Nip & Tuck

There aren't any real surprises on Gov. Rick Perry's agenda for the special session starting next week, and not much controversy, either: He clearly wants to get lawmakers through this thing in a hurry.

He wants lawmakers to come in on Wednesday, July 1, to change the expiration dates on several agencies to prevent them from going out of business in September 2010. We're told the Sunset schedule will be revised to push health and human services agencies, which were up for review next session to 2013. That makes room to put this year's neglected work on the 2011 list of things to do: Transportation, Insurance, Workers' Compensation, and Racing.

The governor wants lawmakers to authorize the sale of $2 billion in highway bonds (already approved by voters) and the use of a revolving credit fund that would be used to magically turn that $2 billion into $5 billion or more.

Both of those items appear to be devoid of controversy.

The third bit on the agenda is potentially problematic. Perry added so-called Comprehensive Development Agreements, or CDAs, to the agenda. That's the fancy phrase for public-private deals to build and operate roads and toll roads, and they can be a major source of contention. The Texas Department of Transportation's authority to enter into CDAs ends in September unless lawmakers do something, and highway officials contend that could threaten projects on the drawing boards and some that are already underway.

To get around any controversy in the special session, the governor and key lawmakers are drawing up a specific list of projects that would be authorized; that would allow projects to go forward without giving TXDOT the power to enter into any deals not okayed by the Legislature. Which projects? "It's still being drafted and we are working with lawmakers on it," says a spokeswoman for Perry. Others tell us the list won't include anything that steps on any local toes. That might be enough to settle everyone down and keep the session short.

While You're Here...

Some lawmakers want other work done in the special session.

Members can file bills within 30 days of a legislative session, so Perry's call for a special session next week makes it open season. First bill out of the chute isn't on the call: Sen. Eliot Shapleigh, D-El Paso, filed legislation to expand the Children's Health Insurance Program to families with incomes up to 300 percent of the federal poverty level. They'd pay premiums that poorer families don't have to pay for that insurance but would be able to get their kids insured for less than they'd pay — if the insurance is available — in the private market. That died at the end of the regular session, but advocates for the increase have pressed for another round.

Lawmakers and outside groups have made pitches for everything from eminent domain to Voter ID to legislation pardoning wrongly convicted murderers. Perry told reporters after calling the special session that he doesn't intend to add issues to the agenda. But that doesn't prevent members from filing bills, advocates from advocating, and so on. And Perry can change his mind, adding items to the list as he chooses.

How Long?

A special session can last up to 30 days, but it doesn't have to — especially when things are worked out in advance.

The short sessions since 1982 weighed in at 5 days, 3, 4, 3, 2, 4, 7, and 7*. And there haven't been any shorties since 1992, when lawmakers took a week in January to pass redistricting legislation, trying to beat the clock for the March primaries. (*Source these dates to the Legislative Reference Library: May 24-28, 1982; Sept. 7-9, 1982; June 22-25, 1983; May 28-30, 1985; June 2-3, 1987; June 4-7, 1990; Aug. 19-25, 1991; and Jan. 2-8, 1992.)

You're free to place your bets on this one. Here's the layout, if all goes as planned next week (!): Lawmakers will file three bills, pass them in their originating houses, send them across the rotunda, pass them again without changes, swing the gavels and getouttatown. If they'll suspend rules that require new stuff to cool off for three days before a vote, they can speed up. If not, they'll have built-in delays that could take them into the second week of July.

Gov. Rick Perry built in a false but significant deadline by starting the thing on July 1. If they're fast and suspend rules and play nice, everybody gets to go home to play with firecrackers and not come back; damage to vacation and other schedules would be minimized. If not, they'll be back on Monday, July 6, after their families complain about the shortened holiday weekend.

Bill Zapper

Gov. Rick Perry vetoed three dozen bills after the legislative session and used his line-item vetoes to cut $288.9 million from the state budget, including $97.2 million in general revenue spending. Most of those budget cuts had to do with legislation that didn't make it onto the books.

The vetoes included:

• Allowing child protective services to remove children from their homes in abuse investigations with the approval of an associate judge — without waiting for another judge's approval. That became a hot cause among social conservatives and the list of people asking for that veto eventually included Rep. Jerry Madden, R-Richardson — the House sponsor of the bill to which that provision was added.

• An expansion of the pre-kindergarten program in public schools that began the session as an ambitious $300 million proposal and passed at 1/12th that size. The bill had more than 100 co-sponsors in the House.

• Allowing public hospitals in small counties to hire doctors directly, and holding them legally responsible for the doctors' work. That bill had a lot of stuff that doesn't seem related, like establishing fines for people making disclosures of secret grand jury proceedings, and regulating the cremation of unidentified human remains.

• Barring the Texas Department of Transportation from using state funds to advertise and promote toll road projects.

• Lessening the influence of the State Board of Education in pre-screening members of the Teacher Retirement System (the governor currently chooses two from a list created by the SBOE), replacing one of those with a retired educator chosen by his or her peers.

• Removing teens convicted of consensual sex with other teens from the list of registered sex offenders.

Perry's budget veto proclamation is available here.

His messages on vetoes and on signatures are here.

And his executive order on textbooks — saying the State Board of Education should be among the decision-makers — is here.

Beached

Without signing it, the governor approved a law that would allow rebuilding of some beachfront homes, including one owned by an East Texas lawmaker.

One of the beneficiaries would be Rep. Wayne Christian, R-Center, and that initially prompted Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson to ask the governor for a veto.

But after talking with Rick Perry and his staff, Patterson now says Christian's provision is unconstitutional. He says Perry did the right thing by allowing the bill to become law and that the governor did so only after he was convinced the provision would wither and the rest of the bill is worth keeping: "With what I known now, namely that the Christian amendment to HB 770 clearly violates the Texas constitutions prohibition on local bills, the Governor has made the correct choice in allowing the bill to become law without his signature. The good provisions of HB 770 will become law, and the Christian amendment will change nothing. Texas beaches will remain as they have always been, open to all Texans, not just a few."

Schieffer's Exploration Ends, Campaign Begins

Former U.S. Ambassador Tom Schieffer officially tossed his hat into the Democratic primary race for governor, speaking in Fort Worth, Houston and Austin during the first leg of a statewide circuit this week.

Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, assured Schieffer within the last month that he won't be joining him in the gubernatorial field, Schieffer told a group of reporters in the State Capitol. Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio, nominated Watson (or a Watson-esque Democrat) by name in a letter she wrote saying that she doesn't want to be governor this time around.

That doesn't precisely gibe with what Watson said in response to Van de Putte. He didn't rule anything in or out: "I intend to give this issue serious consideration, and I do not anticipate making any decisions in this regard until at least sometime after the end of the anticipated special session of the legislature, and probably not until the end of the summer."

A Texas Lyceum poll (see below) shows Schieffer (6 percent) running second to humorist Kinky Friedman (10 percent) in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. Mark Thompson, the 2008 Democratic nominee for railroad commissioner, is also running but wasn't included in that poll. That poll had a margin of more than 6 percent; the candidate's are in a statistical tie, and seven in ten Democratic primary voters haven't made up their minds.

"I think 'undecided' is the runaway leader in both primaries," Schieffer said. "Those results weren't unexpected at this point. You just have to get out there and get your message out. And I think it resonates."

In the GOP primary, Gov. Rick Perry leads U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison 33 to 21 percent, with 41 percent undecided.

If his announcement speech is an indication of things to come, Texans will be hearing a lot from Schieffer about schools, jobs, health care, transportation and environment (in that order). Schieffer, whose friendship with and political support for Pres. George W. Bush could be a handicap among liberal primary voters, stressed his commitment to the Democratic Party by comparing himself to former U.S. House Speaker Sam Rayburn.

Schieffer mentioned that he assisted Gov. Mark White as late as his 1990 loss to Ann Richards. He said he helped out U.S. Army Secretary Pete Geren in his U.S. House campaigns in the late-90's as well. He didn't reveal how much money he hoped to raise, saying only that his goal is to have more money than anyone else by the end of the year.

Flanking Schieffer in Austin was Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston. Schieffer, Thompson and Hutchison were all sworn in as freshman House members in 1973. Schieffer's brother, Bob Schieffer, is the host of CBS's Face the Nation.

It's the Economy...

Texans are focused on the economy — and relatively pessimistic about the national outlook — according to a new public policy poll done by the Texas Lyceum.

Texans think the state economy is in better shape than the national economy and that their children will be better off or at least equal in prosperity. They also think the worst is ahead, and they're opposed to bailouts of carmakers and financial institutions. And just to turn that on it's head, they'd be willing to spend more money — even if it increases deficits — on roads, education, energy technology, and on affordability and accessibility of health care.

They're also solidly in favor of Voter ID, open to legalizing same-sex unions, and split almost evenly on taxpayer funding for stem cell research.

The telephone poll — The poll was conducted for the group by Daron Shaw of the University of Texas at Austin and by James Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project at UT — was done after the legislative session, during the June 5-12 period, and included 860 adults. The margin of error is +/- 3.34 percent. It was commissioned by the Texas Lyceum, a statewide leadership organization. Full poll results (and those for two previous polls) are online here.

Texans are split on the overall direction of things, with 48 percent saying the U.S. is moving in the right direction and 45 percent saying the country is on the wrong track. They overwhelmingly agree that the economy and unemployment are the most important issue facing the country (62 percent), with health care, at 12 percent, far behind. The most important issues facing the state? Economy/Unemployment (35 percent), Immigration/Border Control/Illegal Immigrants (13 percent), and Health Care/Vaccination (8 percent).

They believe the country is worse off than a year ago (58 percent), and put Unemployment and Jobs at the top of the economic issues in Texas (41 percent) in general, and for themselves and their families in particular (27 percent). Even so, many Texans say they are personally in about the same shape they were in a year ago (46 percent) or in better shape (17 percent) economically. For more than a third, however, the economic situation has worsened over the year. Two in five Texans think their children will be better off than they are and another 18 percent think their kids will be about the same economically. Texans are pessimistic about the immediate prospects for the national economy, with 53 percent saying the worst is yet to come. Almost two-thirds believe the Texas economy is healthier than the national economy, and only 8 percent think things are worse here than in the rest of the country.

The respondents were relatively confident about their own situations, but worry about the financial markets and how they're personally affected. More than three-quarters are "very" or "somewhat" confident they can make their mortgage or rent payments and 85 percent are confident in the stability of their banks. Three in five believe their jobs are secure. But Texans are split when asked about the safety of their retirement funds, and almost two-thirds are "not very" or "not at all" confident about investing in the stock market.

Nearly a third have stopped putting money in their retirement accounts in the last 12 months, but almost as many have started new retirement accounts in the same period, and one in five moved retirement money into less risky investments. About a fourth of respondents put off education or training for financial reasons and more than a third put off the purchase of a car. Smaller but significant numbers prematurely pulled money out of retirement accounts, put off their retirement dates, or put off selling their homes.

By a two-to-one margin, Texans think the federal government will spend too much money (rather than too little) trying to boost the economy. But they're choosy about where they're willing and unwilling to spend. Three in five (62 percent) would support higher spending on roads and infrastructure even if that would increase government deficits, but 71 percent oppose more spending to bail out financial institutions, and 64 percent oppose more spending to keep automakers from failure. Most (74 percent) favor more spending on energy technology, to make health care more affordable and accessible (66 percent), and to improve education systems (78 percent). Slightly more than half would favor tax cuts even if those cuts lead to deficits. They're divided on whether to increase regulation of financial institutions. And almost two-thirds believe automakers should be allowed to succeed or fail without government intervention.

Texans are confident that the economic stimulus is helping to make the downturn less severe than it would otherwise be (58 percent), and most are willing to wait to decide whether the Obama Administration policies are working. Their patience varies: 24 percent will wait two or more years; 20 percent will wait two years; 29 percent will wait a year; and 23 percent said they're already out of patience.

Texas turned down $556 million in unemployment insurance stimulus funds, and 58 percent of our respondents agree with Gov. Rick Perry that the money had too many strings attached. Another 34 percent thought the state did the wrong thing in turning down money to shore up that program.

Most Texans don't oppose same-sex unions, but they're split in their support for marriage or civil unions. While more than a third (36 percent) oppose either arrangement, 32 percent said they would support civil unions and another 25 percent think same-sex marriages should be permitted. The poll found a distinct partisan difference, with civil unions as the preference of 29 percent of Democrats, 31 percent of Independents and 37 percent of Republicans; same-sex marriage the preferred alternative of 36 percent of Democrats, 25 percent of Independents, and 14 percent of Republicans. Allowing neither of those alternatives was the preference of 29 percent of Democrats, 25 percent of Independents, and 43 percent of Republicans.

The recent legislative session ended without any resolution of the Voter ID issue, which divided Republicans and Democrats in the Legislature. But voters support the idea (71 percent), and more than half of them "strongly" support it (54 percent). It's a winner across party lines, with support among Democrats (58 percent), Independents (68 percent), and Republicans (86 percent). Support for Voter ID is stronger among Anglos (88 percent) and African-Americans (85 percent) than with Hispanics (69 percent), but all of those groups support the idea. And only 2 percent of Texans are undecided on the issue.

Texans are evenly split over the use of state tax dollars to fund embryonic stem cell research, with 48 percent saying they would support that and 46 percent saying they would oppose it. The intensity of feeling on that issue was roughly even, with 27 percent "strongly" in support and 30 percent "strongly" in opposition.

Disclosure Being Good for the Soul: Our editor helped kick around the questions that were asked in the poll and wrote the poll summaries to explain all of those numbers that resulted here and in the next item. Now you know.

Poll: Perry Ahead of Hutchison

Gov. Rick Perry leads U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison among likely Republican primary voters, according to a new poll done for the Texas Lyceum.

That survey has the governor leading his primary challenger by 12 percentage points — 33 to 21 percent — with a large number of voters — 41 percent — still undecided.

A small group — 1 percent — expressed support for state Rep. Leo Berman. Perry leads Hutchison among self-identified Republicans 40 percent to 18 percent, but that's also the group with the largest number of undecided voters, at 48 percent. Hutchison carries 49 percent of self-identified Democrats and Independents who say they plan to vote in the GOP primary, compared to 23 percent for Perry and 29 percent undecided.

Perry crowed about his poll numbers in an email to supporters. A spokesman pointed to Hutchison's performance. "After months of criticisms from Washington and tearing down Texas the Senator’s numbers continue to drop," said his spokesman, Mark Miner. "Governor Perry will continue to talk about creating jobs, cutting taxes, protecting private property rights, and improving education."

The Hutchison camp, which hyped earlier poll numbers that had her ahead, ignored her numbers and pointed at Perry's.

"To the extent this poll shows anything, it's that two-thirds of Texans don't want Rick Perry for yet another four years. His 39% support from 2006 is deteriorating," said Hans Klingler, spokesman for Hutchison.

Voters clearly haven't tuned into the Democratic primary contest — 81 percent haven't made a choice. Those who have like Kinky Friedman, with 10 percent; Tom Schieffer, with 6 percent, then state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, with 3 percent (Van de Putte announced this week that after looking at the race she doesn't intend to run).

They're largely undecided on their favorite candidates for U.S. Senate, should Hutchison resign late this year and prompt a special election in May 2010. Given the choice of six Republicans and two Democrats who've expressed interest in that race, 71 percent said they either haven't decided or didn't want to say. Houston Mayor Bill White led the pack with 9 percent, followed by Attorney General Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, with 4 percent; Railroad Commissioner Elizabeth Ames Jones and former Texas Secretary of State Roger Williams, 3 percent; and state Sen. Florence Shapiro, former Comptroller John Sharp, and Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, at 2 percent. Sharp and White are Democrats; the others are Republicans.

The poll was conducted for the Texas Lyceum, a statewide leadership organization, by Daron Shaw of the University of Texas at Austin and by James Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project at UT.

They polled 860 people by telephone on June 5-12. The margin of error is a little different on each part of the poll. Everyone was asked about the U.S. Senate race and the approval/disapproval questions, and the margin of error there is +/-3.34 percent (which means, in that Senate result, that everyone in the pack is in a statistical tie right now). The subgroup saying they were "certain" or "likely" to vote in the GOP primary was smaller, so the margin of error on that gubernatorial primary is +/- 6.04 percent; in the Democratic primary, it's +/-6.14 percent. Full poll results (and those for two previous polls) are online here.

Texans think President Barack Obama is doing a "very" or "somewhat" good job with the economy (63 percent), and they like the way he's handling his job as president more generally (68 percent). The number of Texans who don't have an opinion on either of those two assessments was very small.

Asked to grade Perry's performance, 57 percent said they approve and 30 percent said they don't approve. Hutchison got good marks from 65 percent and bad ones from 17 percent. U.S. Sen. John Cornyn has the approval of 55 percent and disapproval of 19 percent. The Texas Legislature, which finished the regular session several days before the polling began, has the approval of 58 percent of respondents and disapproval of 28 percent — numbers almost identical to Perry's.

The Numbers that Count

Unemployment in Texas hit 7.1 percent in May, up from 6.6 percent in April and 4.5 percent in May 2008, according to the Texas Workforce Commission. TWC said the number of unemployed Texans rose by 24,700 in May, and said the state has lost 222,600 jobs over the last 12 months. Still, that's better than the national numbers. U.S. unemployment was 9.1 percent in May, up from 8.6 percent in April and 5.2 percent in May 2008. The state had a total of 822,000 people out of work in May, compared with 519,100 a year ago. The worst spots were in McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, at 9.4 percent unemployment; Beaumont-Port Arthur, at 9.1 percent; and Brownsville-Harlingen, at 9 percent. The lowest rates: Lubbock, at 4.6 percent; Amarillo, at 4.7 percent; and College Station-Bryan, at 4.9 percent.

Van de Putte: Never Mind

Leticia Van de Putte says she won't run for the Democratic nomination for governor next year — she says it would be a nasty race, particularly for a Latina — but is encouraging fellow state Sen. Kirk Watson to run.

"I have, indeed, given it very serious thought, and while I would love to believe, tongue firmly planted in cheek, that this pent-up desire on the part of so many Texans for me to run for governor is solely because of some perceived superior leadership ability and vast intellect of mine, I have to reluctantly admit that it’s not as much about me as it is about Republican failures..." she said in a written statement. "... I intend to lobby Senator Watson to run for governor, and I’ll wholeheartedly support him if he does. But if he declines, Democrats should recruit and support someone who, like Watson, is energetic, pragmatic, focused, and smart; and who can fully energize Democratic supporters while also attracting a broad range of independent voters in every region of the state."

That's a slap of sorts at Fort Worth's Tom Schieffer, who is announcing his bid for that nomination this week. It's also, potentially, a nudge to get Watson to run for Guv and not for Lite Guv, an office of interest to several Democratic senators, including Van de Putte, should Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst decide to run for something else.

Watson isn't committing to anything and isn't announcing what he'll do next year.

"I am very flattered by Senator Van de Putte’s confidence in me, and I strongly agree with her about the need for improved leadership in Texas... " Watson said. "I intend to give this issue serious consideration, and I do not anticipate making any decisions in this regard until at least sometime after the end of the anticipated special session of the legislature, and probably not until the end of the summer."

Schieffer ducked the swat and had nice words for the San Antonio Democrat: "Senator Van de Putte has been a respected member of the Senate for many years. She would have been a formidable opponent in the Democratic primary. I am grateful she will not be running for governor this year. I look forward to sitting down with her to discuss my candidacy because I believe I can be the kind of candidate she can support, both in the Democratic primary and the general election."

Meanwhile, Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, told The Dallas Morning News that — having met with the Rick Perry a few times — he might get out of the GOP contest for governor.

Political Notes

The U.S. Supreme Court turned down an opportunity to undo the federal Voting Rights Act in a lawsuit started when a Texas utility district moved a polling place without permission.

Here's the ruling in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District Number One vs. Holder.

The court was asked to do two things: To allow the MUD to "bail out" of the Voting Rights Act under provisions that have previously been used only by whole counties, and to strike down the part of that law that requires federal officials to pre-clear voting changes in states and locations where voting discrimination occurred in the past. The court said okay on bailouts, and left pre-clearance alone.

That would have had an impact on redistricting in Texas and elsewhere next year, but with this ruling, new state political districts will have to be approved by the U.S. Department of Justice before they can be used. And that'll be the first time in the history of redistricting that a Democratic administration's Justice Department has had the say-so on those maps. Since the VRA was passed in the 1960s, Republican presidents have been in office each time the maps were drawn in 1971, 1981, 1991, and 2001.

• GOPAC, a 30-year-old national Republican political action committee that figured in the GOP surges in Washington in the 1980s and 1990s, now has a state branch, GOPAC-TX, aimed at increasing the number of Republicans in the state Legislature, particularly the House. That group, headed by Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, hopes to raise $4 million and will use the money to back Republicans in open seats and in challenges to incumbent Democrats. They say they won't go after any of their own incumbents in the primaries. Another — the Texas House Republican Committee — will raise money for Republican candidates, too. It's headed by Travis Griffin, who previously worked for Gov. Rick Perry's campaign and for the Stars Over Texas PAC that helped House Republicans.

• Railroad Commissioner Elizabeth Ames Jones will get some help from former U.S. Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher and his wife Mica. They've agreed to be honorary finance chairs for her campaign for U.S. Senate.

• Put Democrat Lainey Melnick in the race for CD-21, where U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio, is the incumbent. She's from Austin, filed papers this week, and has a website up and running. The actual filing for the ballot isn't due until the end of the year, but this lets her start raising money for the contest.

Chuck Wilson, a Waco Republican, plans to run against U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Waco, in CD-17. He's just getting started and has a website in the construction stage.

Kendra Yarbrough Camarena is running as a Democrat in HD-138, currently represented by Dwayne Bohac, R-Katy, and formerly represented by Democrat Ken Yarbrough, D-Houston. That's her dad.

Political People and Their Moves

Tony Garza, the former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, Texas Secretary of State and Texas Railroad Commissioner, signed on with Austin-based Vianovo to handle that public affairs firm's business in Mexico. Garza, who will remain in Mexico, will be a partner in the firm and will also head a new business called Vianovo Ventures. Separately, Garza announced that he has joined White & Case, an international law firm, as counsel. Garza, a rising star in Texas Republican politics, said earlier this year — as he was leaving the ambassador job — that he doesn't plan to run for office again.

Addie Horn is retiring as commissioner of the Department of Aging and Disability Services at the end of August. She's held that post since early 2006 and presided over the agency during a federal investigation that forced the state to improve its care of mentally disabled Texans.

Ray Sullivan is returning to Gov. Rick Perry's office, this time as chief of staff. Sullivan will replace Jay Kimbrough, who's staying on as a senior advisor. Sullivan was the spokesman for Perry's 1998 campaign for lieutenant governor, and worked for him in that office and then when Perry became governor. He was also a spokesman for then-Gov. George W. Bush. Sullivan left government in 2002 to run a public relations outfit. His wife, Leslie Rawl Sullivan, is Perry's campaign fundraiser.

Perry appointed Michael Massengale of Houston to the 1st Court of Appeals. The new judge has been a partner at Baker Botts, and replaced Tim Taft. Massengale will have the job until next year's elections.

Dr. William Henrich got the appointment to head the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio. The board of regents named him to replace Dr. Francisco Cigarroa, who was earlier named the UT System chancellor.

Michael Kelley moves from government relations at the Texas Department of Public Safety to interim chief of the driver's license division. He's apparently in the running for the permanent job.

Resigned: Samuel Kent, a U.S. district judge serving a federal prison term for lying about sexual advances on two women who worked for him. Congress was working on his impeachment when he resigned.

Recovering: Dallas Morning News writer Wayne Slater felt some chest pains at home over the weekend, and ended up getting a valve repaired during open-heart surgery this week. All is well, and you can send him a note: wslater@dallasnews.com.

Quotes of the Week

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, writing to his mistress, "Maria", in an email obtained by The State: "As I mentioned in our last visit, while I did not need love fifteen years ago — as the battle scars of life and aging and politics have worn on this has become a real need of mine. You have a particular grace and calm that I adore. You have a level of sophistication that is so fitting with your beauty. I could digress and say that you have the ability to give magnificently gentle kisses, or that I love your tan lines or that I love the curves of your hips, the erotic beauty of you holding yourself (or two magnificent parts of yourself) in the faded glow of night's light — but hey, that would be going into the sexual details... "

Americans for Tax Reform President Grover Norquist, in The New York Times: "I disagree with the idea that this shows problems for the modern Republican Party. I think instead it shows that sexual attractiveness of limited-government conservatism."

Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, talking about running for governor with the El Paso Times: "The votes that I would be drawing would be from Governor Perry, because Senator Hutchison is to the left of both of us. I do not want to do that. I do not want to take votes from Governor Perry, which would perhaps make him lose this election."

Democrat Tom Schieffer, talking about the governor's race in the Houston Chronicle: "What I want to do in the campaign is to lay these things out and talk about 'em and try to come up with alternatives. And also remind people that this is not going to be easy. It's going to be really hard. And if they want to do that, I get to be governor. And if they don't want to do that, I can go make money, and I've done my civic duty of trying to lay it out."

House Speaker Joe Straus III, quoted by The Dallas Morning News when asked, in Plano, whether Rep. Brian McCall, R-Plano, can keep his post as chairman of Calendars: "Whatever he wants."


Texas Weekly: Volume 26, Issue 25, 29 June 2009. Ross Ramsey, Editor. Copyright 2009 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

The special session should start on Wednesday and could be over by the weekend, House Speaker Joe Straus told members in a memo laying out the details.

This week in the blogosphere, there's Undecided for Governor, and there's everyone else, after a survey showed incumbent Rick Perry up a dozen points on the rest of the field with the biggest bloc of voters uncommitted. Bloggers are also discussing other parts of the Texas Lyceum poll and the special session that starts Wednesday. (We wrote about the poll results here and here.) Capping it off are posts on political campaigns and other things.

* * * * *

Hair and Shoulders Above

BurkaBlog says Lyceum respondents' positions against bailouts and federal spending should bode well for Perry, but he has a different reaction to the Republican gubernatorial primary numbers, saying, "Forget the 12-point lead. The number that jumps out is 33%. That's all?"

"If your sole issue is on the pro-life agenda, Perry is your man. He is quite good at stirring up the base with social issues," says Pondering Penguin, who's written favorably about Perry's chief rival U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. Meanwhile, momentarily diverting her attention from South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford and his Argentinean amante, In the Pink gives her take on the Lyceum poll, saying, "Basically, here's what the numbers mean — Texas voters hate both of them. There."

Texans for Rick Perry claims their guy's got "momentum" and links to interviews with Perry on TV and radio. And North Texas Conservative wins Headline of the Week Award by summing up Perry's campaign message in 12 words: "You Don't Toss The CEO If The Company Has Been Going Strong."

The Austin Chronicle's newsdesk looks at an early Perry veto that slipped under the mainstream media's radar. SB 2038 by Sen. Robert Duncan, R-Lubbock, would have directed judges to treat non-substantive code revisions as such (that is, not substantive). Several people, including possible gubernatorial aspirant Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, are complaining that Perry vetoed bills that staffers said their boss would sign. Off the Kuff wants to know if those kind of assertions are unusual. And Texas Observer Blog reports that, before becoming Perry's new chief of staff, Ray Sullivan was cashing checks for lobbying on behalf of electricity deregulation, red-light cameras and a toll-road builder.

* * * * *

Pack Animals

Texas "Off the Record," who was a public relations consultant for former Gov. John Connally, notes that Democrat Tom Schieffer's 6 percent mark in the Lyceum poll is better than Connally's initial survey showing of 4 percent. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram's PoliTex views the former U.S. ambassador's hometown campaign kickoff through burnt-orange-colored lenses. And the Houston Chronicle's Texas Politics posts audio of a 45-minute interview with Schieffer.

After hearing what Schieffer had to say, Burnt Orange Report "wasn't offended... but... wasn't particularly inspired." Meanwhile, mean rachel canvasses bloggers' reactions on what she calls a "weak" Democratic field for governor. And Burka lays out Watson's (and by extension any Democrat's) chances of winning the governorship in 2010, saying that Perry is vulnerable in the suburbs on the subjects of schools, roads, home insurance and his own tenure.

Wharton Republican Debra Medina ran away with an Internet poll by Lone Star Times on the GOP gubernatorial primary, prompting the blogger to remark that Medina's sway over supporters of U.S. Rep. Ron Paul could be enough to garner 10 to 12 percent of primary votes, and make things a little more interesting in the process.

* * * * *

Takeaways

Seeing that 71 percent of respondents favor voter ID, pollabear thinks Democrats need to concede the issue to Republicans. "If Democrats continue to take the bait they will continue to lose," the blogger says. And Eye on Williamson says the Lyceum poll shows that "Texas is in flux."

Kuff says former Texas Comptroller John Sharp's 2 percent performance in the U.S. Senate section of the poll nixes his name recognition argument. Elsewhere, fellow Democratic U.S. Senate contender and Houston Mayor Bill White is attracting the wrong kind of publicity from Texas Watchdog, who posts a series of articles on what White knew about a Houston airport controversy, and when he knew what he did. (Find more here.)

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Special Interest

A Capitol Blog's Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, creates a 90-second video preview of the special session, which he thinks might last "four or five days." He also says he hopes to be back home by the Fourth of July. A few days before Perry called the special session, Peña announced that he's having a fundraiser July 8 at the Austin Club, so he'll save some gas money if he sticks around the Capitol. On a related note, the El Paso Times' Vaqueros & Wonkeros takes a snapshot of the hometown incumbents' fundraising, noting that Sen. Eliot Shapleigh, D-El Paso, has an event planned for July 4 Out West.

Newsdesk thinks Perry's inclusion of public-private toll roads and a revolving fund on the special agenda muddies the waters a bit. And the Austin American-Statesman's Postcards dusts off their desk calendars to look at special sessions since the late 1800s.

* * * * *

Race to the Finish

Attorney General Greg Abbott may or may not run for lieutenant governor, his new political director says, according to Texas Politics. Meanwhile, Burnt Orange is sounding out for readers' input on what candidates their TexBlog PAC should help in 2010. And Postcards says a couple of Austinites think they'll need at least $1 million to knock incumbent U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio, from his perch.

Texas Freedom Network Insider says their parent organization is training State Board of Education candidates July 22 in Austin (so camp outside St. Edward's University that afternoon to catch a glimpse of the hopefuls.)

Tex Parte Blog has reactions to a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision concerning an Austin municipal utility district and the Voting Rights Act from the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund and the MUD's lawyer.

Texas did pretty well on a state-by-state comparison of legislators' financial disclosure requirements, the Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential reports. (The winner: Louisiana.) Grits for Breakfast talks about the long-delayed Texas Youth Commission trial in West Texas. And the Houston Chronicle's Texas on the Potomac talked energy policy with Obama, then created a big ol' special report about it.


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.

The 81st Regular Session is in the rearview mirror, and bloggers are describing what they're seeing there. They're also discussing rankings of various lawmakers, peering out at political races on the horizon and pondering the political future of a certain Houston representative. Ending it is an update on "Turd Blossom" and other posts.

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Word Wrap

Here, find opinions on the session from a University of Texas professor and a bevy of organizations, via KUT's Notes from the Lege, who has also created a "Vote Tracker" to follow what bills Central Texas lawmakers supported and what they didn't.

A Capitol Blog's Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, declares the session "a success" because of the commitment to a Rio Grande Valley medical school. Peña also lists accomplishments cited by the Governor's Office here. In his other blog, Lone Star Rising, he focuses on his own actions during the session.

Off the Kuff says the Legislature's inaction on false convictions legislation is "Embarrassing." Half Empty looks at education-related legislation and wonders why public schoolteachers have a different retirement system from state employees. And Blue Dot Blues posts photos from the session. Subjects include rattlesnakes, lightsaber-wielding lobbyists, dinosaurs and dead bills.

Save for failed attempts to expand children's health insurance, Democrats did pretty well, Texas Blue says. Meanwhile, WhosPlayin publishes a letter to Gov. Rick Perry urging him to consider solar power legislation if he calls a special session. And Kuff breaks down the sunset bill for the Texas Youth Commission and Juvenile Probation Commission.

In retrospect, when House Speaker Joe Straus, R-San Antonio, said he'd let the lower chamber run itself, he meant what he said and said what he meant, the Dallas Morning News's Trail Blazers says. The Lege passed a few pro-gun bills and no anti-gun bills, and that's all right with A Keyboard and a .45.

Ellis County Observer relays the end-of-session wrap up by conservative group Americans for Prosperity. And the houston conservative says that the Texas Public Policy Foundation is pleased with the outcome of the Regular Session.

Someone might have used a deceased person's name to vote in a Dallas city election, Texas Watchdog reports, noting that photo voter identification legislation discussed during the session would not address this kind of (alleged) fraud, since it (like the vast majority of voting fraud) occurred on a mail-in ballot.

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Making a List

BurkaBlog invites readers to share their thoughts on the Texas Monthly Best/Worst list. Meanwhile, one of the "Worst," Rep. Kino Flores, D-Palmview, shares his thought that Burka and co. were down on Hispanic and border lawmakers, as usual. And "Best" list maker Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, played it cool when KVUE's Political Junkie queried him about his possible statewide ambitions. (Watson ran for Attorney General in 2002 and was defeated by Greg Abbott.)

Letters from Texas provides a press release template for legislators angry/happy with their place on the Texas Monthly list. Blue Dot Blues blasts Texas Monthly's list for being too liberal and gives suggestions for their own 10 Best/Worst list. And Notes from the Lege talks to the magazine's president Evan Smith about what it takes to land on the list.

Letters from Texas, written by a Democratic consultant, teamed up with a GOPer to create a cross-partisan list of the 10 best lawmakers, in their opinion. "I'd bet their Ten Worst list…would be a lot more fun," says Kuff. And Greg's Opinion has mixed feelings about the lists by Texas Monthly and Letters from Texas.

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Trail-scape

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram's PoliTex reports that on Saturday night incumbent Gov. Rick Perry and U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison were in the same room, albeit a very large one (the new Dallas Cowboys stadium). The Houston Chronicle's Texas Politics notices that Hutchison's description of Perry as AWOL (Absent Without Leadership) sounds strikingly identical to a line used by Carole Keeton Strayhorn in the 2006 gubernatorial race. But according to rankings by national blogger Five Thirty-Eight, Perry is the 10th most powerful governor in the U.S., via Rick vs. Kay.

Burnt Orange Report takes umbrage at earlier allegations by Capitol Annex that Houston Mayor and U.S. Senate hopeful Bill White has "Republican ties." Railroad Commissioner Elizabeth Ames Jones has launched a website detailing why she wants to be the next U.S. Senator from Texas, according to Trail Blazers. And Pondering Penguin posts about "A Big Tent Party" in Houston featuring prominent Texas Republicans.

ABC13's Political Blog reports about the emergence of Sean Roberts, a potential challenger to U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee in Houston. According to Annex, former Tyler Mayor Joey Seeber, a Republican, will take on Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, who has expressed gubernatorial aspirations. And Dallas attorney Eric "EJ" Johnson announced that he's running for the seat currently held by Rep. Terri Hodge, D-Dallas, according to Trail Blazers.

* * * * *

On the Sly

Political Blog heard from Democratic Rep. Sylvester Turner's folks that the former House Speaker Pro Tem is looking at running for Mayor of Houston again, possibly. ABC13's Prof13 looks deeper into Turner's past runs at the office and analyzes his prospects this time around, if he does jump in. And Kuff links to more blogs on the topic.

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Potpourri

The Houston Chronicle's Texas Potomac blog compiles their "Where Are They Now?" features on one-time public officials from Texas, and tacks on a profile of (in)famous GOP strategist Karl Rove for good measure.

Texas Observer Blog is keeping an eye on the latest developments in the proposed West Texas radioactive waste disposal site in Andrews County (pop. 13,645). Trail Blazers has a back-and-forth with an Oklahoman cartoonist who has come under fire for a drawing of Supreme Court justice nominee Sonia Sotomayor as the first Puerto Rican piñata we've ever seen.

Lawyers on the opposing sides of the Judge Samuel Kent case exchanged some discouraging words, according to Tex Parte Blog. Democratic donor Mauricio Celis, who was convicted of pretending to be a lawyer in Texas, has now been indicted for lying about his legal credentials from Mexico, reports Tex Parte. And after years of writing about pretty courthouses, Tex Parte is calling on readers to help them find some ugly ones.

Bay Area Houston relays the results of a survey by insurance reform group Texas Watch. The survey says most Texans don't know they pay high insurance rates compared to other states. Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, is engaged to House assistant parliamentarian Shannon Wiggins, reports Texas Politics. And Dos Centavos has a new address — the blog can now be found at www.doscentavos.net.

Blog maverick examines whether people should care what is written about them on the Internet. The answer, he says, is usually not.


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.

All the counting is done, and Comptroller Susan Combs says lawmakers left $359.1 million unspent during the regular session that ended on the first day of this month.In a letter to state leaders and lawmakers, Combs says the Legislature left $359.1 million in general revenue money unspent. She revised some numbers after looking through the Legislature's work, too. The amount available for general revenue spending in the two-year budget that starts in September is $78.1 billion. That's up $1 billion from earlier estimates, but it's not because tax collections have risen — it's because of the way lawmakers wrote the next budget and revised the one we're in. She's making no changes to her revenue estimates — just accounting for what the Legislature did during the session. Bottom line: It all balances, with money left over for general spending. (This has nothing to do with the $9 billion-plus that's expected to accumulate in the state's Rainy Day Fund by the end of the next biennium; that's a different pot of money.)

The Legislature has to come back tomorrow. The governor put public-private highway projects on the agenda. And Robert Nichols, an engineer and former highway commissioner who's now a state senator, says the Legislature ought to solve the problems with those projects now instead of later.

That's not the deal the Gov. Rick Perry's office was trying to get, and it's potentially a threat to the success of a special session that's designed to knock out three issues in three days and end.

Lawmakers have to change the expiration dates on five agencies that will otherwise go out of business in 14 months. They have to authorize the sale of $2 billion in highway bonds already approved by voters (and a revolving credit fund that adds to the buying power of that bond package).

And they're supposed to reauthorize Comprehensive Development Agreements, or CDAs — the public-private partnerships used to build toll roads and other projects with private and public sector financing, operations and ownership. Nichols and other senators who worked on an interim committee on that issue (and others) want to settle the whole thing now. Nichols would give local officials first right of refusal on new CDA projects, letting them decide whether they wanted to participate or leave the jobs to others. That's called primacy and you'll probably read it a lot for the next 72 hours or so. He would also set up a process for working out the deals, settling disputes, and so on.

The Texas Department of Highways and the governor's office want legislators to reauthorize CDAs for a non-controversial list of projects and leave the blanket authorization for later. They're pushing for that while Nichols talks to senators and others about his approach. The list has the advantage of ducking controversy and getting lawmakers out of town fast. The blanket has the advantage of putting a leash on public-private deals at a state agency held in low political regard in the Pink Building.

"We can take a short term approach, but I think it would be a missed opportunity," Nichols says. "My idea is to use this as an opportunity to fix CDAs once and for all."

The Senate approved his approach with just two "No" votes during the regular session. That legislation died in the House as deadlines ran out at the end of the session. Nichols filed a bill that would preserve a list of projects already underway or in negotiation and would put the new rules into effect for everything that follows. And he says the short-term approach — approve a list and leave town — doesn't solve the fundamental problems. Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, filed the same bill in the House, but also says there's "an alternative bill" in the wings if this one doesn't get traction.

Last week, there appeared to be a consensus developing around the idea of a list. With Nichols filing his bill, everybody's still negotiating.

The session starts Wednesday morning.

The special session is less than half a day old, but one of the three issues on the governor's agenda is in deep trouble while two others are cruising through.Legislators moved quickly to extend the lives of five agencies set to "sunset" automatically in September 2010, and to authorize the sale of $2 billion in highway bonds already approved by voters. But Gov. Rick Perry's effort to allow new public-private partnerships on transportation projects started hitting obstacles right away. The arrangements — Comprehensive Development Agreements, or CDAs — allow private companies to pair up with governments to finance, build and operate toll roads and other transportation projects. The House and Senate started with the same idea but the House went to a different version and Senators decided to sit and wait. With lawmakers trying to start and finish the special session in three days, a delayed bill can quickly become a dead bill, and legislators seem more motivated to pass the sunset and bond legislation than to spend a holiday weekend working on CDAs. They're still negotiating, and still hoping to finish early on Friday.

CDAs could spoil the tidy three-day special session envisioned by Gov. Rick Perry and other leaders, after committees adjourned on Day One without acting to free certain Comprehensive Development Agreements from a moratorium that begins Aug. 31.

Without action, the state can't enter into new public-private partnerships on transportation projects. But it — and local governments — could continue on with partnerships that are already underway.

Sen. Robert Nichols, R-Jacksonville, whose SB 3 addresses this, predicts his chamber will not accept legislation unless the House approves language on primacy, non-compete clauses and buyback provisions.

"If they don't come over with those type of protections, my opinion is it will not even receive a vote," Nichols says.

Meanwhile, House Transportation Chair Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, thinks lawmakers on his side will be wary of approving Nichols' comprehensive bill before the weekend. Pickett adds that he personally likes the bill (he's carrying its twin in the House), but isn't sure members have the political will to pass it right now.

Pickett also filed an alternative bill, HB 4, which reauthorizes a short list of CDAs but does not include Nichols' provisions.

Primacy means that local authorities get first dibs on building road projects, and get to decide whether they want to participate with private firms in particular CDAs or not. They'd get the right of refusal before the state could step into a local project.

Nichols' bill would shorten non-compete clauses (which prohibit public authorities from building projects near CDAs that would suck toll revenue from them), shortening the maximum duration of the agreements to 30 years (it's now 50 years).

The bill exempts interstate highways from non-compete clauses. It also lays out the process by which public entities can resume control over the roads if the CDAs don't work out like they expected.

Nichols says the bill has been in development since 2007 and is the product of input from a legislative study committee — and wasn't "quickly thrown together... over the weekend."

Nichols' bill incorporates language from two bills approved by the Senate during the regular session. Both died on the House Calendar when time ran out.

While there is general agreement that sunset agencies and $2 billion in road bonds merited a special session, the necessity of dealing with CDAs has been questioned by some, including Senate Finance chair Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, whose committee is hearing all three special session topics.

Senators told Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst that CDAs don't have wide support in that chamber. But Dewhurst says he's still trying to work a deal.

If lawmakers do not reach an agreement by Friday afternoon, they could recess over the weekend and come back to work Monday. More likely: Both chambers could call it Sine Die, leaving it up to the governor to call them back for another special session on CDAs or to let it rest.

Pickett doesn't think CDAs had the same level of urgency as the other special session topics, saying that two years is a long time in the transportation world, and that failure to pass the CDA legislation would probably not jeopardize any projects.

"I think that the two main issues were still the language for Proposition 12 bonds and the sunset dates for those agencies that were hanging out there," he says. "And I don't think many people at the beginning thought we would be doing comprehensive development plans."

—by a Texas Weekly correspondent

Lawmakers extended the lives of five state agencies and approved $2 billion in bond sales, but stopped short of allowing new public-private partnerships for new transportation projects.Gov. Rick Perry wanted the Legislature to extend the state's authority to start new Comprehensive Development Agreements, or CDAs. But lawmakers don't want to do that and aren't convinced any new projects will go unbuilt if they don't act. With no sense of urgency around it, they decided they're not going to act on that last request. And they changed their tact on the bond sales, striking a provision that would have set up a revolving fund, financed by those bonds, that supporters said would allow more roads to get built. As with the CDAs, lawmakers said they can make any changes they want in the regular session in 2011 without any real detriment to the state's transportation planning and construction. "Since it's not going to make any difference in the number of lane miles that are built between now and the 2011 session, we can address this during that session," Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst told reporters. They planned to finish work on those first two issues and go home, just a day after they began the special session. Lawmakers were reluctant to take on the CDA issue in a short session. It's fraught with political risk, with some voters unhappy about toll roads, partnerships that let foreign companies collect tolls and operate roads, and plans to add toll lanes to free roads in the state. Some lawmakers were willing to give the Texas Department of Transportation the right to go ahead with those deals, if some safeguards were put in place. Others wanted to approve only the new CDAs on a list. And others wanted to kill the idea altogether. The one thing they finally agreed on: No projects will go unbuilt if they put off the issue until the next regular session. That was enough to put the thing to rest for now. The revolving fund that went with the bonds appeared to be alright in the Senate, but some members of the House had misgivings. Since it won't affect any projects before the regular session, it was easier to set that fight aside. "It's a new concept," said Sen. Steve Ogden, R-Bryan. "The House was a little uncomfortable with that, as I understand it..." he said. "In the interest of the short time that we have, I think that they were more comfortable with the familiar than with the risk that you take with something new."

Legislators ended their special session — mostly successfully — a little over 30 hours after they started it.They passed sunset and bond legislation sought by the governor, but closed shop without a vote to allow new public-private partnerships on transportation projects. That complicated issue, lawmakers said, can wait. Gov. Rick Perry's end-of-session statement:

I am pleased that lawmakers passed legislation to continue the Texas Department of Transportation, Texas Department of Insurance and three other state agencies, and authorized the issuance of $2 billion in transportation bonds that were approved by Texas voters in 2007. With more than 1,000 people moving to Texas each day and a growing economy, improving transportation in our state continues to be a top priority of mine. I had hoped to reduce uncertainty regarding several major transportation projects across the state by extending the comprehensive development agreement authority for local and state transportation agencies. Although the CDA bill did not pass, we will continue to work with legislators and local officials to find transportation solutions for our state.
Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst on the end of the session:
I'm proud of how quickly and efficiently the Texas Senate came together during this brief special session to pass legislation ensuring the state can issue $2 billion in voter-approved bonds to build roads, and to keep some of our most critical agencies, including the Texas Department of Transportation and the Texas Department of Insurance, open. The Senate also addressed the issue of building toll roads through public-private partnerships, including a handful of specific projects, but determined no legislative action is necessary in this session.

Gov. Rick Perry ignored pleas and requests to put a number of other issues on the special session agenda — entreaties that continued after the start of the session, and past Perry's statements that no additions are likely.

Family members and advocates for the late Timothy Cole — exonerated of rape charges after he died in a state prison — came to Austin seeking a gubernatorial pardon and asking Perry to put the issue in front of lawmakers if he thinks a new law is required to allow posthumous pardons.

Several lawmakers and trade groups wanted the governor to add eminent domain legislation to the call, saying the measure passed during the regular session helps but isn't enough because it doesn't compensate landowners for all of what they lose when the government forces them to sell land.

Several lawmakers and outside groups, led by Sen. Eliot Shapleigh of El Paso and Rep. Garnet Coleman of Houston, asked Perry to add an expansion of the Children's Health Insurance Program to the agenda.

Two hours after the House and Senate brought the special session to a close, the Harris County GOP was sending Houston Republicans messages urging them to ask Gov. Rick Perry to call another special session with Voter ID as the topic.

Lawmakers actually filed 36 bills, including the two that passed, the CDA bills that died, a CHIP expansion, and bills protecting concealed handgun owners from employer restrictions on storing their guns in their vehicles, extending mental health benefits to include eating disorders, indexing the minimum wage to the cost of living, extending eminent domain protections, changing benefits for employees of junior colleges, allowing revenue bonds for school construction, and tightening revolving door restrictions for Harris County employees.

The upcoming Republican battle for governor is starting to appeal to some Democrats. Fort Worth businessman/lawyer Tom Schieffer's in the race. Medina County entertainer/writer Kinky Friedman is, too. And other buzzards are circling around the idea that a bloody GOP primary could produce a wounded Republican candidate in the November general election — someone who might be vulnerable to a challenge from a Democrat.

It's early, but there's recruitment talk going on. The caveat, as always, is that we can't tell from our seats whether those recruitments are genuine or engineered. But if you log in to Facebook, you'll find groups trying to draft state Sen. Kirk Watson and former Travis County Ronnie Earle, both from Austin. Watson was urged into the race by fellow Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, who looked but won't run and says Watson ought to. Earle, according to the Austin American-Statesman, has filed papers that allow him to raise money for an as-yet unspecified state race. Mark Thompson, who ran for Railroad Commission last year, might also be in the race.

It's a red state — the best performance by a statewide Democrat last year was 45.8 (Sam Houston in a race for Texas Supreme Court). But Democrats are encouraged by strength at the local level in places like Dallas and Houston, and by gains in their statehouse delegation over the last few years. The Democratic share of the Texas House was 62 of 150 seats in 2003; now it's 74 seats, or two short of a majority.

It's not a great environment, but it has improved enough, apparently, to attract some interest.

• On the Republican side, add one and drop one. Gov. Rick Perry has a press conference scheduled this weekend with Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler. Berman was talking about a bid for governor but has lately been talking to Perry and telling reporters that he'd join the governor's reelection efforts if Perry satisfied Berman's standards on immigration issues. There's another Republican challenger in the wings, though: Debra Medina, who chairs the Wharton County GOP, plans to be on the GOP primary ballot for governor in 2010. She's also pushing a set of initiatives she'd like to see on the GOP ballot in March.

U.S. Senate candidate Roger Williams says he raised more than $400,000 — or about $1,000 per guest — at a fundraiser last weekend.

Candidates don't have to make their reports public until mid-July. Williams, a former Texas Secretary of State, is in the hunt for Kay Bailey Hutchison's seat, if she decides to resign early to concentrate on her run for governor.

• Rep. Beverly Woolley, R-Houston, announced she'll seek reelection to her HD-136 seat. A victory would mean a ninth term for Woolley, who was first elected in 1994.

• Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, did some research and found the shortest special session in state history: One hour, in 1919.

• Put Kim Limberg on the list of candidates in HD-105, where Rep. Linda Harper-Brown, R-Irving, is the incumbent. Limberg is a Democrat and a state highway department engineer. Harper-Brown won a very close election last year and Limberg is the second Democrat in the race; Loretta Haldenwang, a former aide to Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, is planning to get in. If the incumbent doesn't run for reelection, Irving City Councilwoman Beth Van Duyne will run as a Republican.

Jeff Weems, a Democratic activist and an oil & gas attorney in Houston, is pulling together a challenge to Texas Railroad Commissioner Victor Carrillo, a Republican who'll be on next year's ballot.

• This isn't exactly the 2012 Republican presidential primary, but it's not exactly not: Govs. Rick Perry of Texas, Haley Barbour of Mississippi, and Sarah Palin of Alaska could all be on the dais at the Texas Public Policy Foundation's 20th anniversary shindig on September 11. That'll be in Austin.

For a Texas governor, the headline perfectly describes a successful special session. Voters didn't get hurt, weren't aroused, and aren't mad.

This special session will be a success if, in a couple of years, most of the people involved have to be reminded of what it was about. If they can't immediately recall it (except for the mooks out there), that's a sign that everything went okay. It has all the signs of a winner.

The "got-to" issues moved quickly, with both chambers unanimously approving sales of $2 billion in highway bonds already approved by voters and extending the lives of five agencies that, without legislative action, would go out of business in September 2010.

Lawmakers stalled on a third issue, partly because none of them could detect enough local fever over public-private highway projects to approve new ones. They decided to let it hold and ended the session about 31 hours after it started.

And they did it with very little television coverage and with voters getting ready for a holiday weekend. Many people didn't even know they were in town.

Gov. Rick Perry ran through a circuit of TEA parties on Independence Day; we caught his Austin speech to several hundred hot (102 degrees!) Texans who gathered on the South grounds of the state Capitol for a day of talks from conservative political folks. You can listen to his speech (about 10 minutes) here, or with the player below. Perry was also scheduled to make stops in Sulphur Springs, Rockwall, and San Antonio. TEA, in this case, stands for "Taxed Enough Already."

 

 

And we took some crowd pictures so you could read the signs (click on each for an enlarged version in a separate window):

Political People and their Moves

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison published a list of people supporting her bid for governor next year against (maybe) incumbent Republican Rick Perry. (His list is here.)As presented, and further down, big enough to read. And there's a version sorted by city here.

"Honorary Statewide Co-chairmen" Hon. Richard Armey James Avery Hon. Henry Bonilla Hon. Kevin Brady Hon. Michael Burgess Hon. John Carter Hon. John Culberson Hon. Gordon England Hon. Phil Gramm Hon. Kay Granger Hon. Kenny Marchant Hon. Rod Paige Hon. Ted Poe Nolan Ryan Roger Staubach Hon. Mac Thornberry "Statewide Finance Chairman" John L. Nau, III "Statewide Organization Chairmen" Cathy Obriotti Green Patrick Oxford "KBH Club Chairmen" Rich & Nancy Kinder Terry & Robert B. Rowling "KBH Ranch Hands" Robert D. Gillikin "Trailblazer Chairmen" Hague & Eric Bing Jennifer & Bryan Pickens "Leadership 20/20 Statewide Chairmen" Thad Chapman Jessica Colon Angie King Annie Holand & Cramer Miller The "State Leadership List" Elaine Agather, Dallas Tory & Dick Agnich, Dallas R.C. Allen, Corpus Christi Ernesto Ancira Jr., San Antonio Trish & George Antuna, Schertz Katharine Armstrong, Austin Sissy & Jeff Austin Jr., Jacksonville Pam & Warren Ayres, Wichita Falls Michelle & Lorne Bain, Houston Jane & John Barnhill, Brenham Mario A. Barrera, San Antonio Ann & Sam Barshop, San Antonio Mayor Barbara Bass, Tyler Mercedes T. & Sid R. Bass, Ft. Worth Louis A. Beecherl Jr., Dallas Alice Belew, Odessa Marge & Calvin Bentsen, McAllen Anne Bergman, Weatherford Lucy Billingsley, Dallas Hon. Teel Bivins, Amarillo Tom Bivins, Amarillo Rebecca Boenigk, College Station Richard Bowers, Corpus Christi Dwight Boykins, Houston Jim Braniff III, Houston Gray Bridwell, Abilene Tucker Bridwell, Abilene Billie & Henry Brooks, The Woodlands Sunni & Britton P. Brookshire, Tyler Sherry & J. Robert Brown, El Paso Joan & Herman Buschor, Houston Penny & John Butler, Houston Ann & Hon. Roy Butler, Austin Jo & Joe Ed Cannon, Abilene Jack Cardwell, El Paso Ana & Don Carty, Dallas Marie E. & M. L. "Red" Cashion, Bryan Trevor Caviness, Amarillo Mary & Bill Ceverha, Dallas James H. Clement Jr., Dallas Hally & Thurman Clements, Victoria Hon. Phyllis Cole, Plano Hon. Peter R. Coneway, Houston John B. Connally III, Houston Kay Copeland, Denton Jeanne Tower Cox, Dallas Jerry Cox, Houston Alfred Davis, Houston Arleigh & Hector DeLeon, Austin Hon. Dianne White Delisi, Temple Hon. Mary Denny, Austin Betty & Marshall Doke, Dallas Melvin Dow, Houston Charles T. Doyle, Texas City Mary & Dr. Tom Duncan, Lufkin Brian J. Eades, Amarillo James B. Earthman III, Galveston Joy & Steve Ellinger, Abilene Tedi & Charles Ellison, College Station Tom Engibous, McKinney Rosemary & Roger Enrico, Dallas Monica & Charles R. Eskridge III, Houston Dr. Fred Farias III, McAllen Cherie & Jim Flores, Houston Gerald Ford, Dallas Debbie Francis, Dallas Victoria M. Garcia, San Antonio Bridget & Bob Gayle, Victoria Murphy George, Lufkin Taffy Goldsmith, Dallas Sydna Gordon, Garland Pattye Greer, Nacogdoches Rosalind Redfern & Arden R. Grover, Midland Julie & Mojy Haddad, Arlington Charles Hassell, Rusk Carol Hasserd, Galveston Richard Hayes, Denton Jan & Frederick B. Hegi Jr., Dallas Nina & Edd C. Hendee, Houston Patty & Tevis Herd, Midland Robert J. Hewitt Jr., Victoria J. Pat Hickman, Amarillo Susie Hitchcock-Hall, Midland Brenda & Carey Hobbs, Austin Hon. Jerry H. Hodge, Amarillo Daniel J. Hollmann, Odessa Kay & Ned S. Holmes, Houston Annette & Tom Hopkins, San Angelo Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Bob Hoy, El Paso Jessie & Gary Jacobs, Laredo Kenneth M. Jastrow II, Austin Barbara & Don Jordan, Houston Harris L. "Shrub" Kempner Jr., Galveston Hon. Jan & Dr. Don Kennady, New Braunfels Greg King, San Antonio Lylabeth & Art King, College Station Stephen J. "Tio" Kleberg, Kingsville Barbara & Arno W. Krebs Jr., Bryan Joe Krier, San Antonio Nancy & David Lacy, Waco Audrey LaFleur, Weatherford Steve Laird, Ft. Worth Betsy Lake, Houston Odysseus Lanier, Houston Milam Mabry, Austin Gail Madden, Dallas Abbie & Wales Madden Jr., Amarillo A.K. Mago, Dallas Cary M. Maguire, Dallas Jack Maxon, El Paso Laura & Mayor Russ McEwen, Big Spring Sara McKnight, El Paso Drayton McLane Jr., Houston Amy & J. Mark McLaughlin, San Angelo Denise McNamara, Dallas Susie & A.P. Merritt, Kilgore Hon. Fred Meyer, Dallas Hon. Tincy Miller, Dallas Julie & Greg Mitchell, Amarillo Marsland & Richard W. Moncrief, Ft. Worth Kit & Charlie Moncrief, Ft. Worth Josh & Martha Morriss, Texarkana Susie & Ben Munson, Denison Sammye & Mike A. Myers, Dallas Mayor Susan & Miguel Narvaiz, San Marcos Elizabeth & Chuck Nash, San Marcos Thetis & Loyd Neal, Corpus Christi Dennis E. Nixon, Laredo Erle Nye, Dallas Morgan Dunn O'Connor, Victoria Joe O'Neill, Midland Oscar Javier Orneles, El Paso Nancy Palm, Houston Janet Payne, Abilene Margaret & Jim Perkins, Tyler Caroline & David Pierce, Houston E.G. Rod Pittman, College Station Gary Polland, Houston Don Powell, Amarillo Dr. C. Venkata Ram, Dallas Phil Ramono, Dallas Diane & Gary Rath, San Antonio Bobby Ray, Plano Sue & Brett Ringle, Dallas Dolores & Daniel O. Rios, McAllen Juandelle Lacy Roberts, Midland Glen E. Roney, McAllen Tara & Adam Ross, Dallas Anne Shepard, Harlingen Robin Shivers, Austin Hon. Clyde Siebman, Sherman Hon. Windy & Frank Sitton, Lubbock Roger S. Sofer, Houston Dr. Nancy C. Speck & A.L. Mangham, Nacogdoches Dian Owen Stai, Abilene Steve Stephens, San Angelo Gail & Richard Suttle Sr., Austin Charles S. Teeple, Spicewood Dianne Thompson, Lubbock Susie Tonymon, Ft. Worth Don Truman, Victoria Betty Turner, Port Aransas Terdema Ussery, Dallas Carol & Joe Van De Walle, San Antonio Kris Anne Vogelpohl, Galveston Hon. Joe Wardy, El Paso Heather & Ray W. Washburne, Dallas Edward E. Whitacre Jr., San Antonio Sherilyn & Patrick Willis, Tyler Tomi & Pete Winstead, Austin Ed Wulfe, Houston Joel Yowell, Wharton Fred Zeidman, Houston The "Exploratory List" Mary & Dr. Joe Abell, Austin Daniel Abernathy, Aledo Judy & Jim Adams, San Antonio Suzanne & John Adams, Dallas Linda & Max Addison, Houston Chris & Robert Adler, Corpus Christi Dorothy Adler, Richardson Isaac Albarado, Austin Stanford Alexander, Houston Jacque & David Allen, Wichita Falls Nancy & Bill Allen, Kenedy Ruth & Dr. Kenneth Altshuler, Dallas Dr. & Mrs. Chuck Anderson, Abilene Gilbert Aranza, Dallas Carisa & Scott Armey, Denton Bess & J.W. Arnold, Tyler Eddie Arnold, Beaumont Dr. Tom Arnold, Houston Dr. & Mrs. Basil E. Atkinson Jr., San Antonio Sherry & Jim Atwell, Friona Evan Autry, Coleman Estela Avery, Fredericksburg Dr. Dionel Aviles, Houston Janis & Bill Bailey, Pasadena Denice Bailey, Abilene Janice & Rick Baldwin, Magnolia Barbara & Cal Banker, San Antonio Betty & Hon. Meryl Barnett, Borger Sara Barrera, College Station Mario Barrerra, San Antonio Joanne & Dick Bartlett, Ft. Davis Vicki S. & Edward P. Bass, Ft. Worth Dr. Alan Baum, Houston Barbara & Chuck Bearden, Hillsboro Coleen Beck, Florence Judy & David J. Beck, Houston Medora & Robert Beecherl, Midland Elisabeth & Timothy Belton, Houston Debbie & John Blake, Abilene Jack S. Blanton Jr., Houston Edward Blessing, Dallas Patty Block, Houston Jeanne & Rhodes Bobbitt, Dallas Fran & Bob Bolen, Ft. Worth Sheryl Bonilla, Schertz Angela Boone, Haltom City Myra & Jim Boswell, Plano Hon. Celia Boswell, Mineola J. Fitz Boyle, Irving Kitty & John F. Boyle Jr., Irving Julie & Michael R. Bradle, Lampasas Ann & Garlan Braithwaite, Dallas David Bray, Houston Toni & Norm Brinker, Dallas Michael Brinkley, Ft. Worth Peggy & Peter Brodersen, Dallas Karen & Mike Brodie, Plano Patty Bruce, El Paso Fred Bucy, Dallas Bette-Jo Buhler, Victoria Pat & Fred Burns, Galveston Joe Burris, Dallas Miriam Burton, Montgomery J. Brett Busby, Houston Holley & Fernando Bustos, Lubbock Julie & J.D. Cage, Muleshoe Sandy & Ken Cailloux, Kerrville Debbie Campbell, Fredericksburg Hon. William Card Jr., Harlingen Alberto P. "Beto" Cardenas Jr., Houston Peggy & M.W. Carr, Dallas Rosine & Stuart Carter, Luling Carter & Tom Casteel, New Braunfels Dr. Luis Castillo, Arlington John Castle, Dallas Rich Castle, Salado Beth & Robert Cathey, Shavano Park William Christopher Caudill, Pearland Clarence P. Cazalot Jr., Houston Lois Chambers, Lufkin Helen T. Chang, Houston Nancy & Charles Cheever Jr., San Antonio Ulupi & Asit Choksi, The Woodlands Jo Anne Christian, Austin Carolyn Clardy, Jacksonville Jean & Robert Clarke, Houston Dixie Clem, Plano Cindy Clifford, Houston Mary Jeanne & Don Coers, San Angelo Cheryl & Stephen A. Coke, Dallas J. Jan Collmer, Dallas Rebecca & David Contreras, Round Rock Gail & Dan Cook, Dallas Kelly Couch, Vernon Pat & David Cowan, Levelland Flo Crady, Houston Bebe Crain, San Antonio Ann & Bill Crockett, Katy Dorothy Crockett, Marble Falls Lesa & Randal Crosswhite, Austin Kathy & Harlan Crow, Dallas Isabella & William Cunningham, Austin Patti & Dr. Mark D. D'Alise, Lubbock Derek Daniels, Athens Deavra Daughtry, Houston Charlie Dauphin, Beaumont Betty & Alton Davis, Abilene Celia Davis, Lampasas Gainor Davis, Amarillo Mayor Bob Day, Garland Katrin Debakey, Houston Myra Dean, Abilene Linnet F. Deily, Houston Jody & Jerry DePriest, Abilene Laurel & Duke DeWare, Jefferson Mayor Peter Dewing, Northlake Susie & Joe Dilg, Houston Dorothy Doehne, San Antonio Elinor & Ben Donnell, Corpus Christi Sujeeth Draksharam, Houston Julie & Bob Driegert, Richardson Ginger & John Dudley, Comanche Jan & Dan Duncan, Houston James Elkins, Houston James Ellis, Humble Susan & Mike Enoch, Mont Belvieu Hon. Pat Evans, Plano Steve Fannin, Lubbock Regen Horchow Fearon, Dallas Sara Field, Abilene Susan & Stan Fields, Beeville Priscilla & Dr. Peter Flawn, Austin Robert Flores, San Antonio Genie & Robert Flournoy, Lufkin Kelli & Jerry Ford, Dallas Ruth Ford, Westlake Hills Dr. L.S. Foreman, Tulia Lily & Charles Foster, Houston Kevin Fowler, Flint Paul Frazier, Lubbock Rachel & Dr. Bud Frazier, Houston Valerie Freeman, Farmers Branch Amber & Chad Gailey, Houston Shirley Garrison, Lubbock Ann Gearn, Hereford Debbie & Eric Georgatos, Dallas Tricia & Hon. Kenn George, Dallas Donna German, Dallas Marilyn & John D. Glass Jr., Tyler Curry Glassell, Houston Shannon & Jeff Graham, Dallas Sandra & Henry Gray, San Antonio Mary Lou Grier, Boerne Hon. Carl Griffith Jr., Port Arthur Justin K. Grimsley, Ft. Worth Jyl & Jayson Grimsley, Friona Linda & Frank Groseclose, Lago Vista Diane & Mike Gruber, Dallas Mary K. & Clifford Grum, Diboll Jo Gudjohnsen, Dallas Susan & Ruben Guerra, El Paso Kenneth Guest, Duncanville John Guest, Duncanville Susan Gwin, Dallas J.M. Hagger Jr., Dallas Linda Hamilton, Ft. Bend Gloria & Jack Hammack, Dallas Linda Hancock, Ft. Bend David Harmon, Lubbock Lynn & Hon. Ron Harris, McKinney Homer Hayes, Tyler Jane Hayley, Galveston Dan Hedges, Houston Dawn Heikkila, Austin Fred Henneke, Kerrville Al G. Hill Jr., Dallas James Hines, Austin Carolyn & Tom Hodges, Houston Amy & Todd Holt, Lubbock Karen & Byron Hood, Houston Carolyn & Roger Horchow, Dallas Jan Horne, Dallas Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Jo Ann Howard, Austin Kara & Aaron Howes, Houston Elsie Huang, Houston Janice & James Huckaby, Mesquite Monte Hulse, Waco Jack Hunt, Houston Dan Hunt, Cleburne Amy & Ward Hunt, Austin Zora Hutchison, Temple Rosella & O.B. Hutchison, Dallas Marshall Iler, Cypress Nancy Inman, Austin Bruce K. Jacobson Jr., North Richland Hills Mary Jalonick, Dallas Janet & Chuck Jarvie, Dallas Wendy & Michael Jenkins, Dallas Jodie Jiles, Houston Pat & Jack Johns, Tyler Claire & Dr. John Johnson, Abilene Denise Jones, Abilene Kristina Jones, Abilene Ramona Jones, Dallas Hon. Robert W. Jordan, Dallas Ann & Darrell Jordan, Dallas Mary Fae & Col. Herb Kamm, Duncanville Diane & Bill Keeble, Abilene Don Kent, Tyler Irene Kerr, Montgomery Marilla King, Austin Olive Ann & Richard Kleberg, San Antonio Randi Mays-Knap & Avery Knapp, College Station Pat & Bill Knebel, Victoria Richard Knight Jr., Dallas Stephen T. Krier, Lubbock Joyce & Larry Lacerte, Dallas Cece & Ford Lacy, Dallas David Laney, Dallas Norma Langford, Alice Teresa & Billy Langley, Rusk Don Langston, Lufkin Benson Latham, Amarillo Chad Lee, Ft. Worth James Lloyd, Houston Maxine & Bill Loafman, Decatur Teresa & Joe Long, Austin Merideth J. Long, Houston Lisa & George Longino, Dallas Krystal Looney, Jacksonville Hon. Evelyn & Sam Lord, Beaumont George Love, Lubbock Lee Maas, Dallas Nita & Wales Madden III, Amarillo Tone' & Bill Mahon, Waco Judy & Gary Martin, Arlington Ruben Martin, Kilgore Sara & David Martineau, Dallas Debbie & Vidal Martinez, Houston Bert Massey, Brownwood Cindy Massingill, Lubbock Ellen & Conrad Masterson, Dallas Chris Matthews, Amarillo JoAnn & Doug Mayer, Westlake Sharon & David McCall, Plano Christy McClendon, Lubbock Carla McCroan, Royse City Linda & John McFarland, Dallas Anne McKeithan, Lake Jackson Angel McShane, The Woodlands Ellen & John McStay, Dallas Dewey Meyers, Odessa Beth & Charles Miller, Houston Karl Miller, Round Rock Mary Ann & Lewis C. Miltenberger, Southlake Sharon Miner, Amarillo Tom Moncrief, Ft. Worth Liza Montelongo, El Paso Pam & Joe Moore, Cat Spring Hilmar Moore, Richmond Martha & Marciano Morales, Lubbock Dr. Ruth Morgan, Dallas Hon. Frank Morris, Harlingen Julia Morton, The Woodlands Mike Moses, Dallas Dianne & Bill Moss, Dallas Gretchen Munday, Austin Betty & James Muns, Plano Justin Murff, Arlington Barbara & James Nowlin, Friendswood Lisa Nowlin, Lubbock Knox Nunnally, Houston Dona & Dr. Ralph E. Nussbaum, Lubbock Julie & Pat Oles, Austin Kathy & Barry Orr, Lubbock Roy Orr, DeSoto Rafael Ortega, Houston Jan & William Ott, Houston Nancy Jane Otto, Houston Dustin Ouellette, Houston John Owens, Lubbock Katie Oxford, Houston Florence Fitch Patton, Nacogdoches Mundy & Pat Peale, Lake Kiowa Michael L. Peay, Houston Joe Penland, Beaumont Connie Jane Pevey, Abilene Regina & Charles Pistor, Dallas Barbara Pittman, Abilene Beth Plummer, San Antonio Romy & Carl Ray Polk, Lufkin Patricia Porter, Dallas Dianne & Boone Powell, San Antonio Kathryn Priddy, Dallas Maureen & Dr. Vince Priestner, Abilene Bobbie Prince, Port Arthur Dr. Paul A. Proffer, Amarillo Caren H. Prothro, Dallas Glenna & Kenny Pryor, Jacksonville Mayor Angela Raiborn, Rusk Chrisiane & Aaron Ramirez, Dallas Ashley & Mack Rankin, Dallas Reagan Rath, San Antonio Sally & Hon. Bill Ratliff, Mount Pleasant Susan D. Reed, San Antonio Hon. Elvira & J.A. Reyna, Little Elm Blake Richardson, Austin Sharon & Tom Riley, Abilene Stacey & Robert Risko, Athens Barbara & Corbin J. Robertson Jr., Houston Beth Robertson, Houston Trisha Robertson, Dallas Susan R. Robinson, Abilene Lucille Rochs, Fredericksburg Sharon Roosevelt, Fort Stockton Matthew K. Rose, Ft. Worth Billie & Jim Ross, Midland Phillip Rummell, Spring Dr. Kimberly Russell, Tyler Rhonda & Lee Russell, Dallas Frank E. Rust, Era Babs & Dennis Rygaard, Santa Fe Mary Lou & Pete Rygaard, Dickinson Linda J. Sadler, Lubbock Erik Saenz, Houston Susan & Dr. Alan Sager, Austin Sherrie & Leroy Salas, Tuscola Shiree Sanchez, Austin Andrew Sansom, Austin Pat & Pete Schenkel, Dallas Mary Schneider, Houston Ellen Schoenfeld, Kerrville Margo & Hal Scholin, Houston Matt Scholin, Houston Josie Schoolcraft, Rusk Paula & David R. Seim, Lubbock Bryan Selden, Tyler Clayton Settle, Sugarland Marsha G. Sharp, Lubbock Dr. Aubrey D. Sharpe, Tyler Debra & Brian Shivers, Dallas Charles Simmons, Ft. Worth Linda Sisk, Nacogdoches J.B. Smith, Tyler Judy & Bob Smith, Montgomery Mary Ann Smith, Dallas Jennifer & Charlie Snead, Aledo Debbie & Don Snell, Dallas Claudia & Pete Snow, Texarkana Jana & William Sojourner, Abilene Itze & Jeff Soliz-Matthews, Houston Gay & Bill Solomon, Dallas Merrie Spaeth, Dallas Dr. Mary Spangler, Bellaire Gwen & Lee Stafford, Lubbock Marian K. Stanko, San Antonio Frank Stanley, Sugarland Trey Stapleton, Austin W. Spencer Stasney, Houston Marianne Staubach, Dallas Phyllis & Ron Steinhart, Dallas M.L. Steinmetz III, Bullard Mark W. Stiles, Dallas Gayle & Paul Stoffel, Dallas Lorelei & Tom Sullivan, Houston Jo & Bill Summers, Weslaco Michael K. Swan, Houston Steven R. Taake, Cypress Judy & Charles Tate, Houston Beth & Homer Taylor, Sweetwater Doodie Taylor-Knox, Coleman Estelle Teague, Hurst George Thomas, Houston Chaunce Thompson, Breckenridge Gary L. Thompson, Spicewood Jere W. Thompson, Dallas Jere W. Thompson Jr., Dallas Cynthia & Gene Thornton, Round Top Martha & David Tiller, Dallas Karin Torgerson, Dallas Susan & John Tripplehorn, Pampa Steve Tucker III, Archer City Dan Tutcher, Houston Melissa Tyroch, Little River Chase Untermeyer, Houston Amy & John Uppeman, Round Rock Ann Utley, Dallas Sam Vale, McAllen Sarah Van Cleef, Tyler Borah Van Dormolen, Salado Hon. Roger Van Horn, Nacogdoches Betsy Vaughan, Houston Annette K. & Jack C. Vaughn, Dallas Robert C. Vaughn, Dallas Mario Vazquez, San Antonio Tory B. Virdell, Llano June & J. Virgil Waggoner, Houston Pam & Chris Waggoner, Austin Roger W. Wallace, Dallas Danielle & Ryan Walsh, Houston Dr. Dolores & Paul Washburne, Abilene Becky Weatherby, Abilene Amy Webb, Tye Evelyn & Wayne Webb, Tye Marcia & Bud Weinstein, Dallas Robyn L. Wertheim, Abilene Jane Wetzel, Dallas Seagal Wheatley, San Antonio David Williams, Austin J.L. Sonny Williams, Dallas Marsha Williams, Dallas Don Wilson, Waxahachie Patricia S. "Pinky" Wilson, La Grange Trisha Wilson, Dallas Ron Woods, Houston Elizabeth & Frank M. Wozencraft Jr., Houston Nancy B. Wrenn, Tyler Christopher J. Wrenn, Tyler Alice & Bill Wright, Abilene Kay Yeager, Wichita Falls Harold Brian Yearwood, Lubbock Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Younger, Midland Mary A. Yturria, Brownsville Humberto Zamora, Harlingen

U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison published a list of people supporting her bid for governor next year against (maybe) incumbent Republican Rick Perry. (His list is here.) This version's sorted by city. Her original is is here.Gray Bridwell, Abilene Tucker Bridwell, Abilene Jo & Joe Ed Cannon, Abilene Joy & Steve Ellinger, Abilene Janet Payne, Abilene Dian Owen Stai, Abilene Dr. & Mrs. Chuck Anderson, Abilene Denice Bailey, Abilene Debbie & John Blake, Abilene Betty & Alton Davis, Abilene Myra Dean, Abilene Jody & Jerry DePriest, Abilene Sara Field, Abilene Claire & Dr. John Johnson, Abilene Denise Jones, Abilene Kristina Jones, Abilene Diane & Bill Keeble, Abilene Connie Jane Pevey, Abilene Barbara Pittman, Abilene Maureen & Dr. Vince Priestner, Abilene Sharon & Tom Riley, Abilene Susan R. Robinson, Abilene Jana & William Sojourner, Abilene Dr. Dolores & Paul Washburne, Abilene Becky Weatherby, Abilene Robyn L. Wertheim, Abilene Alice & Bill Wright, Abilene Daniel Abernathy, Aledo Jennifer & Charlie Snead, Aledo Norma Langford, Alice Hon. Teel Bivins, Amarillo Tom Bivins, Amarillo Trevor Caviness, Amarillo Brian J. Eades, Amarillo J. Pat Hickman, Amarillo Hon. Jerry H. Hodge, Amarillo Abbie & Wales Madden Jr., Amarillo Julie & Greg Mitchell, Amarillo Don Powell, Amarillo Gainor Davis, Amarillo Benson Latham, Amarillo Nita & Wales Madden III, Amarillo Chris Matthews, Amarillo Sharon Miner, Amarillo Dr. Paul A. Proffer, Amarillo Steve Tucker III, Archer City Julie & Mojy Haddad, Arlington Dr. Luis Castillo, Arlington Judy & Gary Martin, Arlington Justin Murff, Arlington Derek Daniels, Athens Stacey & Robert Risko, Athens Katharine Armstrong, Austin Ann & Hon. Roy Butler, Austin Arleigh & Hector DeLeon, Austin Hon. Mary Denny, Austin Brenda & Carey Hobbs, Austin Kenneth M. Jastrow II, Austin Milam Mabry, Austin Robin Shivers, Austin Gail & Richard Suttle Sr., Austin Tomi & Pete Winstead, Austin Mary & Dr. Joe Abell, Austin Isaac Albarado, Austin Jo Anne Christian, Austin Lesa & Randal Crosswhite, Austin Isabella & William Cunningham, Austin Priscilla & Dr. Peter Flawn, Austin Dawn Heikkila, Austin James Hines, Austin Jo Ann Howard, Austin Amy & Ward Hunt, Austin Nancy Inman, Austin Marilla King, Austin Teresa & Joe Long, Austin Gretchen Munday, Austin Julie & Pat Oles, Austin Blake Richardson, Austin Susan & Dr. Alan Sager, Austin Shiree Sanchez, Austin Andrew Sansom, Austin Trey Stapleton, Austin Pam & Chris Waggoner, Austin David Williams, Austin Eddie Arnold, Beaumont Charlie Dauphin, Beaumont Hon. Evelyn & Sam Lord, Beaumont Joe Penland, Beaumont Susan & Stan Fields, Beeville Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Dr. Mary Spangler, Bellaire Laura & Mayor Russ McEwen, Big Spring Mary Lou Grier, Boerne Betty & Hon. Meryl Barnett, Borger Chaunce Thompson, Breckenridge Jane & John Barnhill, Brenham Mary A. Yturria, Brownsville Bert Massey, Brownwood Marie E. & M. L. "Red" Cashion, Bryan Barbara & Arno W. Krebs Jr., Bryan M.L. Steinmetz III, Bullard Pam & Joe Moore, Cat Spring Dan Hunt, Cleburne Evan Autry, Coleman Doodie Taylor-Knox, Coleman Rebecca Boenigk, College Station Tedi & Charles Ellison, College Station Lylabeth & Art King, College Station E.G. Rod Pittman, College Station Sara Barrera, College Station Randi Mays-Knap & Avery Knapp, College Station Ginger & John Dudley, Comanche R.C. Allen, Corpus Christi Richard Bowers, Corpus Christi Thetis & Loyd Neal, Corpus Christi Chris & Robert Adler, Corpus Christi Elinor & Ben Donnell, Corpus Christi Marshall Iler, Cypress Steven R. Taake, Cypress Elaine Agather, Dallas Tory & Dick Agnich, Dallas Louis A. Beecherl Jr., Dallas Lucy Billingsley, Dallas Ana & Don Carty, Dallas Mary & Bill Ceverha, Dallas James H. Clement Jr., Dallas Jeanne Tower Cox, Dallas Betty & Marshall Doke, Dallas Rosemary & Roger Enrico, Dallas Gerald Ford, Dallas Debbie Francis, Dallas Taffy Goldsmith, Dallas Jan & Frederick B. Hegi Jr., Dallas Gail Madden, Dallas A.K. Mago, Dallas Cary M. Maguire, Dallas Denise McNamara, Dallas Hon. Fred Meyer, Dallas Hon. Tincy Miller, Dallas Sammye & Mike A. Myers, Dallas Erle Nye, Dallas Dr. C. Venkata Ram, Dallas Phil Ramono, Dallas Sue & Brett Ringle, Dallas Tara & Adam Ross, Dallas Terdema Ussery, Dallas Heather & Ray W. Washburne, Dallas Suzanne & John Adams, Dallas Ruth & Dr. Kenneth Altshuler, Dallas Gilbert Aranza, Dallas Edward Blessing, Dallas Jeanne & Rhodes Bobbitt, Dallas Ann & Garlan Braithwaite, Dallas Toni & Norm Brinker, Dallas Peggy & Peter Brodersen, Dallas Fred Bucy, Dallas Joe Burris, Dallas Peggy & M.W. Carr, Dallas John Castle, Dallas Cheryl & Stephen A. Coke, Dallas J. Jan Collmer, Dallas Gail & Dan Cook, Dallas Kathy & Harlan Crow, Dallas Regen Horchow Fearon, Dallas Kelli & Jerry Ford, Dallas Debbie & Eric Georgatos, Dallas Tricia & Hon. Kenn George, Dallas Donna German, Dallas Shannon & Jeff Graham, Dallas Diane & Mike Gruber, Dallas Jo Gudjohnsen, Dallas Susan Gwin, Dallas J.M. Hagger Jr., Dallas Gloria & Jack Hammack, Dallas Al G. Hill Jr., Dallas Carolyn & Roger Horchow, Dallas Jan Horne, Dallas Rosella & O.B. Hutchison, Dallas Mary Jalonick, Dallas Janet & Chuck Jarvie, Dallas Wendy & Michael Jenkins, Dallas Ramona Jones, Dallas Hon. Robert W. Jordan, Dallas Ann & Darrell Jordan, Dallas Richard Knight Jr., Dallas Joyce & Larry Lacerte, Dallas Cece & Ford Lacy, Dallas David Laney, Dallas Lisa & George Longino, Dallas Lee Maas, Dallas Sara & David Martineau, Dallas Ellen & Conrad Masterson, Dallas Linda & John McFarland, Dallas Ellen & John McStay, Dallas Dr. Ruth Morgan, Dallas Mike Moses, Dallas Dianne & Bill Moss, Dallas Regina & Charles Pistor, Dallas Patricia Porter, Dallas Kathryn Priddy, Dallas Caren H. Prothro, Dallas Chrisiane & Aaron Ramirez, Dallas Ashley & Mack Rankin, Dallas Trisha Robertson, Dallas Rhonda & Lee Russell, Dallas Pat & Pete Schenkel, Dallas Debra & Brian Shivers, Dallas Mary Ann Smith, Dallas Debbie & Don Snell, Dallas Gay & Bill Solomon, Dallas Merrie Spaeth, Dallas Marianne Staubach, Dallas Phyllis & Ron Steinhart, Dallas Mark W. Stiles, Dallas Gayle & Paul Stoffel, Dallas Jere W. Thompson, Dallas Jere W. Thompson Jr., Dallas Martha & David Tiller, Dallas Karin Torgerson, Dallas Ann Utley, Dallas Annette K. & Jack C. Vaughn, Dallas Robert C. Vaughn, Dallas Roger W. Wallace, Dallas Marcia & Bud Weinstein, Dallas Jane Wetzel, Dallas J.L. Sonny Williams, Dallas Marsha Williams, Dallas Trisha Wilson, Dallas Maxine & Bill Loafman, Decatur Susie & Ben Munson, Denison Kay Copeland, Denton Richard Hayes, Denton Carisa & Scott Armey, Denton Roy Orr, DeSoto Mary K. & Clifford Grum, Diboll Mary Lou & Pete Rygaard, Dickinson Kenneth Guest, Duncanville John Guest, Duncanville Mary Fae & Col. Herb Kamm, Duncanville Sherry & J. Robert Brown, El Paso Jack Cardwell, El Paso Bob Hoy, El Paso Jack Maxon, El Paso Sara McKnight, El Paso Oscar Javier Orneles, El Paso Hon. Joe Wardy, El Paso Patty Bruce, El Paso Susan & Ruben Guerra, El Paso Liza Montelongo, El Paso Frank E. Rust, Era Valerie Freeman, Farmers Branch Kevin Fowler, Flint Coleen Beck, Florence Sharon Roosevelt, Fort Stockton Estela Avery, Fredericksburg Debbie Campbell, Fredericksburg Lucille Rochs, Fredericksburg Barbara & James Nowlin, Friendswood Sherry & Jim Atwell, Friona Jyl & Jayson Grimsley, Friona Linda Hamilton, Ft. Bend Linda Hancock, Ft. Bend Joanne & Dick Bartlett, Ft. Davis Mercedes T. & Sid R. Bass, Ft. Worth Steve Laird, Ft. Worth Marsland & Richard W. Moncrief, Ft. Worth Kit & Charlie Moncrief, Ft. Worth Susie Tonymon, Ft. Worth Vicki S. & Edward P. Bass, Ft. Worth Fran & Bob Bolen, Ft. Worth Michael Brinkley, Ft. Worth Justin K. Grimsley, Ft. Worth Chad Lee, Ft. Worth Tom Moncrief, Ft. Worth Matthew K. Rose, Ft. Worth Charles Simmons, Ft. Worth James B. Earthman III, Galveston Carol Hasserd, Galveston Harris L. "Shrub" Kempner Jr., Galveston Kris Anne Vogelpohl, Galveston Pat & Fred Burns, Galveston Jane Hayley, Galveston Sydna Gordon, Garland Mayor Bob Day, Garland Angela Boone, Haltom City Anne Shepard, Harlingen Hon. William Card Jr., Harlingen Hon. Frank Morris, Harlingen Humberto Zamora, Harlingen Ann Gearn, Hereford Barbara & Chuck Bearden, Hillsboro Michelle & Lorne Bain, Houston Dwight Boykins, Houston Jim Braniff III, Houston Joan & Herman Buschor, Houston Penny & John Butler, Houston Hon. Peter R. Coneway, Houston John B. Connally III, Houston Jerry Cox, Houston Alfred Davis, Houston Melvin Dow, Houston Monica & Charles R. Eskridge III, Houston Cherie & Jim Flores, Houston Nina & Edd C. Hendee, Houston Kay & Ned S. Holmes, Houston Barbara & Don Jordan, Houston Betsy Lake, Houston Odysseus Lanier, Houston Drayton McLane Jr., Houston Nancy Palm, Houston Caroline & David Pierce, Houston Gary Polland, Houston Roger S. Sofer, Houston Ed Wulfe, Houston Fred Zeidman, Houston Linda & Max Addison, Houston Stanford Alexander, Houston Dr. Tom Arnold, Houston Dr. Dionel Aviles, Houston Dr. Alan Baum, Houston Judy & David J. Beck, Houston Elisabeth & Timothy Belton, Houston Jack S. Blanton Jr., Houston Patty Block, Houston David Bray, Houston J. Brett Busby, Houston Alberto P. "Beto" Cardenas Jr., Houston Clarence P. Cazalot Jr., Houston Helen T. Chang, Houston Jean & Robert Clarke, Houston Cindy Clifford, Houston Flo Crady, Houston Deavra Daughtry, Houston Katrin Debakey, Houston Linnet F. Deily, Houston Susie & Joe Dilg, Houston Sujeeth Draksharam, Houston Jan & Dan Duncan, Houston James Elkins, Houston Lily & Charles Foster, Houston Rachel & Dr. Bud Frazier, Houston Amber & Chad Gailey, Houston Curry Glassell, Houston Dan Hedges, Houston Carolyn & Tom Hodges, Houston Karen & Byron Hood, Houston Kara & Aaron Howes, Houston Elsie Huang, Houston Jack Hunt, Houston Jodie Jiles, Houston James Lloyd, Houston Merideth J. Long, Houston Debbie & Vidal Martinez, Houston Beth & Charles Miller, Houston Knox Nunnally, Houston Rafael Ortega, Houston Jan & William Ott, Houston Nancy Jane Otto, Houston Dustin Ouellette, Houston Katie Oxford, Houston Michael L. Peay, Houston Barbara & Corbin J. Robertson Jr., Houston Beth Robertson, Houston Erik Saenz, Houston Mary Schneider, Houston Margo & Hal Scholin, Houston Matt Scholin, Houston Itze & Jeff Soliz-Matthews, Houston W. Spencer Stasney, Houston Lorelei & Tom Sullivan, Houston Michael K. Swan, Houston Judy & Charles Tate, Houston George Thomas, Houston Dan Tutcher, Houston Chase Untermeyer, Houston Betsy Vaughan, Houston June & J. Virgil Waggoner, Houston Danielle & Ryan Walsh, Houston Ron Woods, Houston Elizabeth & Frank M. Wozencraft Jr., Houston James Ellis, Humble Estelle Teague, Hurst J. Fitz Boyle, Irving Kitty & John F. Boyle Jr., Irving Sissy & Jeff Austin Jr., Jacksonville Carolyn Clardy, Jacksonville Krystal Looney, Jacksonville Glenna & Kenny Pryor, Jacksonville Laurel & Duke DeWare, Jefferson Ann & Bill Crockett, Katy Nancy & Bill Allen, Kenedy Sandy & Ken Cailloux, Kerrville Fred Henneke, Kerrville Ellen Schoenfeld, Kerrville Susie & A.P. Merritt, Kilgore Ruben Martin, Kilgore Stephen J. "Tio" Kleberg, Kingsville Patricia S. "Pinky" Wilson, La Grange Linda & Frank Groseclose, Lago Vista Anne McKeithan, Lake Jackson Mundy & Pat Peale, Lake Kiowa Julie & Michael R. Bradle, Lampasas Celia Davis, Lampasas Jessie & Gary Jacobs, Laredo Dennis E. Nixon, Laredo Pat & David Cowan, Levelland Hon. Elvira & J.A. Reyna, Little Elm Melissa Tyroch, Little River Tory B. Virdell, Llano Hon. Windy & Frank Sitton, Lubbock Dianne Thompson, Lubbock Holley & Fernando Bustos, Lubbock Patti & Dr. Mark D. D'Alise, Lubbock Steve Fannin, Lubbock Paul Frazier, Lubbock Shirley Garrison, Lubbock David Harmon, Lubbock Amy & Todd Holt, Lubbock Stephen T. Krier, Lubbock George Love, Lubbock Cindy Massingill, Lubbock Christy McClendon, Lubbock Martha & Marciano Morales, Lubbock Lisa Nowlin, Lubbock Dona & Dr. Ralph E. Nussbaum, Lubbock Kathy & Barry Orr, Lubbock John Owens, Lubbock Linda J. Sadler, Lubbock Paula & David R. Seim, Lubbock Marsha G. Sharp, Lubbock Gwen & Lee Stafford, Lubbock Harold Brian Yearwood, Lubbock Mary & Dr. Tom Duncan, Lufkin Murphy George, Lufkin Lois Chambers, Lufkin Genie & Robert Flournoy, Lufkin Don Langston, Lufkin Romy & Carl Ray Polk, Lufkin Rosine & Stuart Carter, Luling Janice & Rick Baldwin, Magnolia Dorothy Crockett, Marble Falls Marge & Calvin Bentsen, McAllen Dr. Fred Farias III, McAllen Dolores & Daniel O. Rios, McAllen Glen E. Roney, McAllen Sam Vale, McAllen Tom Engibous, McKinney Lynn & Hon. Ron Harris, McKinney Janice & James Huckaby, Mesquite Rosalind Redfern & Arden R. Grover, Midland Patty & Tevis Herd, Midland Susie Hitchcock-Hall, Midland Joe O'Neill, Midland Juandelle Lacy Roberts, Midland Medora & Robert Beecherl, Midland Billie & Jim Ross, Midland Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Younger, Midland Hon. Celia Boswell, Mineola Susan & Mike Enoch, Mont Belvieu Miriam Burton, Montgomery Irene Kerr, Montgomery Judy & Bob Smith, Montgomery Sally & Hon. Bill Ratliff, Mount Pleasant Julie & J.D. Cage, Muleshoe Pattye Greer, Nacogdoches Dr. Nancy C. Speck & A.L. Mangham, Nacogdoches Florence Fitch Patton, Nacogdoches Linda Sisk, Nacogdoches Hon. Roger Van Horn, Nacogdoches Hon. Jan & Dr. Don Kennady, New Braunfels Carter & Tom Casteel, New Braunfels Bruce K. Jacobson Jr., North Richland Hills Mayor Peter Dewing, Northlake Alice Belew, Odessa Daniel J. Hollmann, Odessa Dewey Meyers, Odessa Susan & John Tripplehorn, Pampa Janis & Bill Bailey, Pasadena William Christopher Caudill, Pearland Hon. Phyllis Cole, Plano Bobby Ray, Plano Myra & Jim Boswell, Plano Karen & Mike Brodie, Plano Dixie Clem, Plano Hon. Pat Evans, Plano Sharon & David McCall, Plano Betty & James Muns, Plano Betty Turner, Port Aransas Hon. Carl Griffith Jr., Port Arthur Bobbie Prince, Port Arthur Dorothy Adler, Richardson Julie & Bob Driegert, Richardson Hilmar Moore, Richmond Rebecca & David Contreras, Round Rock Karl Miller, Round Rock Amy & John Uppeman, Round Rock Cynthia & Gene Thornton, Round Top Carla McCroan, Royse City Charles Hassell, Rusk Teresa & Billy Langley, Rusk Mayor Angela Raiborn, Rusk Josie Schoolcraft, Rusk Rich Castle, Salado Borah Van Dormolen, Salado Annette & Tom Hopkins, San Angelo Amy & J. Mark McLaughlin, San Angelo Steve Stephens, San Angelo Mary Jeanne & Don Coers, San Angelo Ernesto Ancira Jr., San Antonio Mario A. Barrera, San Antonio Ann & Sam Barshop, San Antonio Victoria M. Garcia, San Antonio Greg King, San Antonio Joe Krier, San Antonio Diane & Gary Rath, San Antonio Carol & Joe Van De Walle, San Antonio Edward E. Whitacre Jr., San Antonio Judy & Jim Adams, San Antonio Dr. & Mrs. Basil E. Atkinson Jr., San Antonio Barbara & Cal Banker, San Antonio Mario Barrerra, San Antonio Nancy & Charles Cheever Jr., San Antonio Bebe Crain, San Antonio Dorothy Doehne, San Antonio Robert Flores, San Antonio Sandra & Henry Gray, San Antonio Olive Ann & Richard Kleberg, San Antonio Beth Plummer, San Antonio Dianne & Boone Powell, San Antonio Reagan Rath, San Antonio Susan D. Reed, San Antonio Marian K. Stanko, San Antonio Mario Vazquez, San Antonio Seagal Wheatley, San Antonio Mayor Susan & Miguel Narvaiz, San Marcos Elizabeth & Chuck Nash, San Marcos Babs & Dennis Rygaard, Santa Fe Trish & George Antuna, Schertz Sheryl Bonilla, Schertz Beth & Robert Cathey, Shavano Park Hon. Clyde Siebman, Sherman Mary Ann & Lewis C. Miltenberger, Southlake Charles S. Teeple, Spicewood Gary L. Thompson, Spicewood Phillip Rummell, Spring Clayton Settle, Sugarland Frank Stanley, Sugarland Beth & Homer Taylor, Sweetwater Hon. Dianne White Delisi, Temple Zora Hutchison, Temple Josh & Martha Morriss, Texarkana Claudia & Pete Snow, Texarkana Charles T. Doyle, Texas City Billie & Henry Brooks, The Woodlands Ulupi & Asit Choksi, The Woodlands Angel McShane, The Woodlands Julia Morton, The Woodlands Dr. L.S. Foreman, Tulia Sherrie & Leroy Salas, Tuscola Amy Webb, Tye Evelyn & Wayne Webb, Tye Mayor Barbara Bass, Tyler Sunni & Britton P. Brookshire, Tyler Margaret & Jim Perkins, Tyler Sherilyn & Patrick Willis, Tyler Bess & J.W. Arnold, Tyler Marilyn & John D. Glass Jr., Tyler Homer Hayes, Tyler Pat & Jack Johns, Tyler Don Kent, Tyler Dr. Kimberly Russell, Tyler Bryan Selden, Tyler Dr. Aubrey D. Sharpe, Tyler J.B. Smith, Tyler Sarah Van Cleef, Tyler Nancy B. Wrenn, Tyler Christopher J. Wrenn, Tyler Kelly Couch, Vernon Hally & Thurman Clements, Victoria Bridget & Bob Gayle, Victoria Robert J. Hewitt Jr., Victoria Morgan Dunn O'Connor, Victoria Don Truman, Victoria Bette-Jo Buhler, Victoria Pat & Bill Knebel, Victoria Nancy & David Lacy, Waco Monte Hulse, Waco Tone' & Bill Mahon, Waco Don Wilson, Waxahachie Anne Bergman, Weatherford Audrey LaFleur, Weatherford Jo & Bill Summers, Weslaco JoAnn & Doug Mayer, Westlake Ruth Ford, Westlake Hills Joel Yowell, Wharton Pam & Warren Ayres, Wichita Falls Jacque & David Allen, Wichita Falls Kay Yeager, Wichita Falls

Rick Perry published a list of people supporting his bid for reelection as governor of Texas.Here it is, as he presented it, followed by an easier-to-read version (and here's a link to the list published in January by his Republican primary opponent, U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison). There's also a version of his list sorted by city available here.

Statewide Finance Co-Chairs Roy W. Bailey Jim Lee Gene Powell Regional Finance Chairs Rick L. Campbell, East Texas Joe Colonnetta, North Texas Ted Houghton, West Texas Margaret Martin, South Texas Vance C. Miller, North Texas Mica Mosbacher, Southeast Texas John T. Steen Jr., Central Texas Statewide Finance Committee Jon F. Abrams, El Paso Kent M. Adams, Houston Phil D. Adams, Bryan Durga D. Agrawal, Houston Jeran Akers, Plano Nicole and David Alders, Nacogdoches Capy Alexander, Kerrville Barkat Ali, Southlake Dr. Chad Allen, Corpus Christi Joe B. Allen, Houston Chuck and Tina Anastos, Corpus Christi Larry Anders, Plano Ken Anderson, Dallas Joe Aragona, Austin Susanne Lee Archer, Euless Beau Armstrong, Austin Gary Arnett, Pottsboro Elvia and Adrian Arriaga, McAllen Kay and Lonnie Arrington, Beaumont Moshe Azoulay, Dallas W. Mike Baggett, Dallas Bill Bailey, Waco Roy W. Bailey, Dallas Johnny Baker, Houston Bob Barnes, Granbury Cindy Barnes, Austin Roy R. Barrera Jr., San Antonio Traci and Louis Barrios, San Antonio Carin and Todd Barth, Houston Kurt Barton, Austin Ramona and Lee M. Bass, Fort Worth Ricky Beach, New Braunfels Drew Beadle, Beaumont Bunny and Dr. Richard Becker, San Antonio Julie Beecherl, Dallas T. Craig Benson, Austin Joanie Bentzin, Austin Connie and Ron Betenbough, Lubbock Gina and Dr. Devinder Bhatia, Houston Mark Bivins, Amarillo Nelda Luce Blair and Jim Blair, The Woodlands Jeff Booth, Fair Oaks Ranch Dr. William A. Boothe, Plano Becky Borah-Nelson, Bertram Gina Bridwell, Abilene Chip Briscoe, Carrizo Springs Rebecca and Rod Broussard, Willis Georgia and J. Dan Brown, Austin Greg Bruce, Lubbock Lance K. Bruun, Corpus Christi J. Bruce Bugg Jr., San Antonio Jere Lynn and Jim Burkhart, Lubbock Bobby Burns, Midland Cindy and Bruce Busby, Austin Cliff Butler, Mt. Pleasant John D. Byram, Austin Lance R. Byrd, Dallas Cain Caceres, Weslaco Jyl and Randy Cain, San Antonio James E. Campbell, Center Rick L. Campbell, Center Jennifer Cannon and Bradford Hunter, Austin Rosendo Carranco, Laredo Manny Cavazos, Austin Rose M. and Luis Cavazos, Brownsville Stephanie Cavender, San Antonio Bonnie Chambers, San Antonio Sue Chiang, Sugar Land Margaret Ballenger Cluck, San Antonio Joe Colonnetta, Dallas C. Kent Conine, Dallas Gary C. Cook, Dallas Harold D. Courson, Perryton Don Covington, Orange Michael K. Crosno, Austin Joe Crutcher, Palestine Jose Cuevas, Midland Kristy and Kelly Curry, Lubbock Silvia and Tom Cusick, Boerne Jim Dannenbaum, Houston Richard Davila, Lubbock Gene Dawson Jr., San Antonio John Paul DeJoria, Austin Jorge de la Garza, Brownsville Glenn Deitiker, Austin Brent deMoville, Waco Sue and Dr. David DeVillez, Georgetown Leslie Doggett, Houston Joseph F. Domino, Beaumont James D. Dondero, Dallas Keith Drewery, Nacogdoches Ralph H. Duggins, Fort Worth Mark Dulworth, Houston Tim Dunn, Midland Larry Durrett, Jacksonville Lori Edwards, Midland Beau Egert, Houston J. Ralph Ellis Jr., Irving Dr. Tony Falcon, Rio Grande City Gary Farmer, Austin Don Faust Jr., Houston Tyson Faust, Houston Lydia and Noe Fernandez, McAllen Paige and Tilman Fertitta, Houston Jan and Keith Fitzgerald, Keller Blair and Joseph Fitzsimons, San Antonio Deana Flippin, New Braunfels Janice and Manny Flores, Austin Robbi and Stuart Force, Lubbock Alejandra and Paul Foster, El Paso Morris Foster, Salado Jeffery H. Foutch, Houston Lupe Fraga, Sugar Land L. Frederick “Rick” Francis, El Paso Debra and Dan Friedkin, Houston Melinda and David E. Friedman, Austin Paul Frison, Houston Melissa and Gary W. Gates Jr., Rosenburg Robert Gauntt, Houston Cynthia and Kirk Gentry, Lubbock Barnett L. Gershen, Houston Tina and Mike Gibson, Sugar Land John T. Gill, M.D., Dallas Elaine and Kevin Glasheen, Lubbock Tom Glanville, Houston Dennis D. Golden, O. D., Carthage Dixon Golden, O. D., Center Ronnie Goldman, Fort Worth John J. Gorman IV, Austin Jim Grace, Houston Dr. Margarita de la Garza-Grahm, Tyler Dr. Thomas W. Grahm, Tyler Jim Greer, Houston Windi and David M. Grimes, II, Houston Martha Gustavsen, Conroe Beth and Harold Hahn, El Paso Stevan Hammond, Dallas Linda and Stanley Harper, Mansfield Patti and Alan Harper, Arlington Barrett Havran, Fort Worth Joy Ann and Bob Havran, Fort Worth Jim Hawkins, Waco CJ Haynes, The Woodlands Margaret and James Herring, Amarillo Karen and Ron Herrmann, San Antonio Michelle and Dr. Randy Hickle, Lubbock Donna Stockton Hicks and Steve Hicks, Austin Gloria and Ed Hicks, Corpus Christi Thomas O. Hicks, Dallas Joe B. Hinton, Crawford Karen Hixon, San Antonio J. Kelly and Scott H. Hoag, Kyle Jarvis Hollingsworth, Sugar Land Bobby Holt, Midland Julianna Hawn Holt and Peter M. Holt, Blanco Larry G. Holt, College Station Ruben Hope, Montgomery Steven F. Hotze, M.D., Houston Hettie and Ted Houghton, El Paso Reagan Houston IV, San Antonio Robert Howden, Austin Sue and Dr. Gaylord Hoyt, Corpus Christi Molly Hubbard, Houston Sharon Schoch Hubbard and Dr. Jason Hubbard, Austin William Hudson, Brownsville John Huffaker, Amarillo Patty and James Huffines, Austin Phillip W. Huffines, Dallas Sydney Huffines, Dallas Dan A. Hughes Sr., Beeville Peggy G. Hughes and Dan Allen Hughes Jr., Beeville Gaylord T. Hughey Jr., Tyler Anne and Jeff Hunt, Austin Gayle and Woody Hunt, El Paso Robert W. Hunt, San Antonio Kathleen Jackson, Beaumont J.D. Jacobs, Rockwall Cynthia Jenkins, Irving Tom Johnson, Austin Rhonda Castle and James Jonas, Austin Charles F. Jordan III, El Paso Glenda and Jerry Kane, Corpus Christi Sam Kannappan, Houston Craig Keeland, Plano R. David Kelly, Dallas Claudell Kercheville, Kerrville Kathy and David King, Nacogdoches Linda W. Kinney, Dripping Springs David W. Koonce, Center JC and Trisha Kranz, Spring Sheri Shelby Krause and Winston Krause, Austin Rob Kyker, Richardson Joy Kyriakopoulos, Harper Carolyn and Alan Lackey, Lubbock Rick Lambert, Tyler Karen Landa, Austin Bob Langer, Austin Rex Law, Pittsburg Sheryl and Gary Lawrence, Lubbock Howard L. Lawson, Dallas Sharon and Mike Leach, Lubbock Amy and Jim Lee, Houston Bobby Lee, Amarillo Danny Lee, Amarillo Christie McAdams Leedy, D.D.S., Abilene Janet and Philip L. Leggett, M.D., Houston James R. Leininger, M.D., San Antonio Richard A. Levacy, M.D., Beaumont Ron Lewis, Austin Kevin Lilly, Houston Les Littleton, Nacogdoches Kim Locus, Dallas Renee and Mickey Long, Midland Sue and Bob Long, Bastrop Janiece Longoria, Houston Charlotte and Rob Looney, Austin Miguel Lopez, The Woodlands Michael J. Lowthorp, Arlington Maria and Fred Loya, El Paso Steve Lucas, Beaumont William R. Lucas, Beaumont Lisa Lucero, Austin Eugene H. "Stretch" Lund, Sherman Cora Sue and Harry Mach, Houston Steven P. Mach, Houston Sarah and Jimmy Mansour, Austin Frank W. Maresh, Hunt John Marlin, Dallas Kim and Robert Marling, The Woodlands Linda and Larry Martin, Houston Margaret Martin, Laredo Stan Matthews, Beaumont Mayor Nyle Maxwell, Round Rock Mark Mays, San Antonio Peggy and Lowry Mays, San Antonio Randall Mays, San Antonio Edith McAllister, San Antonio Charline and Red McCombs, San Antonio Buddy McCulloch, Texarkana Eric C. McDonald, Lubbock Carolyn and Delbert McDougal, Lubbock Melissa and Mike McDougal, Lubbock Pam and Mark McDougal, Lubbock Colleen McHugh, Corpus Christi Missy and Allen McInnes, Lubbock Linda McKenna, Harlingen Becky McKinley, Amarillo Ross McKnight, Throckmorton Sonia A. McMasters, Round Rock Alex Meade, Brownsville Lamont E. Meaux, Stowell Jewell and Ed Miles Jr., San Antonio Vance C. Miller, Dallas David Montagne, Beaumont Gerry Montefalcon, San Antonio Debbie and John T. Montford, San Antonio Jacob M. Monty, Houston Hon. Rick Morales, Donna Carla Moran, Lubbock Judy and Dr. Jim Morgan, Texarkana S. Reed Morian, Houston Mica Mosbacher, Houston John Mullen, Austin Dennis E. Murphree, Houston Jayaram Naidu, M.D., Odessa David Nance, Austin Dr. Carlos F. Navarro, Dallas Nancy and Dr. Thomas Neal, Lubbock Beverly and Gary D. Newsom, M.D., Austin Jim Noteware, Houston Tom D. O’Leary, Houston Becky Oliver, San Antonio Bob Ostos, Laguna Vista Dr. Laura San Martin and Rolando Pablos, San Antonio Carmen and Kevin Pagan, McAllen Frank Parker Jr., Brownsville Linda Pate, Corpus Christi Gita S. and Subodh Patel, Lubbock Dan Pearson, Austin Donna and Bob Pearson, Austin Lisa and Tom Perini, Buffalo Gap Cynthia B. and Thomas O. Perry, New Braunfels Doylene and Bob Perry, Houston Kristen and John Perry, Houston Elizabeth and Gary Petersen, Houston Carol F. Peterson, Alpine Dade Phelan, Beaumont Roxanne and Gene Phillips, Dallas Bo Pilgrim, Pittsburg James D. Pitcock Jr., Houston Sharon Pittman, College Station Leslie and Dr. David Pohl, Austin Dawn and Allan Polunsky, San Antonio Dana and Gene Powell, San Antonio Wm. Cameron Powell, M.D., San Antonio J.R. Purvis, Midland Carmen and Jaime Ramon, Dallas Dr. Rudy Ramos, Houston Terri and Bob Ranck, Lubbock Clayton N. Reaser, Dallas Emily and Vernon Reaser, Bellaire Felicity and John Reedy, Tyler Jordan Reese, Beaumont Michael Angelo Renna, Austin Dede and Paul Rider, Lubbock Cynthia and Whit Riter, Tyler Tresa Rockwell, Austin Maria Cristina Rodriguez, San Antonio Elizabeth and Wallace "Happy" Rogers, San Antonio Monica Rojas, Boerne Lynden B. Rose, Houston Hollis Rutledge, McAllen Mayor Beto Salinas, Mission Jill and Rick Salwen, Austin Laura and Jeff Sandefer, Austin Kenton Schaefer, Brownsville Kristi and John D. Schiller Jr., Houston Debi and Jim Schneider, Austin Robert N. Schnitzler, M.D., San Antonio Dianne and Dr. Eugene Schoch, Austin Bill Scott, Beaumont Connie and Mike Scott, Corpus Christi Rose and Dick Scott, Wimberley Ray Sepulveda, Cedar Park Viveca and Nick Serafy Jr., Brownsville Canda and Ron Sewell, Odessa Mike Shaw, Fredericksburg Rick Sheldon, Waco Bob Shepard, Harlingen Lex Ann and Mike Shinn, The Woodlands David Shipman, Burleson Reba Showers, McAllen Dave Sikora, Austin Harold Simmons, Dallas L.E. Simmons, Houston Alan L. Smith, Houston Bruce Smith, Houston E. Ashley Smith, Houston Edward N. Smith III, Marshall Norma and Richard Smith, Bryan John Snider, Center Kenny Speight, The Woodlands Dr. Bob Stafford, Amarillo David Starr, San Antonio Dick Stebbins, Longview Weisie and John T. Steen Jr., San Antonio Jaemie and John Steinmetz, Lubbock Nancy and Edward Steves, San Antonio Paul Stewart, Dallas Gail and Robert “Bobby” Stillwell, Houston Steven H. Stodghill, Dallas George Strake Jr., Houston George W. "Trey" Strake III, Houston John Stuart, Spring Branch Elisabeth and Karl W. Swann, M.D., San Antonio Annette Sykora, Lubbock Maria F. Teran, El Paso Connie and David Teuscher, M.D., Beaumont Clifton L. Thomas Jr., Victoria Jim Thorp, Houston Leslie and Tim Timmerman, Austin James H. Tipton, Rancho Viejo Gary Todd, Burleson Carroll Trawick, Tyler J. C. "Pepe" Trevino III, Laredo Tony Trevino, Laredo Lisa and Kenny Troutt, Dallas Pam and Fred Underwood, Lubbock Gene Van Dyke, Houston Amy and George Van Horn, The Woodlands Victor Vandergriff, Arlington Don Walker, San Antonio Craig Wallace, Lubbock Dick Wallrath, Centerville Robert L. Waltrip, Houston Leigh and Hon. Andy Wambsganss, Southlake Leslie Ward, Austin Curt Warner, Austin Rodney Watkins, Mineola Chuck Watson, Houston Laurie Brown Watson, Austin Marc Watts, Houston Rad Weaver, San Antonio Dick Weekley, Houston Connie and David Weeks, Austin Daisy Sloan White and John D. White, Houston Laurie and John White, San Antonio Donna Wick, Spring Pam and Dr. George Willeford Jr., Austin Earl Williams, Beaumont Modesta and Clayton W. Williams, Midland Sharon and Jim Wilson, Sugar Land Welcome Wilson Jr., Houston Welcome W. Wilson Sr., Houston Cassandra and Brad Wolfe, Brownsville Jason Wolfe, Brownsville Jack Wood, Odessa A. John Yoggerst, San Antonio Eddie Zamora, Edinburg

Gov. Rick Perry published a list of people supporting his bid for reelection, probably against Republican U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. This version is sorted by city (here's the list as he presented it). Hutchison's list, issued earlier in the year, is here. Gina Bridwell, Abilene Christie McAdams Leedy, Abilene Carol F. Peterson, Alpine Mark Bivins, Amarillo Margaret and James Herring, Amarillo John Huffaker, Amarillo Bobby Lee, Amarillo Danny Lee, Amarillo Becky McKinley, Amarillo Dr. Bob Stafford, Amarillo Patti and Alan Harper, Arlington Michael J. Lowthorp, Arlington Victor Vandergriff, Arlington Joe Aragona, Austin Beau Armstrong, Austin Cindy Barnes, Austin Kurt Barton, Austin T. Craig Benson, Austin Joanie Bentzin, Austin Georgia and J. Dan Brown, Austin Cindy and Bruce Busby, Austin John D. Byram, Austin Jennifer Cannon and Bradford Hunter, Austin Manny Cavazos, Austin Michael K. Crosno, Austin John Paul DeJoria, Austin Glenn Deitiker, Austin Gary Farmer, Austin Janice and Manny Flores, Austin Melinda and David E. Friedman, Austin John J. Gorman IV, Austin Donna Stockton Hicks and Steve Hicks, Austin Robert Howden, Austin Sharon Schoch Hubbard and Dr. Jason Hubbard, Austin Patty and James Huffines, Austin Anne and Jeff Hunt, Austin Tom Johnson, Austin Rhonda Castle and James Jonas, Austin Sheri Shelby Krause and Winston Krause, Austin Karen Landa, Austin Bob Langer, Austin Ron Lewis, Austin Charlotte and Rob Looney, Austin Lisa Lucero, Austin Sarah and Jimmy Mansour, Austin John Mullen, Austin David Nance, Austin Beverly and Gary D. Newsom, Austin Dan Pearson, Austin Donna and Bob Pearson, Austin Leslie and Dr. David Pohl, Austin Michael Angelo Renna, Austin Tresa Rockwell, Austin Jill and Rick Salwen, Austin Laura and Jeff Sandefer, Austin Debi and Jim Schneider, Austin Dianne and Dr. Eugene Schoch, Austin Dave Sikora, Austin Leslie and Tim Timmerman, Austin Leslie Ward, Austin Curt Warner, Austin Laurie Brown Watson, Austin Connie and David Weeks, Austin Pam and Dr. George Willeford Jr., Austin Sue and Bob Long, Bastrop Kay and Lonnie Arrington, Beaumont Drew Beadle, Beaumont Joseph F. Domino, Beaumont Kathleen Jackson, Beaumont Richard A. Levacy, Beaumont Steve Lucas, Beaumont William R. Lucas, Beaumont Stan Matthews, Beaumont David Montagne, Beaumont Dade Phelan, Beaumont Jordan Reese, Beaumont Bill Scott, Beaumont Connie and David Teuscher, Beaumont Earl Williams, Beaumont Dan A. Hughes Sr., Beeville Peggy G. Hughes and Dan Allen Hughes Jr., Beeville Emily and Vernon Reaser, Bellaire Becky Borah-Nelson, Bertram Julianna Hawn Holt and Peter M. Holt, Blanco Silvia and Tom Cusick, Boerne Monica Rojas, Boerne Rose M. and Luis Cavazos, Brownsville Jorge de la Garza, Brownsville William Hudson, Brownsville Alex Meade, Brownsville Frank Parker Jr., Brownsville Kenton Schaefer, Brownsville Viveca and Nick Serafy Jr., Brownsville Cassandra and Brad Wolfe, Brownsville Jason Wolfe, Brownsville Phil D. Adams, Bryan Norma and Richard Smith, Bryan Lisa and Tom Perini, Buffalo Gap David Shipman, Burleson Gary Todd, Burleson Chip Briscoe, Carrizo Springs Dennis D. Golden, Carthage Ray Sepulveda, Cedar Park James E. Campbell, Center Rick L. Campbell, Center Dixon Golden, Center David W. Koonce, Center John Snider, Center Dick Wallrath, Centerville Larry G. Holt, College Station Sharon Pittman, College Station Martha Gustavsen, Conroe Dr. Chad Allen, Corpus Christi Chuck and Tina Anastos, Corpus Christi Lance K. Bruun, Corpus Christi Gloria and Ed Hicks, Corpus Christi Sue and Dr. Gaylord Hoyt, Corpus Christi Glenda and Jerry Kane, Corpus Christi Colleen McHugh, Corpus Christi Linda Pate, Corpus Christi Connie and Mike Scott, Corpus Christi Joe B. Hinton, Crawford Ken Anderson, Dallas Moshe Azoulay, Dallas W. Mike Baggett, Dallas Roy W. Bailey, Dallas Julie Beecherl, Dallas Lance R. Byrd, Dallas Joe Colonnetta, Dallas C. Kent Conine, Dallas Gary C. Cook, Dallas James D. Dondero, Dallas John T. Gill, Dallas Stevan Hammond, Dallas Thomas O. Hicks, Dallas Phillip W. Huffines, Dallas Sydney Huffines, Dallas R. David Kelly, Dallas Howard L. Lawson, Dallas Kim Locus, Dallas John Marlin, Dallas Vance C. Miller, Dallas Dr. Carlos F. Navarro, Dallas Roxanne and Gene Phillips, Dallas Carmen and Jaime Ramon, Dallas Clayton N. Reaser, Dallas Harold Simmons, Dallas Paul Stewart, Dallas Steven H. Stodghill, Dallas Lisa and Kenny Troutt, Dallas Hon. Rick Morales, Donna Linda W. Kinney, Dripping Springs Eddie Zamora, Edinburg Jon F. Abrams, El Paso Alejandra and Paul Foster, El Paso L. Frederick “Rick” Francis, El Paso Beth and Harold Hahn, El Paso Hettie and Ted Houghton, El Paso Gayle and Woody Hunt, El Paso Charles F. Jordan III, El Paso Maria and Fred Loya, El Paso Maria F. Teran, El Paso Susanne Lee Archer, Euless Jeff Booth, Fair Oaks Ranch Ramona and Lee M. Bass, Fort Worth Ralph H. Duggins, Fort Worth Ronnie Goldman, Fort Worth Barrett Havran, Fort Worth Joy Ann and Bob Havran, Fort Worth Mike Shaw, Fredericksburg Sue and Dr. David DeVillez, Georgetown Bob Barnes, Granbury Linda McKenna, Harlingen Bob Shepard, Harlingen Joy Kyriakopoulos, Harper Kent M. Adams, Houston Durga D. Agrawal, Houston Joe B. Allen, Houston Johnny Baker, Houston Carin and Todd Barth, Houston Gina and Dr. Devinder Bhatia, Houston Jim Dannenbaum, Houston Leslie Doggett, Houston Mark Dulworth, Houston Beau Egert, Houston Don Faust Jr., Houston Tyson Faust, Houston Paige and Tilman Fertitta, Houston Jeffery H. Foutch, Houston Debra and Dan Friedkin, Houston Paul Frison, Houston Robert Gauntt, Houston Barnett L. Gershen, Houston Tom Glanville, Houston Jim Grace, Houston Jim Greer, Houston Windi and David M. Grimes II, Houston Steven F. Hotze, Houston Molly Hubbard, Houston Sam Kannappan, Houston Amy and Jim Lee, Houston Janet and Philip L. Leggett, Houston Kevin Lilly, Houston Janiece Longoria, Houston Cora Sue and Harry Mach, Houston Steven P. Mach, Houston Linda and Larry Martin, Houston Jacob M. Monty, Houston S. Reed Morian, Houston Mica Mosbacher, Houston Dennis E. Murphree, Houston Jim Noteware, Houston Tom D. O’Leary, Houston Doylene and Bob Perry, Houston Kristen and John Perry, Houston Elizabeth and Gary Petersen, Houston James D. Pitcock Jr., Houston Dr. Rudy Ramos, Houston Lynden B. Rose, Houston Kristi and John D. Schiller Jr., Houston L.E. Simmons, Houston Alan L. Smith, Houston Bruce Smith, Houston E. Ashley Smith, Houston Gail and Robert “Bobby” Stillwell, Houston George Strake Jr., Houston George W. "Trey" Strake III, Houston Jim Thorp, Houston Gene Van Dyke, Houston Robert L. Waltrip, Houston Chuck Watson, Houston Marc Watts, Houston Dick Weekley, Houston Daisy Sloan White and John D. White, Houston Welcome Wilson Jr., Houston Welcome W. Wilson Sr., Houston Frank W. Maresh, Hunt J. Ralph Ellis Jr., Irving Cynthia Jenkins, Irving Larry Durrett, Jacksonville Jan and Keith Fitzgerald, Keller Capy Alexander, Kerrville Claudell Kercheville, Kerrville J. Kelly and Scott H. Hoag, Kyle Bob Ostos, Laguna Vista Rosendo Carranco, Laredo Margaret Martin, Laredo J. C. "Pepe" Trevino III, Laredo Tony Trevino, Laredo Dick Stebbins, Longview Connie and Ron Betenbough, Lubbock Greg Bruce, Lubbock Jere Lynn and Jim Burkhart, Lubbock Kristy and Kelly Curry, Lubbock Richard Davila, Lubbock Robbi and Stuart Force, Lubbock Cynthia and Kirk Gentry, Lubbock Elaine and Kevin Glasheen, Lubbock Michelle and Dr. Randy Hickle, Lubbock Carolyn and Alan Lackey, Lubbock Sheryl and Gary Lawrence, Lubbock Sharon and Mike Leach, Lubbock Eric C. McDonald, Lubbock Carolyn and Delbert McDougal, Lubbock Melissa and Mike McDougal, Lubbock Pam and Mark McDougal, Lubbock Missy and Allen McInnes, Lubbock Carla Moran, Lubbock Nancy and Dr. Thomas Neal, Lubbock Gita S. and Subodh Patel, Lubbock Terri and Bob Ranck, Lubbock Dede and Paul Rider, Lubbock Jaemie and John Steinmetz, Lubbock Annette Sykora, Lubbock Pam and Fred Underwood, Lubbock Craig Wallace, Lubbock Linda and Stanley Harper, Mansfield Edward N. Smith III, Marshall Elvia and Adrian Arriaga, McAllen Lydia and Noe Fernandez, McAllen Carmen and Kevin Pagan, McAllen Hollis Rutledge, McAllen Reba Showers, McAllen Bobby Burns, Midland Jose Cuevas, Midland Tim Dunn, Midland Lori Edwards, Midland Bobby Holt, Midland Renee and Mickey Long, Midland J.R. Purvis, Midland Modesta and Clayton W. Williams, Midland Rodney Watkins, Mineola Mayor Beto Salinas, Mission Ruben Hope, Montgomery Cliff Butler, Mt. Pleasant Nicole and David Alders, Nacogdoches Keith Drewery, Nacogdoches Kathy and David King, Nacogdoches Les Littleton, Nacogdoches Ricky Beach, New Braunfels Deana Flippin, New Braunfels Cynthia B. and Thomas O. Perry, New Braunfels Jayaram Naidu, Odessa Canda and Ron Sewell, Odessa Jack Wood, Odessa Don Covington, Orange Joe Crutcher, Palestine Harold D. Courson, Perryton Rex Law, Pittsburg Bo Pilgrim, Pittsburg Jeran Akers, Plano Larry Anders, Plano Dr. William A. Boothe, Plano Craig Keeland, Plano Gary Arnett, Pottsboro James H. Tipton, Rancho Viejo Rob Kyker, Richardson Dr. Tony Falcon, Rio Grande City J.D. Jacobs, Rockwall Melissa and Gary W. Gates Jr., Rosenburg Mayor Nyle Maxwell, Round Rock Sonia A. McMasters, Round Rock Morris Foster, Salado Roy R. Barrera Jr., San Antonio Traci and Louis Barrios, San Antonio Bunny and Dr. Richard Becker, San Antonio J. Bruce Bugg Jr., San Antonio Jyl and Randy Cain, San Antonio Stephanie Cavender, San Antonio Bonnie Chambers, San Antonio Margaret Ballenger Cluck, San Antonio Gene Dawson Jr., San Antonio Blair and Joseph Fitzsimons, San Antonio Karen and Ron Herrmann, San Antonio Karen Hixon, San Antonio Reagan Houston IV, San Antonio Robert W. Hunt, San Antonio James R. Leininger, San Antonio Mark Mays, San Antonio Peggy and Lowry Mays, San Antonio Randall Mays, San Antonio Edith McAllister, San Antonio Charline and Red McCombs, San Antonio Jewell and Ed Miles Jr., San Antonio Gerry Montefalcon, San Antonio Debbie and John T. Montford, San Antonio Becky Oliver, San Antonio Dr. Laura San Martin and Rolando Pablos, San Antonio Dawn and Allan Polunsky, San Antonio Dana and Gene Powell, San Antonio Wm. Cameron Powell, San Antonio Maria Cristina Rodriguez, San Antonio Elizabeth and Wallace "Happy" Rogers, San Antonio Robert N. Schnitzler, San Antonio David Starr, San Antonio Weisie and John T. Steen Jr., San Antonio Nancy and Edward Steves, San Antonio Elisabeth and Karl W. Swann, San Antonio Don Walker, San Antonio Rad Weaver, San Antonio Laurie and John White, San Antonio A. John Yoggerst, San Antonio Eugene H. "Stretch" Lund, Sherman Barkat Ali, Southlake Leigh and Hon. Andy Wambsganss, Southlake JC and Trisha Kranz, Spring Donna Wick, Spring John Stuart, Spring Branch Lamont E. Meaux, Stowell Sue Chiang, Sugar Land Lupe Fraga, Sugar Land Tina and Mike Gibson, Sugar Land Jarvis Hollingsworth, Sugar Land Sharon and Jim Wilson, Sugar Land Buddy McCulloch, Texarkana Judy and Dr. Jim Morgan, Texarkana Nelda Luce Blair and Jim Blair, The Woodlands CJ Haynes, The Woodlands Miguel Lopez, The Woodlands Kim and Robert Marling, The Woodlands Lex Ann and Mike Shinn, The Woodlands Kenny Speight, The Woodlands Amy and George Van Horn, The Woodlands Ross McKnight, Throckmorton Dr. Margarita de la Garza-Grahm, Tyler Dr. Thomas W. Grahm, Tyler Gaylord T. Hughey Jr., Tyler Rick Lambert, Tyler Felicity and John Reedy, Tyler Cynthia and Whit Riter, Tyler Carroll Trawick, Tyler Clifton L. Thomas Jr., Victoria Bill Bailey, Waco Brent deMoville, Waco Jim Hawkins, Waco Rick Sheldon, Waco Cain Caceres, Weslaco Rebecca and Rod Broussard, Willis Rose and Dick Scott, Wimberley

We mashed up the supporter lists issued by Gov. Rick Perry and U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and sorted them by city so you can see how folks are lining up where you live. Hutchison supporters are in italics; Perry's in regular type.Gina Bridwell, Abilene Christie McAdams Leedy, Abilene Gray Bridwell, Abilene Tucker Bridwell, Abilene Jo & Joe Ed Cannon, Abilene Joy & Steve Ellinger, Abilene Janet Payne, Abilene Dian Owen Stai, Abilene Dr. & Mrs. Chuck Anderson, Abilene Denice Bailey, Abilene Debbie & John Blake, Abilene Betty & Alton Davis, Abilene Myra Dean, Abilene Jody & Jerry DePriest, Abilene Sara Field, Abilene Claire & Dr. John Johnson, Abilene Denise Jones, Abilene Kristina Jones, Abilene Diane & Bill Keeble, Abilene Connie Jane Pevey, Abilene Barbara Pittman, Abilene Maureen & Dr. Vince Priestner, Abilene Sharon & Tom Riley, Abilene Susan R. Robinson, Abilene Jana & William Sojourner, Abilene Dr. Dolores & Paul Washburne, Abilene Becky Weatherby, Abilene Robyn L. Wertheim, Abilene Alice & Bill Wright, Abilene Daniel Abernathy, Aledo Jennifer & Charlie Snead, Aledo Norma Langford, Alice Carol F. Peterson, Alpine Mark Bivins, Amarillo Margaret and James Herring, Amarillo John Huffaker, Amarillo Bobby Lee, Amarillo Danny Lee, Amarillo Becky McKinley, Amarillo Dr. Bob Stafford, Amarillo Hon. Teel Bivins, Amarillo Tom Bivins, Amarillo Trevor Caviness, Amarillo Brian J. Eades, Amarillo J. Pat Hickman, Amarillo Hon. Jerry H. Hodge, Amarillo Abbie & Wales Madden Jr., Amarillo Julie & Greg Mitchell, Amarillo Don Powell, Amarillo Gainor Davis, Amarillo Benson Latham, Amarillo Nita & Wales Madden III, Amarillo Chris Matthews, Amarillo Sharon Miner, Amarillo Dr. Paul A. Proffer, Amarillo Steve Tucker III, Archer City Patti and Alan Harper, Arlington Michael J. Lowthorp, Arlington Victor Vandergriff, Arlington Julie & Mojy Haddad, Arlington Dr. Luis Castillo, Arlington Judy & Gary Martin, Arlington Justin Murff, Arlington Derek Daniels, Athens Stacey & Robert Risko, Athens Joe Aragona, Austin Beau Armstrong, Austin Cindy Barnes, Austin Kurt Barton, Austin T. Craig Benson, Austin Joanie Bentzin, Austin Georgia and J. Dan Brown, Austin Cindy and Bruce Busby, Austin John D. Byram, Austin Jennifer Cannon and Bradford Hunter, Austin Manny Cavazos, Austin Michael K. Crosno, Austin John Paul DeJoria, Austin Glenn Deitiker, Austin Gary Farmer, Austin Janice and Manny Flores, Austin Melinda and David E. Friedman, Austin John J. Gorman IV, Austin Donna Stockton Hicks and Steve Hicks, Austin Robert Howden, Austin Sharon Schoch Hubbard and Dr. Jason Hubbard, Austin Patty and James Huffines, Austin Anne and Jeff Hunt, Austin Tom Johnson, Austin Rhonda Castle and James Jonas, Austin Sheri Shelby Krause and Winston Krause, Austin Karen Landa, Austin Bob Langer, Austin Ron Lewis, Austin Charlotte and Rob Looney, Austin Lisa Lucero, Austin Sarah and Jimmy Mansour, Austin John Mullen, Austin David Nance, Austin Beverly and Gary D. Newsom, Austin Dan Pearson, Austin Donna and Bob Pearson, Austin Leslie and Dr. David Pohl, Austin Michael Angelo Renna, Austin Tresa Rockwell, Austin Jill and Rick Salwen, Austin Laura and Jeff Sandefer, Austin Debi and Jim Schneider, Austin Dianne and Dr. Eugene Schoch, Austin Dave Sikora, Austin Leslie and Tim Timmerman, Austin Leslie Ward, Austin Curt Warner, Austin Laurie Brown Watson, Austin Connie and David Weeks, Austin Pam and Dr. George Willeford Jr., Austin Katharine Armstrong, Austin Ann & Hon. Roy Butler, Austin Arleigh & Hector DeLeon, Austin Hon. Mary Denny, Austin Brenda & Carey Hobbs, Austin Kenneth M. Jastrow II, Austin Milam Mabry, Austin Robin Shivers, Austin Gail & Richard Suttle Sr., Austin Tomi & Pete Winstead, Austin Mary & Dr. Joe Abell, Austin Isaac Albarado, Austin Jo Anne Christian, Austin Lesa & Randal Crosswhite, Austin Isabella & William Cunningham, Austin Priscilla & Dr. Peter Flawn, Austin Dawn Heikkila, Austin James Hines, Austin Jo Ann Howard, Austin Amy & Ward Hunt, Austin Nancy Inman, Austin Marilla King, Austin Teresa & Joe Long, Austin Gretchen Munday, Austin Julie & Pat Oles, Austin Blake Richardson, Austin Susan & Dr. Alan Sager, Austin Shiree Sanchez, Austin Andrew Sansom, Austin Trey Stapleton, Austin Pam & Chris Waggoner, Austin David Williams, Austin Sue and Bob Long, Bastrop Kay and Lonnie Arrington, Beaumont Drew Beadle, Beaumont Joseph F. Domino, Beaumont Kathleen Jackson, Beaumont Richard A. Levacy, Beaumont Steve Lucas, Beaumont William R. Lucas, Beaumont Stan Matthews, Beaumont David Montagne, Beaumont Dade Phelan, Beaumont Jordan Reese, Beaumont Bill Scott, Beaumont Connie and David Teuscher, Beaumont Earl Williams, Beaumont Eddie Arnold, Beaumont Charlie Dauphin, Beaumont Hon. Evelyn & Sam Lord, Beaumont Joe Penland, Beaumont Dan A. Hughes Sr., Beeville Peggy G. Hughes and Dan Allen Hughes Jr., Beeville Susan & Stan Fields, Beeville Emily and Vernon Reaser, Bellaire Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Cindy & Jim Hotze, Bellaire Dr. Mary Spangler, Bellaire Becky Borah-Nelson, Bertram Laura & Mayor Russ McEwen, Big Spring Julianna Hawn Holt and Peter M. Holt, Blanco Silvia and Tom Cusick, Boerne Monica Rojas, Boerne Mary Lou Grier, Boerne Betty & Hon. Meryl Barnett, Borger Chaunce Thompson, Breckenridge Jane & John Barnhill, Brenham Rose M. and Luis Cavazos, Brownsville Jorge de la Garza, Brownsville William Hudson, Brownsville Alex Meade, Brownsville Frank Parker Jr., Brownsville Kenton Schaefer, Brownsville Viveca and Nick Serafy Jr., Brownsville Cassandra and Brad Wolfe, Brownsville Jason Wolfe, Brownsville Mary A. Yturria, Brownsville Bert Massey, Brownwood Phil D. Adams, Bryan Norma and Richard Smith, Bryan Marie E. & M. L. "Red" Cashion, Bryan Barbara & Arno W. Krebs Jr., Bryan Lisa and Tom Perini, Buffalo Gap M.L. Steinmetz III, Bullard David Shipman, Burleson Gary Todd, Burleson Chip Briscoe, Carrizo Springs Dennis D. Golden, Carthage Pam & Joe Moore, Cat Spring Ray Sepulveda, Cedar Park James E. Campbell, Center Rick L. Campbell, Center Dixon Golden, Center David W. Koonce, Center John Snider, Center Dick Wallrath, Centerville Dan Hunt, Cleburne Evan Autry, Coleman Doodie Taylor-Knox, Coleman Larry G. Holt, College Station Sharon Pittman, College Station Rebecca Boenigk, College Station Tedi & Charles Ellison, College Station Lylabeth & Art King, College Station E.G. Rod Pittman, College Station Sara Barrera, College Station Randi Mays-Knap & Avery Knapp, College Station Ginger & John Dudley, Comanche Martha Gustavsen, Conroe Dr. Chad Allen, Corpus Christi Chuck and Tina Anastos, Corpus Christi Lance K. Bruun, Corpus Christi Gloria and Ed Hicks, Corpus Christi Sue and Dr. Gaylord Hoyt, Corpus Christi Glenda and Jerry Kane, Corpus Christi Colleen McHugh, Corpus Christi Linda Pate, Corpus Christi Connie and Mike Scott, Corpus Christi R.C. Allen, Corpus Christi Richard Bowers, Corpus Christi Thetis & Loyd Neal, Corpus Christi Chris & Robert Adler, Corpus Christi Elinor & Ben Donnell, Corpus Christi Joe B. Hinton, Crawford Marshall Iler, Cypress Steven R. Taake, Cypress Ken Anderson, Dallas Moshe Azoulay, Dallas W. Mike Baggett, Dallas Roy W. Bailey, Dallas Julie Beecherl, Dallas Lance R. Byrd, Dallas Joe Colonnetta, Dallas C. Kent Conine, Dallas Gary C. Cook, Dallas James D. Dondero, Dallas John T. Gill, Dallas Stevan Hammond, Dallas Thomas O. Hicks, Dallas Phillip W. Huffines, Dallas Sydney Huffines, Dallas R. David Kelly, Dallas Howard L. Lawson, Dallas Kim Locus, Dallas John Marlin, Dallas Vance C. Miller, Dallas Dr. Carlos F. Navarro, Dallas Roxanne and Gene Phillips, Dallas Carmen and Jaime Ramon, Dallas Clayton N. Reaser, Dallas Harold Simmons, Dallas Paul Stewart, Dallas Steven H. Stodghill, Dallas Lisa and Kenny Troutt, Dallas Elaine Agather, Dallas Tory & Dick Agnich, Dallas Louis A. Beecherl Jr., Dallas Lucy Billingsley, Dallas Ana & Don Carty, Dallas Mary & Bill Ceverha, Dallas James H. Clement Jr., Dallas Jeanne Tower Cox, Dallas Betty & Marshall Doke, Dallas Rosemary & Roger Enrico, Dallas Gerald Ford, Dallas Debbie Francis, Dallas Taffy Goldsmith, Dallas Jan & Frederick B. Hegi Jr., Dallas Gail Madden, Dallas A.K. Mago, Dallas Cary M. Maguire, Dallas Denise McNamara, Dallas Hon. Fred Meyer, Dallas Hon. Tincy Miller, Dallas Sammye & Mike A. Myers, Dallas Erle Nye, Dallas Dr. C. Venkata Ram, Dallas Phil Ramono, Dallas Sue & Brett Ringle, Dallas Tara & Adam Ross, Dallas Terdema Ussery, Dallas Heather & Ray W. Washburne, Dallas Suzanne & John Adams, Dallas Ruth & Dr. Kenneth Altshuler, Dallas Gilbert Aranza, Dallas Edward Blessing, Dallas Jeanne & Rhodes Bobbitt, Dallas Ann & Garlan Braithwaite, Dallas Toni & Norm Brinker, Dallas Peggy & Peter Brodersen, Dallas Fred Bucy, Dallas Joe Burris, Dallas Peggy & M.W. Carr, Dallas John Castle, Dallas Cheryl & Stephen A. Coke, Dallas J. Jan Collmer, Dallas Gail & Dan Cook, Dallas Kathy & Harlan Crow, Dallas Regen Horchow Fearon, Dallas Kelli & Jerry Ford, Dallas Debbie & Eric Georgatos, Dallas Tricia & Hon. Kenn George, Dallas Donna German, Dallas Shannon & Jeff Graham, Dallas Diane & Mike Gruber, Dallas Jo Gudjohnsen, Dallas Susan Gwin, Dallas J.M. Hagger Jr., Dallas Gloria & Jack Hammack, Dallas Al G. Hill Jr., Dallas Carolyn & Roger Horchow, Dallas Jan Horne, Dallas Rosella & O.B. Hutchison, Dallas Mary Jalonick, Dallas Janet & Chuck Jarvie, Dallas Wendy & Michael Jenkins, Dallas Ramona Jones, Dallas Hon. Robert W. Jordan, Dallas Ann & Darrell Jordan, Dallas Richard Knight Jr., Dallas Joyce & Larry Lacerte, Dallas Cece & Ford Lacy, Dallas David Laney, Dallas Lisa & George Longino, Dallas Lee Maas, Dallas Sara & David Martineau, Dallas Ellen & Conrad Masterson, Dallas Linda & John McFarland, Dallas Ellen & John McStay, Dallas Dr. Ruth Morgan, Dallas Mike Moses, Dallas Dianne & Bill Moss, Dallas Regina & Charles Pistor, Dallas Patricia Porter, Dallas Kathryn Priddy, Dallas Caren H. Prothro, Dallas Chrisiane & Aaron Ramirez, Dallas Ashley & Mack Rankin, Dallas Trisha Robertson, Dallas Rhonda & Lee Russell, Dallas Pat & Pete Schenkel, Dallas Debra & Brian Shivers, Dallas Mary Ann Smith, Dallas Debbie & Don Snell, Dallas Gay & Bill Solomon, Dallas Merrie Spaeth, Dallas Marianne Staubach, Dallas Phyllis & Ron Steinhart, Dallas Mark W. Stiles, Dallas Gayle & Paul Stoffel, Dallas Jere W. Thompson, Dallas Jere W. Thompson Jr., Dallas Martha & David Tiller, Dallas Karin Torgerson, Dallas Ann Utley, Dallas Annette K. & Jack C. Vaughn, Dallas Robert C. Vaughn, Dallas Roger W. Wallace, Dallas Marcia & Bud Weinstein, Dallas Jane Wetzel, Dallas J.L. Sonny Williams, Dallas Marsha Williams, Dallas Trisha Wilson, Dallas Maxine & Bill Loafman, Decatur Susie & Ben Munson, Denison Kay Copeland, Denton Richard Hayes, Denton Carisa & Scott Armey, Denton Roy Orr, DeSoto Mary K. & Clifford Grum, Diboll Mary Lou & Pete Rygaard, Dickinson Hon. Rick Morales, Donna Linda W. Kinney, Dripping Springs Kenneth Guest, Duncanville John Guest, Duncanville Mary Fae & Col. Herb Kamm, Duncanville Eddie Zamora, Edinburg Jon F. Abrams, El Paso Alejandra and Paul Foster, El Paso L. Frederick “Rick” Francis, El Paso Beth and Harold Hahn, El Paso Hettie and Ted Houghton, El Paso Gayle and Woody Hunt, El Paso Charles F. Jordan III, El Paso Maria and Fred Loya, El Paso Maria F. Teran, El Paso Sherry & J. Robert Brown, El Paso Jack Cardwell, El Paso Bob Hoy, El Paso Jack Maxon, El Paso Sara McKnight, El Paso Oscar Javier Orneles, El Paso Hon. Joe Wardy, El Paso Patty Bruce, El Paso Susan & Ruben Guerra, El Paso Liza Montelongo, El Paso Frank E. Rust, Era Susanne Lee Archer, Euless Jeff Booth, Fair Oaks Ranch Valerie Freeman, Farmers Branch Kevin Fowler, Flint Coleen Beck, Florence Linda Hamilton, Fort Bend Linda Hancock, Fort Bend Joanne & Dick Bartlett, Fort Davis Ramona and Lee M. Bass, Fort Worth Ralph H. Duggins, Fort Worth Ronnie Goldman, Fort Worth Barrett Havran, Fort Worth Joy Ann and Bob Havran, Fort Worth Mercedes T. & Sid R. Bass, Fort Worth Steve Laird, Fort Worth Marsland & Richard W. Moncrief, Fort Worth Kit & Charlie Moncrief, Fort Worth Susie Tonymon, Fort Worth Vicki S. & Edward P. Bass, Fort Worth Fran & Bob Bolen, Fort Worth Michael Brinkley, Fort Worth Justin K. Grimsley, Fort Worth Chad Lee, Fort Worth Tom Moncrief, Fort Worth Matthew K. Rose, Fort Worth Charles Simmons, Fort Worth Sharon Roosevelt, Fort Stockton Mike Shaw, Fredericksburg Estela Avery, Fredericksburg Debbie Campbell, Fredericksburg Lucille Rochs, Fredericksburg Barbara & James Nowlin, Friendswood Sherry & Jim Atwell, Friona Jyl & Jayson Grimsley, Friona James B. Earthman III, Galveston Carol Hasserd, Galveston Harris L. "Shrub" Kempner Jr., Galveston Kris Anne Vogelpohl, Galveston Pat & Fred Burns, Galveston Jane Hayley, Galveston Sydna Gordon, Garland Mayor Bob Day, Garland Sue and Dr. David DeVillez, Georgetown Bob Barnes, Granbury Angela Boone, Haltom City Linda McKenna, Harlingen Bob Shepard, Harlingen Anne Shepard, Harlingen Hon. William Card Jr., Harlingen Hon. Frank Morris, Harlingen Humberto Zamora, Harlingen Joy Kyriakopoulos, Harper Ann Gearn, Hereford Barbara & Chuck Bearden, Hillsboro Kent M. Adams, Houston Durga D. Agrawal, Houston Joe B. Allen, Houston Johnny Baker, Houston Carin and Todd Barth, Houston Gina and Dr. Devinder Bhatia, Houston Jim Dannenbaum, Houston Leslie Doggett, Houston Mark Dulworth, Houston Beau Egert, Houston Don Faust Jr., Houston Tyson Faust, Houston Paige and Tilman Fertitta, Houston Jeffery H. Foutch, Houston Debra and Dan Friedkin, Houston Paul Frison, Houston Robert Gauntt, Houston Barnett L. Gershen, Houston Tom Glanville, Houston Jim Grace, Houston Jim Greer, Houston Windi and David M. Grimes II, Houston Steven F. Hotze, Houston Molly Hubbard, Houston Sam Kannappan, Houston Amy and Jim Lee, Houston Janet and Philip L. Leggett, Houston Kevin Lilly, Houston Janiece Longoria, Houston Cora Sue and Harry Mach, Houston Steven P. Mach, Houston Linda and Larry Martin, Houston Jacob M. Monty, Houston S. Reed Morian, Houston Mica Mosbacher, Houston Dennis E. Murphree, Houston Jim Noteware, Houston Tom D. O’Leary, Houston Doylene and Bob Perry, Houston Kristen and John Perry, Houston Elizabeth and Gary Petersen, Houston James D. Pitcock Jr., Houston Dr. Rudy Ramos, Houston Lynden B. Rose, Houston Kristi and John D. Schiller Jr., Houston L.E. Simmons, Houston Alan L. Smith, Houston Bruce Smith, Houston E. Ashley Smith, Houston Gail and Robert “Bobby” Stillwell, Houston George Strake Jr., Houston George W. "Trey" Strake III, Houston Jim Thorp, Houston Gene Van Dyke, Houston Robert L. Waltrip, Houston Chuck Watson, Houston Marc Watts, Houston Dick Weekley, Houston Daisy Sloan White and John D. White, Houston Welcome Wilson Jr., Houston Welcome W. Wilson Sr., Houston Michelle & Lorne Bain, Houston Dwight Boykins, Houston Jim Braniff III, Houston Joan & Herman Buschor, Houston Penny & John Butler, Houston Hon. Peter R. Coneway, Houston John B. Connally III, Houston Jerry Cox, Houston Alfred Davis, Houston Melvin Dow, Houston Monica & Charles R. Eskridge III, Houston Cherie & Jim Flores, Houston Nina & Edd C. Hendee, Houston Kay & Ned S. Holmes, Houston Barbara & Don Jordan, Houston Betsy Lake, Houston Odysseus Lanier, Houston Drayton McLane Jr., Houston Nancy Palm, Houston Caroline & David Pierce, Houston Gary Polland, Houston Roger S. Sofer, Houston Ed Wulfe, Houston Fred Zeidman, Houston Linda & Max Addison, Houston Stanford Alexander, Houston Dr. Tom Arnold, Houston Dr. Dionel Aviles, Houston Dr. Alan Baum, Houston Judy & David J. Beck, Houston Elisabeth & Timothy Belton, Houston Jack S. Blanton Jr., Houston Patty Block, Houston David Bray, Houston J. Brett Busby, Houston Alberto P. "Beto" Cardenas Jr., Houston Clarence P. Cazalot Jr., Houston Helen T. Chang, Houston Jean & Robert Clarke, Houston Cindy Clifford, Houston Flo Crady, Houston Deavra Daughtry, Houston Katrin Debakey, Houston Linnet F. Deily, Houston Susie & Joe Dilg, Houston Sujeeth Draksharam, Houston Jan & Dan Duncan, Houston James Elkins, Houston Lily & Charles Foster, Houston Rachel & Dr. Bud Frazier, Houston Amber & Chad Gailey, Houston Curry Glassell, Houston Dan Hedges, Houston Carolyn & Tom Hodges, Houston Karen & Byron Hood, Houston Kara & Aaron Howes, Houston Elsie Huang, Houston Jack Hunt, Houston Jodie Jiles, Houston James Lloyd, Houston Merideth J. Long, Houston Debbie & Vidal Martinez, Houston Beth & Charles Miller, Houston Knox Nunnally, Houston Rafael Ortega, Houston Jan & William Ott, Houston Nancy Jane Otto, Houston Dustin Ouellette, Houston Katie Oxford, Houston Michael L. Peay, Houston Barbara & Corbin J. Robertson Jr., Houston Beth Robertson, Houston Erik Saenz, Houston Mary Schneider, Houston Margo & Hal Scholin, Houston Matt Scholin, Houston Itze & Jeff Soliz-Matthews, Houston W. Spencer Stasney, Houston Lorelei & Tom Sullivan, Houston Michael K. Swan, Houston Judy & Charles Tate, Houston George Thomas, Houston Dan Tutcher, Houston Chase Untermeyer, Houston Betsy Vaughan, Houston June & J. Virgil Waggoner, Houston Danielle & Ryan Walsh, Houston Ron Woods, Houston Elizabeth & Frank M. Wozencraft Jr., Houston James Ellis, Humble Frank W. Maresh, Hunt Estelle Teague, Hurst J. Ralph Ellis Jr., Irving Cynthia Jenkins, Irving J. Fitz Boyle, Irving Kitty & John F. Boyle Jr., Irving Larry Durrett, Jacksonville Sissy & Jeff Austin Jr., Jacksonville Carolyn Clardy, Jacksonville Krystal Looney, Jacksonville Glenna & Kenny Pryor, Jacksonville Laurel & Duke DeWare, Jefferson Ann & Bill Crockett, Katy Jan and Keith Fitzgerald, Keller Nancy & Bill Allen, Kenedy Capy Alexander, Kerrville Claudell Kercheville, Kerrville Sandy & Ken Cailloux, Kerrville Fred Henneke, Kerrville Ellen Schoenfeld, Kerrville Susie & A.P. Merritt, Kilgore Ruben Martin, Kilgore Stephen J. "Tio" Kleberg, Kingsville J. Kelly and Scott H. Hoag, Kyle Patricia S. "Pinky" Wilson, La Grange Linda & Frank Groseclose, Lago Vista Bob Ostos, Laguna Vista Anne McKeithan, Lake Jackson Mundy & Pat Peale, Lake Kiowa Julie & Michael R. Bradle, Lampasas Celia Davis, Lampasas Rosendo Carranco, Laredo Margaret Martin, Laredo J. C. "Pepe" Trevino III, Laredo Tony Trevino, Laredo Jessie & Gary Jacobs, Laredo Dennis E. Nixon, Laredo Pat & David Cowan, Levelland Hon. Elvira & J.A. Reyna, Little Elm Melissa Tyroch, Little River Tory B. Virdell, Llano Dick Stebbins, Longview Connie and Ron Betenbough, Lubbock Greg Bruce, Lubbock Jere Lynn and Jim Burkhart, Lubbock Kristy and Kelly Curry, Lubbock Richard Davila, Lubbock Robbi and Stuart Force, Lubbock Cynthia and Kirk Gentry, Lubbock Elaine and Kevin Glasheen, Lubbock Michelle and Dr. Randy Hickle, Lubbock Carolyn and Alan Lackey, Lubbock Sheryl and Gary Lawrence, Lubbock Sharon and Mike Leach, Lubbock Eric C. McDonald, Lubbock Carolyn and Delbert McDougal, Lubbock Melissa and Mike McDougal, Lubbock Pam and Mark McDougal, Lubbock Missy and Allen McInnes, Lubbock Carla Moran, Lubbock Nancy and Dr. Thomas Neal, Lubbock Gita S. and Subodh Patel, Lubbock Terri and Bob Ranck, Lubbock Dede and Paul Rider, Lubbock Jaemie and John Steinmetz, Lubbock Annette Sykora, Lubbock Pam and Fred Underwood, Lubbock Craig Wallace, Lubbock Hon. Windy & Frank Sitton, Lubbock Dianne Thompson, Lubbock Holley & Fernando Bustos, Lubbock Patti & Dr. Mark D. D'Alise, Lubbock Steve Fannin, Lubbock Paul Frazier, Lubbock Shirley Garrison, Lubbock David Harmon, Lubbock Amy & Todd Holt, Lubbock Stephen T. Krier, Lubbock George Love, Lubbock Cindy Massingill, Lubbock Christy McClendon, Lubbock Martha & Marciano Morales, Lubbock Lisa Nowlin, Lubbock Dona & Dr. Ralph E. Nussbaum, Lubbock Kathy & Barry Orr, Lubbock John Owens, Lubbock Linda J. Sadler, Lubbock Paula & David R. Seim, Lubbock Marsha G. Sharp, Lubbock Gwen & Lee Stafford, Lubbock Harold Brian Yearwood, Lubbock Mary & Dr. Tom Duncan, Lufkin Murphy George, Lufkin Lois Chambers, Lufkin Genie & Robert Flournoy, Lufkin Don Langston, Lufkin Romy & Carl Ray Polk, Lufkin Rosine & Stuart Carter, Luling Janice & Rick Baldwin, Magnolia Linda and Stanley Harper, Mansfield Dorothy Crockett, Marble Falls Edward N. Smith III, Marshall Elvia and Adrian Arriaga, McAllen Lydia and Noe Fernandez, McAllen Carmen and Kevin Pagan, McAllen Hollis Rutledge, McAllen Reba Showers, McAllen Marge & Calvin Bentsen, McAllen Dr. Fred Farias III, McAllen Dolores & Daniel O. Rios, McAllen Glen E. Roney, McAllen Sam Vale, McAllen Tom Engibous, McKinney Lynn & Hon. Ron Harris, McKinney Janice & James Huckaby, Mesquite Bobby Burns, Midland Jose Cuevas, Midland Tim Dunn, Midland Lori Edwards, Midland Bobby Holt, Midland Renee and Mickey Long, Midland J.R. Purvis, Midland Modesta and Clayton W. Williams, Midland Rosalind Redfern & Arden R. Grover, Midland Patty & Tevis Herd, Midland Susie Hitchcock-Hall, Midland Joe O'Neill, Midland Juandelle Lacy Roberts, Midland Medora & Robert Beecherl, Midland Billie & Jim Ross, Midland Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Younger, Midland Rodney Watkins, Mineola Hon. Celia Boswell, Mineola Mayor Beto Salinas, Mission Susan & Mike Enoch, Mont Belvieu Ruben Hope, Montgomery Miriam Burton, Montgomery Irene Kerr, Montgomery Judy & Bob Smith, Montgomery Sally & Hon. Bill Ratliff, Mount Pleasant Cliff Butler, Mt. Pleasant Julie & J.D. Cage, Muleshoe Nicole and David Alders, Nacogdoches Keith Drewery, Nacogdoches Kathy and David King, Nacogdoches Les Littleton, Nacogdoches Pattye Greer, Nacogdoches Dr. Nancy C. Speck & A.L. Mangham, Nacogdoches Florence Fitch Patton, Nacogdoches Linda Sisk, Nacogdoches Hon. Roger Van Horn, Nacogdoches Ricky Beach, New Braunfels Deana Flippin, New Braunfels Cynthia B. and Thomas O. Perry, New Braunfels Hon. Jan & Dr. Don Kennady, New Braunfels Carter & Tom Casteel, New Braunfels Bruce K. Jacobson Jr., North Richland Hills Mayor Peter Dewing, Northlake Jayaram Naidu, Odessa Canda and Ron Sewell, Odessa Jack Wood, Odessa Alice Belew, Odessa Daniel J. Hollmann, Odessa Dewey Meyers, Odessa Don Covington, Orange Joe Crutcher, Palestine Susan & John Tripplehorn, Pampa Janis & Bill Bailey, Pasadena William Christopher Caudill, Pearland Harold D. Courson, Perryton Rex Law, Pittsburg Bo Pilgrim, Pittsburg Jeran Akers, Plano Larry Anders, Plano Dr. William A. Boothe, Plano Craig Keeland, Plano Hon. Phyllis Cole, Plano Bobby Ray, Plano Myra & Jim Boswell, Plano Karen & Mike Brodie, Plano Dixie Clem, Plano Hon. Pat Evans, Plano Sharon & David McCall, Plano Betty & James Muns, Plano Betty Turner, Port Aransas Hon. Carl Griffith Jr., Port Arthur Bobbie Prince, Port Arthur Gary Arnett, Pottsboro James H. Tipton, Rancho Viejo Rob Kyker, Richardson Dorothy Adler, Richardson Julie & Bob Driegert, Richardson Hilmar Moore, Richmond Dr. Tony Falcon, Rio Grande City J.D. Jacobs, Rockwall Melissa and Gary W. Gates Jr., Rosenburg Mayor Nyle Maxwell, Round Rock Sonia A. McMasters, Round Rock Rebecca & David Contreras, Round Rock Karl Miller, Round Rock Amy & John Uppeman, Round Rock Cynthia & Gene Thornton, Round Top Carla McCroan, Royse City Charles Hassell, Rusk Teresa & Billy Langley, Rusk Mayor Angela Raiborn, Rusk Josie Schoolcraft, Rusk Morris Foster, Salado Rich Castle, Salado Borah Van Dormolen, Salado Annette & Tom Hopkins, San Angelo Amy & J. Mark McLaughlin, San Angelo Steve Stephens, San Angelo Mary Jeanne & Don Coers, San Angelo Roy R. Barrera Jr., San Antonio Traci and Louis Barrios, San Antonio Bunny and Dr. Richard Becker, San Antonio J. Bruce Bugg Jr., San Antonio Jyl and Randy Cain, San Antonio Stephanie Cavender, San Antonio Bonnie Chambers, San Antonio Margaret Ballenger Cluck, San Antonio Gene Dawson Jr., San Antonio Blair and Joseph Fitzsimons, San Antonio Karen and Ron Herrmann, San Antonio Karen Hixon, San Antonio Reagan Houston IV, San Antonio Robert W. Hunt, San Antonio James R. Leininger, San Antonio Mark Mays, San Antonio Peggy and Lowry Mays, San Antonio Randall Mays, San Antonio Edith McAllister, San Antonio Charline and Red McCombs, San Antonio Jewell and Ed Miles Jr., San Antonio Gerry Montefalcon, San Antonio Debbie and John T. Montford, San Antonio Becky Oliver, San Antonio Dr. Laura San Martin and Rolando Pablos, San Antonio Dawn and Allan Polunsky, San Antonio Dana and Gene Powell, San Antonio Wm. Cameron Powell, San Antonio Maria Cristina Rodriguez, San Antonio Elizabeth and Wallace "Happy" Rogers, San Antonio Robert N. Schnitzler, San Antonio David Starr, San Antonio Weisie and John T. Steen Jr., San Antonio Nancy and Edward Steves, San Antonio Elisabeth and Karl W. Swann, San Antonio Don Walker, San Antonio Rad Weaver, San Antonio Laurie and John White, San Antonio A. John Yoggerst, San Antonio Ernesto Ancira Jr., San Antonio Mario A. Barrera, San Antonio Ann & Sam Barshop, San Antonio Victoria M. Garcia, San Antonio Greg King, San Antonio Joe Krier, San Antonio Diane & Gary Rath, San Antonio Carol & Joe Van De Walle, San Antonio Edward E. Whitacre Jr., San Antonio Judy & Jim Adams, San Antonio Dr. & Mrs. Basil E. Atkinson Jr., San Antonio Barbara & Cal Banker, San Antonio Mario Barrerra, San Antonio Nancy & Charles Cheever Jr., San Antonio Bebe Crain, San Antonio Dorothy Doehne, San Antonio Robert Flores, San Antonio Sandra & Henry Gray, San Antonio Olive Ann & Richard Kleberg, San Antonio Beth Plummer, San Antonio Dianne & Boone Powell, San Antonio Reagan Rath, San Antonio Susan D. Reed, San Antonio Marian K. Stanko, San Antonio Mario Vazquez, San Antonio Seagal Wheatley, San Antonio Mayor Susan & Miguel Narvaiz, San Marcos Elizabeth & Chuck Nash, San Marcos Babs & Dennis Rygaard, Santa Fe Trish & George Antuna, Schertz Sheryl Bonilla, Schertz Beth & Robert Cathey, Shavano Park Eugene H. "Stretch" Lund, Sherman Hon. Clyde Siebman, Sherman Barkat Ali, Southlake Leigh and Hon. Andy Wambsganss, Southlake Mary Ann & Lewis C. Miltenberger, Southlake Charles S. Teeple, Spicewood Gary L. Thompson, Spicewood JC and Trisha Kranz, Spring Donna Wick, Spring Phillip Rummell, Spring John Stuart, Spring Branch Lamont E. Meaux, Stowell Sue Chiang, Sugar Land Lupe Fraga, Sugar Land Tina and Mike Gibson, Sugar Land Jarvis Hollingsworth, Sugar Land Sharon and Jim Wilson, Sugar Land Clayton Settle, Sugarland Frank Stanley, Sugarland Beth & Homer Taylor, Sweetwater Hon. Dianne White Delisi, Temple Zora Hutchison, Temple Buddy McCulloch, Texarkana Judy and Dr. Jim Morgan, Texarkana Josh & Martha Morriss, Texarkana Claudia & Pete Snow, Texarkana Charles T. Doyle, Texas City Nelda Luce Blair and Jim Blair, The Woodlands CJ Haynes, The Woodlands Miguel Lopez, The Woodlands Kim and Robert Marling, The Woodlands Lex Ann and Mike Shinn, The Woodlands Kenny Speight, The Woodlands Amy and George Van Horn, The Woodlands Billie & Henry Brooks, The Woodlands Ulupi & Asit Choksi, The Woodlands Angel McShane, The Woodlands Julia Morton, The Woodlands Ross McKnight, Throckmorton Dr. L.S. Foreman, Tulia Sherrie & Leroy Salas, Tuscola Amy Webb, Tye Evelyn & Wayne Webb, Tye Dr. Margarita de la Garza-Grahm, Tyler Dr. Thomas W. Grahm, Tyler Gaylord T. Hughey Jr., Tyler Rick Lambert, Tyler Felicity and John Reedy, Tyler Cynthia and Whit Riter, Tyler Carroll Trawick, Tyler Mayor Barbara Bass, Tyler Sunni & Britton P. Brookshire, Tyler Margaret & Jim Perkins, Tyler Sherilyn & Patrick Willis, Tyler Bess & J.W. Arnold, Tyler Marilyn & John D. Glass Jr., Tyler Homer Hayes, Tyler Pat & Jack Johns, Tyler Don Kent, Tyler Dr. Kimberly Russell, Tyler Bryan Selden, Tyler Dr. Aubrey D. Sharpe, Tyler J.B. Smith, Tyler Sarah Van Cleef, Tyler Nancy B. Wrenn, Tyler Christopher J. Wrenn, Tyler Kelly Couch, Vernon Clifton L. Thomas Jr., Victoria Hally & Thurman Clements, Victoria Bridget & Bob Gayle, Victoria Robert J. Hewitt Jr., Victoria Morgan Dunn O'Connor, Victoria Don Truman, Victoria Bette-Jo Buhler, Victoria Pat & Bill Knebel, Victoria Bill Bailey, Waco Brent deMoville, Waco Jim Hawkins, Waco Rick Sheldon, Waco Nancy & David Lacy, Waco Monte Hulse, Waco Tone' & Bill Mahon, Waco Don Wilson, Waxahachie Anne Bergman, Weatherford Audrey LaFleur, Weatherford Cain Caceres, Weslaco Jo & Bill Summers, Weslaco JoAnn & Doug Mayer, Westlake Ruth Ford, Westlake Hills Joel Yowell, Wharton Pam & Warren Ayres, Wichita Falls Jacque & David Allen, Wichita Falls Kay Yeager, Wichita Falls Rebecca and Rod Broussard, Willis Rose and Dick Scott, Wimberley

Rep. Sylvester Turner, D-Houston, says he won't run for mayor of Houston and wants to focus on other projects and on his duties as a state lawmaker. This would have been Turner's third attempt at the top city post. He issued a statement:

After careful consideration and consultation with a number of individuals, I have decided I will not run for mayor of the City of Houston in 2009. Although I believe the race is eminently winnable, a late entry into the campaign would have required that I drop every other project in which I am involved—community endeavors such as the Houston Astros MLB Urban Youth Baseball Academy in Acres Homes and continuing my work in the Texas Legislature, to which I am deeply committed and thoroughly enjoy. I thank everyone who took the time to discuss this race with me and the many, many supporters who urged me to run. I have much more to accomplish in my life and I will continue to work hard for the citizens of my district, my city and my state.

Valerie Corte was sworn in as a Temporary Acting Representative for HD-122, subbing for her spouse, Rep. Frank Corte, R-San Antonio, who's on active military duty in Okinawa. He's due to return in mid-July, but the special session is supposed to be over by then.

Juan Garcia, a Farm Service Agency staffer who's originally from Willacy County, is the new Texas state director for that program, which is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The Obama Administration tapped another Texan, Francisco Valentin Jr., as Texas state director for rural development at the USDA. He's been with the federal government since 1979.

Gov. Rick Perry appointed Wayne Roberts of Austin and Scott Smith of Cedar Park and reappointed Paul Braden of Dallas to the State Pension Review Board. Roberts now works at the UT Health Science Center in Houston and used to be on Perry's policy staff. Smith is vice president of investments for Wells Fargo Advisors. Braden is a partner at Fulbright and Jaworski.

Hitched: Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Tricia Hamilton Bivins in a private ceremony in Houston. It's the second marriage for each of them; she is the ex-wife of former state Sen. Teel Bivins, R-Amarillo.

Quotes of the Week

Ogden, Perry, Dewhurst, Stallings, Metzger, and Jillson

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, to Amadeo Saenz, head of the Texas Department of Transportation, on extending public-private highway projects: "We're being asked to pass legislation more on faith than on fact. So far, faith has been very disappointing."

Gov. Rick Perry, telling reporters his intentions, before the session: "Get 'em in, get 'em out and get the work done. Bada-bing, bada-boom."

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, in the Austin American-Statesman: "If the [U.S.] Senate job came open, I would probably give it a hard look. I think that seat needs to stay in Republican hands."

Texas A&M Regent Gene Stallings, quoted in the Bryan Eagle after the faculty overwhelmingly cast a vote of no confidence in Chancellor Mike McKinney: "He may have mishandled a quote or two, as we all do from time to time, but his mind's in the right place and his heart's in the right place."

Merrill Metzger, formerly with Minutemen American Defense — a citizen border patrol group — in The New York Times: "I had to take an oath, and part of the oath was that I couldn't eat Mexican food. That's when red flags went up all over for me. That seemed like prejudice."

Cal Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University, talking about the next presidential race with the Washington Examiner: "It's way too early to talk sensibly about the 2012 field, but that's no reason not to do it."