Campaign News
02/27/2022

Early Voting Ends on Stronger Note and Other News for February 27

TXElects

Early voting has ended for Tuesday’s primary elections. Unofficial, preliminary totals indicate early turnout is a little south of 10% of registered voters, but the totals are presently incomplete. Several counties, including Galveston Co., do not appear to have reported any totals for Friday, the final day of the early voting period which typically sees some of the highest volume. Early voting totals will also rise as mail ballots arrive through Tuesday, assuming they meet the new requirements and can be counted.

As it stands, early voting turnout could be record-setting for gubernatorial primaries, at least for the Republican primary. We will need to see final numbers to be certain.

As of the information currently available, just over 1M people have voted in the Republican primary statewide, and just over 625K people have voted in the Democratic primary statewide. In the 15 counties with the most registered voters, we estimate 530K Republicans have voted, which is 110K more than in 2018 and just ahead of the 2020 figure, making it the second-highest early turnout figure for those counties. Cameron, Hidalgo and Montgomery Cos. have seen record early turnout, and Galveston Co. might have also set a record on the Republican side.

On the Democratic side, around 480K people voted in those 15 counties, which is slightly ahead of the 2018 total but well behind 2020 (770K) and 2008 (890K).

AG (Lean R): Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton’s (R) campaign filed an amended 8-day-out report disclosing an additional $1.8M in expenditures. This level of previously undisclosed spending was anticipated given the reduction in his cash on hand total over the period. Paxton also reported receiving an additional $53K in contributions in three daily pre-election reports. Eva Guzman reported an additional $452K in contributions, all but $20K of which was an in-kind contribution from Texans for Lawsuit Reform PAC for political advertising. George P. Bush reported an additional $45K in contributions, and Louie Gohmert reported receiving an additional $12K. As a reminder, we do not update our Crib Sheets with information from daily pre-election reports.

HD147 open (Safe D): Gov. Greg Abbott (R) ordered a May 7 special election to fill the unexpired term of Rep. Garnet Coleman (D-Houston), who is resigning effective Monday. Candidates must file by March 7, a few days after the primary election narrows the Democratic field seeking a full term to one or two candidates. Early voting will begin April 25.

Filed under AG, Campaign Finance Reports, Early Voting, HD147, Special Elections, Turnout .

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Texas Political Spotlight
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Texas Sen. José Menéndez is defending a 2023 law that lets cities like San Antonio reinvest state tourism and hotel tax revenue into major projects, including a proposed $1.3 billion Spurs arena, saying it keeps the city competitive with others that have used similar funding to spur growth. Democratic U.S. Senate candidate James Talarico, speaking in Fort Worth recently, cast himself as an independent voice challenging both parties and billionaires’ influence, as his tight primary race with Colin Allred gains national attention. Meanwhile, Attorney General Ken Paxton has sued Indiana resident Malcolm Tanner, accusing him of trying to take over Loving County by luring out-of-state residents with false promises of free homes in unsafe desert conditions.

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Texas Political Spotlight
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Austin-based energy startup Base Power announced it has raised $1 billion in new funding to expand its residential battery leasing business, positioning itself at the center of Texas’ fast-growing clean energy sector as demand surges nationwide. Meanwhile, Gov. Greg Abbott has authorized hundreds of Texas National Guard soldiers have been deployed to Illinois to assist federal immigration authorities in Chicago. And in education, Texas selected Odyssey, a national tech firm, to design and administer its new $1 billion school voucher program, the Texas Education Freedom Accounts.

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TXBIZNEWS
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Walmart has announced plans to eliminate synthetic dyes and over 30 other ingredients from its U.S. private brand food products such as Great Value, Marketside, Freshness Guaranteed, and Bettergoods, with a target completion date of January 2027, as outlined in a recent corporate statement.

The Details:

  • The initiative removes 11 synthetic dyes, such as Red No. 40 and Yellow No. 5, along with preservatives and artificial sweeteners, responding to customer demand for simpler ingredients while maintaining taste and value.
  • The move affects all Walmart U.S. food private brands, supporting a more transparent food system and aligning with evolving health-conscious trends.
  • Walmart President and CEO John Furner said, “Our customers want products with familiar ingredients, and we’re delivering on that promise.”
  • The transition will leverage natural alternatives, with the company collaborating with suppliers to meet the 2027 deadline.

“Our customers have told us that they want products made with simpler, more familiar ingredients - and we’ve listened. By eliminating synthetic dyes and other ingredients, we’re reinforcing our promise to deliver affordable food that families can feel good about.”

- John Furner, President and CEO, Walmart U.S.

Why It Matters:
This shift could set a new standard for the U.S. food industry, boosting consumer trust and influencing market trends.

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