Monday was the deadline to file for the 2018 Texas primaries. You have to give credit to whoever in the Texas Democratic Party was in charge of candidate recruitment: unlike many previous years, “Democrats put up candidates for every statewide elected post, except one open seat on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, an initial tally of filings showed Monday night.”
Here are my quick impressions of some of the more competitive statewide primary races to be fought between now and March 6.
Democratic Governor’s Race
See this post. The press is going to cover this as an Andrew White vs. Lupe Valdez race. I think there’s a 50% chance Grady Yarborough makes the runoff.
Republican Agricultural Commissioner’s Race
This race has already turned nasty, with incumbent Sid Miller and challenger Trey Blocker launching nasty Facebook attack ads at each other. One of Blocker’s consultants is Matt Mackowiak, who was just elected to a 2018-2020 term as Travis County GOP chairman unopposed, and whose Twitter feed I follow.
Republican Land Commissioner’s Race
Former Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson has filed to run against incumbent George P. Bush. Patterson is going to have a real uphill fight to unseat Bush, since Patterson lost badly in his last race for Lt. Governor, coming in fourth in a four man race, and the Bush family machine has a legendary fundraising network, having raised more than $3 million in a down-ballot race in 2014. But various Alamo controversies and the fact that Bush has never run in even a slightly competitive race might give Patterson a chance to make the race close. Even so, Bush is still the heavy favorite.
Tomorrow (hopefully): A look at competitive U.S. congressional district races.
Tags: 2018 Election, 2018 Texas Gubernatorial Race, Andrew White, Democrats, George P. Bush, Jerry Patterson, Lupe Valdez, Matt Mackowiak, Republicans, Sid Miller, Texas, Trey Blocker