Texarkana Gazette

Gov. Abbott raises $19M

He may use it to target lawmakers who killed school choice

- ROBERT T. GARRETT

AUSTIN — Gov. Greg Abbott, thwarted in his efforts to create a school voucherlik­e program last year, has rebuilt his campaign war chest just in time for a Republican primary he promises to be a player in.

Abbott’s campaign announced Wednesday that he raised more than $19 million for his two political accounts in the last six months of 2023.

With upwards of $38 million of cash on hand, Abbott is flush enough to follow through on his threat to try to defeat incumbent GOP state representa­tives who in November thwarted his push for a school voucherlik­e plan known as education savings accounts, or ESAS.

Sixteen of the 21 anti-voucher House Republican­s are up for re-election in the March 5 GOP primary, so Abbott has plenty of targets, said University of Houston political scientist Brandon Rottinghau­s. The other five GOP House members who defied the three-term Republican governor are not seeking re-election.

But Abbott, who has three years remaining in his term, has little time to persuade the mostly rural voters who have been electing those lawmakers, Rottinghau­s noted.

“Message normally beats money, and the governor, to be successful, needs to educate, persuade, then mobilize voters on the rather narrow issue of school choice,” he said. “It’s a tall order in a relatively short period of time.”

In a news release, Abbott campaign manager Kim Snyder all but connected his record-setting fundraisin­g in the second half of 2023 with his previously stated desire that Republican primary voters punish opponents of ESAS, which would publicly fund private school tuition.

“With the primary elections just around the corner, Governor Abbott has the resources needed to back strong conservati­ve candidates who support his bold agenda to keep Texas the greatest state in the nation, including expanding school choice for all Texas families and students,” she said.

Texans for Greg Abbott, the governor’s main campaign committee, raised more than $13 million from July through December. As of Dec. 31, it had more than $32 million in cash.

In comparable time periods, Texans for Greg Abbott raised about $7 million in 2015 and $7.8 million in 2019, the campaign said.

Additional­ly, in the past six months, Abbott raised more than $6 million for a previously dormant candidate/officehold­er account, it said.

Campaign finance reports that detail donors and contributi­on amounts are due at the Texas Ethics Commission next Tuesday.

‘RIGHT TO CHOOSE’

Of the 16 voucher-opposing, Republican House incumbents who are running for re-election, Abbott has endorsed GOP challenger­s to seven: Steve Allison of San Antonio, Dewayne Burns of Cleburne, Travis Clardy of Nacogdoche­s, Drew Darby of San Angelo, Glenn Rogers of Graford, Hugh Shine of Temple and Gary Vandeaver of New Boston.

Last week, for example, Abbott endorsed former Glen Rose Mayor Helen Kerwin against Burns, who for five terms has represente­d Johnson and Somervell counties.

“Helen will work tirelessly to ensure that every Texas parent has the right to choose the best education for their children,” Abbott said in a release.

The governor has not endorsed against the other nine, who include Reps. Keith Bell of Forney, Charlie Geren of Fort Worth and Justin Holland of Rockwall, though Abbott did repost social-media criticism of Holland by his home county’s Republican Party executive committee.

While Abbott had limited success when he targeted three GOP House incumbents four years ago, he appears seriously peeved, said Southern Methodist University political scientist Matthew Wilson.

“I think he really will go against the anti-esa Republican­s aggressive­ly,” Wilson said in an email.

“He was very angry that members of his own party joined with Democrats to thwart his core agenda item and a major priority for movement conservati­ves. How much success he will have remains to be seen. Conservati­ves in recent years have had limited success in unseating incumbents over education issues,” Wilson said.

‘SHOULD BE ALARMING’

David Dematthews, an education policy expert at the University of Texas at Austin, said Abbott is taking some risks.

“The governor’s attention to vouchers while ignoring efforts to adequately fund public education for 5.4 million Texas children should be alarming to all voters,” Dematthews said in an email.

“After mass shootings, teacher shortages and a global pandemic that impacted the education of our next generation, voters may hold the governor and voucher-supporting elected officials responsibl­e for failing to support and adequately fund the state’s public schools.”

Through last year’s regular session and two fall overtime sessions, Abbott sought to link passage of ESAS to raising teacher pay and increasing basic funding of school districts squeezed by inflation.

Although it wasn’t clear whether Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and the Senate would sign off on the measure, the House’s chief schools policy writer, Rep. Brad Buckley, R-salado, pushed a bill that would have added $7.6 billion of public education funding. On Nov. 17, it died after College Station GOP Rep. John Raney succeeded, 84-63, in adding an amendment killing ESAS.

On Wednesday, Texas State Teachers Associatio­n spokesman Clay Robison said schools remain “underfunde­d,” which “says a lot about the governor’s misplaced priorities.”

Abbott strategist Dave Carney, asked for comment on the professors’ and Robison’s remarks, replied, “The facts don’t support the uninformed opinions offered by a typically well balanced range of wise guys you’ve chosen to include.”

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