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| 2010 Elections - Texas Governor's Race |
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| Wednesday, April 28, 2010 |
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| Fifty state tour - Texas preview |
With 32 House seats, Texas' congressional delegation is second in size only to California. With just 2 districts among the tracked House races here at Election Projection, it has a remarkably stable political landscape. And the stronger party in this status quo environment is the GOP. After redistricting before the 2004 elections was finalized, the GOP went on a tear in the state during George W. Bush's successful re-election campaign, gaining six seats and turning a 15-17 House delegation deficit into a 21-11 majority. In the two ensuing Democratic wave elections, a net of one seat found its way back into the Democratic column. On the statewide level, GOP dominance is evident as well. Republican presidential candidates have won Texas' sizable EV haul since Ronald Reagan's first victory in 1980, and both Senate seats have been in GOP hands since Kay Bailey Hutchison defeated interim Senator Bob Krueger 18 years ago…
Governor: …and, since George W. beat Ann "Ma" Richards, the Lone Star State's Democratic matriarch and sitting governor at the time, for the statehouse in 1994, so has the top executive office in the state. Rick Perry was Bush's lieutenant governor, becoming interim top dog upon his boss' 2000 presidential triumph. He has since run successfully for election in his own right in 2002 and for re-election four years later. His path to re-election in 2010 got difficult, however, even before the primaries due to a intra-party battle he waged with Senator Hutchison and Tea Party favorite, Debra Medina. Perry eventually won an easier victory than many had expected, averting a nasty runoff election in the process by grabbing 51% of the vote. On the Democratic side, former Houston Mayor Bill White breezed to the nomination with over three-quarters of the vote. The Perry-White match up will be a close race all the way. Unfortunately for Perry, his longevity in Austin may be wearing thin his welcome, and, as a result, he stands to benefit less from the Republican mood in November. Mayor White certainly has a shot at knocking off the incumbent, but current polls give Perry a slight lead. We'll go with that here and project a Mod GOP Hold (which borders on a weak GOP hold) for the time being.
House District 17: Congressman Chet Edwards represents the most Republican district in the nation held by a Democrat. With a Cook PVI of R+20, the fact that Edwards remains on Capitol Hill is a testament to the relationship he has developed in this district. Over the years, he has withstood the red tsunami of 1994 and GOP-led redistricting in 2004 that produced the highly-Republican district in which he now runs for an eleventh term. However, as Cook points out, "Edwards overcame a rough climate in 1994 and a rough district in 2004, but he has never had to overcome both." And this year is shaping up to be one of his toughest election challenges. Signs are he understands what he faces. Edwards' votes against Cap and Trade and Obamacare show he is trying hard not to disrupt the good vibes he has cultivated with his conservative constituents. Whether that's enough to save this seat for the Democrats will be a story told only by the vote count on Election Night, and this race will be on lots of radars between now and then. The Republican opposing him is Bill Flores who won a runoff primary vote to advance to the general election. Flores is a political novice and self-described "limited government conservative." His profile should sit well in this conservative district and make this race competitive. However, Edwards has demonstrated great staying power before, so this race will be a Mod DEM Hold until Flores shows he can connect with the district's voters as well as Edwards has.
House District 23: Republicans got the candidate they wanted to face off against Democratic incumbent Ciro Rodriguez when Hispanic-American Quico Canseco finally emerged from a Republican primary with the nomination. This district boasts a large Hispanic population as well as a highly-engaged non-Hispanic one. Where previous GOP nominees here did well with the latter group, Rodriguez's advantage among the former has been more than enough to ensure victory. That may change this year. I believe, given the makeup of this district and the national GOP tide, that Canseco brings the right kind of cross-section appeal to the race to gather the votes he'll need to ride Rodriguez out of office in November. Pundits don't quite see it that way…yet. (Stuart Rothenberg, for example, doesn't even have this race on his watch list) So, until they do, this race will remain in the Mod DEM Hold category.
The lowdown on the Lone Star can be had on the Texas state page.
Next stop: Utah
Filed under:
Texas
TX House
TX Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 9:16pm 04/28/10::
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| Wednesday, March 3, 2010 |
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| Texas primary results - race tracking initiated |
Yesterday's Texas primary elections yielded many winners and more than a few runoff contests to be held on April 13. Here are the results of the congressional and gubernatorial
contests.
Governor
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Democratic Primary Bill White |
Republican Primary Rick Perry - inc |
District 4
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Ralph Hall - inc |
District 8
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Kevin Brady - inc |
District 9
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Steve Mueller |
District 10
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Mike McCaul - inc |
District 11
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Mike Conaway - inc |
District 12
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Kay Granger - inc |
District 14
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Democratic Primary runoff |
Republican Primary Ron Paul - inc |
District 15
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Democratic Primary Ruben Hinojosa - inc |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 17
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 18
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Democratic Primary Sheila Jackson Lee - inc |
Republican Primary John Faulk |
District 20
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 21
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Lamar Smith - inc |
District 22
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Democratic Primary Kesha Rogers |
Republican Primary none |
District 23
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Democratic Primary Ciro Rodriguez - inc |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 24
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Kenny Marchant - inc |
District 25
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Donna Campbell |
District 26
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Michael Burgess - inc |
District 27
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 28
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Bryan Underwood |
District 29
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Roy Morales |
District 30
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary runoff |
District 31
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary John Carter - inc |
District 32
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Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Pete Sessions - inc |
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Starting today, I'm tracking the Texas races. If you haven't followed Election Projection in the past, you can check out the
Texas state page to get an idea how my election tracking works. As more primaries are
held, additional state pages will be updated with up-to-date race tracking data.
No change in the gubernatorial preliminary projection resulted from adding in actual polling data. Rick Perry is still projected to retain the seat in a Mod GOP
Hold. Tracking for the contested race in district 17 where Democrat Chet Edwards seeks re-election will commence after the runoff election in April determines the
Republican nominee.
Filed under:
Primary results
Texas
TX House
TX Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 9:07pm 03/03/10::
link
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| Tuesday, March 2, 2010 |
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| Texas primary results - updated3 |
Today, the Lone Star State is holding party primaries. Headlining the lineup is the GOP gubernatorial primary. Incumbent Governor Rick Perry is facing challenges from
Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison as well as conservative darling, Debra Medina. Perry's poll numbers have shown more strength lately, but he still may fall short of the 50% +1
needed to avoid a runoff. Medina's numbers, on the other hand, have fallen in recent days. If that trend continues in the voting booth, Perry may get to that magic number.
You can find results here beginning at 7pm CST tonight. For another source, check out
the Texas Secretary of State's election returns page.
Update: I updated the first link above with a better website. As for the results, Rick Perry has indeed crossed the 50% threshhold with 13% of the precincts
reporting. If he can maintain that level of support, he'll avoid a runoff.
Update2: With 85% of precincts reporting, Perry is holding firm at 52%. KBH sits at 30%, and Debra Medina has 18%. It's likely now that there will
be no runoff, and that's a good thing for the GOP here in Texas.
Update3: Apparently, Kay Bailey Hutchison has conceded and will not force a runoff. So even though Perry's vote total is down to 51%, he can breathe a
little easier now.
Filed under:
Texas
TX Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 10:32am 03/02/10::
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