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Texas gubernatorial candidates Bill
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Hispanics will Influence Texas
Governor's Race
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WASHINGTON
(By Huma Khan and Maya Srikrishman,
ABC News) September 30, 2010
Democrats are eyeing the
opportunity to recapture the Texas
governor's seat for the first time
in 15 years, in a race that could
have an impact on national elections
for years to come as the state
prepares to draw up new
congressional district lines.
Former Houston mayor and lawyer Bill
White is in a surprisingly close
race with GOP incumbent Rick Perry,
running for a third term. Among
likely voters, Perry was leading
White by 46 percent to 39 percent,
with 8 percent undecided, in the
most recent poll by the Dallas
Morning News, conducted Sept. 15-22.
White has consistently trailed Perry
since the incumbent won the
Republican primary against Sen. Kay
Bailey Hutchison. Most Texas
politicos are still hedging their
bets on Perry, albeit after a tough
election fight. But Democrats still
have a shot if they can elevate
grassroots momentum in the last few
weeks of the campaign, especially
among Hispanics.
"Perry doesn't have the magic 50
percent" that should give him a
comfortable advantage, said pollster
Mickey Blum. "This is that one time
that it's close enough where it will
matter if people can get their
voters out."
The national interest in White's
campaign makes the race unlike any
other in recent Texas history. White
is the top recipient of in-state and
out-of-state donations among all
Texas candidates, according to data
collected by the Center for
Responsive Politics.
The Texas money game is not just
about the governor's race. In fact,
the national interest in Texas goes
well beyond the 2010 races.
As Democratic Governors Association
executive director Nathan Daschle
wrote in a memo outlining the
group's strategy, "The most
important battles will be for the
states that have relevance in
congressional redistricting,
implications for the 2012
presidential election and the sheer
size of their population."
Texas, the second largest state in
the country, is expected to gain
four House seats -- the most of any
state -- according to private firm
Election Data Services, which
analyzed Census Bureau population
estimates.
The DGA has poured $2 million into
White's campaign, the most ever for
a Texas gubernatorial candidate.
"This is a pretty key pick-up
opportunity in 2010 for us. We
consider the Texas governor's race
one of our top tier opportunities,"
said DGA communications director
Emily Bittner.
Perry "is a 25-year career
politician and people are quite
frankly getting fed up with him. He
works part-time in a taxpayer-funded
luxury mansion," she said.
2010 Election Maps: Follow the
Senate, House and Governors' Races
Texas Governor's Race Heats Up
Redistricting in 2003 ended up
embroiled in a controversy and court
delays that went all the way to the
Supreme Court. Then-House majority
leader, Republican Tom Delay,
particularly came under fire for his
role in crafting a plan that
Democrats charged was a way to
ensure that Republicans would
continue to stay in power in
Washington.
In Texas, district lines are drawn
by the state legislature. If the
legislature can't pass a plan, the
Legislative Redistricting Board
convenes to adopt its own plan,
which must then be submitted to the
Department of Justice for
pre-clearance. The governor has the
power to call a special session --
as Perry did in 2003 -- if
congressional and education
districts are not enacted during the
regular session.
Robert Stein, a professor at Rice
University, predicts that Democrats
could lose as many as eight seats in
the state House, which could spell
bad news for Democrats. But a
Democratic governor could change the
game.
"There is a lot more at stake than
just the obvious Democrats versus
Republicans," Stein said. "And the
Republicans also know that their
future here is very much tied to
their ability to win Hispanic
voters."
The Hispanic population in Texas has
surged in recent years. While the
group has historically voted
Republican, the recent national
debate over immigration and the
state debate over social sciences
curriculum has alienated some
Hispanic voters. But that doesn't
mean the group is energized enough
to turn in favor of Democrats.
Republicans, confident of Perry's
fate in Texas, say the hill is too
steep for Democrats to climb no
matter how much money they pour into
the state.
"This is a Republican year in a
Republican state, and Republicans
are going to win," said Reggie
Bashur, a lobbyist and former
adviser to George W. Bush.
White will have to drive the
attention of independent voters, and
that's not an easy task, experts
say.
"They have to overcome one of the
most durable sense of political
identity that voters have -- their
party identification," said James
Henson, assistant professor of
government at University of Texas,
Austin. "Voter registration isn't
up. So really what you're having to
do is swing voters who've been out,
which is really difficult."
Nevertheless, for Texas Democrats
who are seeing one of the closest
gubernatorial fights in the state
since 1994 -- when George W. Bush
defeated Democrat Ann Richards --
the opportunity is too good to shy
away from.
"We need someone who is more of a
workhorse than a show horse," said
lawyer Beverly Reeves, who has been
volunteering and fundraising for
Democratic candidates since 1971.
"We're really encouraged by the
recent polls. It's very telling that
there's Perry fatigue in the state.
I think Texans want a very fiscally
disciplined leader."