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Austin City Council Races

Austin Mayoral & Place 1 TV Ads


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Fri Apr 24, 2009 at 09:00 AM CDT

We've reached that time, just days before the start of early voting in municipal elections, when campaigns finally take to the airwaves with their television buys. What fantastically awesome and awful ads await us this year? Continue on below to find out!

Mayoral Race: Brewster McCracken

Folksy-ish music? Yes.
On campaign message? Yes.
Walking into City Hall shot? Yes.
Actually see candidate talking? Yes.
Total number of pears left uneaten in family room? 7.

Mayoral Race: Lee Leffingwell

(also see similar version #2 of ad here)

Folksier music? Yes.
On campaign message? It almost runs over you.
Walking into City Hall shot? No, like last year.
Actually see candidate talking? No, like last year.
Haven't we seen this footage before? Yes, like, you get the picture.
Likelihood for Phillip Martin to "hate" this: High.

Mayoral Race: Carole Strayhorn

(also see original more awesome Strayhorn ad)

Creepy, ominous music? Yes.
Creepy, fake cheery voice? Yes.
On campaign message? Yes, if crazy is a message.
City Hall shot? No, apparently City Hall moved since she was mayor.

Place 1: Chris Riley

Folksy music? Yes.
Number of bicycles in ad. 1.
Number of posed children. 5.
Walking into City Hall shot? Yes.
Born and raised inside city hall? Possibly.

Place 1: Perla Cavazos

Folksy music? Oh hell no.
Urban pseudo-latin spicy music? Oh hell yes!
Most memorable but most undefined message? Possibly.
Gives pro-downtown impression when played with sound off? Ironically, yes.
Laura Morrison-esque downtown building hate? NOOOOOOO! (meaning yes).
Number of Cesar Chavez Cavazos Cervezas I need now? Seis.

Discuss :: (56 Comments)

Austin Mayoral & Council Campaign Finance Reports 1/15/09


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Fri Jan 16, 2009 at 01:19 AM CST

So I've run through all the campaign finance reports for the reported candidates for office. Mike Levy, while much rumored, hasn't filed to run, and Oak Hill resident Sandy Baldrige is saying she wants to run against Bill Spelman, but no action to actually follow up those claims on the finance front. In any case, below are a couple of different measures of how you can compare the candidates. Incumbents running for re-election to their own offices are in bold.

Cash on Hand

The only thing order-wise that changes if you sort by total funds raised during the period is that incumbent Sheryl Cole moves from 4th to 2nd and incumbent Mike Martinez moves from 2nd to 4th.

Austin Mayor and City Council Fundraising Report

Overall: I was mostly right in what I've said to friends that I doubted anyone would end up having more than $25,000. I was wrong about Carole Strayhorn but I didn't think she would end up deciding to run. And while Chris Riley didn't end up with more than $25,000 cash on hand, he did raise more than $25,000 so congrats to him.

Mayor: Overall, I'm a little surprised to see Brewster's fundraising more on par with that of the Place 1 candidates and lagging behind that of Carole. Of course, that could just be because his main fundraiser isn't until later this month, but still, it makes the argument against Leffingwell rather irrelevant (that his delay in getting in will put him far behind in the money race). The Draft Lee PAC certainly is not acting as a real shadow campaign in terms of fundraising, but remember, it cannot transfer funds to Lee's Mayoral account once he files so there is no use in building up tens of thousands of dollars on it that would have to be spent independently of the official campaign. Of course, I also think that Strayhorn and Levy could spent lots of money and get far fewer votes than McCracken and Leffingwell so it could just all be a wash. This report tells us very little in the Mayor's race.

Place 1: My ballpark guess in this race was that the fundraising order would be Riley, Cavazos, then Cofer with totals around $20k, $15k, and then $10k. Both Chris Riley and Rick Cofer exceeded those expectations by a reasonable amount and in the end, they indeed are separated by no more than $10,000. Cofer was the last candidate in this race to announce, and with only 2 weeks to fundraise with Christmas killing about a week of that, nearly tieing Cavazos is worthy of note. I should clarify this point as all 3 candidates filed in the 2nd week of December. What I was trying to get at was that Chris was actively exploring this race and making calls months before he filed (I got an early call when I was in the Strama office before the November election) and Perla was actively talking about it in November, whereas I know Cofer didn't make the decision to run until the first week of December, shortly before he filed because he texted me about it.

Does this report create a frontrunner? I don't know. Last year, in the open Place 4 race, the first report went Morrison, Galindo, Cravey with $21k, $14k, and $12k. Randi Shade led incumbent Jennifer Kim $69k to $44k. Of course all of those were running earlier and in this period, the fundraising period was truncated by a presidential election, late filing, and a bad economy (even though the max contribution limit has increased from $300 to $350).

But if convention wisdom must be set, than I figure it's Cofer and Cavazos competing more with each other to secure a spot in a runoff with Chris Riley.

Place 5: This is all about Bill Spelman. Which is pretty easy to say since there is no sign of his "declared" regional opponent as of yet from Oak Hill. A lot of the same caveats apply as in the Place 5 race (Bill filed with about 3 weeks to fundraise) and it's a hard sell to get people to give you money when (at the time) there was no opponent. So this could end up like the Leffingwell-Meeker race in 2008. Lots of bluster from the 2nd tier candidate, but probably not a whole lot of electoral action with a healthy win.

Other Places: Mike Martinez doesn't have a declared opponent. Sam Osemene is running against Sheryl (he ran for Place 4 against Morrison/Galindo/Cravey last year) but he hasn't filed any report as he appointed his treasurer in January; but if he runs like last time, he won't be a factor other than a repository of votes for people who don't want to vote for Sheryl.

Here are some other interesting breakdowns.

Austin City Council Burn Rates

Austin City Council Donors

Austin City Council Donor Size

Disclosure: I am listed as having donated $300 of in-kind website development services to the Spelman campaign.

Discuss :: (5 Comments)

Me, BOR, and Local Elections: Info for Candidates & Readers


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Thu Jan 15, 2009 at 10:00 AM CST

(I wanted to be sure everyone saw this (I forgot a couple clubs) and I'll only refer back to it as needed.   - promoted by Karl-Thomas Musselman)

I don't plan on making a lot of posts about this, but just so it is out there very clearly, and very plainly.

1) I personally will not publicly endorse or donate to any candidates in (real) contested Austin elections this spring. Primarily, that's referring to the Mayor's Race and Place 1. Yes, I built Bill Spelman's website as he's a former professor of mine and Mike Martinez rocks, which is a given. I hope everyone can live with my decision as this spring I'm in a situation where I'm actually able to spend some time working on BOR site and content development and hope that I can entertain and inform our readers with coverage of the races. To that end, I expect to attend events, fundraisers, volunteer events, join facebook pages, and all sorts of things for all the candidates as there is often no better way to really cover a campaign than through "activist eyes" even if I'm not supporting them.

See?

facebook comparison between council candiates

2) I personally do hold a vote in a variety of club endorsement meetings which could include (assuming I'm eligible and my dues are current) the following. Yes, I will cast my votes there, but I'm the oddball that actually casts different votes in some organizations based upon who would be the most appropriate candidate for that club to endorse. (i.e. I'd be crazy not to vote for Chris Riley for the League of Bicycling Voters endorsement given that I and he are both carless and bike everywhere, though that shouldn't stop Perla or Rick from making their case. I can be swayed for strange reasons.)

- Austin Gay & Lesbian Political Caucus
- Capital Area Asian American Democrats
- Capital Area Progressive Democrats
- Capital City Young Democrats
- Central Austin Democrats
- ChangeAustin.org (I forgot to list)
- Democracy for Texas (doesn't technically endorse)
- Latinos for Texas
- League of Bicycling Voters
- Stonewall Democrats
- Texas Environmental Democrats
- Texans for Obama (has discussed doing endorsements)
- University Democrats (not really, but I'm always around)

3) Burnt Orange Report as an entity will endorse in the Austin municipal elections and that will probably be in early April. That endorsement is done by a weighted consensus of the staff relevant to election, which in this case, is as follows. My vote is convertible to 3 if needed to break a tie, or more simply, just means that I have final say in brokering what our consensus is or means.

2 Karl-Thomas Musselman
2 Matt Glazer
2 Phillip Martin
1 David Mauro
1 Katherine Haenschen
1 Michael Hurta

4) I am going to make advertising packages available to all candidates. I'll be in touch with the campaigns about this, but I want to make it easier for you to talk to voters here. The benefit of that is at the same time you're investing in something that hopefully is of value, not only in this election, but into the future. This is a premium readership and in this election, a lot of folks are undecided and the ones you sway here are more than likely voters that will sway dozens of votes beyond each one you win over.


OK, is everyone clear on this? It's worth it to all the campaigns to invite me to whatever they have going on, send me press releases, send me inside baseball, quotes, content, dirt, whatever you want that no one else is talking about. I want to actually cover your elections unlike some of the news outlets in this town and will try to to my best in getting thousands of Austinites clued in on why you are doing what you are doing.  

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

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