On May 1, voters in Lubbock will be deciding the fate of Proposition A, which would declare the City of Lubbock as a “sanctuary for the unborn.” A hot-button issue from the start, Lubbock is experiencing a heightened level of outside interest in this local election. Proposition A was placed on the ballot in response to the opening of a Planned Parenthood clinic, and the subsequent petition and City Council rejections of the sanctuary ordinance that opened the door for a vote.
Ground Game Texas PAC
Texas Committee
$4,005Cash on Hand
$9,568Total Contributions
$8,422Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
|---|---|
| $3,000.00 | Chris Karlin |
| $600.00 | Phil Mcjunkins |
| $600.00 | William Perrenod |
| $500.00 | Barry Boothe |
| $500.00 | Michael Lewis |
| $410.00 | Annie Compton |
| $375.00 | Samuel Anderson |
| $300.36 | Manuel Utset |
| $300.00 | Dianne Hess |
| $240.00 | Betsy Appleton |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
|---|---|
| $2,338.73 | Call Hub |
| $1,625.04 | Airtable |
| $683.29 | Bumperactive.com |
| $506.76 | Amazon.com Inc |
| $486.95 | Google Inc |
| $457.43 | Target Corporation |
| $421.34 | Scale to Win |
| $317.00 | Action Network |
| $305.48 | ActBlue Texas |
| $182.33 | Walmart Stores Inc |
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This article is Part 2 of a four-part series demonstrating how the money in a lobby sector can impact state politics and legislation. We’ve selected the Green Energy sector due to a resurgence of interest in a behind-the-scenes look at renewables following the 2021 snowstorms, but you can follow the money in any industry of interest that is spending lobbying dollars in Austin.
One national Democratic super PAC is saying it plans to pump $15 million into what they see as key state-level legislative races around the country—$6.2 million of which is projected to flow into Texas House elections.
