Which Texas candidate raised the most money?
We Can Keep It
Texas Committee
$10,552Cash on Hand
$242,481Total Contributions
$223,923Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$210,500.00 | Hollis Sullivan |
$5,000.00 | James Traweek |
$5,000.00 | Kenneth Eldred |
$5,000.00 | Kenneth Roberta Eldred Revocable & Trust |
$5,000.00 | Larry Kalas |
$4,854.70 | Wes Reeder |
$3,000.00 | Jay And Toni Meadows |
$1,042.37 | Trent And Beth Prim |
$1,038.73 | John O'Shea |
$600.00 | Jorge And Sarah Bosch |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$103,000.33 | Tim O'Hare |
$100,003.00 | Tim O'Hare |
$10,003.33 | Matt Krause |
$9,003.33 | Nate Schatzline |
$1,274.00 | Tarrant County Conservatives |
$563.18 | Stripes LLC |
$76.00 | Vista Bank |
Related Articles
Lobbying is big business in Austin. Over $667 million was spent by lobbyist clients to influence lawmakers during the 2020 election cycle (January 1, 2019 – December 31, 2020), with the vast majority of that spending occurring while the Texas legislature was convened in 2019. Yet only two percent of all those expenditures have a legislator’s name attached to them. That’s right. In the entire two-year cycle, only $12,944,291 ever made its way onto a detailed report filed with the Texas Ethics Commission.
As the 87th Texas legislative session resumes after a two week adjournment, efforts to ban taxpayer-funded (TPF) lobbying are back in the spotlight. Considered priority legislation by the Republican Party of Texas, bills were once again filed by State. Rep. Mayes Middleton (R—Wallisville) in the House, and State Sen. Bob Hall (R—Edgewood) in the Senate.