In July, a group of Democratic legislators left Austin, with some traveling to Washington, D.C., in an effort to break the quorum of the Texas Legislature to prevent action on Gov. Greg Abbott’s special session agenda.
Eddie Lucio III
$20,596Cash on Hand
$326,063Total Contributions
$304,866Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$20,000.00 | Border Health PAC |
$10,181.38 | Texans for Lawsuit Reform PAC |
$8,087.43 | Blackridge Consulting LLP |
$7,500.00 | Saam Zarrabi |
$7,000.00 | The Chickasaw Nation |
$6,500.00 | Texas Consumer Finance Association Political Action Committee |
$6,000.00 | Texas Rural Water PAC |
$5,033.18 | Texas REALTORS Political Action Committee |
$5,000.00 | AT&T Inc. Texas Political Action Committee |
$5,000.00 | Exelon Corporation Political Action Committee (DISSOLVED) |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$33,120.97 | Ruben O'Bell |
$15,469.23 | TD Auto Finance |
$12,878.66 | AMLI on 2nd Apartments |
$9,429.83 | AT&T Services Inc |
$6,700.00 | Miguel Sarkis |
$6,200.00 | Houston Tower |
$6,183.67 | Southwest Airlines |
$6,128.73 | Apple Inc |
$5,808.00 | CubeSmart Self Storage |
$5,750.00 | Cameron County Democratic Party (P) |
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Thirteen members of the Texas House and two members of the Texas Senate have already announced their intention to retire or to seek higher office, creating 15 open seats in the Texas legislature with redistricting underway ahead of the 2022 elections.
The latest campaign finance reports reveal that the Texas Democrats who broke quorum collected $491,000 between their July 12 departure and the end of the first special session. Over 25 percent of that money came from out-of-state donors.