Do you want to understand why Texas is the way it is? You have to know who is funding the politicians. 26 people have poured over $56,000,000 in the past 12 months into Texas politics. This illustrates the who and where. #DeepInThePocketsOfTexas #txlege
26. Jay Adair, an American billionaire businessman, and the chief executive officer of Copart, a car salvage company.
Adair gave $1,015,000 to 3 Republicans and 1 PAC (Texans for Lawsuit Reform) #txlege
25. Tench Coxe, an American billionaire, has served on the board of chip designer Nvidia since 1993.
Coxe gave $1,064,000 to 3 Democrats
24. Simone Coxe, chair emeritus and co-founder of CalMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisan journalism venture.
Coxe gave $1,078,333 to 4 Democrats and 2 PACs
23. Tilman Fertitta, billionaire owner of the Houston Rockets, the Golden Nugget Casinos, and Landry's, a Texas-based restaurant and entertainment company.
Fertitta gave $1,097,250 to 55 Republicans ($1.01 mil) and 23 Democrats ($87k)
22. Kathaleen Wall, former Director for CWA She Prays, She Votes Texas, former candidate for US Congress, wife of Holloway Frost.
Wall gave $1,169,752 to 12 Republicans and 5 PACs / Orgs
21. Alan Hassenflu, co-founder and CEO of Fidelis Realty Partners Ltd., sits on the Board of Texans for Lawsuit Reform.
Hassenflu gave $1,202,505 to 8 Republicans and 3 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform
20. Michael Porter, with his wife Mary, owns the Cross Creek Ranch in Doss, formerly with Red Butte Corp., Jayport Electric, Inc., and Wespac Electric.
Porter gave $1,245,100 to 3 Republicans and 1 PAC
19. Joe C. "Rusty" Walter, inherited Walter Oil & Gas from his father. The company has drilled 450+ wells in the Gulf. It's one of the biggest privately-held oil companies in the US.
Walter gave $1,275,000 to 1 Republican and 3 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
18. Trevor Rees-Jones, American billionaire, founder and chairman of Chief Oil and Gas.
Rees-Jones gave $1,406,000 to 7 Republicans and 5 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
17. Reed Hastings, billionaire and cofounder and CEO of Netflix.
Hastings gave $1,511,000 to 1 PAC, Educational Equity, which is about privatizing public education.
16. Ashley Watt, who owns a 75,000-acre ranch in the Permian Basin.
Watt gave $1,694,400 to 4 Republicans
15. George Soros, billionaire and hedge fund tycoon.
Soros gave $1,711,000 to 1 Democrat and 1 PAC
14. Charles Butt, billionaire, chairman and CEO of the grocery chain H-E-B.
Butt gave $1,803,659 to 2 Republicans and 2 PACs. $1.5 million went to the Charles Butt Public Education PAC.
13. Kenny Troutt, billionaire, founded and sold Excel Communications, reinvested the profits in stocks, bonds and horses.
Troutt gave $1,815,000 to 7 Republicans and 2 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
12. Robert Rowling, billionaire, sold the family's oilfields and bought Omni Hotels.
Rowling gave $1,985,000 to 22 Republicans and 3 PACs, including ART
11. John Nau, Chairman and CEO of Silver Eagle Beverages, one of the largest Anheuser-Busch distributors in the nation.
Nau gave $2,028,482 to 17 Republicans, 1 Democrat ($5k), and 5 PACs, including ART
10. Jeffery Hildebrand, billionaire, cofounded Hilcorp, America's biggest privately owned oil company.
Hildebrand gave $2,065,968 to 9 Republicans and 4 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
9. Miriam Adelson, billionaire, widow of Sheldon Adelson, the former CEO and chairman of casino company Las Vegas Sands.
Adelson gave $2,300,000 to 1 PAC (Texas Sands)
8. Farris Wilks, billionaire from the sale of FracTec, he and his brother own more than 672,000 acres of land in six different states across the West, becoming America's 12th-largest landowners.
Wilks gave $2,340,117 to 6 Republicans and 3 PACs ($2.1 mil to Defend Texas Liberty)
7. Harlan Crow, billionaire, chairman and Chief Executive Office of Crow Holdings.
Crow gave $2,425,000 to 23 Republicans and 6 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
6. Mayes Middleton, president of Middleton Oil Company, current Texas House Rep, running for Texas Senate.
Middleton gave $2,656,168 to 22 Republicans and 15 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform. $1.7 million went to his own campaigns.
5. S. Javaid Anwar, president and chief executive officer of Midland Energy, Inc.
Anwar gave $3,035,300 to 10 Republicans and 1 PAC (Texans for Lawsuit Reform)
4. H. Ross Perot, Jr., billionaire, founded real estate development company Hillwood.
Perot gave $3,141,860 to 23 Republicans, 1 Democrat ($5k), and 3 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and ART
3. Richard "Dick" Weekley, chairman of Weekley Development Company, Co-Founder, Chairman and CEO of Texans for Lawsuit Reform.
Weekley gave $3,581,333 to 27 Republicans, 1 Democrat ($1k), and 12 PACs, including Texans for Lawsuit Reform and anti-public schools PACs
2. Tim Dunn, Chief Executive Officer of CrownQuest Operating, Vice-Chairman of Texas Public Policy Foundation.
Dunn gave $5,420,320 to 8 Republicans and 2 PACs. $5,150,000 was to the Defend Texas Liberty PAC
1. Jan Duncan, widow of billionaire Dan Duncan of Enterprise Products Partners LP, a pipeline and storage company.
Duncan gave $6,313,175 to 5 Republicans and 1 PAC. $6 million was to Texans for Lawsuit Reform
As always, the money numbers I utilize are all pulled from the Texas Ethics Commission and made freely available in what I think is a more usable format at my site (christackettnow.com), or direct link here: datastudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/…
It really is must see, to understand not only the “what”, but also the “why” for several of these mega-donors.
In the days ahead, I’ll be illustrating what all of those PACs did with the money these donors (and others like them with slightly smaller pocketbooks) gave them. How interconnected is the web? We will find out. Make sure you follow along!
If you like what I put out there, feel free to become a patron and kick in a few bucks each month. Contrary to what a certain former Texas House rep believes, no one is paying me for this info. Just doing it for the public good. patreon.com/christackettnow
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Did you watch the @CNN documentary "Deep In The Pockets Of Texas"? If so, you saw two Texas billionaires featured, Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks. What will follow is where the money they gave from January 1, 2015 to Current went, directly and via PAC's where they are major donors
In the list below, the "Primary" PACs list for Wilks and Dunn I'm leveraging:
Empower Texans
Texas Right to Life
Texans for Fiscal Responsibility
Texas Homeschool Coalition
There are a whole host of other PACs they and those who share ideology with utilize, but keeping it simple
Contributions from Dunn / Wilks / & primary PACs 1. Defend Texas Liberty - $7,475,000 2. Empower Texans - $5,809,500 3. Don Huffines - $3,747,117 4. Texas Right to Life - $2,500,133 5. Shelley Luther - $2,067,936 6. Ken Paxton - $1,181,000 7. Jon Francis - $1,152,500
(1 of 20)
Until you actually understand what you are up against, it’s hard to figure out how to beat it. Even though some have been making as much noise as they could over the past few years, many didn’t want to or weren’t ready to hear. Maybe now that changes.
This is legitimately a fight for our country, our state, and our communities. The @CNN documentary, Deep In The Pockets Of Texas, showed the tip of the iceberg.
It is scary. It could be demotivating. But know that we can beat this. We have to have everyone pulling in the same direction, understanding the fight to come, and being honest about the ideology driving it - 7 Mountains
I've seen this meme shared quite a few times over the last few days, mostly by people who really want to compromise with Republicans, by showing Reagan speaking up for the separation of church and state.
Yeah, he said it, but (as always), there really is more context needed.
The Reagan quote in the meme is "We establish no religion in this country, we command no worship, we mandate no belief, nor will we ever. Church and state are, and must remain, separate." It's from a speech given on October 26, 1984, to a Jewish group in Temple Hills, NY.
The rest of the paragraph is:
"All are free to believe or not believe, all are free to practice a faith or not, and those who believe are free, and should be free, to speak of and act on their belief."
Still all feels good right?
This article from @kathsstewart lays it out. White Christian nationalism has no intention of slowing down, and is accelerating their plans. It is going to take all of us stepping up to stop it.
“Breaking American democracy isn’t an unintended side effect of Christian nationalism. It is the point of the project.”
“Seven Mountains Dominionism — the belief that “biblical” Christians should seek to dominate the seven key “mountains” or “molders” of American society, including the government — was once considered a fringe doctrine, even among representatives of the religious right.”
A former Granbury ISD teacher sent me this over the weekend and asked me to share it.
This is a teacher who connected with her kids, helped them see what was possible in the world, and made a difference.
But she left Granbury ISD during this school year. #txed
When great teachers and staff leave because of leaders, it doesn't bode well.
Please share this letter. Help people see what is happening in Granbury and how it impacts students, teachers, and the community. #txed
When it is mentioned about standing before the Granbury ISD school board last July, here is the video of things. It's around 9 minutes long and shows what was said by the teacher, as well as the response from the Superintendent.
The Superintendent of Granbury ISD was recorded telling librarians to pull books because:
“I’m cutting to the chase on a lot of this. It’s the transgender, LGBTQ, and the sex, sexuality in books.”nbcnews.com/news/us-news/t…
On January 24th, 2022, the Granbury ISD Superintendent addressed those who had given public comment: students, parents, community members, who were speaking against banning books.
He said "radicals" were coming into the board meeting, "gaslighting" about what was happening.
Listen to this audio of the Granbury ISD Superintendent on January 10th. Who was gaslighting? Doesn't seem to be those who were alarmed about the book removals. nbcnews.com/video/texas-su… via @NBCNews