Houston Chronicle

Mayoral campaign is flush with cash

Candidates collect more than $7 million in first half of year

- By Rebecca Elliott

The 2015 Houston mayor’s race is on track to be the most expensive in recent city history, with the candidates filling their campaign coffers with more than $7 million in the first half of the year.

This means Houstonian­s can expect to see no shortage of political advertisin­g this cycle, as the crowded field of candidates lines up to pepper the Web and television­s citywide in the four months leading up to November’s election.

“If you’re an Xfinity account executive, you have to be happy with these numbers,” said Rice University political scientist Mark Jones.

Campaign finance reports are not due until next Wednesday, but former Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia set off a cascade of early fundraisin­g releases when he announced a $1.5 million haul Tuesday afternoon.

City Councilman Stephen Costello led the pack with more than $1.8 million, including a $250,000 personal contributi­on and a $262,000 transfer from his council account.

Costello and Garcia’s campaigns were the only ones to re-

lease how much cash the candidates have on hand, with both saying they have more than $1.3 million in the bank.

State Rep. Sylvester Turner, who started the race with some $900,000 from his legislativ­e account, reported raising an additional $750,000. Because of a state fundraisin­g blackout period that spans the legislativ­e session, he was barred from accepting contributi­ons until nine days before the close of the reporting period on June 30.

Former Kemah Mayor Bill King also broke the million-dollar threshold, having brought in about $1.25 million. Of that, $750,000 came from donors, with King donating the remaining $500,000 to his campaign.

None of the candidates has released a complete fundraisin­g report, so the Chronicle could not independen­tly verify the campaigns’ announced totals. The identities of major donors and how the candidates are spending the money also remain unknown.

Looking back to Houston’s last open mayoral race in 2009, Costello, Garcia, King and Turner each took in more than what Mayor Annise Parker and runnerup Gene Locke had raised at this point in their campaigns — about $800,000 and $1.1 million, respective­ly.

And while no one topped former Mayor Bill White’s July 2003 haul of $2.9 million or former Mayor Lee Brown’s $2.2 million in 2001, in total the six candidates raised more than everyone combined at this point in both of Houston’s last two open-seat mayor’s races.

University of Houston political scientist Brandon Rottinghau­s called it a “blockbuste­r” showing.

“The streets will be littered with campaign parapherna­lia,” he said.

Meanwhile, 2013 mayoral runner-up Ben Hall’s coffers swelled by nearly $800,000, $500,000 of which he donated himself, according to his campaign. Hall pursued a similar, though more robust, funding strategy in 2013, when he contribute­d $1.7 of his $2million raised through the first half of the year.

Former congressma­n and city councilman Chris Bell ended the reporting period having raised nearly $400,000.

Bell came in third among likely voters in a June Houston Public Media/KHOU mayoral poll, but political observers said the lower fundraisin­g total could prove problemati­c.

“He raised enough to be credible in the abstract. The problem is when you compare that figure to the others, it starts to look like he’s not competitiv­e,” Rottinghau­s said.

However, Bell’s campaign manager, Patrick Devney, said the campaign is confident that Bell’s fundraisin­g total puts him in a strong position.

“It cannot be overlooked that Chris starts out with millions of dollars of name ID,” Devney said.

Businessma­n Marty McVey said his campaign finance report will show his campaign has taken in about $1.175 million. However, he said $1 million of that came in the form of a loan.

McVey, who said he personally contribute­d $75,000, did not identify the lender.

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