Houston Chronicle

Governor blasts local lawmaker as ‘hostile’ to agenda

- andrea.zelinski@chron.com twitter.com/andreazeli­nski By Andrea Zelinski

AUSTIN — Gov. Greg Abbott gave state Rep. Sarah Davis a political lashing Tuesday, saying his fellow Republican from the Houston area was “absolutely hostile” to his conservati­ve agenda and is no different than a Democrat.

“By all metrics and studies that I have seen, she is clearly the farthest to the left state representa­tive in the state of Texas,” Abbott said on the first day of early voting.

He said the West University Place Republican running for her fifth term has worked “antagonist­ically” against his agenda and has separated herself from Republican ideology, such as by opposing anti-abortion measures and sponsoring a bill that would have meddled with emergency disaster funding and killed ethics legislatio­n out of spite.

Abbott has made Davis a prime target in the March 6 primary, having spent at least $160,000 in TV ads casting her as a liberal who needs to be ousted from the Texas House and endorsing her opponent.

Davis, who has said Abbott’s attacks lack context, refused to sign on to nearly every issue Abbott wanted lawmakers to pass during a 2017 special session. Those ideas included regulating which bathrooms transgende­r students can use, increasing reporting for abortion providers and institutin­g local government spending limits, along with nearly 20 others.

Democratic foes

The governor is urging voters to elect Susanna Dokupil instead. The CEO of Paladin Strategies communicat­ions company worked for him while he was attorney general. Her platform is narrow and focuses on backing the governor’s agenda.

Whoever wins the election will have to fend off the winner of the Democratic primary race between Allison Lami Sawyer and Lloyd Wayne Oliver.

“Listen, the district is blue already,” Abbott said when asked if his attacks are worth it if Republican­s ultimately lose that district. “Sarah Davis really has been acting like a Democrat. What she really should do is come out and admit she is a Democrat and run as a Democrat.”

Davis shot back Tuesday, saying Republican­s should be dismayed to learn Abbott admitted he knows his attacks on her could cost Republican­s the House seat.

“What a sad and pathetic failure of leadership,” said Davis. “Gov. Abbott may be willing to abandon the Republican Party but I never will, and I will always be guided by the wisdom of President Ronald Reagan who taught us that a Republican who agrees with me 80 percent of the time is not my enemy.”

Moderate resistance

Davis released her own negative campaign ad Tuesday, called “Dangerous Allies,” linking Dokupil to the anti-vaccine movement, a state lawmaker who once joked about marital rape, a judge accused of sexual assault, and indicted Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Davis is a member of the House leadership, a team made up of moderate Republican­s who run the chamber. House leadership clashed with the governor during the special session, often times bottling up or rewriting bills the governor wanted passed.

Davis represents a wealthy swath of southwest Houston that includes Bellaire, Southside Place, West University Place, the Texas Medical Center and stretches north through Memorial Park.

Voters there chose Democrat Hillary Clinton over Republican Donald Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al election by 15 points. Voters in the district, many of whom are doctors, historical­ly back a mix of Republican­s and Democrats in downballot races.

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