Burkablog

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Election Night V — The post-mortem

Going through the comments, I see claims that this was a great night for conservatives. Not to be contrary, but I don’t agree, at least not fully. Yes, Cruz won in a very impressive fashion, and so did Donna Campbell, but several conservatives fell by the wayside: Bill Keffer. Jim Landtroop. Sid Miller. What I found interesting was that Republican voters opted for moderation in legislative races involving extreme conservatives. Villalba beat Keffer, Ken King beat Landtroop, and J. D. Sheffield beat Sid Miller. Ken Miller won a victory for conservatives and so did Stephanie Klick. But this was not a tea party sweep, like the election of 2010. Moderates were able to beat conservatives, something that wasn’t the case in the first round of the primary.

The question now is how deep is the rift in the Republican party and can it be patched up? I think it can be, but only if Republicans leave their past behind. Dewhurst and Perry have been around too long. They need to yield the floor to others. Cruz, it is clear, is a great political talent. He’s the Mike Trout of Texas politics, a rookie of the year candidate who is better than the veterans. He captured the imagination not just of the Texas electorate, but of the nation. He has the potential to be a great United States senator. My first reaction was that he is an ideologue, but I don’t think he’ll remain one for long. He’s going to figure out the Senate and his role in it. His campaign was basically flawless. He is by far the most talented person in Texas politics (not the highest of bars to clear).

CORRECTION: I previously reported that Ciro Rodriguez had defeated Pete Gallego in CD-23. The returns were incomplete. Gallego ultimately prevailed.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Election Night Part IV — legislative races

Cruz’s lead has now expanded to 13 points at 10:51. The rout that I predicted in an earlier post has come to pass

More legislative races:

HD-11:

Chuck Hopson appears headed for defeat. All boxes are in. Hopson needed a big vote in Rusk County and he didn’t get it. The truth is, Hopson has been living on borrowed time, and has survived in East Texas for many years, but it looks like his luck has deserted him.

HD-12:

Closest race of the night:

Kyle Kacal 50.88%

Tucker Anderson 49.11%

Another squeaker, which just went final:
State Board of Education, District 10

Tom Maynard, 50.15%

Rebecca Osborne, 49.8%

The good news about this race is that both protagonists are quality candidates.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Election Night Part III — Odds and ends

Taking a look at other statewide races, congressional races, and legislative races:

I regret to report that in the Democratic primary, Pete Gallego lost his race against Ciro Rodriguez.

Craddick defeats Chisum (Railroad Commision)

Smitherman defeats Parker (Railroad Commission)

Randy Weber defeats Felicia Harris (CD 14) — the old Ron Paul seat

Steve Stockman defeats Stephen Takach (CD 36)

Supreme Court Place 4

Readers may recall an ugly incident in which John Devine, a candidate for the court, allegedly told someone he was running against incumbent David Medina because Medina had an Hispanic name. Medina also had ethics problems resulting from a fire at his house. In a race reminiscent of the defeat of Perry appointee Xavier Rodriguez early in the 2000s, Devine did defeat Medina, 54.79% to 45.20%.

Congressional District 25:

Roger Williams 58.94%

Wes Riddle 41.05%

Riddle had charged that President Obama had given away several islands off Alaska to the Russians.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Election Night — Part II: AP calls the race for Cruz

Slowly but inexorably, Cruz is widening his lead. It’s up to 8 points now statewide.

Looking at House races:

BONNEN-SITTON

Bonnen is “sitton” pretty:

Bonnen 57.0%

Sitton 42.9%

JIM LANDTROOP-KEN KING

Landtroop is winning. He’s hard to beat.

CRUZ WINS URBAN/SUBURBAN TEXAS

Look at these numbers:

Collin County:

Cruz 13,526

Dewhurst 8,880

Harris County:

Cruz 42,268

Dewhurst 27,047

Tarrant County:

Cruz 19,683

Dewhurst 15,078

Montgomery County:

Cruz 11,634

Dewhurst 6705

Dallas and Travis are the only big voting counties that are close. Both are pretty much an even split.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Election Night 2012 — Part I

I’ll be reporting on the runoffs tonight. Dewhurst vs. Cruz is the most important race, of course, but there also are a number of runoffs for legislative seats. UPDATE: Aaron Pena just tweeted (per the Trib) Cruz 65%, Dewhurst 35% in Hidalgo Co. early returns. Cruz grabbed a 5-point lead early and has held it throughout. Early vote statewide:

Cruz 52.29%

Dewhurst 47.70%

HOPSON-CLARDY

Clardy swamped Hopson in the early vote coming out of Nacogdoches County:

Clardy 2,535

Hopson 487

However, Hopson won Cherokee County by more than a thousand votes. Hopson needs a big win in Rusk County to hold onto his seat. No returns yet from Rusk.

 

LANDTROOP-KING

 

 

S. MILLER-SHEFFIELD

 

 

LOZANO-WILSON

San Patricio County early vote has a big lead for Wilson (913-413)

 

 

VILLABLA-B. KEFFER

 

 

KLICK-SAPP

 

 

MCKNIGHT-SPRINGER

 

 

B. RATLIFF-NGUYEN

Nguyen led the primary,  but Ratliff is  believed to have narrowed the gap with mailers accusing Nguyen of lobbying for Obamacare.

 

 

WENTWORTH-CAMPBELL

The first thing to watch for in this race is the Bexar County early vote. If Wentworth is not well ahead–he needs to win Bexar by 58%–he’s in trouble. His only other good county in the district is Comal, and he needs at least to break even there. Guadalupe could give him a boost. Travis and Hays are problematic, at best.

UPDATE:

Wentworth is toast, done. Early vote in Bexar:

Campbell 64.76%

Wentworth 34.75%

Campbell won the early vote in every county.

COLE-LEACH

Cole ran and lost in 2011.

 

G. BONNEN-SITTON

I think Bonnen should win this. Just the early vote is in:

Bonnen: 57.0%

Sitton: 42.9%

R. Miller-Chaumette

Miller is a longtime political operative in Fort Bend County. This is one of those races between a politician and a civic leader that the civic leader is going to be hard-pressed to win.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Senate race looks like a rout for Cruz

I had a conversation with a source in the Cruz camp, who spoke on background. Their latest poll, with which the source was familiar, was taken on Sunday night, and showed Cruz with a double-digit lead and everything trending in Cruz’s direction.

The Cruz campaign polled only people who had actually voted in the May 29 primary. They did not poll Republicans who did not vote in the primary. “We’re missing that universe,” the pollster acknowledged. “We only wanted 2012 primary voters.” Here was his crucial point: Based upon the numbers in the internal poll released by the Dewhurst campaign, Dewhurst would have to get 90% of the “missing universe” to win the election. And that defies the law of probability.

The pollster said that after the primary, nothing was moving for either candidate for three weeks. From late June until early voting for the runoff, the race was static. The TV ad war did not move votes. The debates did not move votes. The race was  close until the Wednesday night before the runoff. That was when the Cruz camp saw that voters were becoming more attentive, and the electorate started breaking for Cruz, and the momentum was all in his direction.

Monday, July 30, 2012

PPP: Cruz +10

The race has been moving in this direction for months now. Nothing Dewhurst has tried has changed the dynamics of the race at all. If anything, the millions Dewhurst has spent on TV have hurt his own campaign. The China ad and the Kids for Cash scandal ad have not achieved anything. Dewhurst’s array of consultants has never been able to lay a glove on Cruz. The most the campaign has been able to achieve is to establish the idea that Cruz is a lawyer who will take on any client who walks in the door, and that is just not enough to undermine Cruz’s positives.

The conventional wisdom concerning the numbers in this race is that the bigger the turnout, the better Dewhurst would do–the idea being that a large turnout would indicate that there is more to the GOP electorate than the tea party. But the fact is that the Dewhurst campaign never identified a constituency. The campaign was a mess from the start: Dewhurst, despite ten years in office, never really established an identity separate from Rick Perry.

And speaking of Perry, he’s the big loser in this race. He went all-in for Dewhurst, even lending him his own campaign organization. In effect, the Perry team portrayed Dewhurst as Perry’s alter ego. That was doomed to fail. In promoting Perry, the Dewhurst campaign diminished their own candidate.

What happens to Perry now? I think his political career may be over. The party he led is split, and the faction whose candidate he opposed appears to be winning the race. Perry’s ego is so huge that he thought he could get Dewhurst elected simply by endorsing him. How can he run for another term as governor (which he clearly wants to do) when he supported an establishment candidate against the tea party’s darling? Dan Patrick is in the same position. Both have lost credibility with their base. Everything is wide open now.

The big winner in this election (other than Cruz himself) is George P. Bush, Jeb’s son, who endorsed Cruz. That tells me two things: (1) he has inherited good political antennae; (2) his statewide political ambitions are on the fast track.

More from PPP:

Cruz’s [anticipated] victory is driven by 4 things: the Tea Party, the enthusiasm of his supporters, a generational divide within the Texas Republican ranks, and the lack of regard the party base currently holds for Rick Perry.

PPP is a Democratic polling firm and has every incentive to denigrate Rick Perry. Nevertheless, I believe PPP is right. There is a general lack of regard for Rick Perry among Republicans, Democrats, the tea party, and independents.

And Politico weighs in:

Runoffs, of course, are notoriously unpredictable and hard to poll. One example: Dewhurst adviser Dave Carney tells [Dave] Catanese, “I know we’re winning the early vote.” But PPP reports Cruz has a wide 55-40 lead among those who say they’ve already voted.

That fits. I don’t think anything I have heard from the Dewhurst campaign has proven to be accurate.

Tagged: , ,

Friday, July 27, 2012

Senate race could be definitive

The Senate race between David Dewhurst and Ted Cruz is shaping up to be the most important race in many years, going back to the Bush-Richards governor’s race of 1994. That race settled that Texas had become a Republican state and would remain one going into the future. The Dewhurst-Cruz race is likewise a watershed race. It will determine whether the Texas Republican party ventures into the roiling waters of ideological purification, as has happened in states like Arizona and Kansas and South Carolina or whether it can right the ship and return to a relatively normal course of governing.

Ted Cruz is the key figure. He has galvanized a constituency of extremists who threaten a tea party takeover of Texas politics. Rick Perry is to blame for this; it was he who jump-started the tea party movement in Texas in April of 2009. He gave it legitimacy at a rally by saying, “They say you’re a bunch of right-wing extremists, and if you are, I’m for you.” (The quote is not exact, but you get the idea.) And, of course, he hinted broadly that he supported secession. Too late, Perry must face up to the fact that he bears much of the responsibility for the extremism of the Republican party; he cannot control the forces that he unleashed, and he has reaped the whirlwind. The tea party is a mortal threat to the mainstream Republican party.

I wonder what went through Perry’s mind when he was booed at the Republican convention for supporting Dewhurst for Senate. He thought he could manage the flow of events but he couldn’t. Cruz had done what no one else in Texas politics had done, except possibly Debra Medina in 2010: He had gotten to Perry’s right. Perry’s  endorsement of the Dew was worthless, just counterfeit coin.

This is what happens when a party loses interest in governing, when all that its once and future leaders care about are issues that do not improve the lot of its citizens: Voter I.D., sanctuary cities, mandatory sonograms, purging the voter rolls, and fighting the federal government at every turn. How can Republicans endure as a mainstream party when an insurgent candidate for U.S. Senate invokes the word “moderate” to condemn his opponent?

It is unfortunate that Dewhurst is cast in the role of defender of the faith. The poor guy has nothing to offer except snuggling up to Rick Perry. He has been in office for ten years and has little to show for it except a decade of toadying to the governor. I can’t think of a single achievement Dewhurst can claim while in office that isn’t also a Perry achievement. Well, the property tax cut of 05-06 was driven by the lieutenant governor’s office. The problem with Dewhurst isn’t that he doesn’t get what is going on. He gets it. It’s that he doesn’t have the political will to do something about it. Hence, the about-face on using the Rainy Day Fund last session, after which angry senators told me on the Senate floor that if there had been a vote of confidence on Dewhurst, the tally would have been 31-0 against.

Make no mistake: the future of the Republican party is on the line in the Senate race. This is a “For Whom the Bell Tolls” moment. If Cruz wins, it means that powerful Washington interests with the ability to spend far more than our home-state politicians and sugar daddys, are poised to insert themselves into Texas politics and change its course. Even Perry understands this, which is why he is all-in for Dewhurst. What is going to stop the tea party and its deep-pockets national backers from taking over Texas politics with money that comes from outside the state? What is to stop them from uniting behind another Ted Cruz-like candidate to defeat Rick Perry’s bid for reelection. This is exactly what has happened in the Senate race, and it will continue to happen in future race.

There is another aspect to the Dewhurst-Cruz battle, and it is the tendency of the mainstream Republicans to fail to act in their own best interests. It is stunning to me that Greg Abbott continues to harass Hispanics with Voter I.D. and purging the voter rolls: that he can’t see the damage it is doing to the party’s future. He is willing to trade long-term political gain for his party in return for short-term political gain for himself.

The tea party is an immediate threat but not a long-term one; it is a one-generation phenomenon, the last gasp of old angry uninformed white guys. Hispanics are a different story; they represent the future and without them the Republicans have no future. Does it change anyone’s thinking? Apparently not.

I had a conversation with a nationally known Republican consultant yesterday . Here is what he told me: “If Ted Cruz wins the Senate race, Texas will be a purple state in four years.” In other words, the tea party is so extreme that even a Democrat might be able to get elected. Does it change anyone’s thinking? Probably not.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Combs endorses Dewhurst

Short take: Late. to. the. party.

Having already taken a hard right turn, she tries to move back to the middle. By the time she decides which office to run for, she’s going to be dizzy from all the twists and turns she has taken.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

High SA turnout could boost Wentworth

An unanticipated surge of early voting in Bexar County could benefit hometown state Senate candidate Jeff Wentworth in the high-profile race for state Senate district 25. On Monday, the first day of early voting, 4,705 voters cast ballots in the Republican primary, a rate of 540 votes per hour. On Tuesday, the rate increased to 718 votes per hour. Of course, it is not known who received those votes, but it is a fair assumption that Wentworth stands to benefit more than his opponent, Dr. Donna Campbell, who lives in New Braunfels. The formula for a Wentworth victory would require a high early vote total, similar to the May 29 primary vote, and a low turnout in the other counties in the district (parts of Comal, Hays, Travis, Guadalupe, Kendall). It is generally thought that Wentworth’s campaign had been struggling going into the early voting.

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