[Voterescue] One-Party Texas Counties??! SoS has some'splainin' to do!

David Van Os david at vanoslaw.com
Thu Mar 6 23:34:57 CST 2008


Armstong, Hansford, and Roberts are the 3 counties in Texas that as of now don't have Democratic county chairs. They are all in the upper Panhandle. So they didn't have Democratic primaries because there was nobody to hold one. In general elections the Democratic vote typically ranges from about 12% to about 22% in those counties. (As of 2006 there were about 7 or 8 counties that didn't have Democratic county chairs, but the palpable changing of the tide has led Democrats to come out in several of them and volunteer to serve as county chairs and organize a local Democratic party. For example, there is now a Democratic county chair in Ochiltree county for the first time in about 15 years, and Ochiltree County held a Democratic primary this year for the first time since then.) 

There is an even greater number of rural West Texas and rural South Texas counties that don't have Republican county chairs, with some of them being Democratic counties in national and statewide elections and others being Republican counties in national and statewide elections. To explain more, an interesting quirk about rural Texas is that, outside of South Texas, in both eastern and western rural counties, there are quite a few counties where the last top-ticket Democrat that carried them was Jimmy Carter in 1976, but where the offices of county government are still held 100% by Democrats just like they have been ever since Reconstruction ended in 1877. It is just long, deep tradition. In county government offices, everybody runs in the Democratic primary and the elections are decided in the Democratic primary - even though the majority of the voters are Republican voters for the purposes of everything above the level of county government. 

But in most rural South Texas counties, the huge majority of voters are simply Democrats period, for all purposes, and there is nobody to run as a Republican because no Republican could possibly get elected to anything. 

David Van Os
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: DARogers at aol.com 
  To: karen.renick at grandecom.net ; voterescue at voterescue.org 
  Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 10:48 AM
  Subject: Re: [Voterescue] One-Party Texas Counties??! SoS has some'splainin' to do!


  This is unsurprising.

  There are 254 counties in Texas.  Many of them are sparsely populated.  A number of them have no county chairmen (particularly on the Republican side).  With no county chairman, there is no one to organize or run a primary.

  Perversely, some of the counties with no Republican chairmen consistently go Republican at the top of the ticket in November, but all the local officials are Democrats.

  David Rogers

  ----------------------------------------

  In a message dated 3/6/08 10:30:11 AM, karen.renick at grandecom.net writes:



    Thank you, Richard Hayes Phillips!!!
    We are hoping to have Dr. Phillips on VoteRescue Radio this Sunday, March 9, which airs Sundays 2-4 pm CST on www.wtprn.com. We'll also be covering our hugely successful Citizen Exit Polls (CEPs) here in Texas and speaking with Victoria Parks and Marj Creech about theirs in Ohio. Tune-in to learn how you can do the same in your state! CEPs are the first big step in reclaiming OUR elections! ~  Karen & Vickie

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D.
    March 5, 2008


         Didn’t anybody notice this?

         It is now 24 hours after the polls closed in Texas.  In 21 counties, with 100% of precincts reporting, nobody voted in the Republican presidential primary.  In three counties, with 100% of precincts reporting, nobody voted in the Democratic presidential primary.
         In the 21 counties with no Republican voters, there were 87,919 registered voters, and 36,239 ballots cast, all of them Democratic.
         In the three counties with no Democratic voters, there were 5,212 registered voters, and 1,865 ballots cast, all of them Republican.
         In Maverick County, all 9,661 ballots cast were Democratic.  In Hansford County, all 1,235 ballots cast were Republican.


    ONE-PARTY TEXAS COUNTIES, PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY, 2008

    County              Registered    Republican    Democratic
                        Voters        Votes         Votes

    Armstrong            1404          369             0
    Borden                432            0           139
    Brooks               6385            0          3185
    Cottle               1230            0           471
    Crockett             2654            0          1166
    Culberson            1959            0           526
    Dickens              1410            0           612
    Duval                9331            0          5053
    Foard                1043            0           432
    Hall                 2110            0           813
    Hansford             3101         1235             0
    Hardeman             2969            0          1086
    Hudspeth             1557            0           476
    Kent                  665            0           250
    La Salle             4071            0          1392
    Loving                116            0            22
    Maverick            26224            0          9661
    Reeves               6337            0          2228
    Roberts               707          261             0
    Stonewall            1087            0           483
    Throckmorton         1175            0           513
    Upton                2139            0           823
    Zapata               7148            0          3190
    Zavala               7877            0          3718

         But don’t take my word for it.  See for yourself.

    http://enr.sos.state.tx.us/enr/mar04_135_race0.htm
    http://enr.sos.state.tx.us/enr/mar04_136_race0.htm
    http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/state/#TX

         Election officials in the State of Texas have some explaining to do.


    Richard Hayes Phillips is the author of the definitive book on the 2004 presidential election in Ohio – “Witness to a Crime: A Citizens’ Audit of an American Election.”  For more information: richardhayesphillips at yahoo.com









  David Rogers
  (512) 923-6188

  CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email communication (including any attached document(s)) may contain information that is confidential, proprietary and/or privileged. The information is intended for the sole use of the indicated addressee(s). If you are not an intended recipient of this email communication, please be advised that any disclosure, copying, distribution or other use of this communication or any attached document is strictly prohibited. Moreover, any such inadvertent disclosure shall not compromise or waive the attorney-client privilege as to this communication or otherwise. If you have received this email communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by e-mail (DARogers at aol.com) or by telephone at (512) 923-6188, and promptly destroy all copies of this communication and any attached document(s). Thank you.




  **************
  It's Tax Time! Get tips, forms, and advice on AOL Money & Finance.
  (http://money.aol.com/tax?NCID=aolprf00030000000001) 


------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  _______________________________________________
  Voterescue mailing list
  Voterescue at voterescue.org
  http://voterescue.org/mailman/listinfo/voterescue_voterescue.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://voterescue.org/pipermail/voterescue_voterescue.org/attachments/20080307/f430d928/attachment.html 


More information about the Voterescue mailing list