June 15, 2006
Conservative Lawmaker Appears to Have
Inside Track in CD 22 But Race is Still On
By
Mike Hailey
Capitol
Inside Editor
State Rep. Robert Talton, who's
arguably the Texas Legislature's most conservative
member, appears to be the frontrunner in the race
to replace ex-U.S. House Majority Leader Tom
DeLay on the November general election
ballot. But it's not a done deal.
A Pasadena Republican who's served in the House
for the past 13 years, Talton is looking particularly
strong in Galveston and Harris counties - two
of the four counties where GOP activists will
choose a new fall nominee for Congressional District
22 - barring a court order that prevents them
from doing so.
The competition for the one vote that Republican
precinct chairs will have in Fort Bend County
appears to have narrowed to Sugar Land Mayor David
Wallace and State Rep. Charlie
Howard of Sugar Land. The Brazoria County
vote is apparently still up for grabs - and Talton
is believed to have the inside track for the two
votes that precinct chairs in Harris and Galveston
will have in the DeLay replacement derby. Harris
County's vote, however, may be more in play at
this point than the vote that GOP precinct chairs
in Galveston County will cast if and when the
Texas Republican Party calls a vote on a replacement
as planned.
While the debate and campaigning continues, the
process has been in limbo for the past week as
a result of a temporary restraining order that
an Austin judge issued last week in response to
a request from Texas Democratic Party Chairman
Boyd Richie. Democrats contend
that the state GOP cannot replace DeLay as the
CD 22 nominee because he has a homestead exemption
on the Sugar Land residence where he lived before
moving to Virginia and resigning from Congress
last week. Richie argues that DeLay's withdrawal
from the race is not a sufficient cause to trigger
a move to find somebody to run in his place this
fall.
Republicans are confident that they will prevail
in the court battle - either at a June 22 hearing
on a permanent injunction before State District
Judge Darlene Byrne of Austin
or in the State Supreme Court in the event of
a second adverse ruling from the lower court later
this month. Byrne, a Democrat, granted the TRO
one week ago on the same day that the Democratic
Party kicked off its state convention in Fort
Worth. Republicans note that DeLay has registered
to drive and to vote in Virginia and taken additional
steps to establish his residence there. The homestead
exemption on DeLay's previous residence in Texas
won't expire until January.
Even most partisan Democrats predict that Republicans
will eventually be allowed to pick a new nominee
to face former Democratic Congressman Nick
Lampson, a Libertarian and possibly former
U.S. Rep. Steve Stockman, who
hopes to be on the ballot as an independent candidate.
But the court-imposed delay has reduced the amount
of time that a Republican candidate will have
to raise money and to organize grassroots support
for the race.
The field of potential replacements includes
State Senator Mike Jackson of
La Porte, Houston City Council member Shelley
Sekula-Gibbs, former State Republican
Executive Committee member Tim Turner,
Fort Bend County Commissioner W. A. "Andy"
Meyers, retired Air Force officer Don
Richardson and Sugar Land lawyer Tom
Campbell, who lost to DeLay in the March
primary election. Harris County Judge Robert
Eckels had been mentioned as a possible
contender but removed his name from the competition
several weeks ago.
Once State GOP Chairwoman Tina Benkiser
gets the green light to proceed with the process,
Talton appears to be in decent position to go
into it as the favorite. The precinct chairs who
will designate one of their own from each county
to cast their county's vote tend to be more conservative
than the average Republican voter - and Talton's
reputation as staunch conservative is second to
none among lawmakers at the Texas Capitol. Talton,
a member of Speaker Tom Craddick's
leadership team as the House Urban Affairs Committee
chairman, captured headlines across the state
last year when he led a push to ban gays and lesbians
from being foster parents.
If Talton wins the support of the Galveston County
precinct chair designee as Republican insiders
predict, he would be assured of at least a tie
with a victory in either Harris or Brazoria counties.
A tie would be broken in a vote of the SREC. Before
the process would be settled by the state governing
board, two candidates would have to win two counties
apiece unless four separate contenders each received
one vote. |