Democrat Chris Bell is suing Republican Rick Perry and the Washington, D.C.-based Republican Governor’s Association over the provenance of $1 million in campaign money in last year’s gubernatorial election.
State Government
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Crash Test Dummies
Dan Barrett and Mark Shelton — a lawyer and a doctor, a Democrat and a Republican, an opponent and a supporter of the current Speaker of the House — will face each other in a runoff in HD-97 in a few weeks. The money is big, the stakes are big, and there’s nothing else going on in state politics at the moment. It’s a Petri dish full of what’ll be happening in House races for the next 12 months.
The South Texas Way
The filing period for candidates is still a month away, but things are already getting ugly down in Senate District 21.
Pigs, Chickens, and Lame Ducks
To summarize: The state’s senior senator won’t seek reelection and might quit early, and hasn’t decided whether to run for governor or to get out and earn some money in the private sector.
Death and Texas
The state’s top criminal judge has inspired a parody website and a complaint from a group of lawyers that’s dead serious.
Its Name is MUD
Clunky as it is, “Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District Number One” is a familiar name in election law circles.
Soldier, Legislator, Lobbyist, Candidate
Come March, Democratic primary voters will likely know all about U.S. Senate hopeful Rick Noriega’s ties to utility companies. What voters will make of it is still anybody’s guess.
A Herd of Headless Chickens
Maybe nobody will remember this in six months, but the people who want Texans to approve $3 billion in cancer bonds are having a hard time keeping their act together.
Sweet Sixteen
The political air is different in sixteen legislative districts: Republicans win statewide races, but Democrats dominate in legislative contests.
Campaign Maps, By the Numbers
Redistricting, with just a few exceptions, still has a strong hold on the makeup of the state Senate and the Texas congressional delegation. But several House members continue to confound the mapmakers, winning in districts where, on paper, they shouldn’t.



