Texas governor Rick Perry will face Democrat Bill White in November

By Kelley Shannon Associated Press

Wednesday March 3, 2010
 
 

AUSTIN — Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison conceded the Republican nomination for Texas governor to Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday after a heated primary battle that highlighted the growing anti-Washington mood among voters in midterm elections.

Hutchison once was seen as the candidate who could deliver Perry’s first election loss in a lifetime of public office.

But the governor, a darling of the social conservatives, forcefully painted the senator as too entrenched in Washington politics.

Speaking at his election-night party in Driftwood after Hutchison conceded, Perry said he would unite a fractured Texas Republican Party in the November general election, and he said Washington politics had no place in the Lone Star State.

“From Driftwood, Texas, to Washington, D.C., we are sending you a message tonight: Stop messing with Texas,” Perry said.

Perry, Texas’ longest-serving governor, had 51 percent of the vote compared to Hutchison’s 31 percent, with nearly three-fourths of precincts reporting Tuesday night.

About one in five voters cast ballots for a third candidate, Debra Medina, a GOP party activist who was backed by some in the state’s Tea Party movement.

The GOP nominee will face former Houston Mayor Bill White, who defeated Houston hair care magnate Farouk Shami and five others Tuesday to win the Democratic nomination for governor.

Gov. Rick Perry (right) held off Republican challenger Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison on Tuesday in the primary election. He will face former Houston Mayor Bill White (left) in November.
Gov. Rick Perry (right) held off Republican challenger Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison on Tuesday in the primary election. He will face former Houston Mayor Bill White (left) in November.
Pat Sullivan, LM Otero/Associated Press

Hutchison, first elected to the Senate in 1993, acknowledged that Perry’s anti-Washington campaign theme worked against her in the current environment.

She told supporters in Dallas on Tuesday that she called Perry once she thought the election results were clear.

“We have fought valiantly for our principles, but we did not win,” she said.

Medina’s setback

Medina raised relatively little money and suffered a setback when she told talk show host Glenn Beck there were “some very good arguments” that the U.S. was involved in the 2001 terrorist attacks, yet she still managed to win over scores of voters who might otherwise have sided with the deeply conservative Perry.

“I’m a pretty conservative guy,” said Kevin Merritt, a 31-year-old software developer from Frisco.

He said he cast his ballot for Medina because he liked her goal of reducing property taxes and disliked Perry’s support of a now-dead project to build a huge system of toll roads.

Hutchison initially said she would step down from the Senate by the end of 2009 and focus full time on her run for governor.

But she later changed her mind and said she had to stay in Washington, D.C., to battle President Barack Obama and the Democrats on health care.

Her continued presence in the nation’s capital gave Perry more ammunition to cast her as a congressional insider.

“It definitely hurt, but it was not my doing,” Hutchison said last week, discussing her decision to stay in the Senate. “It was the progress of health care reform. The game change for me is when health care kept being put off.”

Democratic race

On the Democratic side, White had about 76 percent of the vote with about three-fourths of precincts reporting to defeat wealthy Houston hair-care magnate Farouk Shami and five other lesser-known candidates.

The well-funded businessman and lawyer who made a name for himself with his city’s response to the Hurricane Katrina evacuation has said he didn’t feel at a disadvantage with so much attention paid to the Republicans and spent the time listening to voters.

He aired television ads introducing himself to a statewide audience and generally kept his campaign on a positive path.

Republicans have held the governorship since George W. Bush took over in 1995 after defeating Democrat Ann Richards.

Perry ascended to governor from lieutenant governor in December 2000, when Bush resigned to become president, and has held the office ever since.

Democrats have been looking for an avenue back into statewide power, and many see White as that chance with his money to spend on a big race and his power base in Houston, the state’s largest city.

Businessman Tom Schieffer dropped out of the Democratic race for governor last fall and threw his support behind White, who switched from running for U.S. Senate.

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Mar. 15, 2010, 2:45PM

(Report Comment)

I will be voting for Bill White, it's time for fresh meat. Everybody I've talked to in Houston said he did a good job for them down there, because Rick Perry's record speaks for itself_he hasn't done anything.

 

Mar. 08, 2010, 11:23AM

(Report Comment)

Crap!! Nothing to vote for here,Chet is ok with me cause he keeps the doors open at the red-brick buildings....Yeah I don't like how he votes either.Like it or not Perry is back in,teachers and troopers get the shaft while he runs around the country having a party on our money. It will play out this way!!!wait and see!!

 

Mar. 06, 2010, 7:37AM

(Report Comment)

Bill White will follow the national agenda of President Obama, Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi. If you like big government, high taxes and changing America into a version of the Old Russia, check Bill White on your ballot.

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 7:45PM

(Report Comment)

Come on Austin. Bill White did a bang up job in Houston. It's not like Houston is some bathroom and gas stop. You're talking about the 4th largest city in the US. Look at how Rick Perry has let Texas fall to the wayside. If it wasn't for Texas being able to sell itself, Texas would be in dire straits. This great state should be leading the nation in public education insteady of being towards the bottom. Anybody who worked in the Clinton administration has automatic credentials. Don't forget Clinton had the country with a surplus....

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 6:27PM

(Report Comment)

Here comes toll roads and coal plants.

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 2:41PM

(Report Comment)

If you're voting for Bill White, you're voting for budget deficits, porkulous spending, a state income tax, additional gasoline taxes, additional favors to the trial attorneys & the unabashed acceptance of Federal Dollars and Mandates from Washington DC that come with those Dollars. Bill White is a pure Clintonista holdover and wreck this state worse than Ann Richards ever did. Hope you all really want that if you're pulling the lever for White.

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 2:08PM

(Report Comment)

I was surprised to see Farouk Shami get so many votes. America may have been ready for a black President but Texas definitely was not ready for a A-Rab Governor.

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 9:14AM

(Report Comment)

Good for you Rick. Soon Texas can get back to its primary job--unashamedly executing the innocent and mentally disabled.

 

Mar. 03, 2010, 1:40AM

(Report Comment)

Pack your bags Rick....It's on.

 





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