Last month, the bill attempting to ban taxpayer-funded lobbying appeared unlikely to make it out of the Texas House State Affairs Committee. The atmosphere has shifted in the last week, after so many people came to testify at a hearing for House Bill 749 that the meeting lasted until early the next morning. The sheer volume of advocacy has thrust the lobbying ban bill back into the spotlight, and we’re seeing a surge of renewed interest in the Texas lobbying conversation.
Clint Morgan
$14,659Cash on Hand
$16,095Total Contributions
$1,587Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$5,205.08 | Charles Earnest |
$2,500.00 | Montgomery J Bennett |
$2,500.00 | Texans for Lawsuit Reform PAC |
$1,041.02 | Theodore Cory |
$520.50 | Heather Hudson |
$500.00 | Giselle Horton |
$500.00 | Grant Earnest |
$500.00 | Grant Winthrop |
$500.00 | Hoover Slovacek LLP |
$500.00 | Lam Blake |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$446.99 | Winred Technical Services LLC |
$384.65 | The UPS Store |
$250.00 | Clint Morgan |
$185.28 | Alliance Graphics and Printing |
$90.81 | Aggregated Unitemized Expenditures |
$30.00 | Republican Women's Club of Katy |
$29.81 | Amazon.com Inc |
$25.00 | Fort Bend Republican Women |
$23.39 | Los Cucos |
$22.44 | Coastal Grill |
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When lawmakers convene in Austin, the biggest financial influence on them shifts from campaign contributions to lobbying. And taxpayers are footing the bill for a lot of it.