Beau Miller
Texas 190th District Court
$67,717Cash on Hand
$846,798Total Contributions
$718,971Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$17,500.00 Anthony G Buzbee INDIVIDUAL
$17,500.00 Jason & Kisha Itkin INDIVIDUAL
$17,000.00 Muhammad Suleiman Aziz INDIVIDUAL
$16,000.00 Baker Botts Amicus Fund ENTITY
$15,000.00 Kurt Arnold INDIVIDUAL
$13,000.00 Spagnoletti & Associates ENTITY
$12,300.16 Jason A Gibson INDIVIDUAL
$12,000.00 Ahmad Zavitsanos Anaipakos Alavi & Mensing PC ENTITY
$11,500.00 Nancy McGregor and Neal Manne INDIVIDUAL
$11,000.00 Vinson & Elkins Texas PAC ENTITY
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$122,060.79 Harris County Democratic Party (P) ENTITY
$55,392.04 Grant Martin Campaigns dba Storefront Politics ENTITY
$54,148.01 Beau Miller INDIVIDUAL
$51,407.45 Strong Strategies LLC ENTITY
$48,855.56 Kathryn McNiel INDIVIDUAL
$33,337.88 Chase Bank Visa ENTITY
$27,500.00 K-Chase ENTITY
$26,000.00 KChace Consulting ENTITY
$18,116.69 Rally Piryx LLC ENTITY
$15,903.84 B & B Butchers Restaurant ENTITY
View All Payees
Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

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Related Articles
Transparency USA | 11/20/2020
Texas House District 26 includes portions of Sugar Land and other areas in Fort Bend County.
Tracy Marshall | 10/21/2020
The most closely watched battle in Texas state-level politics is the effort by Democrats to flip the Texas House to blue this November. If Democrats can hold the 12 seats they gained in 2018 and take nine more, they will control the Texas House for the first time in more than two decades. The upcoming redistricting process, set to happen in 2021, redraws the legislative maps for both state and federal legislatures and makes this election even more consequential.
Transparency USA | 08/14/2017
1.  Governor Greg Abbott ($10,091,875) had quite the haul, raking in more than $10 million in campaign contributions in just twelve days, despite the fact that he has no likely Republican primary challenger or significant Democrat opponent in sight. And he certainly didn’t need the cash – Governor Abbott’s war chest was already one of the largest in the nation; it now registers over $41 million, more than double what he had when he first ran for governor in 2013.