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The Morning After: Last-Minute Contributions In Texas’ 2002 Primary Elections
 

II. The Morning After the Primary

As already discussed, campaign contributions made in the last nine days of Texas political campaigns generally elude public scrutiny, while contributions made in the last 48 hours of an election cycle typically are not disclosed until months after an election is over. This report tracks 102 state candidates who faced contested primaries for statewide and district-based office on March 12, 2002 and who filed electronic disclosure reports on these campaigns. Twenty-two of these candidates are tracked a step further, through their primary runoff election on April 9, 2002.

The 102 candidates studied here raised $18.7 million for their primary election, with $1.7 million (9 percent) eluding public scrutiny by flowing in the last nine days of the primary election.6  Of these late funds, $343,328 (20 percent) flowed in the last two campaign days, meaning that it typically was not reported until months after the election was over. The accompanying graph plots the daily amount of money that these candidates raised in the last 12 days of the 2002 primaries. Note that contributions begin shooting up on March 3, 2002, the first day that candidates began filing often-overlooked telegram reports. Another spike occurs the day before the election. Contributions made on that day typically are not disclosed at all until the next semi-annual report, which is not due until a couple of months after the election.

Top recipients
The 20 candidates who benefited the most from this late-flowing money (see table) received almost $1.2 million of it, or 69 percent of the total. The top four recipients of this money were senate candidates, headed by Senator Jeff Wentworth. Wentworth beat primary challenger John Shields by just 1,216 votes. The only other recipient of more than $100,000 in late money was Bill Ratliff, who became lieutenant governor in the reshuffling that followed George W. Bush’s ascension to the White House.7  After Ratliff came two House members seeking a senate promotion: Reps. Kim Brimer and Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa.
 

Primary's Top 20 Morning-After Candidates
Candidate All Primary 
Money Raised
Last-9-Day 
Money
Last-9-Day 
Money (%)
Party Office 
(Dist.)
Share of 
Vote (%)
Jeff Wentworth
$889,351 
$157,435 
18%
R
S-25
51%
Bill Ratliff
$375,279 
$105,303 
28%
R
S-1
70%
Kim Brimer
$447,575 
$71,480 
16%
R
S-10
63%
Juan Hinojosa
$386,521 
$69,625 
18%
D
S-20
*43%
Elizabeth Ray
$438,342 
$67,117 
15%
R
SC
*43%
Xavier Rodriguez
$680,716 
$65,049 
10%
R
SC
47%
Wallace Jefferson 
$652,937 
$63,236 
10%
R
SC
62%
Sandra Watts
$124,000 
$62,526 
50%
D
DJ-117
57%
Kenn George
$644,549 
$60,950 
9%
R
Land Com
43%
Kyle Janek
$748,670 
$58,800 
8%
R
S-17
66%
Craig Estes
$821,768
$56,450
7%
R
S-30
58%
Dale Wainwright
$218,536 
$53,900 
25%
R
SC
*31%
Gary Polland
$414,943 
$50,193 
12%
R
S-17
34%
Kip Averitt
$790,341 
$43,660 
6%
R
S-22
58%
John H. Shields
$439,622 
$39,148 
9%
R
S-25
49%
Tom Ramsay
$145,060 
$35,850 
25%
D
Ag Com
57%
Mary Denny
$96,300 
$32,745 
34%
R
H-63
60%
David Bernsen
$515,736 
$26,425 
5%
D
Land Com
62%
Edmund Kuempel
$266,099 
$24,697 
9%
R
H-44
66%
Brian McCall
$142,040 
$21,550 
15%
R
H-66
69%
TOTALS:
$9,238,385
$1,166,139
13%
     
Note: S = Senate, SC = Supreme Court, DJ = District Judge, Com = Commissioner, H = House.
* Went into a runoff election.

Judicial candidates also gobbled up enormous amounts of late money, led by Texas Supreme Court candidate Elizabeth Ray, who was defeated by Dale Wainwright in a runoff. Supreme Court incumbents Xavier Rodriguez and Wallace Jefferson also were major late-money recipients. Corpus Christi resident Sandra Watts was the sole district judge candidate to make the list. This judicial late money is particularly troubling since judicial candidates do not even file telegram reports, thereby assuring that their late money goes undisclosed until months after the polls close.

Of the top-20 overall recipients of late money, Watts was the most dependent on eleventh-hour contributions, which accounted for half of her primary war chest. Late money supplied 34 percent of the primary war chest of Rep. Mary Denny, the top House recipient of late money. Late money accounted for 28 percent of Ratliff’s war chest and 25 percent of the war chests of Wainwright and Agriculture Commissioner candidate Tom Ramsay.

Top donors
Given that eleventh-hour contributions elude pre-election scrutiny, it is interesting that the accompanying list of the top 12 sources of this money includes some controversial donors. Plaintiff lawyers account for two of the top five sources of late money (Mikal Watts and Nix Patterson & Roach). The No. 1 late donor is trial lawyer Mikal Watts, who gave a belated gift of $60,000 to his mom, judicial candidate Sandra Watts.

 The second largest source of late money, the Washington, D.C.-based Republican National State Elections Committee (RNSEC), gave $25,000 apiece to minority Texas Supreme Court incumbents Wallace Jefferson and Xavier Rodriguez. This money was controversial because party PACs do not usually pick sides in primary battles. The GOP may have weighed in this time to try to preserve racial and ethnic diversity on its statewide ticket.
 

Primary's Top Morning-After Contributors
Donor City Interest Amount Top Recipient
Mikal Watts Corpus Plaintiff lawyer
$60,000
Sandra Watts
GOP Nat'l State Elections Com. Washington GOP
$50,000
Jefferson/Rodriguez
Tigua Indian Reservation El Paso Gambling
$41,000
Hinojosa/Wentworth
TX Medical Assoc. Austin Doctors
$38,336
Jeff Wentworth
Nix Patterson & Roach Daingerfield Plaintiff lawyers
$35,000
Tom Ramsay
TX Aggregates & Concrete Assoc. Austin Concrete
$30,000
*
TX Bell Employee PAC Austin Communications
$21,200
Kim Brimer
TX Assoc. of Realtors Austin Real Estate
$20,000
William Ratliff
Texans For Governmental Integrity San Antonio See Jim Leininger
$17,000
Mary Denny
Douglas Hartman Austin Investments
$15,500
John Shields
James Leininger San Antonio Hospital beds
$15,000
Ed Harrison
Texas Mortgage Bankers Houston Home Loans 
$15,000
Brimer/Ratliff
   
TOTAL:
 $358,036
 
* Top recipients were Averitt, Brimer, Galloway & Ratliff at $5,000 apiece.

Other major controversial donors of late money include the Tigua Indian Reservation (which has fought legal battles with the state over its casinos), the Texas Aggregates and Concrete Association (concrete interests have upset their neighbors with toxic air emissions),8  and James Leininger along with his PAC Texans for Governmental Integrity. Leininger founded Kinetic Concepts, Inc. to make hi-tech hospital beds that rotate to prevent bedsores. FDA accident reports and private lawsuits suggest that the rotating beds also have injured nurses and patients. This prompted Leininger to promote weaker business liability laws, despite the fact that his company is a plaintiff that has won some of the largest verdicts in Texas history.9
 
 



6  This report just tracks contributions of $100 or more.
7  Citing the pernicious role of money in politics, Ratliff abandoned a short-lived lieutenant governor campaign in June 2001, electing to seek his old senate seat instead.
8  “Lege May Put Cement Shoes On Concrete Industry’s Foes,” TPJ’s Lobby Watch, March 20, 2001.
9  “Bed Makers’ Case Awaits Jury Verdict,” San Antonio Express-News, September 26, 2002; “Huge Antitrust Verdict Against Hospital Bed Maker,” Texas Lawyer, October 7, 2002.
 


Copyright © 2002 Texans for Public Justice