Democrat Tony Sanchez has spent enough money trying to become governor of Texas that he’s made the contest a national news item. In the latest financial reports, Sanchez reported spending $26.2 million, a three-month bender that brings his overall total to $57.5 million. Republican Rick Perry spent a measly $10.5 million during the past three months–that’s under $120,000 a day, for crying out loud–bringing his total to date to $17.2 million. The national news? Spending in the Texas governor’s race has already topped $75 million, putting the contest here on the scale of the California gubernatorial contests that hold most of the records.
Spending His Children’s Inheritance
Two Parties Without an Accurate Guest List
Five out of five experts agree: They don’t have a consensus on how many Texans will vote this year, or on which Texans will make up that total. That makes it difficult to know where to send mail, what shows to buy commercial time on, who to call when it’s time to get Joe and Josephine Sixpack off the couches and out to the polls. It’s got the smart people scratching their pointy heads.
You’re in Political Hands
The insurance issue blows up, the second-largest insurer plans to leave the state, more than a half million homeowners could be forced to change insurers during the next year. There’s plenty for regulators and legislators to do next year, but how does that splash in the election pool?
Ain’t Gonna Study War No More
Several months ago, a spokesman for Attorney General John Cornyn popped off about the Democratic “Dream Team,” calling it a racial quota ticket that ultimately wouldn’t work. Cornyn disavowed it right away. Then U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm told Republican Party state delegates that Democrats were trying to divide the state’s voters on the basis of race. Soon after, in a press grab in Washington, D.C., Cornyn said Gramm was right to say race shouldn’t be the basis for the elections.
Off to the Races
The well-worn rule is that the political season starts on Labor Day, but we’re doing now what would usually have been done then because of the 9/11 break in the political schedule. The ads are coming back on television now, and candidates who have been keeping a low profile are breaking into their sprints for the last six weeks before the elections.
Wasn’t There a Lucky-Ducky in the Fable?
While everyone is talking about the potential gap between income and spending in the next budget, the state is facing a big problem in the current budget. Put simply, lawmakers will face a combination of spending overruns and revenue shortfalls when they show up for work in January. Annual sales tax revenues have increased every year since 1983. But not last year: The state’s largest single source of tax income dropped by almost $187 million during the fiscal year that ended on August 31. It was supposed to increase by $366 million.
Florida’s Progeny
Partisans in Dallas County are gathering for a fight over who will get to vote on Election Day in November and in the early voting that leads up to it. Republicans call it Ballot Security. Democrats call it Voter Education. Both sides refer to what the other side is doing as Voter Intimidation.
How Big is the Dump Truck?
With state agencies filing budget requests for the next Legislature, all attention is on the growing demands on state spending. The Austin American-Statesman led the pack, reporting that the differences between available money and spending needs has swollen dramatically, to $7 billion and beyond.
Risks, Hazards, and Insurance
The great thing about incumbency is that you control the government agencies you’re seeking to lead. For example, lookit: Gov. Rick Perry started a commercial that touts the fact that the Texas Department of Insurance issued a cease-and-desist order against Farmers Insurance. The ad began running the same day the order from TDI was announced, letting the governor–through the regulators–control what was in the papers at the same time he was starting a political ad reinforcing the message. The trick is getting voters to believe in reforms put in place so close to Election Day.
A Call for a Political Cease-Fire
A challenge to Texas politicians to lay off the rough stuff in the days around September 11 gives a little after-the-fact cover to candidates who’ve been leaving grill marks on your television screen.

