On May 1, voters in Lubbock passed Proposition A, a local ordinance that designated the city as a “sanctuary for the unborn,” with 62 percent of voters voting in favor. The election, which made Lubbock the largest city in the United States to establish such a designation, attracted heavy campaign spending by both sides as the trail to Election Day heated up.
The Taxpayers Coalition
Texas Committee
$449Cash on Hand
$4,056Total Contributions
$3,189Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$530.00 | Shyamsundar Ananthaswamy |
$501.00 | Neeta Sane |
$400.00 | Clyde Neel |
$250.00 | Nayela Abdulhameed |
$250.00 | Tamara Macfarlan |
$240.95 | Evelyn Montalvo |
$200.00 | Robert Beham |
$200.00 | Terese Raia |
$154.97 | John Treadgold |
$150.00 | Jennifer Haar |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$1,888.96 | Nbd |
$676.03 | Texas GOP Store |
$192.86 | Court Hardware |
$108.80 | Fort Bend Herald |
$101.80 | Paypal Holdings Inc |
$96.00 | Hometown Journal |
$55.00 | Katy Christian Magazine |
$39.00 | Aggregated Unitemized Expenditures |
$31.00 | Bank of Texas |
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On May 1, voters in Lubbock will be deciding the fate of Proposition A, which would declare the City of Lubbock as a “sanctuary for the unborn.” A hot-button issue from the start, Lubbock is experiencing a heightened level of outside interest in this local election. Proposition A was placed on the ballot in response to the opening of a Planned Parenthood clinic, and the subsequent petition and City Council rejections of the sanctuary ordinance that opened the door for a vote.
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