Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pastor whose child was slain at Texas church runs for office

- Paul J. Weber and David Warren

AUSTIN, Texas – A Texas pastor whose teenage daughter was among more than two dozen people killed in a mass shooting at his church in 2017 said Sunday that he will run as a Republican next year for a seat in the state Legislatur­e.

Frank Pomeroy – whose 14-year-old daughter, Annabelle, was killed in the November 2017 attack at First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs – is launching his campaign at a moment when gun violence is again at the forefront of Texas politics following a mass shooting in El Paso this month that killed 22 people.

The two mass shootings were part of a “trajectory” that led him to run for the state Senate, he said during a brief phone interview before stepping into a restaurant with his family. The shooting at his church compelled him to have more conversati­ons with people about guns and other leading political issues, he said, while he was troubled by the way the victims of the El Paso attack were used by others to score political points.

“I felt like something needed to be brought to the conversati­on, like civility and real intelligen­t discourse,” he said, adding that he’s concerned by the way “integrity and morality are degrading,” particular­ly within the Democratic Party.

First Baptist Church opened a new sanctuary this year after the old building was turned into a memorial, following what remains the deadliest mass shooting in Texas history. A gunman shot and killed 25 people at the church; authoritie­s put the official death toll at 26 because one of the victims was pregnant.

Pomeroy, who has never held elected office, had not been outspoken politicall­y in the two years since a discharged Air Force airman with a history of violence opened fire in the church that the gunman’s wife and mother-inlaw attended.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott emerged last week from a lengthy, closed-door meeting with lawmakers noncommitt­al about tighter gun laws in wake of the El Paso attack.

And Texas’ powerful gun lobby already is pushing back after Abbott on Thursday floated ideas that might restrict private gun sales or allow “welfare checks” on some people who have access to firearms.

Pomeroy, 53, will run in a senate district that is considered safely Democratic – President Donald Trump lost it by double digits in 2016 – and sprawls hundreds of miles from Austin to the U.S.-Mexico border. The incumbent, Democrat Judith Zaffirini, took office in 1987 and was the first Hispanic female to serve in the state Senate.

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