Two Senate Hopefuls Look to Create Aura of Inevitability

Rep. Lois Kolkhorst smiling after adjournment of House on June 15th, 2011
Rep. Lois Kolkhorst smiling after adjournment of House on June 15th, 2011

This week’s word in state politics is inevitability, as in the feeling that a pair of state Senate candidates is trying to instill in their respective contests.

Lois Kolkhorst, the Brenham Republican state representative, has been running for a while now for the Senate District 18 seat being relinquished by state Comptroller-elect Glenn Hegar.

Hegar made things official last Friday, announcing that he would resign his seat on Dec. 5 ahead of a special election set for the next day. The filing period to enter the special election ended on Wednesday with Kolkhorst being one of five hopefuls for the seat.

Two Republicans, Gary Gates of Richmond and Charles Gregory III of Simonton, and two Democrats, Cynthia Drabek and Christian E. Hawkins, are the other candidates to throw their hat in the ring.

Kolkhorst, meanwhile, spent the week rounding up further endorsements. On Monday, she said that the GOP county chairs in 13 of the district’s 21 counties were backing her.

And Hegar attended a campaign event for Kolkhorst on Wednesday where he endorsed her as well.

While all this was going on, movement also started on who might take Kolkhorst’s seat in the Texas House should a vacancy occur. Austin County Judge Carolyn Bilski, who is finishing up her fifth term in office, signaled Monday that she’d be interested for the seat.

State Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio, is jockeying for the pole position in the special election to succeed Leticia Van de Putte, who confirmed on Wednesday that she is resigning her Senate District 26 to run for mayor of San Antonio.

Martinez Fischer, who chairs the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, was quick off the mark on Thursday morning with a slate of endorsement intended to be an overwhelming show of strength.

In it, he cites the support from the widows of former Senators Greg Luna and Bob Vale, who both represented SD-26, and of Joe Bernal, another Senator to represent the district.

In addition, Martinez Fischer said he had the backing of San Antonio Congressman Joaquin Castro as well as five Democratic members of the Bexar County House delegation — Justin Rodriguez, Joe Farias, Ruth Jones McClendon, Roland Gutierrez and Phil Cortez.

If this was intended to scare off other candidates for the SD-26 seat, the initial indication is that it didn’t work.

State Rep. Jose Menendez, D-San Antonio, who has also been in the mix for Van de Putte’s seat, released a statement on Thursday confirming his intention to run.

“As Senator Van de Putte chooses a new place to serve, I intend to run for Senate District 26,” Menéndez said. “I look forward to fulfilling her legacy of delivering a world class education for our students, protecting San Antonio families, creating high paying jobs and honoring our Veterans.”

Straus: 61 and Counting...

House Speaker Joe Straus is shown on Sept. 20, 2014, during an interview at The Texas Tribune Festival.
House Speaker Joe Straus is shown on Sept. 20, 2014, during an interview at The Texas Tribune Festival.

The list of GOP lawmakers supporting Joe Straus' re-election as Speaker now stands at 61 with the release of another 19 names on Thursday.

The most recent batch of names pushed the numbers in the Straus column well past half of the members of the GOP House caucus. One dominated by Straus-appointed committee chairs and other key Straus lieutenants, was distributed by Appropriations subcommittee Chairman John Zerwas. The second list, distributed by state Rep. Dan Huberty, rounded up Houston-area state representatives, including Debbie Riddle and the newly elected Gilbert Peña. On Wednesday, a group of seven West Texas GOP state representatives pledged their support to Straus.

The result of this steady drumbeat of releases augmenting the Straus column, which has now put him past the 50 percent mark among the GOP House caucus, has been to foment a perception that the Speaker's race is over before it has a chance to begin. It is also a direct answer to challenger Scott Turner's vow to take the Speaker's race to the floor for a vote on Jan. 13, the first day of session.

*****

Count Wendy Davis as ready for Hillary.

The former Democratic nominee for governor on Thursday sent out a letter from her campaign soliciting names to support the Ready for Hillary PAC, the super PAC established to prepare for Hillary Clinton's expected run for the White House.

One of the storylines in this year's contest for governor was the role of Battleground Texas in preparing the ground for a presidential run by Clinton in 2016. Clinton has been coy about making an official pronouncement about her candidacy but Davis' letter makes it clear about her aims to be a key surrogate for Clinton in Texas.

*****

Texas' GOP delegation in the U.S. House will add two more chairmanships in the upcoming Congress, for a total of six.

Per the Houston Chronicle's Kevin Diaz, a pair of West Texans — Mike Conaway of Midland and Mac Thornberry of Clarendon — are being tapped to take over as chairs of Agriculture and Armed Services, respectively.

That is in addition to Jeb Hensarling (Financial Services), Michael McCaul (Homeland Security), Lamar Smith (Science, Space and Technology) and Pete Sessions (Rules) who retain their chairmanships. In addition, Diaz notes that Bill Flores of Bryan has landed the chairmanship of the Republican Study Committee.

*****

A gag order has been issued in advance of state Rep. Ron Reynolds' new trial on allegations that he solicited accident victims for business. The practice, which goes by the legal term barratry, is illegal.

A mistrial was declared last week after a juror had what was described as an "outside influence that affected her saying 'guilty.'" Reynolds was found guilty of six misdemeanor counts of solicitation of professional employment at the conclusion of that trial.

Reynolds' new trial is scheduled for Jan. 5, a week before the next session of the Legislature begins.

Newsreel: House Speaker, SBOE, Border Surge

This week in the Texas Weekly Newsreel: House Speaker Joe Straus appears to be locking down his position on the dais, the State Board of Education is again considering materials for textbooks and state leadership wants to keep the surge of law enforcement on the border in place through August.

Inside Intelligence: About That Coming Session...

Conversations about the election are wearing thin and the talk about the upcoming legislative session is picking up, so this week we asked the insiders in politics and government about the next Legislature.

Nine out of ten think state Rep. Scott Turner, R-Frisco, will get fewer than 25 votes in his bid to knock off House Speaker Joe Straus, R-San Antonio. The conventional wisdom is that that race is no race at all.

And they think Straus and Gov.-elect Greg Abbott will have the strongest day-to-day alliance among the three top officeholders, a group that also includes Lt. Gov.-elect Dan Patrick.  A smaller number thinks the Abbott/Patrick alliance will dominate, and a mere 3 percent think the pair to watch will be Straus and Patrick. 

The Senate’s two-thirds rule — the practice of requiring two-thirds of the senators to agree that an issue is ripe for debate before bringing it to the floor — won’t last in its current form, the insiders said. While 18 percent think it will remain in place, 51 percent expect modifications and 29 percent believe that rule will die.

Patrick said during the campaigns that he will not have as many Democrats chairing committees as his predecessor, and might not have any at all, but 76 percent of the insiders read him to mean that he will have at least one; 19 percent said Republicans will hold the middle seats on all of the Senate’s committees.

And finally, we asked the insiders whether credential reporters should continue to be allowed into the House and Senate chambers while those bodies are in session. Most — 79 percent — said yes, but 19 percent think that privilege has run its course.

We collected comments along the way and a full set of those is attached. Here’s a sampling:

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How many votes do you think Rep. Scott Turner will receive in his bid for speaker?

• "An option should have read 'Fewer than 10'"

• "And it'll be a self-identified idiot test!"

• "You forgot to use the term 'quixotic' when defining his 'big for speaker'"

• "In the end, he may get none. Either because he withdraws in good judgment, or his few supporters run like rabbits when the record vote comes."

• "Rep. Scott Turner is a WINNER!"

• "In this case the conventional wisdom will hold true. And the outside groups pushing hard on the inside process won't make much of a difference. "

• "Great way to start out a Legislative session. Meaningless acrimony. Impressive. "

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What’s the most likely day-to-day alliance among the top three officeholders during the legislative session?

• "Patrick will relish his outsider role. However, DP doesn't understand he needs Abbott and Straus in order to be a successful Lt. Gov."

• "Patrick will do his best to minimize Abbott as governor to keep his own quest for governor rolling."

• "This first session they will try to get along. "

• "Depends on how long it takes Patrick to realize that leading the Texas Senate is not a campaign speech, sound bite, or poke at the other Party."

• "I don't believe even the big 3 themselves can accurately predict this yet. Also, some may scoff at the Abbott/Patrick/Straus choice but there is a small chance it could work out that way. "

• "Abbott and Straus will work well together. Patrick will try to maintain a bit more distance because he has a pretty sizable ego that can only cozy up so far to others, but he will work collegially enough with the Governor and Speaker because he is also politically savvy and is writing his legacy in Texas politics from the Lt. Gov's office. This session won't be all puppies and rainbows, but it will not be the kind of divisive session for which the Tea Party faction of the GOP hopes."

• "Straus is too liberal to go along with Abbott or Patrick on much of anything. Besides, he is beholden to the Democrat Party for his chair. "

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Do you think the Senate will keep the two-thirds rule in place?

• "Bye, bye two thirds rule (this will be so SWEET when the Dems come back in control and can point to the repubs for getting rid of the rule!)"

• "That modification being 60 percent rather than two-thirds."

• "It would be a politically unacceptable result for the Tea party to win the Lt Gov seat and not at least reform the rule. "

• "I think the senate repubs will drive the show - not wisely but will get their fundamental issues of concern over to the house. More interesting will be the urban vs. rural or other issues out there that will cause some 'pause.'"

• "In reality it exists now only if it doesn't make a difference on something really important - like voter ID or redistricting "

• "Tradition be damned"

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Do you think Lt. Gov.-elect Dan Patrick will appoint any Democratic chairmen?

• "Well he better not! He promised he wackadoodles, I mean supporters that he would NOT. "

• "One or two for relatively minor committees."

• "Let's just see Patrick try to refuse a committee chair to the Dean of the Texas Senate, who has forgotten more about the Texas Senate Rules than Patrick will ever know."

• "Less than a handful."

• "One or two. No big chairs."

• "Wasn't there a campaign promise?"

• "Say what you want of him, but we all can acknowledge he is a shrewd politician. "

• "Don't want a bunch of angry veteran Senators do you?"

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Should the Texas Legislature continue to allow credentialed reporters on the floor when the House and Senate are in session?

• "However, in the interest of good governance, House and Senate members should be excluded from the floor at those times."

• "You scumbags get enough special treatment already."

• "No. The very definition of 'journalist' has become corrupted by the cancer of politics. Journalists - fake and real - should be relegated to the gallery with the alternate benefit of creating the appearance of an interested public. "

• "Credentialed reporters should be allowed; but 'credentialed reporter' lobbyists should not. If an appropriate distinction cannot be made in the rules to prevent reporter-lobbyists from being on the floor during session, it would still be best to allow reporters on the floor. Our press coverage of government is too important to compromise."

• "But anyone who is recruiting candidates, sending paid media to voters, or engages in campaigning is not a 'credentialed reporter' regardless of what other hats they may be wearing. Certain roles and activities should completely disqualify people from any claim of being a 'reporter.' "

• "No real harm in it. Some actual reporting occasionally results."

• "No. When the press was the sole source of timely news for constituents, it made sense for politicians to have them close by to schmooze, cajole, and leak stories to. But social media in the 21st century has removed the political utility of having the press at your elbow. It's time for reporters to have to chase down members just like the rest. Join us up in the gallery, folks, the weather is fine up here."

• "How does one define 'credentialed' though, or better yet - what activities would preclude someone from receiving credentials to 'report' from the floor?"

Our thanks to this week's participants: Gene Acuna, Cathie Adams, Victor Alcorta, Brandon Alderete, Clyde Alexander, George Allen, Jay Arnold, Dave Beckwith, Amy Beneski, Andrew Biar, Allen Blakemore, Tom Blanton, Chris Britton, Raif Calvert, Lydia Camarillo, Marc Campos, Snapper Carr, Corbin Casteel, William Chapman, Elna Christopher, Harold Cook, Kevin Cooper, Beth Cubriel, Randy Cubriel, Denise Davis, June Deadrick, Nora Del Bosque, Glenn Deshields, Holly DeShields, Tom Duffy, David Dunn, Richard Dyer, Jeff Eller, Jack Erskine, John Esparza, Jon Fisher, Wil Galloway, Neftali Garcia, Dominic Giarratani, Bruce Gibson, Stephanie Gibson, Kinnan Golemon, Daniel Gonzalez, Jim Grace, Thomas Graham, John Greytok, Clint Hackney, Bill Hammond, John Heasley, Ken Hodges, Steve Holzheauser, Deborah Ingersoll, Richie Jackson, Cal Jillson, Mark Jones, Robert Jones, Robert Kepple, Richard Khouri, Tom Kleinworth, Dale Laine, Nick Lampson, Pete Laney, Dick Lavine, James LeBas, Donald Lee, Luke Legate, Leslie Lemon, Myra Leo, Richard Levy, Ruben Longoria, Vilma Luna, Matt Mackowiak, Luke Marchant, Mike McKinney, Steve Minick, Bee Moorhead, Mike Moses, Steve Murdock, Nelson Nease, Keats Norfleet, Pat Nugent, Todd Olsen, Nef Partida, Gardner Pate, Jerod Patterson, Bill Pewitt, Jerry Philips, Tom Phillips, Wayne Pierce, Richard Pineda, Allen Place, Gary Polland, Jay Propes, Ted Melina Raab, Karen Reagan, Patrick Reinhart, David Reynolds, Carl Richie, Grant Ruckel, Jason Sabo, Andy Sansom, Jim Sartwelle, Barbara Schlief, Stan Schlueter, Steve Scurlock, Christopher Shields, Ed Small, Martha Smiley, Larry Soward, Dennis Speight, Jason Stanford, Bob Strauser, Colin Strother, Sherry Sylvester, Jay Thompson, Gerard Torres, Trey Trainor, Vicki Truitt, Joe Valenzuela, Corbin Van Arsdale, Ware Wendell, Ken Whalen, David White, Darren Whitehurst, Christopher Williston, Seth Winick, Peck Young, Angelo Zottarelli.

The Calendar

Thursday, Nov. 27

  • Thanksgiving Day
 

The Week in the Rearview Mirror

State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte announced Wednesday that she will resign her seat in the Legislature to run for mayor of San Antonio. The Democrat's announcement complicated the mayoral aspirations of state Rep. Mike Villarreal who had previously announced his candidacy. It also set up a showdown between state Reps. Trey Martinez Fischer and José Menéndez to succeed Van de Putte in the Senate.

State Comptroller-elect Glenn Hegar will resign his Senate seat Dec. 5, a day prior to a special election to fill the vacancy. At the end of the filing period for Hegar's seat, three Republicans — state Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, Gary Gates and Charles Gregory III — and two Democrats — Cynthia Drabek and Christian E. Hawkins — had entered the race.

State leaders have agreed to bring back National Guard troops from border surge operations by early Spring of next year. The move was a signal of a shift in emphasis to using Department of Public Safety personnel who have arrest making authority.

Controversy flared again at the State Board of Education over the selection of social studies textbooks with the board ending up deadlocked on a preliminary vote after public testimony demonstrated concerns over perceived biases in the materials. The board is expected to take a final vote on Friday.

The special prosecutor pressing criminal charges against Gov. Rick Perry will not be disqualified from the case over questions around the oath of office he took. A judge ruled Tuesday that the prosecutor was properly sworn into office.

Lt. Gov.-elect Dan Patrick announced his staff hires for the upcoming session, highlighted by his bringing aboard two experienced Capitol hands — Mike Morrissey and Walter Fisher.

A leak of methyl mercaptan gas that killed four workers early Saturday at a LaPorte chemical plant has focused attention on plants' safety records across Texas. One finding is that releases are not uncommon, happening dozens of times in the past two years.

Political People and their Moves

Alía Ureste of El Paso has been appointed by Gov. Rick Perry to the Texas Holocaust and Genocide Commission for a term to expire Feb. 1, 2015.

Randy Williams of Abilene has been named by Perry to the Juvenile Justice Advisory Board for a term to expire at the pleasure of the governor.

Aureka Sanders of DeSoto was named by Perry to the Assistive and Rehabilitative Services Council for a term to expire Feb. 1, 2015.

Newly elected state Sen. Konni Burton, R-Colleyville, announced her hires of legislative staff for the upcoming legislative session. Art Martinez de Vara, currently the mayor of Von Ormy, will serve as Burton's chief of staff. Tyler Norris, who was on the staff of state Rep. James White last session, will serve as legislative director. Cathy Bean Scott will serve as district director.

The Texas Department of Public Safety Foundation announced the first members named to its 18-member board of directors and its nine-member advisory committee. Board officers include President Tom Clowe of Waco, Vice President Ada Brown of Dallas, Secretary Allan Polunsky of San Antonio and Treasurer Carin Barth of Houston.

Carrie Simmons, former director of the Texas House Republican Caucus and co-founder of Red State Women PAC, has joined Texas Lobby Group.

Todd Whitley has joined Equality Texas as its new communications manager, a move designed to help expand the group's reach from North Texas into the state's other major metropolitan centers. Whitley has been a columnist for Dallas Voice and was most recently board chair and program director of Hope for Peace & Justice.

Sarah Tober has been hired by NFIB Texas as its new state communications director. In addition to past communications jobs with Austin Energy and the Texas Historical Commission, she also has history as a small business owner, running a neighborhood grocery store in Hutto specializing in Texas-made products.

Disclosure: The Texas Historical Commission is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune. A complete list of Texas Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here.

Quotes of the Week

You’re gonna be spending a lot of time walking on marble floors, so get ya a pair of rubber-soled shoes.

U.S. Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Dallas, dispensing advice this week to incoming freshmen congressmen

There already is a path to citizenship in this country. And I would suggest to you it doesn't need to be changed. So, if you want to be a citizen, go get in the line, and pay the dues ... just like everybody else.

Gov. Rick Perry, taking the hard line on immigration in remarks to the Republican Governors Association

At the end of the day, we all do the state a disservice by making this vote something much bigger than it actually is. It's a freaking vote.

State Rep. Jonathan Stickland, R-Bedford, seeking to downplay the long-term significance of a speaker vote in January

So I’ll leave the threats and the intimidation to others.

House Speaker Joe Straus saying in a speech to the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce that he plans to take a different approach to the speaker's race than those who want to unseat him

We’re delighted that he has been appointed secretary of state because it gets him out of Cameron County as county judge. We’re happy to get rid of him.

Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa, who lost the county judge race in 2006 to Carlos Cascos, "congratulating" him on his pending appointment to be secretary of state