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.
Stop Tax Hikes
Texas Committee
$189Cash on Hand
$3,855Total Contributions
$3,411Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$2,164.25 | Lisa Akerly |
$1,091.15 | Lennea Hartoonian |
$300.00 | Aggregated Unitemized Contributions |
$300.00 | Patrick Wamhoff |
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For the 2020 election cycle (2019 – 2020), more than $109 million in taxpayer dollars was being spent to lobby Austin politicians. With our Lobbying Data feature, Texans can see which organizations hired lobbyists, who they hired, and how much they spent. In addition to pulling back the curtain on lobbying — the largest source of money and influence on Texas lawmakers — we have also divided the organizations hiring lobbyists into two categories: those who are taxpayer-funded and those who are privately-funded.