Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Parker up, Dome down

A $217 million bond measure to fund a massive Astrodome renovation failed by several percentage points, a decision expected to doom it to the wrecking ball.

[...]

"We're going to have to do something quick," County Judge Ed Emmett said afterward. "We can't allow the once-proud Dome to sit like a rusting ship in the middle of a parking lot."

He called it "an interesting evening to say the least" and added, "We have an electorate that is for whatever reason anti-bond."

The news came as a blow to representatives of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

"There's no disputing this building is an icon," said the Trust's Beth Wiedower. "Its legacy will live on even if it doesn't. It seems like its fate is sealed; obviously we are disappointed in the outcome."

The other Harris County bond referendum on the ballot, a $70 million initiative to fund part of a city-county inmate processing center, narrowly passed in complete but unofficial returns. The vote will let the city shutter its two aging jails.

It's not hard to say that turnout was driven by the Dome proposal. But since the margin of victory for the "Nos" was about 16,500 votes ... and 19,685 voters -- out of nearly 260,000 -- did not pick either 'for' or 'against', what to think about that?

Compare this to the Houston mayor's race, where Parker won with 57% of 169,549, and just 4800 undervotes. That tells me that a hundred thousand people in unincorporated Harris County (or incorporated in another municipality) made their way to the polls -- or mailed in a ballot -- but at least four times as many of those voters made no choice about the life or death of the Astrodome.

That is just weird.

In other news, Ben Hall wiped himself out as expected.

Mayor Annise Parker swept to a third term Tuesday night, beating back a crowded field led by former City Attorney Ben Hall.

News of Hall's concession call was greeted with a burst of applause at Parker's Election Night event at the George R. Brown Convention Center. The mayor took the confetti-strewn stage right at 9 p.m.

"I love this city," she told supporters. "Tonight I feel it loves me back."

Of the race with Hall, she added, "This was not a limping across the finish line. This was a decisive victory."  Indeed, Hall conceded about 90 minutes after polls closed.

"We may not have enough votes to be the mayor of Houston. But it does not end our journey," he told supporters.

Despite the early Election Night exit, Hall said his campaign awakened City Hall to some of the criticisms and needs of Houston residents. Issues like the poor quality of roads and reducing crime were brought before voters, he said, as a result of a hearty campaign.

Some supporters just wished it last a little longer, applauding Hall for his gentlemanly campaign. Alvin Zimmerman, Hall's campaign chairman, called Hall's efforts "upstanding and righteous, as opposed to what he faced."

That last quote is the weirdest thing I have seen or heard regarding the mayoral contest yet.

Hall's supporters -- many of them Republicans to be sure, but also many evangelical African Americans who have historically voted D -- all seem to be as delusional as Hall himself is.  It's just Tea Party, alternate reality psychosis.

And as for this biannual municipal coalition of Republicans and conservative blacks who think they can build a winner together... stop kidding yourselves, hate mongers.

More about city council races next.

Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Harris County Election Returns

Updates as we go through the night.

These returns are for EV votes cast prior to Election Day, and flashed to the harrisvotes.com website after 7 p.m.  The first Election Day tallies were posted at 8:30 p.m and only the closest races below have been updated, with the early numbers appearing now as a strike-through.

Update: Latest numbers as of 9:00 9:30 10 p.m. with 36% 66% 97% of the county's precincts reporting.

State propositions 1-9:

1.  86% For, 13% Against
2.  81 -18
3.  56-43
4.  86-14
5.  63-37
6.  78-22
7.  75-25
8.  69-31
9.  84-16

The water bill had some late objections from the left, but it looks as if it will carry.  At 8 p.m., the Associated Press called all statewide propositions as having passed.

Harris County propositions:

1.  51% For, 49% Against. 50.97- 49.03 50.59 - 49.41 50.09 - 49.91

At 9 p.m., about 3000 votes separated ayes from nays. This proposition, for the detention holding facility, is hanging by a thread; at 9:30 p.m. it's about 2100 votes.  At 10 p.m it's less than 400 votes.

At 11 p.m. and with all boxes in,  the detention facility measure passes by 456 votes.

2.  46-54 46.43 - 53.57% 46.61 - 53.39 46.55 - 53.35

The Dome is in trouble.  At 9 p.m., and with 36% of the vote counted, the 'Fors' are trailing by 10,000 votes.  At 9:30 p.m the gap widens to about 13,300 votes.

At 9:37 p.m. the Houston Chronicle called the proposal defeated.

-- Houston Mayor (in ballot order, contested races only):

Eric Dick - 11%
Annise Parker (inc.) - 57%
Ben Hall - 28%
All others - less than 1% each

Not much mystery left here.  There are 1,044 early votes from Fort Bend County that are unlikely to tip the mayor's race, but, unlike Harris, Hall (63%) leads Parker (33%).

At 8:45 p.m., Parker's campaign reports that Ben Hall has called the mayor to concede.

-- Houston City Council District A:

Amy Peck - 7%
Brenda Stardig - 30% 29.7%
Rhonda Hale - 5%
Helena Brown (inc.) - 38% 38.5%
Mike Knox -19%

A runoff between the incumbent and the previous incumbent looks likely.

-- District B:

Kathy Blueford Daniels - 21% 22%
Kenneth Perkins - 8% 9.5%
James Joseph - 6% 7.5%
Jerry Davis (inc.)- 65% 61%

-- District D:

Travis McGee - 6%
Keith Caldwell - 2%
Christina Sanders -5%
Demetria Smith - 2%
Assata Richards - 9% 10%
Dwight Boykins - 47% 43.97%
Lana Edwards - 4%
Larry McKinzie - 2%
Anthony Robinson- 4%
Georgia Provost- 15%
Kirk White - 1%

Boykins and Provost will square off in December.

-- District F:

Richard Nguyen - 52% 51% 51.32% 51.47% 51.60%
Al Hoang (inc.) - 48% 49% 48.68% 48.53% 48.40%

The incumbent is surprisingly trailing.  This contest will be decided late in precinct returns from the far west.  At 9:30 p.m. Nguyen clings to a 165-vote lead out of 5,600 cast.  At 10 p.m., and with a 200-vote lead and 6124 district votes counted, Nguyen will hold on to defeat Hoang.

-- District G:

Brian Taef - 18%
Oliver Pennington (inc.) - 82%

-- District I:

Leticia Ablaza - 20% 21% 22.39% 22.87%
Robert Gallegos - 25% 25.34% 25.90% 25.01%
Graci Garces - 30% 29% 26.88% 27.51%
Ben Mendez - 24% 25.02% 24.83% 24.6%

Still anybody's ballgame.  At 9:30 p.m. Gallegos leads Mendez by 29 votes for the right to face Garces in the runoff. At 10 p.m Gallegos still has a 21-vote margin over Mendez.

At 11 p.m., with 100% of precincts reporting, Gallegos holds on to that 20-vote lead and will run off with Garces next month.

-- Houston City Council At Large 1:

Stephen Costello (inc.) - 63% 61%
Griff Griffin - 37% 38%

-- At Large 2:

David Robinson - 40% 39.89% 40.11% 40.55%
Moe Rivera - 14%
Andrew Burks (inc.) - 41% 40.48% 39.24% 37.94%
Trebor Gordon - 6%

A horse race tonight, and in December.  Challenger Robinson caught and has gradually pulled ahead of incumbent Burks, and will be the favorite to defeat him in December.

-- At Large 3:

Brad Batteau - 9%
Roland Chavez - 11% 12.17%
Rogene Calvert - 17.2% 17.26% 16.85% 16.59%
Michael Kubosh - 29% 28.73% 28.55% 28.33%
Jenifer Rene Pool - 16.9% 16.95% 16.85% 16.87%
Roy Morales - 17.1% 17.27% 17.63% 17.66%

The evening's most interesting development will be who will face Kubosh in the runoff. At 8:30 p.m., exactly two votes separated Calvert and Morales. At 9 p.m. Morales pulls slightly ahead of Calvert and Pool, by 675 votes.

At 9:30 p.m., Morales now leads Pool by over 800 votes and Calvert by more than 1100.  The two Republicans will face each other in December's second round.

-- At Large 4:

CO Bradford (inc.) - 83%
Issa Dadoush - 16%

-- At Large 5:

Jack Christie (inc.) - 56%
Carolyn Evans-Shabazz - 32%
James Horwitz - 12%

-- Houston City Controller:

Bill Frazer - 47% 47.89% 48.28% 49.02% 48.86%
Ronald Green (inc.) - 53% 52.11% 51.72% 50.98% 51.14%

The incumbent may yet hold off the Republican challenger, but late returns will tell the tale. At 9:00 p.m., Election Day results continue to narrow the gap for Frazer.

At 9:30 p.m., just 2200 votes out of 110,000 cast separate the two.  But the real news is the 30,500 undervotes in this race.  At 10 p.m. Green gets a little breathing room, leading now by 3000 votes.

At 10:20 p.m., when the votes from Fort Bend and Montgomery are added, Controller Green has a 5,062 vote lead.  He has narrowly avoided being upset. 38,134 Harris County voters did not vote in this race.

More about these results -- and voter turnout, which came in at 259,000 votes across the county, and 174,000 in the mayor's race -- tomorrow morning.

Election Day

-- For those opening their polling places this morning, this account by Greg Wythe about his experience as an EV clerk -- and how the "substantially similar" business is being handled -- is timely and valuable.  Just know that your mileage may vary depending on how your election judge interprets the law.  And that it will probably be revised in its application in the future.  All of which suggests that the photo ID law is not meant to "true the vote" but to stifle it.  To cause confusion, uncertainty, and irritation, especially among infrequent voters.

-- I'll refer you back to my earlier prognostications regarding electoral outcomes today.  I am not yet released from my EVBB duty, so commenting on anything on the ballot remains verboten.  I will say that the most important result to me personally is Prop 2, the fate of the Dome.  Anecdotal reports have lately suggested it might not pass; hope I'm wrong about that.

Durrel at New Media Texas has some predictions on video of mayoral, council, and education board races.

-- Turnout for early voting was to my eye massive, but Charles seems convinced that after we see the numbers for today that it will not have predicated a large increase in total votes over previous municipal cycles.

My guess is that Houston’s final turnout will resemble the 50% early scenario, with between 130,000 and 150,000 votes total in the city.

Let's see how close he comes to that.  Here's his list of watch parties for tonight.

Update: And if you're really OCD about today's election, follow the Chron's all-day-long liveblog (or the Twitter hashtag #houvote).

Monday, November 04, 2013

Texas Tribune poll has Abbott leading Davis by 5 percentage points

And twenty percent still undecided.

Attorney General Greg Abbott, the leading candidate for the Republican nomination for Texas governor, holds a single-digit lead over the likely Democratic nominee, state Sen. Wendy Davis of Fort Worth, according to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll.

[...]

“What you’ve got is a race in which, for the first time in a long time, the Democrat is as well-known as the Republican at the outset of the race,” said poll co-director Daron Shaw, a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin.

I have thrown many rocks at the TexTrib's polling since its inception, but I have to say that this feels about right.  It may, however, just be one of those reinforcing-one's-existing-beliefs kind of data points.

“These numbers are not evidence that the underlying fundamentals are changing in Texas,” said Jim Henson, who co-directs the poll and heads the Texas Politics Project at UT-Austin. “We have not seen a big change in party identification, and we don’t see any large-scale shifts in the underlying attitudes that are forming.”

That also feels right.

So is Abbott's woeful 40% figure just another a polling error?  Could it be an oversampling of a Davis demographic... or could it be Abbott fatigue?  If Republicans generically aren't losing support, then why isn't Abbott pulling something in the traditional 55-40 range?  Or at least 50%?  I don't think "too early" explains his sagging result.

This should be enough to get Democrats enthusiastic (not to mention getting your e-mail inbox filled with Davis financial solicitations).  There's more interesting poll results at the Trib's link, including "Don't Know" leading David Dewhurst in the GOP LG primary by 46-26 with Dan Patrick at just 13%.

Update: Harvey Kronberg thinks there's bigger news than Wendy Davis barely outside the margin of error.

The stunner in today’s Texas Tribune poll was not that Wendy Davis is within shouting distance of Greg Abbott in a general election, but that with all his money and name ID among Republican primary voters, he just hits 50%. One wobble and he could be in an unpredictable and volatile runoff where anything could happen.

Update II (11/5): So much for this being a close race early.  PPP, a polling outfit with a much better track record, released its most recent survey of Texans at lunchtime on Election Day and it has Abbott up 15, at 50-35.

The Weekly Wrangle

The Texas Progressive Alliance falls back once a year, but is always moving forward as it brings you this week's roundup.

Off the Kuff gives an update on the 2014 Democratic lineup so far.

Horwitz & Sophia at Texpatriate published a featured article that examines Houston mayoral candidate Ben Hall's time as city attorney as well as his messy transition back into the private sector.

As the see-saw court battle over the Texas abortion restrictions law moved through the courts, both sides could claim victory in the past week. PDiddie at Brains and Eggs knows that -- besides having the SCOTUS rule in their favor sometime in 2015 -- the only way to guarantee women's reproductive freedom is for Democrats to turn out the 2014 vote.

CouldBeTrue of South Texas Chisme doesn't know whether to laugh or cry at the prospect of la la fantasy man David Barton running against the rapist enabler John Cornyn.

Eye On Williamson, still blogging at their temporary home, has Greg Abbott thinking that the Lege will cede him more power. He's either ignorant or naive about how the Texas Legislature actually works, in Follow-up on Greg Abbott's "economic" plan.

Neil at All People Have Value said that Houston mayoral candidate Ben Hall is a lousy guy who does not support the freedom of all people. All People Have Value is part of NeilAquino.com.

=========================

And here are some posts of interest from other Texas blogs.

Equality Texas guest poster Melanie Pang documents why she supports Wendy Davis.

PTA Mom Kim Burkett is equally effusive about Sen. Davis.

Better Texas Blog sets the record straight about pre- and post-ACA rates.

The Lunch Tray explored the ethics and dilemmas of Halloween candy.

Texas Watch calls on the Texas Department of Insurance to adopt some much-needed reforms for auto insurance.

TFN Insider has some good news about science textbooks in Texas, but warns that politics remains an obstacle.

BOR laments the millions of Texans that will be hurt by the cut to food stamps.

Blog con Queso celebrates Dia de Lost Muertos, and no, that's not a typo.

Sunday, November 03, 2013

Sunday Daylight Saving Funnies

Posts with words -- opinions, predictions, you know, the usual stuff -- to resume eventually.  In the meantime I shouldn't have to remind you that this is Fall Back Sunday, and that you don't have to turn your clocks backward an hour, because we all have those magic 21st-century timepieces that do so automatically.  Right?


Enlarge (by clicking upon) and enjoy.