San Antonio Express-News

House speaker race adds five more hopefuls

- By Cassandra Pollock The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Four Republican­s and one Democrat declared bids for speaker of the Texas House on Thursday, bringing the number of candidates in the race to seven.

Up to that point, no Republican­s had filed to run for the job.

Republican Reps. Trent Ashby of Lufkin, Chris Paddie of Marshall, John Cyrier of Lockhart and Geanie Morrison of Victoria all filed Thursday afternoon.

Rep. Oscar Longoria, D-Mission, also announced his candidacy, making him the third Democrat to enter the race — Reps. Trey Martinez Fischer of San Antonio and Senfronia Thompson of Houston filed paperwork to run for the job last week.

More candidates are expected to file, though it won’t be clear which party will be in control of the House — and by how many seats — until after Tuesday’s election. Candidates are vying to replace Republican House Speaker Dennis Bonnen, who will retire after serving one term thanks to a political scandal last year.

The House will vote for a new speaker when the Legislatur­e convenes in January for its 87th legislativ­e session, a 140-day stretch that will feature a difficult budget-writing task due to the economic shortfall from the pandemic.

The Legislatur­e also is expected to take up redistrict­ing and several other challengin­g issues next year.

In statements, Ashby, Cyrier, Morrison and Longoria pointed to the legislativ­e session beginning in January — and the challenges state lawmakers all but certainly will have to tackle — to help make their pitch for why they’re the best candidate for the job.

Ashby, who has served in the House since 2013, said “it is critically important that the next speaker fosters the trust and cooperatio­n necessary to overcome these challenges and deliver the results that all Texans expect and deserve.”

Cyrier, who has served in the House since 2015, said the session “will be a demonstrat­ion of Texans’ resilience.”

“My top priority as speaker will be to work with all members of the House and build consensus during what is sure to be a challengin­g session,” Cyrier said.

Longoria, who has served in the House since 2013, said he has received support “from a bipartisan coalition” of House colleagues.

“I am running for speaker to ensure that we have stability, civility, and integrity in the Texas House,” he said. “The unpreceden­ted challenges we face require a leader who can build consensus across the political aisle, across rural and urban communitie­s, and across ideologies.”

And Morrison, who has served since 1999, said she would lead the House if elected speaker “with integrity and transparen­cy.”

“Working together,” she said, “we will continue to show how Texas leads.”

Paddie, who has served in the lower chamber since 2013, didn’t immediatel­y release a statement about his bid. Thompson, the longest-serving woman and Black person in the history of the Legislatur­e, filed Friday to run for the gavel.

Over the past two days, two coalitions — the lower chamber’s Harris County Democratic delegation and the Texas Legislativ­e Black Caucus — have announced their support for Thompson’s speaker bid, putting the number of members publicly backing her candidacy at 23. The winning candidate will need a majority of votes.

Thompson’s number of supporters, of course, could change after Election Day. Democrats need to gain nine seats in the 150member chamber to gain control of the House for the first time in nearly two decades. Dozens of House seats are widely viewed as competitiv­e.

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