Keeping LISD Strong
Texas Committee
$7,899Cash on Hand
$47,612Total Contributions
$30,419Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$25,600.00 Aggregated Unitemized Contributions INDIVIDUAL
$5,000.00 Pfluger Architects ENTITY
$3,500.00 Raba-Kistner PAC, Inc. ENTITY
$2,596.37 Amy Jones INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Brooke Huling INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Joe Charlton INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Martin Burger INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Thomas Satori INDIVIDUAL
$1,309.03 Stephen Scheibal INDIVIDUAL
$1,000.00 Kenton Heinze INDIVIDUAL
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$7,911.52 Aggregated Unitemized Expenditures ENTITY
$2,563.00 Hill Country News ENTITY
$2,500.00 Charles Carter INDIVIDUAL
$2,467.24 Signs on the Cheap ENTITY
$2,382.59 Dirt Cheap Signs ENTITY
$2,141.00 Four Points News ENTITY
$2,049.84 VistaPrint ENTITY
$1,750.00 Kyle O'Donnell INDIVIDUAL
$1,269.69 Nextdayflyers ENTITY
$930.00 Call Multiplier ENTITY
View All Payees
Top Loans

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Related Articles
Transparency USA | 08/28/2019
Texas House Representative Dustin Burrows, who represents District 83 (Lubbock and a swath of West Texas), resigned his post as Chair of the Republican Caucus in the Texas House, apparently as a result of his role in the scandal currently plaguing Texas Republicans. Although he did not resign from office, he finds himself vulnerable in 2020. 
Transparency USA | 08/08/2019
These ten Texas PACs have already taken in more than $14 million combined, which they will use to support their favored candidates in the 2020 elections. Some of these PACs are partisan, some are corporate, and some represent the special interests of their industry constituents. Meet the top ten PACs which have collected the most money so far.*
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.