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Showing posts with label David Dewhurst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Dewhurst. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Texas Tea Party Win Big

Tea Party Tornado Sweeps Texas GOP Primary

Dan PatrickTo paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the Tea Party’s death in Texas are greatly exaggerated. In four Republican primaries, Tea Party-supported candidates all won their respective contests, headlined by the race for Lieutenant Governor.
Challenger Dan Patrick beat well-funded incumbentand energy magnate David Dewhurst for the 2nd highest office in Texas. Dewhurst contributed over $5 million of personal funds to his campaign, and a Dewhurst ally – Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson – released records that showed Patrick had been treated for depression (and allegedly attempted suicide) back in the 1980s.
This wasn’t enough to overcome the strong anti-Establishment sentiment in the Lone Star State. The Houston Chronicle interviewed Robert Wilkerson, a 65-year-old handyman from Aledo (near Ft. Worth) who said he voted for Patrick because Dewhurst had become too “passive.”
From: Tea Party Update.com
“David Dewhurst hasn’t taken control,” Wilkerson said. “He wouldn’t get in the middle of anything, he would just kind of go along with the status quo and I think we need some changes.”
Patrick moves on to the November general election, where he will face Democratic state senator Leticia Van de Putte from San Antonio.
In the GOP primary for state Attorney General, Tea Party-backed Ken Paxton beat Dan Branch, a member of the Texas state House leadership team.
Sid Miller won the Republican race for Agriculture Commissioner over his former legislative colleague Tommy Merritt, whom he accused of being too moderate.
17-term incumbent Ralph Hall was the first incumbent to lose his bid for renomination after he was ousted by former U.S. Attorney John Ratcliffe in the 4th Congressional District race, 53% to 47% with 98 percent of precincts reporting.
While Tea Party candidates have had limited success in other states this election season, Texas is a very notable exception.
Will this primary be the springboard that propels other Tea Party candidates to success in 2014 and beyond? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

The "Defeated" Tea Party Dominates In Texas. Once Again Lame Stream Media And GOP Get It Wrong!


Texas Tea Party Dominates GOP Primary, Unseats Lt. Governor and House's Oldest Rep.


The Atlantic Wire

Texas Tea Party Dominates GOP Primary, Unseats Lt. Governor and House's Oldest Rep.
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Texas Tea Party Dominates GOP Primary, Unseats Lt. Governor and House's Oldest Rep.
Texas Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst's political career may have ended tonight, as the incumbent in the state's powerful second-in-command post lost his primary runoff race to State Sen. Dan Patrick, according to the Associated Press. Although Patrick ran as a Tea Party challenger to Dewhurst, both men are quite politically conservative. Patrick, who led in votes after the first round of primary voting earlier this year, is a talk show host in the state. Dewhurst has been Lieutenant Governor since 2003. 
This is actually the second time in two years that Dewhurst (who as the Washington Post notes was once a rising star on the national field) has lost a race to a Tea Party candidate. The first time was in 2012, when Dewhurst ran against and lost a Senate race to none other than Ted Cruz. Earlier, Dewhurst said that his 2014 bid for re-election would be his last. He's right, but likely not for the reasons he hoped. According to the Associated Press, Dewhurst spent $5 million of his own money on his re-election bid. The campaign leading up to today's vote turned bizarre and personal in recent weeks, including an attack ad from the Dewhurst camp featuring Patrick singing a parody of "Let it Go." 
Despite, say, the Texas legislature's passage of a restrictive, omnibus anti-abortion bill this year, many of the state's Republicans were targeted by challengers who attempted to run even further to the right, as Patrick did to Dewhurst. In the race for the state's Attorney General spot — incumbent Greg Abbot is running for Governor instead — the Tea Party-backed State Sen. Ken Paxton looked set to win out over State Rep. Dan Branch. Texas voters also picked a Tea Party challenger, John Ratcliffe, over the oldest sitting member of Congress: 91-year-old Rep. Ralph Hall. 
Although, as the Dallas Morning News pointed out, Texas is ranked 47th in per capita spending and 48th in taxation compared to every other state, many of the Tea Party candidates ran on the platform that spending was out of control thanks to "establishment" Republicans, and promised substantial cuts to spending. The Morning News summed up the state's Tea Party position as, essentially, "to shut down the border, to stop or even impeach President Barack Obama and to fight for gun owners to be able to carry their weapons openly and anywhere." Patrick, for example, repeatedly referred to undocumented immigration as an "illegal invasion," angering many Latino political leaders in the state. In case you still think the Morning News's description is a bit much, Patrick's first campaign ad tagline was simply, "Secure the border, fight Obama." 
Patrick will now go up against Democratic State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte in the November general elections. Like virtually every Republican running for statewide office in Texas, Patrick is heavily favored to win. 

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Texas Tea Party Win


Ted Cruz wiped the floor with the Texas lieutenant governor! He obliterated the mainline Republican candidate and did it coming from the back with little initial name recognition. If this is any indication of what is going to happen in November, it will be a good day for the Republican Party, but not necessarily for RINOs.

The Texas Tea Party made a statement and hopefully sometime in the future, those in the mainline will wake up to a new reality, which is, the old ways don't work anymore! Instead of being Democratic Light, the Tea Party is offering the country a real choice. Does the public want a socialist Nanny state or one where individuals make their own choices, where the Constitution is honored and obeyed, and where government edicts are not the rule of the day? That is the choice and let's hope that the public agrees with us. We believe they do.

Conservative Tom 


Texas Tea Party Candidate Trumps Republican Establishment in U.S. Senate Race

Texas Senate Race
Holding his daughter Caroline, U.S. Senate candidate Ted Cruz and and his wife, Heidi, holding their daughter, Catherine, appear before a cheerful crowd after Cruz defeated Republican rival, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst in a runoff election for the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Kay Bailey Hutchison Tuesday, July 31, 2012, in Houston. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Johnny Hanson) MANDATORY CREDIT
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Ted Cruz is fond of saying that when he began his run for U.S. Senate, he was at 2 percent in the polls against Texas Republican juggernaut David Dewhurst, the state's lieutenant governor for nearly a decade.
Actually, the 41-year-old former state solicitor general seemed an even longer shot than that.
Gov. Rick Perry and much of the rest of the Republican establishment lined up to endorse Dewhurst for their party's nomination to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, and the party's mainstream doesn't lose much in Texas. After all, the state hasn't elected a Democrat to statewide office in nearly 20 years.
But Cruz pulled off what had seemed an unthinkable upset Tuesday, and it wasn't even close. He trounced Dewhurst by about 13 percentage points, shaking one of America's reddest states to its political core.
His victory was all the more stunning considering Cruz lost to the lieutenant governor 44 percent to 34 percent during the state's May 29 primary. But simply making it to a second round of voting proved a major momentum-builder for Cruz, who vowed to prevail since his supporters were dedicated enough to turn out during the Texas summer doldrums.
Cruz got there by spending months sitting in on Republican women's meetings at Denny's, chatting up pastors at Bible studies and addressing tea party gatherings across Texas. Eventually, he became enough of a grass-roots sensation to attract the support of national conservative groups such as the anti-tax Club for Growth, which branded Dewhurst as too moderate and spent millions to help defeat him.
"We are witnessing a great awakening," Cruz told cheering supporters in Houston shortly after Dewhurst called him to concede Tuesday night. "Millions of Texans, millions of Americans are rising up to reclaim our country, to defend liberty and to restore the Constitution."
The race had been closely watched nationally as one of the most-vivid contrasts between the GOP mainstream and grass-roots, conservative activists. Shortly after most of the polls closed statewide, it had become a cakewalk for Cruz.
"We're just tired of the government ignoring the Constitution," said Don Steinway, a 76-year-old retired commercial airline pilot, who lives in Houston and described himself as a staunch supporter of the tea party.
Cruz's father Rafael was born in Cuba and fought with Fidel Castro's rebels before they embraced communism. The elder Cruz fled the island and arrived in Texas in 1957 with $100 sewn into his underwear. His son, meanwhile, is a onetime Ivy League debating champion with a fiery stage presence and a brand of populism that energizes grass-roots groups.
Dewhurst oversaw some of the most-conservative state legislative sessions in Texas history and helped speed the passage of laws requiring women to undergo a sonogram before having an abortion and voters to show identification at the polls. However, he also occasionally compromised with Democratic lawmakers to keep the legislative agenda moving.
Looking exhausted and shaken, Dewhurst told a small crowd in another part of Houston late Tuesday, "We got beat up a little bit but we never gave up."
Perry then released a statement calling Cruz "a force to be reckoned with: an excellent candidate and a great conservative communicator."
Also Tuesday, Democratic state Rep. Paul Sadler easily bested perennial candidate Grady Yarbrough to capture his party's nomination and face Cruz in November's general election, but Cruz begins that race the overwhelming favorite.
Sadler said that he stood "alone as the only nominee of a major political party in Texas because the Texas Republican Party has been hijacked by the tea party."
It doesn't look like a hijacking from where Cruz now sits. He successfully painted his opponent as wishy-washy — even though they actually disagree on little.
Dewhurst also was endorsed by former baseball great Nolan Ryan, as well as former Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert, who finished third in the Republican primary, and ex-NFL running back and ESPN commentator Craig James, the primary's fourth-place primary finisher.
None of it was enough. Cruz was endorsed by ex-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, radio talk show host Glenn Beck, U.S. Sens. Jim DeMint of South Carolina and Kentucky's Rand Paul, as well as former GOP presidential hopeful and Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum.
"The message of this race couldn't be clearer for the political establishment: the Tea Party is alive and well and we will not settle for business as usual," Palin said via Facebook.
Cruz has drawn comparisons to Indiana, where state Treasurer Richard Mourdock defeated incumbent Sen. Richard Lugar in the Republican primary. But in Texas, the nation's second-most populous state, a win by a tea party-backed candidate is likely to resonate even more.
To Dewhurst's supporters, Cruz said, "We ask you to join us."
"We want you on our team," he continued. "In the heat of the campaign there have been harsh words spoken but I am hopeful that all of us can put them behind us and work together going forward."