called the post office and tried to stop it. Too late.

So what does Hobbs have to say about all this? He says his questionnaire didn't come on time and as soon as he got it, he sent it in. That would be just before Mar. 19.

"His mail piece makes people think I'm hostile to every Republican issue out there," Hobbs says. "You start talking to Texans about taking their guns away and they're going to ask questions. Even people who don't have guns will fight for the right for their neighbor to have one."

Daniel says he doesn't think the conflict will be beneficial or harmful for either candidate — and he's frustrated that the site changed before voters received his mail piece.

"I'm in an unenviable position," he says. "Some voters think he just submitted the questionnaire for political gain, others think that he's hiding something, but that's not for me to decide. I didn't make a personal judgment here."

— by Karie Meltzer

From the Debunking Squad

Texas House candidate Ken Legler owns properties in Harris and Galveston counties, but don't buy the line that he's got homestead exemptions on both of them. Local tax officials say it ain't so, in spite of what they've posted on the Internet.

Texas law only allows one homestead exemption per taxpayer. Former Rep. Gene Seaman, R-Corpus Christi, lost a reelection bid two years ago with a similar issue playing a role; he had exemptions on properties in Travis and Nueces counties, and blamed his wife for the mistake. Legler's foes thought they caught him making the same mistake, but it's a bogus claim.

The websites for the appraisal districts in Galveston and in Harris counties indicate Legler has homestead exemptions in both places.

But the Galveston website is out of date. It's got the old owner listed (though Barbara Legler shows up on a tax payment) and says there's a homestead exemption. Officials with the Galveston Central Appraisal District say they're in the process of updating it, and say the Leglers don't have and haven't applied for a homestead exemption there. The Harris County exemption — that's the house that's in teh House district — is apparently the only one they've got.

Legler's daughter goes to Friendswood High School, which is in neither the school district nor the House district where Legler is running for office. But he's got a house in both places.

Macias Goes to Court

After coming up short in the official recount, state Rep. Nathan Macias, R-Bulverde, is going to court to try to keep his seat.

A copy of the lawsuit is posted here. One point of attack: He contends a "fairly large" number of people voted in both the Republican and Democratic primaries.

Macias lost the election by 38 votes in the initial count. The recount closed that to 17. He won the seat two years ago by a similarly narrow margin. His opponent then, Rep. Carter Casteel, elected not to go to court.

The winner, for the moment, is Doug Miller, former Mayor of New Braunfels.

Macias' lawyers — Rene Diaz and Trey Trainor — say Miller benefitted from some votes that shouldn't have been counted, and that Macias suffered because election officials didn't count some votes they should have counted. They contend the number of questionable votes was greater than Miller's margin of victory. And they're asking the court to either figure out the real result or order a new election.

Miller says he was "saddened" by the lawsuit and compared Macias' effort to Al Gore's push for a Florida recount in 2000: "You hope the guy would do the right thing and allow the voice of the people to be heard."

Moonlighting

As long as you don't have a direct conflict of interest, you can apparently work for the state and have a private law practice at the same time.

House staffer Trey Trainor is working off hours as an attorney on an election law case — an arrangement that's unusual, but apparently legal.

Trainor is one of two lawyers representing Macias in his suit seeking to overturn the primary election that ousted him after one term by 17 votes.

Trainor is also the clerk of the House Committee on Regulated Industries and a top aide to its chairman, Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford.

He admits it's an unusual circumstance, but says he checked state law and the House's own rules before signing on with the lead lawyer in the case, former Judge Rene Diaz. He's not representing anyone with business before the House or the committee, and the rules of the House say you can have a second job if you've got your employer's approval. King, he says, approved. And, he adds, he's not working on the case on House time.

He says he's done legal work for his family while on the state payroll. And he's listed with the Republican National Lawyer's Association in the "hire a Republican lawyer" section.

Trainor says he's involved because of what he knows about election law after working for a year for then-Secretary of State Roger Williams. "I have a unique perspective," he says.

Doug Miller, who won the primary — at least so far — says Trainor's involvement surprised him. "He was on the recount team, too," Miller said. "It amazes me... like a Republican governor giving $20,000 in a Republican primary. What's going on here?"

Gov. Rick Perry contributed that amount to Macias.

Dirty Laundry

One loop in the race for Travis County District Attorney works like this:

1. An anonymously authored political website posts "news" that House Parliamentarian Terry Keel is helping candidate Mindy Montford.

2. The other candidate — Rosemary Lehmberg — sends out mailers (see below) repeating that and other bits from blogs, a statewide political journal, and the local paper.

That's not an unusual two-step in the political ecosystem. But there's potentially a dirty trick in this example. It turns out that political consultant Kelly Fero, who's working for Lehmberg in this race, is the anonymous blogger on that first website (credit the first report on that to the Austin American-Statesman). He apparently wrote the bit about Keel, and still vouches for it (though he didn't sign it at the time).

Keel, who works for House Speaker Tom Craddick, says he hasn't played any role in any of the DA campaigns. He's not saying explicitly what he'll do, but expect legal action that hits on libel, slander, campaign finance, and political ethics.

Keel's involvement in the race would be a big deal, if true. He's a former first assistant to DA Ronnie Earle (as Lehmberg, Earle's favorite in the DA race, is now). Earle has been in Craddick's political business since the 2002 election that put Craddick in power, so Keel, who's generally been a defender and friend of Earle's, might have a motive to get involved.

Whatever his motive, he researched the Austin Political Report, called the registrars in Bryan/College Station, found out Fero was the owner, and called foul. He's not commenting further at this point because of "pending litigation."

So be agnostic about this for a minute. The election is Tuesday, and chances are good that voters will go to the polls either suspecting Montford of getting help from Republicans, or suspecting Lehmberg of paying for laundered news she could use in her political mailers to slime the opposition.

Who's the trickster? We'll know sometime after Election Day. And if there is a crime under all of this, the prosecutor in charge would be... the candidate who wins next week.

Flotsam & Jetsam

On the eve of their county and Senate district caucuses, Texas Democrats were telling their voters that the deal was still on and that rumors of cancellations were untrue. They got reports at the state party headquarters of people sending emails and making automated calls to tell delegates that the caucuses have been canceled. Apparently, few people bought it: The Democrats say their regional meetups drew 100,000. It's not final until June, but both sides admit Barack Obama will get out of Texas with a win over Hillary Clinton in the only numbers that count toward a nomination: delegates.

• The Houston Chronicle, following its sister paper in San Antonio, is dropping distribution in Austin and other spots outside of the main service area. Both papers are owned by the Hearst Corp. By this time next week, neither will be available in racks in the state capital nor for home delivery. Get thee to the Internet; both are free online, at chron.com and at mysanantonio.com.

Political People and Their Moves

Glenn Shankle will leave the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, where he's the executive director, as soon as his replacement is named (they want someone new in place before the start of the legislative session in January 2009). He told the board this week and they'll start a search to replace him. One name in the hat is Shankle's number two, Mark Vickery. Shankle held the post since mid-2004 and worked for the agency for a decade before that. In fact, he retired once before and returned, joining zillions of other long-term state employees allowed by the Legislature to collect retirement checks and paychecks at the same time. Before he joined the environmental agency, Shankle worked in the Texas Senate and for the Comptroller of Public Accounts.

Dr. Kenneth Shine will take over as interim chancellor of the University of Texas System. He's currently the vice chancellor for health affairs and will fill in until the Board of Regents names a permanent replacement for Mark Yudof, who's leaving to run the University of California System.

Tom Krampitz is leaving the Texas Motor Speedway, where he's been general counsel and head of government affairs for six years, to hang his own shingle in Fort Worth. He's the former head of the District and County Attorneys Association in Austin; he'll specialize in transportation and economic development.

State Sens. Leticia Van de Putte of San Antonio and Kirk Watson of Austin will co-chair the Texas Democratic Party's state convention in Austin in June. Keeping score? She's for Clinton. He's for Obama.

Ken Anderson, appointments director for Gov. Rick Perry for the last six years, is moving on. That job goes to his deputy, Theresa Spears, who's worked for several years in Perry's political office with grassroots groups and issues. From her new perch, she'll handle Perry's appointments, the latest of which include:

Luke Inman of Wellington as district attorney for the five-county 100th judicial district. He's a private attorney and will replace Stuart Messer of Memphis, who left the job when Perry appointed him to a judgeship.

• Ten new members to the Brazos River Authority Board and named Christopher DeCluitt of Waco to chair that panel. The newbies include Patricia Bailon, a retired political consultant from Belton; Richard Ball, co-owner of Wes-Tex Vending Co. in Mineral Wells; Grady Barr, president of Double Barr Corp. in Abilene; F. LeRoy Bell, president of Compass Financial Strategies in Tuscola; Peter Bennis, CEO of First State Bank Texas in Cleburne; Zach Brady, a Lubbock attorney; John Brieden, a Brenham insurance agent; John Sloan, president of First Texas Bank Round Rock; Scott Smith, a consultant with A.G. Edwards & Sons in Cedar Park; and Salvatore Zaccagnino, an associate at LPL Financial Services in Caldwell.

• Seven new members to the Office of Rural Community Affairs and put Wallace Klussman, a rancher and retired Texas A&M University professor, in the chairman's spot. The new members are David Alders of Nacogdoches, president of Carrizo Creek Corp. and manager of Alders' Enterprises; Woodrow Anderson, owner of Anderson Farms in Colorado City; Bedias Mayor Mackie Bobo, an education consultant; Charles Butts, CEO of Medical Arts Hospital in Lamesa; Remelle Farrar of Crowell, director of the Knox County Visioning Team and the Texas Prairie Rivers Region; Joaquin Rodriguez, an Eagle Pass attorney; Linda Saenz, who owns a realty company in Carrizo Springs; and Patrick Wallace of Athens, an administrator at East Texas Medical Center there.

John Eckstrum of Montgomery to run the Texas Real Estate Commission, and named Avis Wukasch of Georgetown to an open spot on that board. Both are real estate brokers.

William Berry James of Palestine to the Upper Neches River Municipal Water Authority Board of Directors. He's an orthodontist. And he'll replace Joe Crutcher of Palestine.

Douglas Saunders, who owns an eponymous company in Amarillo, to the Oil Field Cleanup Fund Advisory Committee.

Lewis McMahan of Dallas to the Texas Water Development Board in place of William Meadows of Fort Worth. McMahan is a retired veep at Texas Instruments.

• Named David Duree of Odessa the chairman of the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy and added Stephen Peña of Georgetown to that panel. Both men are CPAs.

Maybe he did something bad in a previous life: Chris Lippincott is the new head of media relations for the Texas Department of Transportation. He joined that agency after a stint with the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault and until now was in the federal legislative affairs section.

Nora Belcher, until recently the deputy director of the governor's budget staff, left the Pink Building for Strategic Partnerships, where she'll be a senior consultant.

Republican consultant David Weeks — founder of Austin-based Weeks & Co. — is this year's "outstanding alumnus" of the College of Communications at the University of Texas.

Deaths: Darshoel "D" Willis, who for years was the clerk to the House Committee on Business and Industry, of cancer. He was 33.

Quotes of the Week

Former Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox, quoted in the Austin American-Statesman, telling Hays County Democrats he'd seen polls showing supporters of Clinton and Obama saying they wouldn't support the other candidate against the Republicans in November: "If you understand the math at all, that defeats you right there. What's more, if you are part of that 16 percent, you need to get up and get the hell out of here right now."

Democrat Gwendolyn Cline, quoted by the San Antonio Express-News on her way out of the senatorial district caucus, where she started as a delegate and wound up as an alternate to the state convention: "I'm not going away mad. But I am leaving confused."

Senate District 17 Chairman Bert Anson, caught during the caucuses by the Houston Chronicle: "It's going very good. I've only been yelled at and cursed twice. I've only lost my temper once. No, I've lost my temper twice."

Texas A&M Athletic Director Bill Byrne, quoted in The New York Times on the success of women's basketball and other sports there: "We've been trying to change the culture, as far as making sure every sport is important. Football is very important in Texas, but I've always had the philosophy that when you keep score, you might as well try to win."

Democratic strategist Morris Reid, talking about modern campaigns in the Houston Chronicle: "You really have to be able to have an online and an offline strategy to address all the misinformation that's out there. There is no policing, no arbiter of last resort on the Internet, and you have to worry about your reputation all the time."

Gov. Rick Perry, quoted by the Corpus Christi Caller-Times: "I have a lot of things I want to get done during the next session. If I get those things done I may ride off into the sunset. But if I don't I'll run for re-election."

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, who's talking about running for governor, quoted by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram on the prospect of Perry seeking another full term in 2010: "Whatever."


Texas Weekly: Volume 25, Issue 14, 7 April 2008. Ross Ramsey, Editor. Copyright 2008 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

Bloggers are buzzing about the outing of (and legal action against) a formerly anonymous blogger. They're also posting on House runoffs, conventions and personal stories. And there are ten more posts at the end.

* * * * *

The Man Behind the Curtain

Political consultant Kelly Fero was thrust into the spotlight due to this posting he made on his blog Austin Political Report. The subject of the post, House parliamentarian Terry Keel, filed a criminal complaint against Fero, who was working as a political consultant to Travis County District Attorney candidate Rosemary Lehmberg.

Burnt Orange Report says the to-do is political in nature, not criminal, and has a sit-down with Lehmberg. The Mindy Montford campaign has excelled in dictating the narrative of the race, says KVUE's Political Junkie, who also takes a look at TV ads and money reports for the campaigns. Texas Observer Blog has an analysis of where the money's coming from.

Capitol Annex says, "nothing will close the potential floodgate of complaints against bloggers except legislative action," and Pink Dome has a bit of advice for anonymous bloggers: "Don't bother. Someone will always find out. Then they will blab it to everybody. There are NO EXCEPTIONS to this rule."

The no-longer-anonymous Fero forged ahead with his APR blog, posting on the contested state House race in New Braunfels, the railroad commissioner contest and Gov. Rick Perry's book-pitching.

* * * * *

Two-Minute Warning

Texas Politics, the Houston Chronicle's blog, has a podcast (with transcription included) on diverse state House runoffs. In summary: the HD-112 race in Dallas is getting nasty; Harris County's HD-144 contest includes allegations of identity theft and tax avoidance; Odessa's HD-81 candidates are sparring about health; Williamson County's HD-52 race is a battle over gun rights; and, HD-55 candidates are squabbling about tax evasion and lavish spending of tax dollars.

Regarding the HD-55 contest between Ralph Sheffield and Martha Tyroch, BurkaBlog comments on a critique of Tyroch's spending by Texans for Fiscal Responsibility. Meanwhile, BlogHouston says state Rep. Hubert Vo, D-Houston, (who's under fire for owning dilapidated buildings in Houston) is selling his $4.5 million home for a profit of $200,000.

Burnt Orange contrasts the reaction of Nathan Macias to losing his House race recount to that of Carter Casteel two years earlier. And Half-Empty received a robo-call on behalf of CD-22 candidate Shelley Sekula Gibbs by one John O'Neill, of Swiftboat Veterans for Truth fame. Meanwhile, Texas Safety Forum looks at early voting totals, concluding that the results thus far bode better for Sekula Gibbs than for Pete Olson.

Musings pleads readers to vote for Dale Henry in the runoff for railroad commissioner, while Burka previews what House members will be arguing about during the 2009 session, that is, "the speaker's claim to absolute power to deny recognition to a member."

* * * * *

The Agony and the Ecstasy

Hillary Clinton supporter U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Houston, was booed by her own constituents (who prefer Barack Obama). Greg's Opinion is that the constituents lack class.

There's duh-raaama out in El Paso, according to Burnt Orange, alleging the Democratic Party county chair stacked convention delegates with Clinton supporters, which could result in an invalidation of the county's representation.

Burnt Orange has a guide to becoming a delegate to the national Democrats' party in Denver, and a how-to on fixing the state's caucus process.

Here's the current estimated presidential delegate count, by Burnt Orange, and here are lists of resolutions passed in the county and state senate district conventions.

PoliTex, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's blog,has video from Tarrant County. Chronic, the Austin Chronicle's blog, has photos of Travis County conventions. And Texas Kaos has an insider's account from Austin.

Eye on Williamson has a list of grievances against the Williamson County convention and the Democratic prima-caucus system in general. Musings has a laundry list of complaints against Fort Bend County's SD-17 convention that takes up two posts, here and here. And Panhandle Truth Squad has nicer things to say about the convention in Randall County. PoliTex says the Collin County meeting was long.

South Texas Chisme relays a rumor that Obama supporters were responsible for the fire marshal being called in to Hillary-leaning conventions in Nueces County and Harris County. Clinton supporters are mulling over a challenge to Tarrant County conventions, says PoliTex. And Texas Democratic Party chair Boyd Richie is naming an Obama backer and a Clinton supporter to lead the state convention, reports PoliTex.

GOP political consultant Bryan Eppstein predicts that Obama and Clinton will both be on the November ticket, says PoliTex. The Clinton campaign is admitting that she's losing Texas…but says it ain't over yet, according to PoliTex.

ABC13's Political Blog has Obama's anti-Big Oil ad that's running in Pennsylvania, but not Texas. And Trail Blazers, the Dallas Morning News's blog, has Clinton's reworked 3 a.m. advertisement.

Ron Paul r3VOLutionaries took over an Austin GOP convention, says Chronic. And Postcards from the Lege, the Austin American-Statesman's blog, reports that convention leader Robert McDonald had to lay the smack down upon a fellow Paulista in order to maintain order. Meanwhile, Trail Blazers says that the Texas Republican Party isn't willing to nix its anti-homosexuality stance just yet.

* * * * *

Political People

Tex Parte Blog has a story about Texas Supreme Court justice Don Willett getting a call from his intellectual hero George Will. And Dallas County D.A. Craig Watkins made a personal appeal to Dallas County commissioners to help him continue clearing inmates of wrongful convictions.

Texas Blue gets to know CD-32 Democrat Eric Roberson. Democratic candidates are speed-dating constituents in Colleyville, says PoliTex. And Texas Kaos waxes energetically about how super exciting this year's elections are.

Walker Report has photos (here and here) of former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich's visit to San Antonio, and also of a meeting of conservative bloggers in Austin.

U.S. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Ennis, is not happy about having his health records stolen, says Trail Blazers. Bet the agency responsible isn't happy about it either, because Barton's a bigwig on the House committee responsible for its oversight.

Trail Blazers relays an article about "Another Side of John Hagee," the controversial San Antonio pastor. And Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison hasn't said she's running Texas' top executive spot, but she likes being called "Governor reports Trail Blazers.

Legislative staffer Darshoel "D" Willis died March 29, says Capitol Crowd.

* * * * *

Countdown

10. Priceless Harris County D.A. e-mails, by Tex Parte Blog;

9. Texas healthcare not good, by Annex;

8. Comprehensive coverage of Texas Senate prison oversight hearing, by Grits for Breakfast;

7. Time to evaluate prison telemedicine? by Grits;

6. HIV drugs make up 48% of TDCJ pharmacy budget, by Grits;

5. Greater leniency for immigrant inmates, by Grits;

4. Testimony before Public School Accountability committee, by Mike Falick's Blog;

3. Michael Chertoff's waiver, by Observer;

2. Bexar County Young Democrats Newsletter, by Walker;

And 1. Robert Duvall is Karl Rove, says Trail Blazers.


This edition of Out There was compiled and written by Patrick Brendel, who hails from Victoria but is spending the spring in the mid-Atlantic region. 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.

None of the incumbents in statewide offices or in the Texas congressional delegation have fallen, nor have any state senators (put asterisks here for Sen. Kyle Janek, R-Houston, who will resign later this spring and will be replaced in a special election, probably in November).

But retirements and defeats thus far will mean at least 17 new faces in the Texas House — plus another, if you count the resignation of Rep. Anna Mowery, R-Fort Worth, last summer.

Nine House incumbents lost their primaries. The list of the defeated includes Democratic Reps. Kevin Bailey, Houston; Juan Escobar, Kingsville; Borris Miles, Houston; and Paul Moreno, El Paso. The defeated Republicans include Reps. Pat Haggerty, El Paso; Thomas Latham, Mesquite; Nathan Macias, Bulverde; Corbin Van Arsdale, Tomball; and Buddy West, Odessa.

The retirement list includes Democrats Robby Cook, Eagle Lake;

Rick Noriega, Houston; and Robert Puente, San Antonio. The Republicans: Dianne White Delisi, Temple; Fred Hill, Richardson; Mike Krusee, Round Rock; Mike O'Day, Pearland; and Robert Talton, Pasadena. Mowery, who left last summer, was replaced in a special election by Democrat Dan Barrett of Fort Worth. He has to defend that seat before ever sitting for legislative session, in a rematch with Republican Mark Shelton in November.

The election season is already over for one Texas congressman, three state senators, and 33 state representatives. There are 24 Democrats and nine Republicans in this group.

The Republican list: U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert, Tyler; state Sens. Craig Estes, Wichita Falls, and Tommy Williams, The Woodlands; and Reps. Warren Chisum, Pampa; Byron Cook, Corsicana; Charlie Howard, Sugar Land; Bryan Hughes, Mineola; Carl Isett, Lubbock; Lois Kolkhorst, Brenham; Jodie Laubenberg, Parker; Geanie Morrison, Victoria; and Wayne Smith, Baytown.

And the Democrats: Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., Brownsville; and Reps. Alma Allen, Houston; Roberto Alonzo, Dallas; Barbara Mallory Caraway, Dallas; Joaquin Castro, San Antonio; Norma Chavez, El Paso; Harold Dutton Jr., Houston; Al Edwards, Houston; Kino Flores, Palmview; Ryan Guillen, Rio Grande City; Yvonne Gonzalez Toureilles, Alice; Roland Gutierrez, San Antonio; Tracy King, Batesville; Eddie Lucio III, Brownsville; Armando "Mando" Martinez, Weslaco; Jose Menendez, San Antonio; Ruth Jones McClendon, San Antonio; Rene Oliveira, Brownsville; Aaron Peña, Edinburg; Joe Pickett, El Paso; Allan Ritter, Nederland; Sylvester Turner, Houston; Mike Villarreal, San Antonio; and Armando Lucio Walle, Houston.

Special Citation for Cakewalking: Roland Gutierrez will become a Texas House member without an election. The former San Antonio city councilman was the only candidate to sign up for the special election to replace Rep. Robert Puente, who retired. Gutierrez is also on the November ballot for a full term, but has no opposition.

James Ho, one of a group of lawyers who successfully challenged the constitutionality of laws preventing non-legislators from participating in races for Speaker of the Texas House and co-author of a legal treatise on the status of terrorists and war, will be the state's new solicitor general.

Ho is a former clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and also worked for U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. Ho is also the co-author of a paper on the legal status of terrorists and what they're entitled to — and not entitled to — when they're in custody. (His co-author, John Yoo, wrote a confidential memo for the Bush Adminstration that's been making news; Ho was not involved in that and has spoken out against it). In their paper on terrorists and war, the two concluded that members of al-Qaeda and the Taliban are "unlawful combatants not entitled to the legal status of prisoners of war under the Geneva Convention." Ho's new job doesn't require Senate confirmation.

Ted Cruz, the current chief litigator at the Attorney General's office, is leaving for private practice later this year. He's been the Solicitor General for over five years and argued a string of cases before the U.S. Supreme Court during that time. The most recent: A successful challenge to federal officials who tried to overturn a death penalty case against a Mexican national because it violated a ruling of the World Court. The state argued that it wasn't bound by that court's rulings.

State and local governments will cover about $7 million of the costs of holding the NCAA Men's Final Four in San Antonio with a fund designed to make Texas attractive for big events like that.

Comptroller Susan Combs wants to expand the program in time for the 2011 Super Bowl in Arlington, allowing promoters to cover the expenses of more events that will, in turn, bring in more tax money.

The state has four funds set up to lure sporting and other events that could — without a competitive edge — go to other states. For big sporting events like the Final Four or the Super Bowl, the state figures up the economic impact and what it means in terms of taxes on sales, hotel rooms, motor vehicles and drinks. They agree to reimburse approved expenses based on that, and on local government tax breaks, and figure they'll make up the expenses and then some from indirect and induced spending that results from the event.

In the case of the Final Four, the state agreed to pay up to $6.1 million if the expenses were approved and if the local governments would put up $973,000. And they figured the state would bring in about twice that amount in taxes on spending associated with the event — money that wouldn't be spent, they figure, if the Final Four had gone to another state.

Texas already won the 2011 Super Bowl. But there's a move to expand the tax breaks to include event-related spending over a longer period of time and/or to include benefits from non-direct spending. Say the economists broaden their economic impact study to cover more than a two-week window, or to include indirect and induced spending in their numbers. Either would make more money available to the locals for reimbursement. Combs says they might be able to add to their event planning as a result, and bring more money into state coffers as a result.

"It's an incentive — not a subsidy," she says. "It's a net money-maker."

You'd have predicted this if you sat down and thought about it, but the fundraising pitch for House Democrats in Texas is the same one Tom Craddick and the Republicans used in the 1990s, when they were in the minority.

The Texas House Democratic Campaign Committee says Democrats need "only five seats to a majority." They tout the distance they've covered, from a low point of 88 Republicans and 62 Democrats to the current 79-71. The leader of that group, Waco Rep. Jim Dunnam, is borrowing a page from the current Speaker, who ran campaigns called "76 in '96" and "8 in 98" on his way to winning a majority, after redistricting, in 2002. That election year flipped the Republicans from a 72-78 minority to an 88-62 majority.

• The tax courts are out of the comptroller's control now (they were moved last year to the State Office of Administrative Hearings), and the people who practice before them are welcome at Susan Combs' fundraisers again. Brint Ryan — head of Dallas-based Ryan & Co. — was among the contributors at a Combs funder at the home of Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones this week. "I've got a firewall now between us and the [tax judges]," Combs says.

Martin Cuellar — brother of U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, R-Laredo — edged out the incumbent sheriff of Webb County in this week's runoffs. Cuellar, with 50.09 percent, defeated Sheriff Rick Flores. The margin? 48 votes, of 26,779 cast.

• Put Austin Furse on your list of potential Republican candidates in SD-17. That's the spot currently held by Sen. Kyle Janek, R-Houston, who has announced he'll resign at the end of May. That probably sets up a special election on November 4 to fill the last two years of Janek's four-year term.

• Democrat Kristi Thibaut got her second endorsement from Annie's List, a PAC set up to elect Democratic women to the Legislature. She had the group's endorsement two years ago, against the same Republican, Rep. Jim Murphy of Houston. Thibaut got 41.7 percent the first time, but her supporters are betting the presidential contest will change the math in HD-133.

Political People and their Moves

Rep. Buddy West, R-Odessa, lost his primary to former Judge Tryon Lewis.

In most legislative races, votes are still being counted. But incumbent West's race is over. Lewis got 72 percent of the vote, with all the votes counted. West told colleagues last year he wouldn't be returning, then changed in his mind (a dire health report brightened) and decided to seek reelection. By then, he had three opponents, and he ran second coming into the runoff.

In races to replace district attorneys in Harris and Travis Counties, Pat Lykos and Rosemary Lehmberg won their respective primary runoffs.

In Harris County, Lykos, a former judge, out-polled assistant DA Siegler in the race for the GOP nomination for district attorney. Lykos got 52.7 percent in final and unofficial returns. The winner will face former Houston Police Chief C.O. Bradford. And all of them are running to replace scandal-plagued former DA Chuck Rosenthal. Short take: Siegler was an assistant to Rosenthal and paid for that proximity; Lykos ran as an outsider to the office.

In Travis County, where Democratic primary voters will choose the next district attorney, Rosemary Lehmberg got 65.2 percent of the vote against Mindy Montford. Both are assistant district attorneys to DA Ronnie Earle, who decided not to seek another term. Short take: Lehmberg accused Montford of being too close to the lobby and to Republican donors in a job where policing the Capitol is part of the assignment and in a primary where elephants aren't welcome. Montford said Lehmberg was getting her support, in part, from criminal defense attorneys who regularly do battle with the county's prosecutors.

Complete returns....

In the only statewide primary of the night — the Democratic battle for Railroad Commission — political novice Mark Thompson outran Dale Henry, who was making a third run for a job on that regulatory panel. Thompson got 59.2 percent of the vote, and will challenge Republica incumbent Michael Williams.

Voters chose challengers for two members of Congress. In Dallas' CD-32, Eric Roberson beat Steve Love, with 72.5 percent of the vote. He will face U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Dallas, in November. And in CD-22 in the Houston-Sugar Land area, Pete Olson got 68.5 percent against Shelley Sekula Gibbs. Olson, a former Navy pilot and chief of staff to U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, was the favorite of Washington Republicans and the better of the two candidates for a general election race. Sekula Gibbs briefly held the seat after U.S. Majority Leader Tom DeLay resigned, and that bumpy tenure played against her. The winner will take on U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Stafford.

In Republican runoffs for the Texas House:

HD-52: In this Williamson County race, Bryan Daniel beat Dee Hobbs, winning 53.6 percent of the vote. The incumbent, Mike Krusee of Round Rock, didn't seek another term. Daniel will face Democrat Diana Maldonado in November.

HD-55: Ralph Sheffield beat Martha Tyroch, and convincingly: 63.5%—36.5%. The incumbent, Dianne White Delisi, R-Temple, didn't seek reelection. That contest featured accusations that he went years with unpaid business taxes and that she overspent taxpayer funds on trips while a member of the Temple City Council. He'll face Democrat Sam Murphey in November.

HD-81: Rep. Buddy West of Odessa lost his reelection bid to Tryon Lewis, also of Odessa. That's a final but unofficial result. Lewis got 5,171 votes to West's 1,631. That puts Lewis in the House, in all likelihood: His only remaining opponent is Libertarian Elmo Hockman.

HD-112: Angie Chen Button, with 53.2 percent, defeated former Garland City Councilman Randy Dunning. That's the race to replace Rep. Fred Hill, R-Richardson. Still ahead: Democrat Sandra Phuog VuLe of Garland.

HD-144: With all the votes counted, Ken Legler held onto a 101-vote lead over Fred Roberts in the race to replace Robert Talton, R-Pasadena. Legler had 51.6 percent, but that might be close enough to prompt a recount request. Legler actually ran second on Election Day, but had racked up enough early votes to offset that and beat Roberts. The winner will meet Democrat Joel Redmond in November.

Dallas lawyer and former Judge Catharina Haynes won U.S. Senate confirmation to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, replacing Judge Harold Moss on that panel. She was most recently with Baker Botts, but serviced two terms as a state district judge before that.

Don Forse Jr. moves into the chief of staff job for Sen. Bob Deuell, R-Greenville, but he'll continue as communications director, too, at least for now. Forse replaces Todd Gallaher, who is under investigation for doing political work from his state computer. Forse has been with Deuell since 2003 and worked in the House before that.

Gov. Rick Perry named Karen Rankin of San Antonio the presiding officer at the Texas Veterans Commission and named Eliseo Cantu Jr. of Corpus Christi and John McKinney of El Paso to that board. Rankin is with Keywtone International. Cantu is a retired exec with Driscoll Children's Hospital. And McKinney is a retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army.

Perry named Brett Gilbert, an assistant business professor at Texas A&M University, to the Texas Emerging Technology Advisory Committee. She'll replace Elsa Murano, who's now the president of that university.

And the Guv named Allen Cline and Karen Siegel to the Texas State Board of Acupuncture Examiners, which regulates that business. Cline is president of Turtle Dragon Health Services in Austin. Siegel's with the Acupuncture and Nutrition Clinic in Houston.

Quotes of the Week

Palmer, Baldwin, Kincaid, Fallon, Lewis, and Vo

Dave Palmer, a Californian who filed a campaign ethics complaint against Sen. Jeff Wentworth, quoted by the San Antonio Express-News on money the Texan spent on trips to Bohemian Grove in San Francisco: "Unless the state of Texas or San Antonio is paying him to dress up in drag, I don't know how that can be an official duty."

Kerr County Commissioner Buster Baldwin, quote by the West Kerr Current on the burn ban there: "This is the most unfavorite part of my job. Telling people what to do with their lives and property borders on insanity."

Trevor Kincaid, an aide to U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Stafford, quoted in The Wall Street Journal about his boss' leanings as a Democratic super-delegate: "It's nothing we're discussing."

Gayle Fallon, president of the Houston Federation of Teachers, quoted in the Houston Chronicle after the state rejected school district claims that teacher bonus amounts should be secret: "Possibly HISD has learned that public money is public information."

Tryon Lewis, who beat Rep. Buddy West, R-Odessa, quoted in the Midland Reporter-Telegram in support of another term for House Speaker Tom Craddick: "I think we're very fortunate to have a speaker from West Texas."

Rep. Hubert Vo, D-Houston, quoted in a Houston Chronicle story on the substandard condition of apartments he owns: "It's going to affect me very much. It's going to kill my reputation. I just have to move on and try to repair the damage."