-- Republicans who voted a straight ticket in Harris County are waking up this morning with some
buyer's remorse.
A $25,000 political contribution from the owner of a strip club being sued by Harris County lawyers found its way, via the Harris County Deputies Organization, into the campaign coffers of the man challenging Sheriff Adrian Garcia in November, according to campaign finance reports.
Ali Davari, who with his brother Hassan Davari owns a handful of prominent local strip clubs, including Treasures, Gold Cup and Trophy Club, gave $25,000 to the deputies union political action committee on Oct. 15. It was the only contribution the organization received during the time period covered by the report, which was filed Thursday. The union donated the same amount, in its only listed expenditure, to Republican Louis Guthrie's campaign a week later, earmarking it for political advertising.
Guthrie reports receiving a $25,000 check from the union on Oct. 9; Guthrie's campaign manager Sara Kinney said the campaign listed that date because that was the date on the check. HCDO Vice President Eric Batton could not explain the discrepancy in the dates.
You had plenty of opportunities to educate yourself on the candidates in this race, people. Adrian Garcia
loves accelerated deportation; that makes him
the Republican, even though there's a D behind his name. We have known since before the May primary that Guthrie is
corrupt beyond comprehension.
Remington Alessi is the only decent option. Try to fix this with your friends and neighbors in the remaining days.
Update: John, in his inimitable style,
has more.
--
Henry Cooper hosted his opponent, Rep. Jessica Farrar, on his KPFT radio show,
Proyecto Latino Americano, last night. I can't wait to listen to the
archived recording.
--
Keith Hampton has been endorsed by
every newspaper in the state. Even the wildly Republican ones like the
San Angelo Standard-Times, the
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal and the
Amarillo Globe-News. Hampton was in fact
the only Democrat some of these papers endorsed. Yet another reason why Republicans shouldn't vote a straight ticket.
Are you paying attention, Republicans?
--
Max Martin had an
interview with Khambrel Marshall of KPRC-TV, and participating in it with them was my friend Aimee Turney of the
League of Women Voters. Pay close attention at the 4:50 mark when Martin talks about the Republican who ran in the primary that told him they were voting for him. When your only other option is Steve Stockman, you just have to hope the voters of CD-36 are smart enough to figure it out.
(By the way, you can also download the League's Voter Guides available in
English and
Spanish for the positions on all candidates on your ballot. The best source of information available anywhere. Much better than anyone's slate card in your mailbox.)
Update: I should have also included
this link to the debate/discussion between CD-09 candidates Vanessa Edwards Foster (G), Libertarian John Weider, and Republican Steve Mueller. No Al Green sighting.
-- The
TexTrib's poll revealed a surprise: Green candidate Chris Kennedy with 6% of the vote in the Texas Railroad Commissioner's race.
As you see, that's the one with a Democrat in it; the other TRC race does not. What do you suppose this portends for these
races left uncontested by the Democrats, like the Texas Supreme Court?
I have taken great exception to the polling conducted by the Texas Tribune in the past, but these late results seem to have a bit more sanity baked in to them. Note, though, that projecting the Lite Gov field for 2014 is a waste of effort. Long-range prognostication is typically where this poll fails.
But the question prompted by these numbers: is it possible that the Democratic rank-and-file is getting the message? That is, to send a message to the Democratic insiders?
I'll be very anxious to to see these results next week.
Update: Via
Greg, this from
KHOU...
The poll shows (President Obama) leading in Harris County with the
support of 46 percent of surveyed voters, compared to Romney’s 42
percent. Libertarian Gary Johnson cracked the survey with 2 percent.
In the U.S. Senate race, Democrat Paul Sadler’s 44 percent leads
Republican Ted Cruz with 42 percent in Harris County. With a 3.5
percent margin of error, that’s a statistical dead heat in the largest
county in Texas.
[...]
Nonetheless, the poll revealed that large numbers of voters allied
with both parties are breaking away from casting straight-ticket ballots
in two high-profile races. In both campaigns, Republicans and
Democrats are eschewing party loyalty to vote against candidates who’ve
been hit with waves of bad publicity.
Republican crossover voters are helping push Democratic Sheriff
Adrian Garcia to 51 percent in this survey, compared to Republican
challenger Louis Guthrie’s 32 percent. Another 13 percent were
undecided.
On the other hand, many Democrats told pollsters they’re voting for
Republican district attorney candidate Mike Anderson, who’s polling at
41 percent. Nonetheless, Democrat Lloyd Oliver is close behind with 35
percent. Another 19 percent are undecided. That number is especially
striking because Democratic Party leaders were so embarrassed by
Oliver’s candidacy they tried to remove him from the ballot.
“What we’re seeing is a much more significant ticket-splitting among
Republicans than Democrats,” said Bob Stein, the Rice University
political scientist and KHOU analyst who supervised the poll. “I don’t
know if that’s because they’re more bipartisan, or they simply are more
capable and more likely to make that choice, which is not easy to do on
an e-Slate ballot.”