Somebody around here should point out the remarkable similarities between Tom DeLay’s defense, so far, and Kay Bailey Hutchison’s defense against the same prosecutors in 1993 and 1994. Hutchison won acquittal after a searing public investigation and indictments, dropped indictments and re-indictments that threatened her political career. When the judge in that case, John Onion Jr., refused to pre-approve evidence seized by prosecutors from Hutchison’s state treasury offices, prosecutors refused to present their case. With nothing from the prosecution to consider, the court acquitted Hutchison. And here’s the political moral: She’s been invincible in state politics since then.
State Government
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Paying Tribute
Political advisors to Rep. Jim Pitts, R-Waxahachie, pulled the plug on an unusual fundraiser for “Speaker Tom Craddick’s Political Action Committee” after inquiries about the event. Pitts, the House Appropriations Committee chairman, was traveling outside the U.S. and unavailable for comment. But before he left, he sent a letter to House colleagues from the Dallas delegation asking them to help with a funder on December 1: “I believe, together, we can plan an event that will honor Tom Craddick for his outstanding work during the 79th Legislative Session.”
Fighting on Two Fronts
Tom DeLay has two fights on his hands. One is legal, and that’s what all of the paper flying around the courthouse is about. The other is political, and that’s why the lawyers and his supporters and detractors are spending so much of their time in the media, doing interviews and spinning, spinning, spinning.
DeLay Indicted
A Travis County grand jury indicted U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Sugar Land, and two aides — John Colyandro and Jim Ellis — on charges of conspiring to illegally exchange $190,000 in corporate political contributions for that amount of non-corporate money.
The Other Hurricane
Former state Comptroller John Sharp, who’d been informally exploring a run for governor, won’t run next year. Instead, he’ll head a blue ribbon committee for Gov. Rick Perry, looking for a better tax system for the state.
Another September, More Storm Clouds
A Travis County grand jury indicted the Texans for a Republican Majority PAC and the Texas Association of Business on charges relating to the use of corporate money in the 2002 legislative election. The five indictments include 130 counts alleging third-degree felony violations of campaign finance laws. Fines reach up to $20,000 per count, a potential total of $2.6 million.
A Bailout Offer for Texas Democrats
A group that includes Dallas lawyer Fred Baron — the chief fundraiser for the John Kerry-John Edwards ticket last year — and Marc Stanley — the incoming president of the Texas Trial Lawyers Association — wants to reboot the Texas Democratic Party, infusing money and people to try to get that moribund organization running again.
No Reply
Rick Perry won his first attempt at statewide office in 1990, in part because Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower didn’t answer commercials being run by the Republican upstart.
Shipwrecked
If you’ve been watching closely as the Legislature ran aground, you’ve been spun enough. We’ll make our autopsy report brief. The highlights:
Craddick Goes Statewide
House Speaker Tom Craddick is running radio ads in “selected markets across the state” — Houston, Dallas and San Antonio are on the list — defending the House’s actions on school finance, attacking the Senate, and suggesting the Texas Supreme Court will have the final say on what lawmakers should do.

