Austin American-Statesman

Candidates for district’s seat live elsewhere

District sprawls 58,000 square miles; Hurd, Gallego spend bulk of time away.

- By Will Weissert

A West Texas congressio­nal district sprawls 58,000plus square miles and two time zones, from San Antonio to just outside El Paso. Yet neither the Republican who represents it nor the Democrat trying to reclaim the seat actually lives there.

The home of first-term Republican Rep. Will Hurd, 39, is in the San Antonio suburb of Helotes, just outside the borders of a district that is larger in land area than 29 states.

The challenger, former Rep. Pete Gallego, spends most of his time away from the district in Austin, but lists his official address as the remote town of Alpine, which is in the district. One of the properties his family owns there — a boarded up home and former cafe site — was recently slapped with a sign declaring it a “dangerous” violation of Alpine safety codes. Gallego has declined to say if he ever stays at one of the others.

Gallego, 54, keeps a district apartment in San Antonio that serves as his base while campaignin­g, but his wife, Maria Elena Ramon, and 11-year-old son Nicolas live 80 miles north of San Antonio in Austin. Contracts show Gallego worked in government­al relations positions there as recently as the summer of 2015, but a statement his campaign released Wednesday said he “is not and never has been a registered lobbyist.”

Federal candidates aren’t required to live in the district where they run for office, and districts represente­d by members of Congress who reside elsewhere are fairly common throughout the country. But few districts nationwide are as large as the one Hurd and Gallego are contesting.

Conservati­ve Texas activists have sometimes tried to make living outside a congressio­nal district an issue. GOP primary challenger and Dallas-area tea party organizer Katrina Pierson, now a national spokeswoma­n for Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, accused longtime Republican Rep. Pete Sessions of it in 2014. That charge didn’t stick and Sessions trounced Pierson. Hurd faced no serious primary challenger this cycle.

“You can’t really make the argument that Will doesn’t live in the district, either. He’s in San Antonio all the time when he’s away from Washington,” said Hurd campaign manager Justin Hollis.

Hurd spent nine years with the CIA in India, New York, Afghanista­n and Pakistan before returning to Texas. Hurd’s house in Helotes was part of the district when he first ran for Congress and lost in the Republican primary in 2010, Hollis said, and now is “less than 100 yards” outside it according to more-recent redistrict­ing maps.

Asked why Hurd hasn’t moved into the district since, Hollis said it was a moot point because the congressma­n “lives a stone’s throw away.”

The race is the only competitiv­e one among Texas’ 36 congressio­nal districts. Hurd unseated Gallego two years ago by 2,422 votes out of more than 115,000 cast. Gallego is hoping that Trump’s harsh immigratio­n rhetoric and promises to build a wall the length of the U.S.-Mexico border can boost him in a district that’s nearly 70 percent Hispanic and features 800-plus miles of Texas-Mexico border.

Gallego says his family’s Austin home is an investment property that his wife owns separately.

Gallego spent 22 years in the Texas Legislatur­e. Although it meets in Austin, he kept a residence in Alpine because of a mandate in the state constituti­on that legislator­s live in the districts they represent.

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