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.
Garnet Coleman
$41,664Cash on Hand
$0Total Contributions
$69,427Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$69,378.96 | Operation Smart |
$48.15 | A Rocket Moving & Storage Inc |
Top Personal Contributions
From reports filed by the recipients of these funds, it appears these transactions originated from personal rather than campaign accounts.
Total Contributions | Candidate | Committee |
---|---|---|
$7,500.00 | John Whitmire | Whitmire, John (The Honorable) |
$3,250.00 | ActBlue Texas | |
$500.00 | Houstonians for Safe & Healthy Schools | |
$500.00 | Eddie Morales Jr | Morales Jr., Heriberto (The Honorable) |
$500.00 | Jarvis Johnson | Johnson, Jarvis (The Honorable) |
$500.00 | Laurel Jordan Swift | Swift, Laurel Jordan (Mrs.) |
$250.00 | Dade Phelan | Phelan, Matthew M. (The Honorable) |
$250.00 | Royce West | West, Royce (The Honorable) |
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This article is Part 4 of a four-part series demonstrating how the money in a lobby sector can impact state politics and legislation. Read the first three articles here, here, and here.
Election Day for the party primary runoffs in Texas is this upcoming Tuesday, July 14. All eyes are on elections for the Texas Legislature this round, because the results of these runoffs could have an outsized impact in November. Although primary elections were held back on March 3rd, 16 of those elections have proceeded to a runoff because no candidate was able to garner at least 50 percent of the vote.