The Republican presidential primary might turn out to be a race between incoming votes for the candidates on one hand, and public and press scrutiny of U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona on the other. He hid in the sun until late in the race, protecting himself from the kind of intense attention that can kill an insurgent campaign, and the Bush folks didn’t have him on their radar until he was well into the fight. They were paying attention to Steve Forbes, the spoiler four years ago. McCain is benefiting at this stage from voters’ willingness to look at something fresh. He might hold up just fine when people begin to look more closely. Or, he might turn into Ross Perot, who was initially attractive to the press and the public before close attention revealed his quirks and drained his support.
State Government
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Sacks of Cash for People Who Aren’t Running
Lt. Gov. Rick Perry raised an average of more than $20,000 every day, including weekends, from the first of July through the end of the year. That’s in a cycle when he’s not on the ballot.
A Man on the Hot Seat
Within about 24 hours, Rodney Watkins, an insurance agent from Mineola, pulled his name off the ballot and then agreed to let it stay on, and then called it off again. Watkins, who owns a growing insurance business with offices in Austin and Waco as well as in his home, decided at one point that business matters should dominate his time and energy, and that’s apparently what he finally decided.
You Can’t Win If You Don’t Play
The Democrats were spinning hard when they announced their overall ballots on the third day of the year. Chairman Molly Beth Malcolm answered just about every question with a variation on “We are rebuilding and we are focussed on the House, the Senate and Congress.” Flip the question and ask Democrats if they were happy to have a ticket without a head on it, or with a head on it that consists mainly of five political nobodies who aim to challenge the best-funded U.S. senator in the country, and they concede that, well, yes, that does sound sort of goofy.
Crayons, Politics, Idle Speculation
Scotch the notion, which was being knocked around in the mostly idle Pink Building last week, that a delay in redistricting would automatically keep the current maps in place for a few more years. Those maps are generally considered to be favorable to Democrats. A judge could leave those plans in place, but the changes in the state’s population have been so extensive that it would be a tough decision to defend. The current plans are probably burnt toast after this next set of elections.
Campaign Finance: Some Assembly Required
A new law requires candidates to file their campaign finance reports “by computer disk, modem, or other means of electronic transfer.” A little twist in the law requires the Texas Ethics Commission to post the reports on the Internet for all of Texas to see, but to first strip out street addresses of contributors, ostensibly for reasons of privacy and piracy. The law also says people can get the reports by showing up at the ethics agency and requesting them.
Testing the Teflon
The national press, in particular the political press corps from the city of Washington, D.C., thinks the Texas press has left a lot of food on the table when it comes to Gov. George W. Bush. There’s been talk, as the saying goes, the gist of which is that the local folks have been very easy on the state’s chief executive and that it will take the heat of a national race to cook out the truth.
What’s Big and Slowly Graying?
We liked it better when stories about baby boomers were about hip-huggers and greasy hair and loud music, but the most self-centered generation in modern America is getting old. That ain’t news in and of itself, but it presents a whole slew of things for people in government and business to think about and Texas actually has dispatched a team to start doing some of that thinking.
T. R. O. U. B. L. E., Part I
No one has stepped forward to announce a challenge to Sen. James “Buster” Brown, R-Lake Jackson, but the senator’s local GOP has put together most of the tools an opponent would need.
A Smaller Agency, a Bigger Hole
Only two months into the current budget, the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse (TCADA for short) has discovered it has $57 million less than it thought, partly because the agency has less money on hand than it forecast and partly because it’s spending money faster than it knew.

