On Monday, approximately 58 members of the Texas House of Representatives boarded private planes in Austin and flew to Washington, D.C. to avoid voting on an election integrity bill.
Ben Hardin
$9,191Cash on Hand
$18,000Total Contributions
$60,817Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$2,500.00 | Don Jackson |
$2,500.00 | Francisco Guerra IV |
$2,500.00 | Gregory F Cox |
$2,500.00 | Mark Sparks |
$2,500.00 | Mikal Watts |
$2,500.00 | Ray Thomas |
$2,000.00 | Thomas Pirtle |
$1,000.00 | Irfan Ali Lalani |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$15,963.84 | Lexus Financial Services |
$9,345.85 | Darion Irvine |
$4,977.00 | Chase Bank Visa |
$4,216.32 | Texas Dow Employees Credit Union TDECU |
$3,986.00 | AT&T Services Inc |
$2,990.32 | Progressive County Mutual Insurance Co |
$2,317.00 | Affordable Storage |
$1,857.57 | Ann's Monogramming |
$1,457.59 | The Houston Chronicle |
$1,157.22 | Costco Wholesale |
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Governor Greg Abbott made headlines this week when he literally defunded the Texas legislature. But lawmakers still have options, namely your campaign donations.
Over the course of the 2020 election cycle, more than $662.5 million dollars were reported as contributions to Texas state-level candidates and PACs. Of that total, an astounding $46.9 million in donations went to Governor Greg Abbott’s campaign account. To put that number in context, Abbott’s donations account for seven percent of all Texas campaign contributions — and over 15 percent of candidate contributions — in an election cycle when he was not up for election.