-- O'Rourke versus Cruz is your marquee. As posted earlier, Lyin' Ted wasted no time in calling Robert a pussy "liberal man". This is how it's going to be for the next eight months, Donkeys; better get used to it. If Bob doesn't start counter-punching now, this race is gonna be over before the kids are out of school for the summer.
Update: This is the best take on the whole "Rafael versus Robert" nothingburger. As a reminder, I will be using the candidates' birth names, not their chosen nicknames nor their assumed names (as with the incumbent lite governor), but I will be making puns like this out of them.
Don't leave the fighting-back to the bloggers, Bobo.
-- Valdez (or Average White Guy) against the juggernaut with $43 million, a bad attitude, and an ileostomy bag. Valdez has a lot to do in the less-than-six-months after May 22 so as not to embarrass herself or the Texas Democrats to any worse outcome than they have experienced for the past 24 years. Surely improving on 38% and not losing the female vote again, as Wendy Davis managed, is not so difficult as it sounds, yes? No?
-- Mike Collier versus Danny Goeb. Once more, if Texas conservatives actually functioned with a speck of rationality, this would not be a brainer. But this is Texas, and conservatives think with their red, swollen, baboon-ish ass and not with the proper end.
Update (3/9): Goeb's challenger in the GOP primary, Scott Milder, has endorsed Collier this morning.
The salience here is that Milder earned nearly 368,000 votes last Tuesday. That covers a lot of the ground between Democrat (bit more than a million voters) and GOP (over 1.5 MM) totals in the two March 6 elections. It also provides a bigger opening for Collier to go after the Joe Straus/Sarah Davis Caucus. This development doesn't enthuse me at all -- I voted for Michael Cooper because I thought Collier was too much like a Republican as it is -- but it can prove beneficial for him if he can walk the line between pandering to mild conservatives while not losing any D votes.
If Straus, for example, followed suit with his endorsement as well as some of that cash he's still sitting on, it would become a more compelling storyline for November, the corporate media, and "we just wanna win something" Dems (Kuffner). Not so much me.
-- Ken Paxton versus Justin Nelson. Ordinarily when your state's top law enforcement official is under criminal indictment for fraud, he would stand no chance of being re-elected, much less nominated. Paxton drew no primary opponent. Why are Texas Republicans afraid to run against him? Texas Republicans nominated his wife to serve in the Texas Senate, for crine out loud.
Banana republics point and laugh at this. National politicos -- poorly informed ones -- posit questions a ten-second Google search would clear up for them. This may indicate a depth of ignorance and dysfunction of our political gatekeepers that even cynical ol' me hasn't plumbed.
-- Sid Miller versus Kim Olson. Would anyone mind if I just typed 'ditto' to all of the above -- especially the baboon's ass -- and moved on? Okay, one thing: Jim Hogan, just as he did in 2014 as a "Democrat", made no effort to get elected beyond pay his filing fee but almost pushed Sid into a runoff. Trey Blocker is still drinking somewhere this morning.
-- George Pee Bush v. Miguel Sauzo. There was some buzz about Bush being in trouble against Jerry Patterson that I read as late as Monday morning. Can't find that article now. Some journalist had their webmaster scrub it, I guess. Screenshot, anyone? The story this morning is that it's okay to fluff Trump if you're a Texas Republican, or IOKIYAATxR. I don't think anybody asked Kathaleen Wall about that, though. (Next post.)
-- Glenn Hegar against Joi Chevalier. Maybe a spirited race for the most boring job in state government could turn in the Democrats' favor. Chevalier defeated my candidate, Tim Mahoney, by a nose, perhaps on the strength of glowing endorsements in the Dallas News, the Houston Chronicle, and others. Chevalier is the only African American on the state D slate who's not a judicial candidate. If she can campaign effectively, raise and spend a little money to get her name out there, take advantage of whatever boost she can get running against the charisma-challenged GOP beancounter Jethro Bodine ... possibly there's a chance.
-- Christi Craddick facing off with Roman McAllen torun Texas railroads fellate oil and gas interests under the guise of regulating them. No offense intended to Mr. McAllen, but he's up against more Texas Republican nepotism here. He'd be one against two other conservatives in trying to slow down the fracking train if he pulled off the upset anyway. Still, if the Latin@ turnout (as with evidence of the Russians hacking the election) were to finally show up, I could be a believer. I remain of the opinion that the onus is all on Lupe.
One judicial tilt I'll mention for now: Sharon "Killer" Keller barely survived her primary and will match up with Maria Jackson in the fall. If I do any volunteer work this cycle, it will be in this race.
Congressional races, a much hotter topic, coming, maybe by lunchtime today.
Update: This is the best take on the whole "Rafael versus Robert" nothingburger. As a reminder, I will be using the candidates' birth names, not their chosen nicknames nor their assumed names (as with the incumbent lite governor), but I will be making puns like this out of them.
Don't leave the fighting-back to the bloggers, Bobo.
-- Valdez (or Average White Guy) against the juggernaut with $43 million, a bad attitude, and an ileostomy bag. Valdez has a lot to do in the less-than-six-months after May 22 so as not to embarrass herself or the Texas Democrats to any worse outcome than they have experienced for the past 24 years. Surely improving on 38% and not losing the female vote again, as Wendy Davis managed, is not so difficult as it sounds, yes? No?
-- Mike Collier versus Danny Goeb. Once more, if Texas conservatives actually functioned with a speck of rationality, this would not be a brainer. But this is Texas, and conservatives think with their red, swollen, baboon-ish ass and not with the proper end.
"Keep Texas RED!"
Update (3/9): Goeb's challenger in the GOP primary, Scott Milder, has endorsed Collier this morning.
"I cannot on good conscience vote for a man who I know to be a liar, nor can I vote for a man who willfully ignores and disrespects his legislative colleagues and his constituents," Milder said in the (Facebook) post. "I will be casting my vote for Mike Collier, the rational Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, and will strongly encourage all Texans who voted for me in this race to cast their votes for Mr. Collier as well."
[...]
"It doesn't happen very often that a Republican endorses a Democrat, but public education groups recruited (Milder) to run against Patrick and he and I viewed proper funding of public education as very important," said Collier, a retired Kingwood CPA and business executive.
"I've already had a fair number of moderate Republican donors (to Milder's campaign) who have called and said they want to join me."
The salience here is that Milder earned nearly 368,000 votes last Tuesday. That covers a lot of the ground between Democrat (bit more than a million voters) and GOP (over 1.5 MM) totals in the two March 6 elections. It also provides a bigger opening for Collier to go after the Joe Straus/Sarah Davis Caucus. This development doesn't enthuse me at all -- I voted for Michael Cooper because I thought Collier was too much like a Republican as it is -- but it can prove beneficial for him if he can walk the line between pandering to mild conservatives while not losing any D votes.
If Straus, for example, followed suit with his endorsement as well as some of that cash he's still sitting on, it would become a more compelling storyline for November, the corporate media, and "we just wanna win something" Dems (Kuffner). Not so much me.
-- Ken Paxton versus Justin Nelson. Ordinarily when your state's top law enforcement official is under criminal indictment for fraud, he would stand no chance of being re-elected, much less nominated. Paxton drew no primary opponent. Why are Texas Republicans afraid to run against him? Texas Republicans nominated his wife to serve in the Texas Senate, for crine out loud.
Banana republics point and laugh at this. National politicos -- poorly informed ones -- posit questions a ten-second Google search would clear up for them. This may indicate a depth of ignorance and dysfunction of our political gatekeepers that even cynical ol' me hasn't plumbed.
-- Sid Miller versus Kim Olson. Would anyone mind if I just typed 'ditto' to all of the above -- especially the baboon's ass -- and moved on? Okay, one thing: Jim Hogan, just as he did in 2014 as a "Democrat", made no effort to get elected beyond pay his filing fee but almost pushed Sid into a runoff. Trey Blocker is still drinking somewhere this morning.
-- George Pee Bush v. Miguel Sauzo. There was some buzz about Bush being in trouble against Jerry Patterson that I read as late as Monday morning. Can't find that article now. Some journalist had their webmaster scrub it, I guess. Screenshot, anyone? The story this morning is that it's okay to fluff Trump if you're a Texas Republican, or IOKIYAATxR. I don't think anybody asked Kathaleen Wall about that, though. (Next post.)
-- Glenn Hegar against Joi Chevalier. Maybe a spirited race for the most boring job in state government could turn in the Democrats' favor. Chevalier defeated my candidate, Tim Mahoney, by a nose, perhaps on the strength of glowing endorsements in the Dallas News, the Houston Chronicle, and others. Chevalier is the only African American on the state D slate who's not a judicial candidate. If she can campaign effectively, raise and spend a little money to get her name out there, take advantage of whatever boost she can get running against the charisma-challenged GOP beancounter Jethro Bodine ... possibly there's a chance.
-- Christi Craddick facing off with Roman McAllen to
One judicial tilt I'll mention for now: Sharon "Killer" Keller barely survived her primary and will match up with Maria Jackson in the fall. If I do any volunteer work this cycle, it will be in this race.
Congressional races, a much hotter topic, coming, maybe by lunchtime today.