News

Unlikely Tea Party Candidate Challenges State Senator

July 24, 2012 5:05 am by: Ben Philpott

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

State Senator Jeff Wentworth expected a tough fight in the GOP primary for Senate District 25, which runs from South Austin to San Antonio. But instead of spending the summer battling the well-funded candidate he thought would force him into a runoff — former Railroad Commissioner Elizabeth Ames Jones – Wentworth has instead been tussling with a political newcomer who has broad Tea Party support.

Dr. Donna Campbell came into the primary with a fraction of the money that was being collected and spent by Ames Jones and Jeff Wentworth. But in forcing a runoff, Campbell found increased interest and increased donations. The campaign is now using that money to introduce Campbell to voters especially in Bexar County, Wentworth’s home.

“I’m the only candidate who has pledged not to raise taxes,” Campbell says in this radio ad. “I joined Governor Perry and signed the Texas Budget Compact. That means no new taxes and a hard cap on spending. I know our taxes are too high. I live here and I pay the same taxes you do.”

Campbell had said she would not take donations from the Texans for Lawsuit Reform or TLR. That group gave more than $700,000 to the Ames Jones campaign for the May primary. But Campbell did accept an in-kind gift of $18,000 for results from a poll conducted by TLR. Even if she doesn’t take another dime, TLR has plenty of money flooding mailboxes and the airwaves with reasons not to vote for Wentworth. Harvey Kronberg is editor of Quorum Report, a political newsletter.

“Between Jeff Wentworth and Donna Campbell only one had a million dollars or two million dollars in negative ads run against them,” says Kronberg. “So Wentworth has a high hurdle to jump, having been so identified by his prior opponent.”

That may be why – after a particularly negative primary – Wentworth has gone positive with his runoff ads, reminding voters all he’s done for the district during his 19 years in the Senate.

“Jeff Wentworth is constantly fighting for new roads to deal with our exploding population,” a narrator in this ad explains. “He hates traffic jams. We have thousands of new jobs and billions in new investments – thanks to Jeff Wentworth.”

But turnout in any runoff, especially in the middle of summer, traditionally favors candidates supported by party activists. The more passionate the voter, the better the chance they’ll make it to the polls. In the northern part of Senate District 25 from Travis, through Hays and into Comal County, support for the Tea Party is strong among Republicans. As is support for Campbell. And in Bexar County, conservative activists were already organized as part of a failed attempt to oust House Speaker Joe Straus.

“There was actually a Tea Party style operation in play in that part of the district,” Kronberg says.

He says the group hosted a teleconference as recently as Sunday night on behalf of Campbell.

The winner of the Republican Primary faces Democrat John Courage in November.

Early voting is underway now. Election Day is Tuesday, July 31.

One Response to “Unlikely Tea Party Candidate Challenges State Senator”

  1. On July 26, 2012 at 12:45 pm Frankie responded with... #

    UGH!! Another Tea Party candidate. Is anyone watching C-Span’s live telecasts of the U.S. Congress in action? And the obstructionism of the far right wing of the Republican Party THE TEA PARTY. It’s rediculous and embarrasing, watching their efforts to put into place their Draconian rules & laws. What is wrong with coming together in the CENTER, & get some things done. The GOP is not your fathers’ Republican Party anymore…sadly.

Add your response

Comments are moderated. They are posted at the discretion of KUT if they stick to the topic and contribute to the conversation. They will not be published if they contain or link to abusive material, personal attacks, profanity or spam.

You must be logged in to post a comment.