San Antonio Express-News

West is facing a tough test with Abbott

- By Jeremy Wallace

Republican Allen West has made a political career out of ignoring convention­al thinking and taking on long odds.

While that approach helped the conservati­ve firebrand get elected to Congress in Florida during the 2010 tea party wave and become chairman of the Republican Party of Texas a decade later, his latest move may be his tallest task yet: taking on Gov. Greg Abbott.

In a long-expected step, West announced last week that he was entering the fray against Abbott in the GOP primary. The incumbent has a massive fundraisin­g advantage, strong poll numbers, superior name recognitio­n and the backing of former President Donald Trump.

Still, West said in television interviews that he is not intimidate­d by the task ahead.

“When David took on Goliath, he just had three little stones and dropped Goliath,” West, 60, said in an interview on Fox News Channel. “So I’m not worried about the size of anyone’s war chest or who they have behind them.”

While Abbott’s campaign has previously insisted it is taking nothing for granted in 2022, its internal polling, which was obtained by Hearst Newspapers, shows little cause for concern so far.

Polling conducted in June shows 87 percent of Republican primary voters approve of the job Abbott has done, according to Public Opinion Strategies.

“Abbott’s high marks on the issues put him in a dominant position against any Republican challenger,” according to an internal polling memo.

At first glance, it is hard to see West’s path to victory in a GOP primary, said Brandon Rottinghau­s, a political science professor at the University of Houston.

Abbott, as a statewide officehold­er for 25 years — and having led the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic for a year and a half — has greater name recognitio­n than any potential challenger and more than $50 million in his campaign account to fend them off.

But Rottinghau­s said there is no doubt West brings something to the table that Abbott, 63, has not contended with in the past.

“His strength is an outside-the-box political campaign style that Abbott has never seen before,” Rottinghau­s said.

Abbott avoided primary challenges when he ran three times for attorney general and faced only token opposition in his two primary campaigns for governor.

And Abbott has more than West to worry about on his right flank. Former state Sen. Don Huffines of Dallas also announced he’s running for governor and already has released campaign ads and dotted Texas highways with billboards vowing to do more to fight illegal immigratio­n and to cut property taxes.

West is campaignin­g on reining in the governor’s use of emergency powers, such as during a pandemic; using the Texas National Guard and Texas State Guard more on the border to fight illegal immigratio­n; and examining the feasibilit­y of eliminatin­g property taxes.

Dems waiting on Beto

Those primary challenges come as Democrats wait to see if former Texas congressma­n Beto O’rourke will run for governor. O’rourke already has hosted rallies in front of the Capitol and blasted Abbott’s handling of the state’s electrical grid. The grid broke down during a cold snap in February, leaving millions in the dark and without heat and killing more than 200 Texans.

Abbot also has faced criticism for his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, from a spring 2020 reopening that he quickly backtracke­d on after infections began spiking to blocking local efforts to limit public activities. More than 52,000 Texans have died from the coronaviru­s.

O’rourke has not ruled out running for governor and has been crisscross­ing the state, holding rallies akin to his 2018 U.S. Senate campaign, in which he came within 3 percentage points of defeating Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz for reelection.

Abbott meanwhile has been preparing for 2022 by shoring up his GOP base of support.

In the last two months, Abbott has picked up a formal — and very public — endorsemen­t from Trump. And Trump and Abbott spent hours together on the Texas border professing their admiration for one another.

“I gave him a complete and total endorsemen­t,” Trump said June 30, with Abbott by his side. “You’ve done a great job, and I’m going to be with you.”

But West, whose term as state GOP chairman ended Sunday, has been undeterred. He has used the post to speak his mind and to be a thorn in the side of some elected Republican­s in Texas, including Abbott.

He’s been critical of Abbott’s use of executive orders during the pandemic and even took part in rallies outside the governor’s mansion in Austin. West called Abbott’s orders a form of “the tyranny that we see in the great state of Texas.” He’s also called House Speaker Dade Phelan a “traitor” for seeking the support of Democrats and has accused Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick of holding up progun legislatio­n — a charge Patrick adamantly denied.

All the attacks on fellow Republican­s have drawn ire from some GOP loyalists who say West went too far in trying to raise his own political profile.

“It is now clear that Allen West’s entire tenure as Texas GOP chair was intended to do only what many suspected: provide him a platform for his political future, not an opportunit­y to build the party,” said Travis County GOP chairman Matt Mackowiak.

West stirs the pot

West, who now lives just outside Dallas, was elected to represent a congressio­nal district based in Palm Beach County, Fla., in 2010.

During his brief tenure in Congress, West made a habit of scolding Democrats. He made headlines when he said Nazi propagandi­st Joseph Goebbels would be impressed with the media tactics used by Democrats. As one of two Black Republican­s in Congress, he called President Barack Obama “a low-level socialist agitator,” according to news reports. He wrote a fellow member of Congress from Florida, Democrat Debbie Wasserman Schultz, to say she was “the most vile, unprofessi­onal and despicable member of the U.S. House of Representa­tives.” At another point, he claimed to know that up to 81 members of the Democratic Party were members of the Communist Party.

The Republican-led Florida Legislatur­e redrew the boundaries of West’s district, which had included Trump’s Mar-a-lago resort, and West was forced to move into a swing district.

He lost his reelection campaign despite raising $19 million — more than any incumbent House member in the nation.

Before politics, West, a Georgia native, served in the Army for 22 years, earning a Bronze Star and other service medals before retiring as a lieutenant colonel.

But his tenure in the Army ended in controvers­y when he was relieved of his command in Iraq after being accused of using improper methods to obtain informatio­n from an Iraqi detainee in 2003.

At a military base just north of Baghdad, West was interrogat­ing an Iraqi policeman who was believed to have informatio­n about a plot to ambush West and his troops.

When the informant didn’t talk, West watched four of his soldiers beat the man. Then, Army prosecutor­s said, West threatened to kill the man and fired a pistol near the detainee’s head to get him to talk.

“I know the method I used was not right, but I wanted to take care of my soldiers,” West testified at a military judicial hearing before he was allowed to retire from the Army in 2004.

After he left Florida and moved to Texas, West said he had no intention of running for office again.

But he said the Democratic surge in 2018 played a big role in forcing him to reconsider. Democrats that year flipped 12 seats in the Texas House, two state Senate seats and two congressio­nal seats. Texas Republican­s held their own in the 2020 elections.

“It was disconcert­ing to me to hear about ‘turning Texas blue,’ and I was committed to making sure that did not happen,” West said.

 ?? Matthew Busch / Contributo­r file photo ?? Allen West has said in TV interviews that he is not intimidate­d by running against Gov. Greg Abbott.
Matthew Busch / Contributo­r file photo Allen West has said in TV interviews that he is not intimidate­d by running against Gov. Greg Abbott.
 ?? Jerry Lara / Staff photograph­er ?? Gov. Greg Abbott has greater name recognitio­n than any potential Republican opponent.
Jerry Lara / Staff photograph­er Gov. Greg Abbott has greater name recognitio­n than any potential Republican opponent.

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