This article is Part 4 of a four-part series demonstrating how the money in a lobby sector can impact state politics and legislation. Read the first three articles here, here, and here.
True Texas Project PAC
Texas Committee
$4,552Cash on Hand
$12,570Total Contributions
$15,704Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$1,000.00 | Gateways to Better Education |
$900.00 | Nick Tilotta |
$850.00 | Tim Rhodes |
$700.00 | David Mason |
$675.00 | Tammy Kreif |
$650.00 | Judith Linn |
$550.00 | Paul Hektner |
$500.00 | Chris Putnam |
$450.00 | David Walker |
$340.00 | Allan Solmon |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$5,577.94 | Digital Corporate Companies Inc |
$4,353.00 | Reed Advertising & Distributing |
$2,132.14 | Office Depot Inc |
$833.76 | Meta Platforms Inc / Facebook |
$760.00 | Cumulus Dallas |
$600.00 | Joshua Hendrickson |
$517.00 | US Postal Service |
$241.40 | Star Sports Keller |
$216.00 | Patricia Date |
$210.99 | Bartley's Bbq |
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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.
When Texas’ last legislative session gaveled to a close in late May, conservatives from across the state were not shy about expressing their disappointment with the results. Leaders of large and powerful grassroots organizations like Julie McCarty of True Texas Project, JoAnn Fleming of Grassroots America We The People, Michael Quinn Sullivan of Empower Texans and Elizabeth Graham of Texas Right to Life described the results of the session as “purple,” “loser,” and “nothing,” making ominous, albeit veiled, threats to withhold funding.