John Grace
Texas 72nd District Court
$8,576Cash on Hand
$47,800Total Contributions
$54,966Total Expenditures
Are you John Grace, or someone associated with their campaign? Learn about the benefits of claiming your page - it's free.
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$15,000.00 Davis W Smith PC ENTITY
$5,000.00 David Grace INDIVIDUAL
$5,000.00 Diana Grace INDIVIDUAL
$2,500.00 Kevin Reed INDIVIDUAL
$2,500.00 Krista Reed INDIVIDUAL
$2,500.00 William McNamara INDIVIDUAL
$2,000.00 Mell Jackson Jrmd INDIVIDUAL
$2,000.00 Nancy Jackson INDIVIDUAL
$1,000.00 Brent Rose INDIVIDUAL
$1,000.00 Mark Griffin INDIVIDUAL
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$12,977.55 John Grace INDIVIDUAL
$10,494.00 Town Square Media ENTITY
$7,201.33 Advertising Services Inc ENTITY
$2,500.00 Chandler Grace INDIVIDUAL
$2,500.00 The What's Up Radio Program ENTITY
$1,800.00 Craig Cuny INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Lubbock County Republican Party (CEC) ENTITY
$1,500.00 Republican Party of Texas ENTITY
$1,309.29 Advertising Services ENTITY
$1,177.25 KCBD ENTITY
View All Payees
Top Loans
Amount
Lender
Type
$5,000.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$4,000.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$2,000.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$2,000.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$1,055.27John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$1,000.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$500.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$350.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
$200.00John GraceINDIVIDUAL
View All Loans
Related Articles
Transparency USA | 08/10/2022
Buckingham is the representative for Texas State Senate District 24 and is running for Texas Land Commissioner in 2022. Buckingham raised $2.8 million and spent $3.7 million between Jan. 1, 2021, and June 30, 2022. According to Texas Ethics Commission reports, the following individual donors and PACs gave the most money to Buckingham.
Tracy Marshall | 09/18/2019
Doxxing is the modern day version of stocks in the town square. Could it happen to you?
Tracy Marshall | 05/07/2019
Last week we reported that lawmakers had lumped this session’s most prominent pieces of legislation — property tax reform, school finance reform, and a sales tax — into one codependent heap. Yesterday, the Senate took steps to remove and kill the sales tax portion of the heap.