A Nice Inheritance

Kyle Janek isn't in a political race this year, but his money will be. The Houston Republican resigned from the state Senate in mid-term and the special election to replace him is underway.

At mid-year, Janek closed his political accounts, spent some of the $510,957 on charitable and political contributions, political work, bonuses for employees and a last, large payment to his political consultant, Blakemore and Associates. Then he sent the $302,334 balance to a political action committee set up to keep the Senate seat in Republican hands.

The reports for both committees included statements that he's shutting things down. Janek has moved to Austin and signed on with a biomedical testing firm.

The mid-year report for the "Best for Texas PAC" recorded that contribution and five small expenditures for "political promotion: sponsorship." One, to Victoria Ellis of Houston, was for $25. The other four were for $5 each, and included separate payments to Mark and Stacey Clark of Houston, and to Joan Huffman and Keith Lawyer, also of Houston. All five were among the donors who started the PAC last October with token contributions, and each was refunded what they gave.

The main point of interest there is Huffman, one of several candidates vying to replace Janek in the state Senate; Lawyer is her husband. The Clarks are both listed among the sponsors of a Huffman fundraiser coming up early next month. Janek has been supporting another Republican, squiring Austen Furse through introductions to potential supporters and donors in both Houston and Austin.

And it looks like Furse will be the beneficiary of the Best for Texas PAC.

"I made the decision that I didn't want to hold onto the money. That money was given to me to campaign, but I'm through campaigning," Janek said. "I wanted to make sure the district stays in good hands. I suspect they'll use it to help Austen, but I have nothing to do with it."

The new PAC has the same Houston address and phone number that was listed on Janek's campaign accounts. The treasurer, replacing his father, Eddie Janek, is Joe Slovacek, a Houston attorney. The address and contact numbers listed on reports for the PAC and for the campaign match the contact information for Blakemore & Associates, the Houston political consulting firm that has worked for Janek in the past and is working for Furse in this year's special election.

A spokesman for Huffman says she and Lawyer didn't get an explanation for why they got their $10 investment in Best for Texas returned. Chances are they'd have eventually demanded it: Allen Blakemore says Slovacek, the treasurer of the PAC, is a Furse supporter. He notes Janek's support for Furse. And he says the committee's money "may well be spent in a way not supportive of Huffman."

The committee hasn't spent any money so far and Blakemore said he doesn't know whether it will donate to Furse, spend its money on his behalf, or what.

Another curiosity from Janek's last reports: He spent $27,170 on "research" from an Austin-based polling firm, Baselice & Associates. Put that on the calendar: Janek announced his resignation at the end of January, but paid for the polling on March 10. Opponents are wondering if that went to Furse's benefit, but Blakemore says Janek "wanted to get an eye on the landscape of the district and be apprised of what was likely to happen as he left."

Janek also gave $25,000 to the Twenty One PAC, set up to make sure Republicans hold at least 21 seats in the Texas Senate — the number it takes to control the agenda. It reported contributions to Sens. Chris Harris of Arlington, $25,000, Kim Brimer of Fort Worth, $100,000, John Carona of Dallas, $25,000, and Mike Jackson of La Porte, $100,000. Raise your hand if you think you know the address and phone number for that one. Sen. Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands, is listed as the treasurer, but the address and phone are for Blakemore's office in Houston.

The race to replace Janek isn't limited to Furse and Huffman. Republican Grant Harpold is in, too, as is Democrat Chris Bell. Several of the Republicans we talked to while working on this think the infighting about their candidates will benefit Bell, the only Democrat in the race. Something like that happened in Fort Worth last year, when several GOP candidates in a special election for an open House seat cut each other up and lost the runoff in what looked like a Republican district to Democrat Dan Barrett.

Down to the Wire

Sen. Kim Brimer went to the Texas Supreme Court Monday to try to knock his Democratic opponent, Wendy Davis, off the November ballot. On Tuesday, they turned him down.

That leaves the legal fight in Fort Worth's 2nd Court of Appeals, which has set a schedule that'll quickly make election law specialists of the consultants on both sides. A state district court ruled earlier this summer that Davis is legally on the ballot. Brimer is arguing that she wasn't off the Fort Worth City Council in time to qualify as a candidate for Senate.

Briefs were due on Thursday, as this newsletter's deadline approached. Friday, 22 August, is the last day the Texas Secretary of State can remove someone from the ballot. Next Tuesday is the last day (with some technical exceptions) that someone can be added to the ballot. That appeals court hasn't set a hearing date.

But the deadlines could leave that court with the job of deciding whether she's eligible after the law has made it possible to take her off the ballot or to replace her with another Democratic candidate. The Supremes could still be involved later, if either side appeals whatever ruling comes from the appeals court in Fort Worth.

If the court were to declare Davis ineligible after Friday, her name would still appear on the ballot. And if they were to wait until say, a week from Wednesday, Tarrant County Democrats would find it difficult, if not impossible, to put up another candidate for the November election.

Two new bits of paperwork have been added to the pile in that case. Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, was party to the lawsuit that threw the eligibility laws into a new gray area. In an amicus brief filed this week, he said the courts need to clear up confusion over when someone is deemed to be holding an office that prevents them from seeking another. In his case, he'd given up his position and someone else was serving by the time he sought another office. In this case, Davis was (arguably) a candidate for Senate before she'd been replaced. Another "friend of the court" brief, from Fort Worth Councilman Chuck Silcox, argues that Davis' replacement wasn't sworn in before she became a candidate. He was sworn in twice — the question is whether the earlier one counted and whether, in the eyes of the courts, it makes a difference.

"An Insane System"

A federal judge stayed the execution of Jeffrey Lee Wood, saying Wood deserves legal help and time to show whether he is sufficiently mentally competent to be executed.

Wood was convicted under the state's "law of parties" for participating in a robbery and killing even though someone else did the killing. His requests for legal help were refused in the trial court, and that refusal was the basis for U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia of San Antonio to stay the execution and appoint a lawyer and a mental health expert to assist Wood in his appeal.

The judge said the evidence falls short of proving Wood is mentally incompetent, but said the state's system for letting him prove it is out of whack, because it requires him to do alone what lawyers are highly trained to do. "With all due respect, a system which requires an insane person to first make 'a substantial showing' of his own lack of mental capacity without the assistance of counsel or a mental health expert, in order to obtain such assistance is, by definition, an insane system."

Bzzzztt!

State Rep. Bill Zedler, R-Arlington, flew too close to the bug zapper with a mailing inviting folks to a fundraiser featuring Republican U.S. Reps. Joe Barton of Ennis and Kay Granger of Fort Worth among the "honorary hosts."

The September 9 fundraiser at Fort Worth's City Club also features House Speaker Tom Craddick as "special guest" and Attorney General Greg Abbott and Sens. Kim Brimer and Jane Nelson as honorary hosts. The invite asks supporters to sign on as hosts for the luncheon at the $1,000, $2,500, or $5,000 level.

If you're a campaign finance lawyer or a political nerd, you'll find the same violation in the previous paragraph that the Democrats at the Lone Star Project found: Federal officeholders solicit more money — even for an unregulated state candidate — than they're allowed to collect for their own campaigns. And for members of Congress like Barton and Granger, that's $2,300 per person.

That group — which supports Democrat Chris Turner in that House race — says Zedler should cancel the event. Jeff Fisher, the former Republican Party of Texas executive director who is now running Zedler's campaign, says it was "a layout mistake" in the mailer sent to supporters. Fisher says only 51 were sent. He says Barton and Granger should've been listed as guests. Asked whether he plans another mailing correcting the first one, he sighed. "I don't think sending a correction fixes it, necessarily."

Wrecking Crew

The state agency that regulates homebuilders should be abolished, according to the staff of the Sunset Advisory Commission, which says the Texas Residential Construction Commission's regulatory structure is worse than no regulation at all.

The TRCC "was never meant to be a true regulatory agency with a clear mission of protecting the public," the staff report says (here's a link to the full report). "... Current regulation of the residential construction industry is fundamentally flawed and does more harm than good."

That got a quick and negative response from Duane Waddill, the executive director of the agency, who said it would leave the state's homebuilding industry unregulated.

Builders want to keep it, too, according to their trade group. The Texas Association of Builders called the recommendation "short-sighted." But Texas Watch, a longtime critic, applauded the idea of killing TRCC.

The Sunset panel periodically reviews most state agencies, but those reviews rarely recommend — or result in — abolition of the agencies in question.

That's the first recommendation for TRCC. The report — not yet made public — says that would result in the layoffs of 80 state employees. It would also cost about $300,000 annually. That's the amount by which fees charged to builders outpaces the costs of running the regulatory agency.

The report is critical of the agency's regulatory setup, which requires homeowners to navigate through its procedures before going to court to sue a builder. "No other regulatory agency has a program with such a potentially devastating effect on consumers' ability to seek their own remedies," the report says. "... Sunset staff did not trust that the commitment exists to establish the true regulation needed for the protection of the public."

The full commission will take its first public look at the report next month, and is slated to make its official recommendations on TRCC at its December meeting. TRCC's commissioners will meet in early September to talk about an official response.

Their first response? Sunset has a bad idea.

"The Texas Residential Construction Commission ardently disagrees with the Sunset Commission staff recommendation to abolish the agency," Waddill said via press release. "Accepting Sunset’s staff recommendation would free nearly 28,000 builders from regulatory oversight. Nearly 600,000 homes have been registered since the commission’s inception. Those Texas families will be left to fend for themselves if an issue arises with their home.

"The commission has stripped or denied the right to operate from nearly 500 builders/remodelers in the state. Repealing this legislation would turn back the clock and allow these builders to return and compete in the receding housing market. With the downturn of the market and the ongoing crisis among lending institutions, eroding consumer confidence in the housing industry by deregulating the building industry could be strike three to a fragile economy."

Texas Watch, a longtime critic of the agency, hailed the Sunset report and said TRCC should be replaced with something that regulates builders instead of regulating homeowners. "Lawmakers should replace the feckless TRCC with real reforms that ensure builder accountability, quality building standards, and true oversight and regulation of the homebuilding industry," said Alex Winslow, that group's executive director.

Burn Report

Joe Jaworski got a $2,500 contribution from Dallas lawyer Fred Baron last year, and we reported it last week. Before the pixels were cool, one of his campaign consultants called to tell us the candidate had given a check in that amount to cancer research at the University of Texas Medical Center in Galveston as soon as he could after learning about Baron's role in the John Edwards mess. (Baron was Edwards national finance chairman and has said he paid to move the woman with whom Edwards had an affair to help her avoid hectoring from the press and others.)

Looked like Jaworski was the only Democrat in Texas running from the money.

But Jaworski got on the blower a few hours later to say the gift to UTMB wasn't related to the donation from Baron. He says now that his campaign isn't worried about funds received the Dallas lawyer, isn't returning it or donating the money, and that the campaign consultant who called on Jaworski's behalf got it wrong when telling us about it.

So the check that he wrote for cancer research at the University of Texas Medical Branch has nothing to do with the check he received for the same amount from Baron, Jaworski says, and he's got no problem taking the Dallas attorney's money.

"I was happy to take his money in 2007 and I daresay I spent it fairly quickly," Jaworski says. "I would accept it again. Fred Baron is a good Democrat and his heart is in the right place."

Jaworski, who's running for the Texas Senate, is one of a handful of legislative candidates who received direct contributions from Baron in this campaign cycle; most of Baron's donations go to Democratic groups and political action committees.

Republicans have started pushing Democratic candidates to disavow the money now that Baron has been tied to Edwards' problems. Jaworski says he's not going to do that.

We mentioned Jaworski and Carol Kent of Dallas last week as a couple of legislative Democratic candidates who got money directly from Baron in this election cycle. We left out a few state candidates with competition, to wit: Jim Jordan, challenging Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson, $5,000; Emil Reichstadt, who's running against Rep. Dan Branch, R-Dallas, $2,500; Chris Turner, challenging Rep. Bill Zedler, R-Arlington, $5,000; and Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, who's trying to fend off Republican Louis Bruni Jr., $2,500. Out of harm's way, at least in November, but on Baron's list: Reps. Rafael Anchia of Dallas, $2,500; Jim Dunnam of Waco, $2,500; and Richard Raymond of Laredo, $5,000; and Sen. Royce West of Dallas, $5,000.

Highways, Constitutions and Trips Behind Enemy Lines

State government's top three officials say they'll work to take state police funding out of the gasoline tax account that's also used to pay for highways and other roads, that they'll create a transportation finance operation allowing state investment funds to help finance highways, and that they'll put highway bonds approved by voters into the state budget. That's all in a letter to the Transportation Commission, and it includes instructions to get ready to sell $1.5 billion in bonds also approved by voters to get some money into the highway pipeline. The signatures at the bottom of that letter belong to Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and House Speaker Tom Craddick.

• A legislative proposal to limit increases in property taxes has a flaw: It's unconstitutional. Sen. Dan Patrick and Rep. Dwayne Bohac, both Houston Republicans, say the state could effectively halve annual property tax increases by simply appraising properties biennially instead of annually. The thinking? The state limits increases in taxable property value to 10 percent from one appraisal to the next. If those appraisals were done every two years instead of every year, it would take two years for a property to increase — for tax purposes — by 10 percent.

Credit the catch to former state district Judge F. Scott McCown, who now heads the Center for Public Policy Priorities in Austin. The state constitution, he points out, limits the property tax increases to 10 percent "of the appraised value of the residential homestead for the preceding tax year." To change it, the Lege would have to change the constitution. That requires a two-thirds vote in each House, and there weren't enough votes in 2007 to make a similar change by amending the constitution to limit increases to something less than 10 percent.

• Texas Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams is going to the other political party's convention. Williams, a Republican, will be in Denver to talk about energy issues, among other things.

Sick of Boots?

Only three-and-a-half times since 1960 has the national ticket for federal office not included a Texan as either the presidential or vice presidential candidate.

Chances seem slim that a Texan will make the list this year. Only a couple of Texans have won mentions this year, including U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison as a potential Republican veep candidate, and U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards of Waco, as a maybe on the Democratic side.

So there could be a breather for Texas (from Texas?) for the first time in almost 30 years. And like the last time the state saw a drought on the national ticket, this one would follow a Texan's term as president.

Nobody from here made the major party tickets in 1968, 1972, or 1976, the three elections that followed Lyndon Johnson's term. Johnson was on the ballot in 1960 and then in 1964. Since that break, it's been Bush country, with George H.W. Bush on the ballot in 1980, 1984, 1988, and 1992 and George W. Bush on the ticket in 2000 and 2004. We're not even counting Vice President Dick Cheney, though he was living in Dallas when he got on the ticket as a candidate from Wyoming. U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen was the Democratic veep candidate in 1988, and Ross Perot was, in 1992 and 1996, a high-profile third party candidate.

Political People and Their Moves

With two open positions on the powerful Public Utility Commission, Gov. Rick Perry raided his own staff. He appointed Ken Anderson Jr. — his former appointments secretary — and Donna Nelson — one of his policy advisors — to that three-person regulatory panel. Anderson is an attorney and recently left the governor's office to return to private practice (the PUC is a full-time gig). And Nelson was the Guv's special assistant and advisor on energy, telecommunications and cable issues. She worked at the PUC before that, as director of the telecommunications section and she's a former assistant Texas attorney general. They'll replace Julie Parsley and Paul Hudson, who are both resigning from that panel.

Texas state police Major Stan Clark of Garland will take over as interim head of the Department of Public Safety. He'll hold the post while the board decides on a permanent replacement for Col. Tommy Davis, who resigned.

Mark Miner, formerly the press guy for Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, is moving from his present gig in the private sector to be communications director for Gov. Rick Perry, starting Monday. Allison Castle will be press secretary (she's been in the press office there for some time). That takes care of both of Robert Black's titles; he's leaving Perry's shop for the private sector. One more: Krista Piferrer is leaving to handle media for Baptist Child & Family Services in San Antonio. Katherine Cessinger returns as deputy press secretary in her place.

Wallace Jefferson, chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court, is on track to become president of the Conference of Chief Justices, which represents top judges in the top courts all over the country. He's first vice president this year and slated to be president-elect and then president after that.

In the works: John Sneed, who worked for Dewhurst at both the General Land Office and through his time (so far) as Lite Guv, will be leaving soon to take over at the State Preservation Board. Gaye Polan is retiring from that post. Sneed is Dewhurst's director of intergovernmental relations.

Phil Fountain, late of Rep. Dianne White Delisi's staff (because she resigned early), is joining the Senate Health and Human Services Committee as a policy analyst to Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Lewisville. But that new gig will wait until later this year. He's in the Texas Air National Guard and is up for a brief deployment to Iraq starting next month.

Name-calling: It's now called the Anita Thigpen Perry School of Nursing at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, after the First Lady. She took some classes at Tech, but got her undergrad degree at what was then West Texas State University and her nursing degree at UT Health Science Center in San Antonio.

Perry appointed James Matz of Harlingen and Bob McCan of Victoria to the Coastal Coordination Council. Matz, a property manager, is a former county commissioner and mayor. McCan is general manager of McFaddin Enterprises.

House Speaker Tom Craddick named Sarana Savage of Midland to the Health Disparities Task Force, replacing Dr. Hilton Perez, who quit. Savage is a former teacher and state health worker; she's now president of the Midland Community Healthcare Services board.

Quotes of the Week

Dallas lawyer Fred Baron, asked by The New York Times about whether he lent money to either the woman who had an affair with John Edwards or the former Edwards employee said to have fathered her child: "I have a brief recollection of giving someone some cash. My assumption is I loaned some small amount of money to the both of them."

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, asked about his personal wealth by the Associated Press: "We're not going there. Do I look stupid today? In Texas, we have a long tradition of not talking about the number of cattle you own or your net worth."

Gov. Rick Perry, telling reporters he's not opposed to teachers and staffers carrying guns at schools: "I'm pretty much a fan that if you've been trained and you are registered, then you should be able to carry a weapon. Matter of fact, there's a lot of instances that would have saved a lot of lives."

Texas Ethics Commissioner Ross Fischer, quoted in the Austin American-Statesman on a proposal to require politicians to pay campaign finance fines with personal funds instead of campaign funds: "If you are paying a fine with someone else's money, there is no personal accountability."

Rep. Mike Krusee, R-Round Rock, talking to Utah lawmakers and quoted by KCPW-FM: "Guess how many roads pay for themselves in taxes? Zero. Not a one. Most of them are less than 50 percent. Imagine if you're a grocery store owner, and you decide, I'm gonna sell sirloin at a buck a pound, and I'm gonna sell milk at a dime a gallon. That's basically what's happening with transportation. We're letting people use our roads for three cents a mile, when it costs us 20 to 30 cents a mile."

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison's latest answer on whether she'll run for governor in 2010, in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: "I'm not undecided at all. But I really don't think this is the time to be telling of it. This is not the time to be building a political organization. But it is my hope to come home. It's just I don't know what's going to happen in the next two years."

Carl Shepro of the University of Alaska, quoted in the Los Angeles Times about scandals there involving U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens and U.S. Rep. Don Young: "People are — I don't know if 'disgusted' is the right word, but — with the appearance that you can do these things and think you're going to get away with it. And the other thing is: It seems like they've all sold out for very little money — and that's kind of embarrassing."


Texas Weekly: Volume 25, Issue 32, 25 August 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

Spin Number Two — now that U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, has turned out not to be Barack Obama's pick for the vice presidential nomination — is that Edwards is closer to being positioned for an upcoming (maybe) race for U.S. Senate.

He'd need a bigger boost than that.

Only a handful of members of the Texas congressional delegation have won statewide office from those perches in the last 30 years. Democrat Jim Mattox had a Dallas Democratic machine and a statewide Democratic sweep in his favor when he ran for attorney general in 1982. Republican Phil Gramm had a national reputation — more importantly, a statewide rep — when he ran for U.S. Senate. Gramm got there after helping President Ronald Reagan's budget-cutting efforts from the Democratic side of the aisle. The Democrats ostracized him, so he resigned, changed parties, and won the special election to replace himself as a Republican. And Kent Hance had a national rep at the time, too, for some of the same reasons. He was a Democratic congressman, helped Reagan with his tax plan (the other half of that administration's financial package), lost a statewide race as a Democrat, switched parties, lost a race as a Republican, and finally won a place on the Texas Railroad Commission as a Republican.

Two others made it from Congress into statewide court positions, but we'd probably argue that those elections are more about the strength of a particular ticket than about the candidates. Even so: Jack Hightower, a Democrat, won a spot on the Texas Supreme Court after losing a bid for a sixth term in Congress in 1984. And Bob Gammage, a Democrat, won election to two statewide court seats (Court of Criminal Appeals and then the Supreme Court) in the years after serving one term in Congress in the late 1970s.

But the political field is littered with the carcasses of Democrats and Republicans who've tried to step from their congressional seats into statewide office. The odds of winning without a political wave or a bigger-than-normal reputation are skinny.

Jack Fields. Mike Andrews. John Bryant. Jim Chapman. Joe Barton. Ken Bentsen. Steve Stockman. None of them made it out of their post-congressional election bids (though Barton ran in a special election and still holds his seat in Congress, 15 years later).

Money helps, because a candidate can buy statewide attention with it, raising his or her profile to a competitive level. That's part of what boosted the handful of winners from local notoriety to statewide recognition. And several members of the current congressional delegation have the bucks to at least start statewide races. Edwards, with $1.5 million in his campaign fund, is one of them.

Others with more than $1 million on hand (and without serious threats against them in this election cycle): Ron Paul, R-Surfside, $4.0 million (largely because of his presidential campaign); Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, $2.4 million; Barton, R-Ennis, $2.1 million; Jeb Hensarling, R-Dallas, $1.4 million; Pete Sessions, R-Dallas, $1.1 million; and former U.S. Rep. Jim Turner, D-Crockett, $1.0 million.

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison had $8.7 million in the bank at mid-year, but she's been a statewide elected official at either the state or federal level since 1990 and wouldn't have the congressional wall to hurdle.

For all of those officeholders, the federal campaign money would convert, in full, to state campaign accounts if the pols wanted to come home and run. Of the bunch, only Hutchison is regularly on the list of people who might come home for a state run.

If she were to leave office for a state race, some of the House mice might be interested in moving to the Senate. She beat two members of Congress from her own party — Barton and Fields — when she started her tenure in a special election in 1993. In a race like that, where they've raised all of their money with federal campaign limits in effect, federal officeholders start with a financial advantage. That could be important if Hutchison decides to run for governor and to resign early to make that race.

The law limiting speech and political contributions in races for Speaker of the Texas House is, in part, unconstitutional according to a federal judge in Austin.U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks ruled late last week (the ruling wasn't available until now) that the law set limits so low that even a newspaper editorial could constitute illegal support of a speaker candidate. His ruling parallels an earlier ruling by U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel, also based in Austin. And it means, apparently, an end to restrictions on groups that had been barred from trying to influence elections for speaker. A copy of the ruling is available here. The lawsuit was filed by the Texas branch of the ACLU and by the Free Market Foundation; we covered that here. And Yeakel's temporary restraining order was covered here.

Bloggers are all about this week's Democratic National Convention in Denver. They're also talking about Texas highway funding, a train trip, happenings on the campaign trail, and the usual gallimaufry...

* * * * *

Rocky Road

In the Pink Texasmade it safely to Denver and wrote a few blogs about it. She'll be posting videos throughout the week on Texas Monthly's site. Postcards from the Lege, the Austin American-Statesman's blog, is there. So is Texas on the Potomac, the Houston Chronicle's blog. Read here, here, here, here, here and here. And so is Trail Blazers, the Dallas Morning News's blog. Here, here and here.

Off the Kuff isn't going to Colorado, but has a list of bloggers who are. Burnt Orange Report has the state seating chart for the convention. Follow all their posts here.

Austin delegate Steve Rivas will be guest-blogging for Chronic, the Austin Chronicle's blog, during the Democratic convention, while mean rachel is writing for Texas Observer Blog. And teenager Grace Powell is contributing to Potomac.

The Houston Chronicle's Texas Politics thinks it's interesting that Republican-leaning Anadarko Petroleum Corp. is at the Democratic convention and is handing out swag bags. Meanwhile, TexasSparklecriticizes the Dems' convention stage for being "over the top" compared to the Repubs'.

PoliTex, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's blog, says the Texas Democrats' hotel and convention seats stink; souvenirs are already being marked down; and, at least one Texas delegate will vote for Hillary Clinton. A couple more posts here and here.

Conservative Colloquium says former vice presidential contender U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, is way too liberal. Policy Spotlight has numbers backing up that assertion. And Former House Speaker Pete Laney says Texans would have preferred Edwards or New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson to Obama's choice Joe Biden, according to Trail Blazers.

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Street Cents

Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and House Speaker Tom Craddick proposed major changes to how Texas pays for its roads. Postcardshas the letter the three wrote to Texas Transportation Commission chair Deirdre Delisi.

"All this is folks is a repackaging of the same 'ol corporate toll road scam they've been pushing for years. It's just a new marketing campaign," says Eye on Williamson. And BurkaBlog says the idea of investing state pension funds in road projects is "irresponsible — and immoral."

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Travelogue

Recreating a childhood trip he made with his own dad, Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, crossed the country by train with son Anthony to see Abraham Lincoln's home in Springfield, Illinois. Follow them at A Capitol Blog by clicking here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here.

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Trail Mix

Rick Noriega held a press conference in Houston, and nobody showed up, according to Lonnie Walker's Blog, which is gloating. Right Up Front says there were actually six people there, including a John Cornyn staffer, who eventually was asked to leave.

Democratic media consultant Dean Rindy launches an ad countering Cornyn's "Big Bad John" video, via KVUE's Political Junkie, while Capitol Annexaccuses Cornyn of fictionalizing his record on health care reform.

Here's an analysis of Cornyn's campaign contributions by Half Empty. And Trail Blazers has an overview of the race.

Half Empty says national Democrats made a poor move by targeting Republican Pete Olson in a TV ad meant to assist incumbent U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Stafford. Libertarian Republican looks at Congressional District 18, while Texas Kaos takes a gander at Central Texas Congressional races.

Burka looks at Senate District 17, where the Young Conservatives of Texas are supporting Republican Joan Huffman. Elsewhere, Policy Spotlight says Sen. Kim Brimer is embarrassing the Texas GOP by suing to get Democratic challenger Wendy Davis removed from the ballot.

Capitol Annex criticizes House District 12 Republican Van Brookshire for beating the drum on immigration and HD-78 Republican Dee Margo for his stance(s) on the state's small business tax.

McBlogger really dislikes HD-47 Republican Terry Keel. So doesTexas Kaos. And mean rachelcalls out incumbent Valinda Bolton for losing the campaign sign war to Keel in southwest Austin. Bolton's camp put a sign up in the area within 24 hours.

Blue Dot Blues looks at HD-52. National group Democracy For America is endorsing John McClelland in the race for HD-64, says Texas Cloverleaf. And WhosPlayin reports that DFA is backing Edra Bogle for the State Board of Education.

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Off the Beaten Path

Texas Politics has podcasts featuring Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, and Rep. Frank Corte, R-San Antonio, talking about immigration. Postcards has a lengthy post on a Senate finance committee hearing on property taxes.

A Keyboard and a .45 wrote a letter to U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison on gun control and got an inappropriate response. Texas Observer Blog returns to the topic of nuclear waste dumping in West Texas.

Texas law students graded their schools. PoliSci@UST has the report. Rep. Scott Hochberg, D-Houston, says Texas should create a public "warehouse" for criminal justice data. Grits for Breakfast thinks it's a great idea.

And Headline of the Week award goes to the Texas Freedom Network Insider for its post titled, "Party for Science!"


This edition of Out There was compiled and written by Patrick Brendel, who hails from Victoria but is semi-settled in Austin. 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.

Chris Bell's new poll has a little of everything in it.

• He's ahead in the SD-17 race, according to the poll, and since it was released by his campaign you would expect that. He's got 42 percent to Joan Huffman's 8 percent, AustenFurse's 5 percent and Grant Harpold's 4 percent. Bell is the only Democrat in the race.

• Bell is better-known (75 percent) than the other candidates, and since he's the one most recently on the ballot — two haven't been on the ballot at all and one has been there only as a judge — you'd expect that, too.

• President George W. Bush has negative job performance ratings from 61 percent of the respondents.

Bell's spin: He's ahead, well known, and Republicans aren't a slam-dunk in what should be a Republican district.

Spun the other way: He's well-known and still under 50 percent, the Republicans will do better when they advertise and match or approach his name ID.

The survey by Alexandra, Va.-based Cooper & Secrest was done a week ago (with a one-day break, apparently). They talked to 404 general election voters and put the margin of error at +/- 4.9 percent.

A copy of the poll memo is attached.

Libertarians got their candidate lists to the Texas Secretary of State on time, but say the Democrats and the Republicans missed it by holding their national conventions after the deadline, which was Tuesday of this week.

Neither party's nominee was official by the deadline. The Democrats were convening and still talking about having a roll call vote offering the choice between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Joe Biden had been named, but not nominated. And the Republicans were days away from their convention. John McCain is the presumptive nominee, but hasn't named his choice for veep. And so none of those names for the top two slots on the ballots of the top two parties was filled.

But the Texas Secretary of State says the parties filed their lists on time and are expected to file amended lists once their conventions are over.

No harm, no foul, they say.

The Libertarians say their candidate — Bob Barr — got knocked off the ballot in two states because he missed filing deadlines. And they say Ralph Nader, running as an independent candidate in 2004, was denied a spot on the Texas ballot for the same reason (Nader was a certified write-in candidate that year, meaning his votes were counted, and has that same designation this year).

"Texas law doesn't make any exceptions for absurdly late nominating conventions," said Wes Benedict, executive director of the Libertarian Party of Texas. "Although Bob Barr should win Texas by default, I expect the Republicans and Democrats will get away with breaking the laws they made. They get away with breaking their promises to voters all the time. It's a travesty that we have a double standard, where Republicans and Democrats are above the law, but other parties and independents have to comply with every letter of the law."

He cites the Texas Election Code, which we'll excerpt:

192.031. PARTY CANDIDATE'S ENTITLEMENT TO PLACE ON BALLOT. A political party is entitled to have the names of its nominees for president and vice-president of the United States placed on the ballot in a presidential general election if:

 (1) the nominees possess the qualifications for those offices prescribed by federal law;

 (2) before 5 p.m. of the 70th day before presidential election day, the party's state chair signs and delivers to the secretary of state a written certification of:

    (A) the names of the party's nominees for president and vice-president; and

    (B) the names and residence addresses of presidential elector candidates nominated by the party, in a number equal to the number of presidential electors that federal law allocates to this state; and

 (3) the party is:

    (A) required or authorized by Subchapter A of Chapter 172 to make its nominations by primary election; or

    (B) entitled to have the names of its nominees placed on the general election ballot under Chapter 181.

A spokeswoman for the Texas Secretary of State, Ashley Burton, said elections officials are relying on a couple of Texas Supreme Court opinions that, in essence, hold candidates harmless when their parties' actions interfere with state deadlines. Barr, a former congressman from Georgia, put out a press release saying he's the only candidate on the Texas ballot. "We know all about deadlines," said Russell Verney with Barr's campaign. "We are up against them constantly in our fight to get on the ballot across the nation. When we miss deadlines, we get no second chances. This is a great example of how unreasonable deadlines chill democracy." He said third parties don't get a break when they bust deadlines and that the major parties shouldn't get a break this time. Neither the Republican Party of Texas or the Texas Democratic Party seems particularly worried about it. "Attorneys for the Texas Democratic Party spoke to the Secretary of State's Office and were told our filings were submitted in a timely manner," said Hector Nieto, a spokesman for the TDP. Hans Klingler with the GOP says they filed last Friday and, according to their lawyers, are in compliance.
Kim Brimer has to wait until at least September 18 to find out whether he's got a legal opponent in his bid for reelection to the Texas Senate. Fort Worth's 2nd Court of Appeals will hear his case against Democrat Wendy Davis that day, though there's no requirement that they also rule at that time. Brimer contends Davis' time on the Fort Worth City Council illegally overlapped her Senate candidacy and that she shouldn't be on the ballot. Voters will apparently see her name whether she's legal or not. The deadline for pulling names off the ballot passed last week. If she's declared illegal, her own party will be stuck, since the deadline for replacing candidates or adding new names to the ballot passed this week. Short form: The appeals court will be deciding whether she can serve if she beats Brimer at the polls in November.

• With the exception of the presidential candidates and pending lawsuits, the ballots for November are all but set. Republicans say the only drop they had before the ballot name deadline was James Masik, who had filed to run against Rep. Elliott Naishtat, D-Austin. The most current lists (still not certified; that comes later) are available on the Texas Secretary of State's website.

• South Texas politicos are talking about a Hillary Clinton swing through the Valley on behalf of Barack Obama and Rick Noriega. Details are scarce, but they're talking eight cities, late September, with some fundraising layered in between public appearances.

• U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison will be among the speakers at the GOP national convention in St. Paul next week. She's got a prime-time spot on Wednesday to talk about energy independence.

• Democrats are passing around a poll that says voters aren't all that familiar with either of the candidates in HD-52. That's currently Republican Mike Krusee's district. Democrat Diana Maldonado is running against Republican Bryan Daniel (and Libertarian Lillian Simmons). The survey by Opinion Analysts has the candidates locked in a tie in a "cold test." When some biographical details and issues ("with a health mix of positives and negatives for each candidate") were added in, Maldonado pulled to a 55-30 lead. They didn't reveal any of those details in the memo that got leaked, but did include one tidbit — 77 percent of the respondents "agree that their state representative should oppose the [House Speaker Tom] Craddick agenda."

• State Senate candidate Chris Bell picked up endorsements from the Texas State Teachers Association and the American Federation of Teachers political action committee. Bell is the only Democrat in the race to replace Kyle Janek, R-Houston. Three Republicans have signed up: Austen Furse, Grant Harpold, and Joan Huffman.

• Follow-up: Rep. Bill Zedler, R-Arlington, re-invited supporters to a fundraiser to be held after Labor Day in Fort Worth. He's still asking for contributions of $1,000, $2,500, and $5,000. But the invites this time don't have any federal officeholders mentioned as hosts, guests, or anything at all. Zedler's earlier version had U.S. Reps. Joe Barton of Ennis and Kay Granger of Fort Worth on board. But federal officials cannot solicit donations for themselves — or anyone else — above the federal limit of $2,300 per donor.

• The political arm of the Texas Farm Bureau — AGFUND — endorsed Ralph Sheffield in the HD-55 race to replace Rep. Dianne White Delisi, R-Temple. Sheffield's the Republican in that contest and faces Democrat Sam Murphey and Libertarian Chris Lane in November. Sheffield's also getting out-of-town help: U.S. Sen. Hutchison is doing a fundraiser for him on October 2.

Hutchison isn't the only statewide official playing in House races. Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst is hosting a fundraiser in Austin on September 11 for Mike Anderson. The former Mesquite mayor beat Rep. Thomas Latham in the GOP primary and faces Democrat Robert Miklos in November.

• At least four Democrats in the state Senate are on the Chris Bell bandwagon: Rodney Ellis, Mario Gallegos, Kirk Watson, and John Whitmire all signed up as "special guests" for a fundraiser for Bell next week in Houston. Kyle Janek, who resigned from the seat Bell's trying to win, is supporting Austen Furse in the race.

John Cornyn and Rick Noriega will debate at least twice, at public television forums in Houston and Dallas in October. On Thursday, October 9, they'll be at KUHT during that station's "Red, White, and Blue" public affairs show. The KERA-TV event is a week later, and is co-sponsored by The Dallas Morning News, Texas Monthly and the Texas Association of Broadcasters. The League of Women Voters signed on as sponsor of both debates.

• The latest Rasmussen poll has Cornyn ahead of Noriega 48 percent to 37 percent. This next line is becoming standard with the two Senate candidates: It's generally bad mojo for an incumbent like Cornyn to be pulling less than 50 percent in a reelection bid. But Noriega, the Democratic challenger, hasn't yet been able to close the gap separating him from the Republican.

• Gov. Rick Perry has the government digging for its galoshes and batteries, issuing a disaster declaration while the weather folk watch Gustav in the Gulf of Mexico. That was a tropical storm at the time he pulled the trigger, but the machinery in several state agencies is geared up for a potential landing, or potential damage, in any or all of 61 Texas counties.

Political People and their Moves

Texas Secretary of State Hope Andrade named John Sepehri of Dallas to be her general counsel, replacing Jay Dyer, who left the SOS for a gig with Attorney General Greg Abbott. Sepehri was most recently with the Patton Boggs law firm.

Scott Haywood is leaving the Secretary of State's office, where he's been the spokesman for just over three years. His replacement, for now, is Ashley Burton. Haywood had been on Gov. Rick Perry's media staff before going to work for then-SOS Roger Williams. He's going to work for Houston-based Spacehab, which bills itself as a "space commerce" pioneer. He'll remain in Austin.

Gov. Rick Perry appointed Brian Gary of Gunter to the 397th Judicial District Court in Grayson County. Until now, Gary was an attorney in private practice. That's a new court.

The Guv made a couple of insurance appointments. He named Rod Bordelon Jr. the commissioner of the Workers' Compensation Division at the Texas Department of Insurance. Bordelon has been running the Office of Public Insurance Counsel, which represents ratepayers before insurance regulators. He's replacing Albert Betts. In Bordelon's place, the governor tapped Deeia Beck of Fort Worth; she had been an administrative law judge in the Workers' Comp Division.

Chrissy Borskey moves to General Electric, where she's in charge of Mid-South government relations. In English: She'll lobby in Texas, Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Mississippi, and New Mexico.

Deaths: Mary Ellen Murphy Hall, wife of U.S. Rep. Ralph Hall, R-Rockwall, for 63 years. She was 83.

Quotes of the Week

Strickland, Richards, Edwards, Hutchison, Mattos, and Goodman

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, riffing on Texas Democrat Jim Hightower's line from the 1988 national convention: "You know, it was once said of the first George Bush that he was born on third base and thought he'd hit a triple. Well, with the 22 million new jobs and the budget surplus Bill Clinton left behind, George W. Bush came into office on third base, and then he stole second."

Cecile Richards, daughter of the late Ann Richards, at the Democratic National Convention: "After eight years of George Bush, you might be surprised that a Texan is president of Planned Parenthood. After all, there aren't many people eager to see the words 'Texan' and 'president' in the same sentence ever again."

U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, joking with the Houston Chronicle that Barack Obama might name him head of the CIA for keeping his silence during the vice presidential vetting: "In a town of leaks, I could keep a secret for 2-1/2 months."

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, asked on MSNBC (before the choice was known) whether she ducked consideration as a potential veep because she wants to run for governor of Texas: "Everybody knows that is where my heart is."

Former Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox, famous for his rough-and-tumble campaigns, telling the Fort Worth Star-Telegram what the national Democrats should be doing to the GOP ticket: "I'd never advocate using untruths or distortions, but we ought to be going at them blow-for-blow right here on this floor, and real soon."

John Goodman, from the National Center for Policy Analysis, quoted in The Dallas Morning News on Census reports showing Texas leads the nation in uninsured citizens: "So I have a solution. And it will cost not one thin dime. The next president of the United States should sign an executive order requiring the Census Bureau to cease and desist from describing any American — even illegal aliens — as uninsured. Instead, the bureau should categorize people according to the likely source of payment should they need care. So, there you have it. Voila! Problem solved."