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.
Texas Senate Democratic Caucus
Texas Committee
$114,954Total Contributions
$152,389Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$25,000.00 | Swedish Match North America LLC |
$20,000.00 | BNSF Railway Company RAILPAC |
$20,000.00 | Chevron USA |
$10,000.00 | Amazon.com Inc |
$10,000.00 | Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma |
$10,000.00 | NRG Energy Inc |
$7,500.00 | Charter Communications Inc Texas PAC |
$7,453.85 | ActBlue Texas |
$5,000.00 | AT&T Inc. Texas Political Action Committee |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$136,280.55 | Gusto Capital LLC |
$2,628.65 | III Forks Steakhouse |
$2,358.44 | Eddie V's Prime Seafood |
$2,100.00 | J Carver |
$2,082.95 | Ruth's Chris Steak House |
$1,536.91 | Headliners Club |
$1,100.00 | Vespaio |
$900.00 | Austin Land & Cattle Company |
$900.00 | Jacoby's Restaurant & Mercantile |
$796.46 | The Grove Wine Bar & Kitchen |
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For the last two years, the most fiercely fought contest in Texas politics has been the Democrats’ effort to take control of the Texas House. Buoyed by flipping 12 seats to their column in 2018 and believing they could ride a demographic wave to increased power, Democrats and their PACs spent tens of millions of dollars in this effort.
The last campaign finance reports to be filed by Texas state-level candidates before Election Tuesday were due October 26 to the Texas Ethics Commission. With that latest update, all available pre-election campaign finance data for the 2020 election cycle is now included in Transparency USA’s Texas database.