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Speaker's Race

Joe Straus Files for Re-Election as House Speaker


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Wed May 27, 2009 at 06:29 PM CDT

Earlier today, current Texas House Speaker Joe Straus filed paperwork that would enable him to campaign for re-election as speaker upon the conclusion of the legislative session. While not unexpected, the timing would indicate that he feels like he is in a position to secure votes from fellow Republican for having not caved on Voter ID, and killing off debate and passage of Rick Perry's "do not want" bill regarding unemployment insurance.

Of course, all of the following items were as a result deemed less important than Voter ID. Straus and the GOP set the agenda. They, along with the actions of Senate Republicans at the start of session, took actions which had a cascading effect across the legislative calendar.

* The electric co-op reform bill
* Eminent domain
* Averitt's clean air bill
* TDI sunset
* Enabling legislation for $5 billion in highway construction bonds
* Informed consent for abortion
* Solar energy incentive program
* Windstorm insurance (Hurricane season begins Monday)
* Dewhurst's overhaul of health care (SB 6, 7, 8 )
* Unemployment insurance
* Flores' enabling act creating a homestead exemption for disabled veterans
* Criminal asset forfeiture reform (to prevent the abuses that took place in Tenaha)
* Constitutional authorization for bonds for water projects and the state water plan
* Watson's renewable energy bill

So if you were to ask, what is is the House that Straus built- it's constructed of just one brick called Voter ID. Oh, and maybe a budget. But that's about it.

For other thoughts on what this might mean moving forward, I'll point you to read replies by Off the Kuff and Burka.

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

Understanding the Speaker's Race: Part 2 -- The Solution


by: Phillip Martin

Tue Jan 13, 2009 at 06:00 AM CST

Ed. note: This is part two of a three part series I've worked on over the break about understanding the Speaker's race. Part one focused on the problem -- why isn't someone else Speaker yet? Part two focuses on the solution -- how to emerge as a legitimate Speaker candidate. Part three will focus on the goals -- what Democrats should want in a new Speaker candidate.

Part Two: How to Emerge as a Legitimate Speaker Candidate

In Part One, I explored ideas about what the barriers the Craddick challengers must overcome in order to elect a new Speaker. Quickly, let's revisit those key points to make sure this post makes sense:

  1. Purpose -- Members want to be treated fairly
  2. Barriers -- Craddick's incumbency gives him strong organizational capacity, which builds his legitimacy
  3. Individuals -- Craddick is a gatekeeper for power, which prevents Members from moving up
  4. Group dynamics -- When you can't trust a person, you trust a group
  5. Rising in the ranks -- Craddick challengers need a megaphone to build organizational capacity

Originally, I wanted to write about how to overcome these barriers, but as Straus lived it out over the last few weeks, current events took much deserved center stage. So instead of looking forward, we'll use this post to look back a little -- then close out the series either Wednesday or Thursday (again, based on how busy current events are) with Part 3.

How does one overcome the barriers I've argued exist in order to get elected Speaker of the Texas House? Given that there's a purpose -- legitimate or otherwise -- to replace a Speaker, the biggest obstacle to overcome is building the organizational capacity necessary to develop group dynamics and to exhibit the values of your purpose -- trust, cohesion, shared power -- within your own circle of friends. No (wo)man is an island, and "Anybody But" is still not a valid name for a ballot; the solution, therefore, is to be a uniter (not a divider) with a strong positive narrative that (1) gives others a vision while simultaneously (2) reinforcing the negative narrative of your opponent(s).

The coalition building, in regards to the Speaker's race, requires intraparty and cross-party relationships to be built. One thing that can help make that happen is an understanding of 3D negotiation skills. I want to look at how those 3D tactics are put in play in both the intraparty and cross-party relationships we saw develop over the past month(s).

3D Negotiations: Building a Bargain Away from the Table

A quick intro on the framework I'm using -- stolen from 3D Negotiations:

Most negotiators focus on a single dimension of the bargaining process. They are “one-dimensional,” in our terminology, and the single dimension that they embrace is tactics. One-dimensional bargainers believe that negotiation is mainly what happens at the table. To them, preparation and execution is mainly about process and tactics.

But all too often, this one-dimensional approach leaves money on the table. It is inadequate to the tough negotiations in which the other side seems to hold all the cards. It isn’t well-suited to common dealmaking challenges such as many parties—not just two—tricky internal as well as external negotiations, and shifting agendas. It leads to suboptimal deals, creates needless impasses, and fosters conflicts that could have been avoided.

The argument put forth, then, is that a 3D negotiation looks at all levels of the negotiation: the tactics (1D), the deal design (2D -- creative ways of creating value), and the setup (3D). The setup requires the following (emphasis in the original):

This means ensuring that the right parties have been approached, in the right sequence, to deal with the right issues, that engage the right set of interests, at the right table or tables, at the right time, under the right expectations, and facing the right consequences of walking away if there is no deal. If the setup at the table isn’t promising, this calls for moves to re-set it more favorably.

So what are the right parties, sequences, issues, etc., to create a cohesive intraparty and cross-party group for a Speaker's race? Rep. Straus, the ABCs, and the Democrats showed us how to make it all happen:

Intraparty -- Why "Anybody But Craddick" Worked

Ben Barnes, in his book Barn Burning, Barn Building, wrote about the problems that led to the downfall of the Democratic Party back in the 1970's. From his book:

In the absence of a strong opposition party, the Democrats themselves split into two factions, the conservative / moderates and the progressives. 

His account of the reasons the Democratic Party fell apart are telling. If power, policy, and political fights are relegated to intraparty squabbles, then it's easy for the opposition party to rise to the ranks. Republicans have lived this tale over the past five years, and Democrats have been the better for it -- both nationally and in Texas.

Unfortunately, while there was intraparty opposition to Craddick, there was nowhere for his Republican opponents to go. Governor Perry, Lieutenant Governor Dewhurst, the lobby, the SREC, the Texas GOP, Eagle Forum...every Republican group imaginable was in his pocket. Even the press was on his side -- falsely claiming Craddick gained "momentum" when it was clear he didn't have the votes.

The "ABCs" were a specific group that was a safe landing for those who were no longer comfortable with Craddick. Even if a Republican was not an "official member" of the ABC club, there was at least a public group of individuals who could create a holding environment for anti-Craddick sympathies. The players were all important, too:

  • Rep. Jim Keffer, a respected conservative Republican from rural Texas
  • Rep. Charlie Geren, a vocal buddy-buddy from Fort Worth
  • Rep. Tommy Merritt, an excentric but personable East Texas conservative

For the first time, the ABCs became an actual opposition party within their own party. In 2007, they were newly formed, and it was hard to work together. By 2008 and 2009, they had a better sense of themselves as a group and an organization. What's more, instead of waiting for last-minute tactic deals (like they did in 2007), they set the table and sequenced the Speaker's race brilliantly -- waiting until right after the holiday break to meet, choose a challenger, and giving them the weekend (when Members didn't need to be busy with their real jobs) to make phone calls.

And by waiting until January 2 to make their announcement, Craddick didn't know who to run against. Meanwhile, as he struggled to set up a counter to a new challenger, they had a positive for Rep. Straus, a negative for Craddick, and were making calls while Craddick was still trying to hold a meeting. You want to know how disorganized Craddick was? Look at the 2-second "Speaker race" of Rep. Vicki Truitt.

The Republican challengers set the table up right this time. But, they had some help.

Cross-party: Bringing the Democrats on Board

On the other side, House Democrats have been building their coalition since 2003. However, their coalition has not been built -- as Vince and others would argue -- as "anti-Craddick." Texas Democrats have grown in numbers by uniting behind issues that are important to Texas families. At the end of the day, those Democrats who had supported Craddick and those who didn't still agreed on the issues.

The question was simply -- who delivers the best opportunity for me, personally, and my district?

Well, a caucus that grows from 62 to 74 in three election cycles becomes, just as the ABC Republicans became, a legitimate opposition group. There were some in the Democratic caucus who did not feel comfortable with the Democratic Caucus leadership; thus, they voted for Craddick in 2007. But then throughout last session, and in the eighteen months since, Reps. Dunnam, Coleman, and Gallego have shown a remarkable amount of patience and passion to elect more Democrats.

And remember -- the House caucus was the first group to release a list of names. Speaker Craddick tried to argue that some of those names would support him, but what credibility did he have by the time those names were released? Republicans had left Craddick in the seven weeks between Rep. Dunnam announcing the list and then revealing the names. Why would any Democrat move towards Craddick when Republicans were only moving away?

Thus, the "holding environment" that the Caucus created was the list itself; a group that worked cohesively and trusted one another. During those seven weeks, the group spoke together, worked with each other, got to know freshmen Members, and then agreed to all come together and discuss whether they would vote for Rep. Straus (once he was announced).

The result? 70 Democrats came out to support Straus, not just 64.

The Solution - Building Cohesion Through Empowerment

The barriers Craddick erected were that he controlled all leverages of power, thus making him the gatekeeper for all information. The "insurgency" had to then crash the gates to take power from him, but they had to be smart about it. As we witnessed over the past few months, it's anything but easy.

The right people must be contacted in the right sequence, asked to do the right things, etc. But once Members began feeling their own sense of empowerment -- granted to them through the creation of their own intraparty and corss-party coalitions -- it became easier to step outside the box and consider other options. And with strong leaders among both the Republicans and Democrats opposed to Craddick, devising a strategy that played across the entire 3D negotiation spectum became a more realistic possiblity.

Now that there is a "solution" and that we will see a new Speaker take the gavel in a few hours, only one question remains: where do we go from here? Stay tuned to Part 3 (coming tomorrow or Wednesday) for my thoughts.

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

Joe Straus Increases Total to 96 Public Pledges for Speaker


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Mon Jan 05, 2009 at 02:52 PM CST

There is a certain point at which keeping track of the new pledges will be pointless but so long as there are people that think there is a speaker's race still going on, we'd be remiss not to post the latest additions.

There were the original 85 pledges and they will be rewarded more than most. Then Turner (D), Guillen (D), and Button (R) added their support to make 88.

Then overnight there was Rep. Mike "Tuffy" Hamilton (R) and Patricia Harless (R) for 90.

And 6 more have been released for a total of 96 publicly listed. Kronberg says 98 but he's either double counting 2 votes or those two haven't been released yet. We're checking that out.

Republicans
Rep. Rob Orr (withdrew support from Smithee)
Joe Driver
Wayne Smith
John Davis
Harvey Hildebran

Democrats
Al Edwards

That leaves Democrat Harold Dutton as the only Democrat who has not pledged to Straus.  

Discuss :: (1 Comments)

Rep. Will Hartnett on Tom Craddick's Fall


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 07:48 PM CST

Elise Hu of KVUE took this clip, interviewing Rep. Hartnett tonight who has been one of Tom Craddick's spokesmen through the Speaker's Race. While the information may get out of date if Rep. Smithee ends up pulling out of this race in the next 24 hours, it is insightful to watch given that the King has given up his throne.

Discuss :: (10 Comments)

Joe Straus's List of 85 Pledged Supporters for Speaker


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 06:44 PM CST

List now fully updated indicating the Gang of 11 and former Craddick D's (may that name now be retired!). I'd also like to note that Burnt Orange Report was the only place that reported Doug Miller's alignment with Straus becoming one of only 4 non-Gang of 11 GOP members on Straus' list.

Here is Straus' pledged votes for speaker in full.

Republicans (15 total)

G11 indicates member of the Gang of 11 Republicans that selected Straus.

Dan Branch
Byron Cook (G11)
Rob Eissler (G11)
Gary Elkins
Charlie Geren (G11)
Delwin Jones (G11)
Jim Keffer (G11)
Edmund Kuempel (G11)
Brian McCall (G11)
Tommy Merritt (G11)
Doug Miller
Jim Pitts (G11)
Burt Solomons (G11)
Todd Smith
Joe Straus (G11)

Democrats (70 Total)

CD indicats Democrat who voted for Craddick in 2007. Some had since pulled support.

Alma Allen
Roberto Alonzo
Carol Alvarado
Rafael Anchia
Valinda Bolton
Lon Burnam
Joaquin Castro
Norma Chavez (CD)
Ellen Cohen
Garnet Coleman
Yvonne Davis
Joe Deshotel (CD)
Dawnna Dukes (CD)
Jim Dunnam
Craig Eiland
Kirk England
Joe Farias
David Farabee
Jessica Farrar
Kino Flores (CD)
Stephen Frost
Pete Gallego
Helen Giddings (CD)
Veronica Gonzalez
Yvonne Gonzalez Toureilles
Roland Gutierrez
Joe Heflin
Ana Hernandez
Abel Herrero
Scott Hochberg
Terri Hodge
Mark Homer
Chuck Hopson
Donna Howard
Carol Kent
Tracy King (CD)
David Leibowitz
Eddie Lucio (CD)
Diana Maldonado
Barbara Mallory Caraway
Marisa Marquez
Armando Martinez
Trey Martinez Fischer
Ruth Jones McClendon (CD)
Jim McReynolds
Jose Menendez
Robert Miklos
Joe Moody
Elliott Naishtat
Rene Oliveira
Dora Olivo
Solomon Ortiz
Aaron Pena (CD)
Joe Pickett
Paula Pierson
Chente Quintanilla
Richard Raymond
Tara Rios Ybarra
Allan Ritter
Eddie Rodriguez
Patrick Rose (CD)
Mark Strama
Kristi Thibaut
Senfronia Thompson
Chris Turner
Allen Vaught
Marc Veasey
Mike Villarreal
Hubert Vo
Armando Walle

Democrats Not on Straus's List: (4 Total)

Harold Dutton (CD)
Al Edwards*
Ryan Guillen (CD)
Sylvester Turner (CD)

*Note: Al Edwards was not in the lege in 2007 but had been a Craddick Supporter prior to his primary defeat by Borris Miles, who he in turn defeated in 2008 to return to the legislature.

Discuss :: (11 Comments)

Craddick's Last Throes: Considering Releasing Pledges


by: Karl-Thomas Musselman

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 05:40 PM CST

Via Laylan Copelin at the Statesman comes words of Tom Craddick's last ditch attempt to salvage his collapsing speakership. But seeing the end, it's likely that he's going to release his pledges from his iron grasp.

There was an impromptu meeting in the speaker's office this afternoon with about eight members, including Dan Gattis and John Smithee.

Gattis reportedly has dropped his speaker's bid in favor of Smithee who's trying to gather support to bloc Joe Strauss.

Craddick began considering releasing his pledges with the news that four Craddick D's, including Austin's Dawnna Dukes, has signed on with Straus.

There is some degree of sweet cold justice that Rep. Dukes is standing Craddick up and that Tom could only pull together 8 members at this office this afternoon. Assuming that the reign of Craddick is about to terminate, the only real surprise is how quietly he goes into the night and if runs for re-election in 2010 out in Midland.

It's like tumbleweeds rolling across an increasingly empty playing field.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Straus to Announce 80+ Pledges Tonight


by: Matt Glazer

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 05:16 PM CST

The rumor on the street is that Republican Speaker candidate Joe Straus will be announcing more than 80 pledges tonight.

This race could be over tonight, before the January 13 vote happens.

Craddick's meeting and the announcement from Straus both seem eminent.

Republican Warren Chisum is on record for the Speaker race yet again:

Chisum said that contrary to a few days ago, he was no longer confident that Craddick had enough pledges to remain speaker. "I don't know. I don't know," he said. Without elaborating, he cited "a lot of new developments" that appeared in recent days to have changed the race's dynamics.

Chisum said he could not say whom Craddick might support should he withdraw from the race. Chisum said he'll wait to see what Craddick does and follow his lead.

Straus is said to announce his bipartisan support tonight and then be available to press and the public tomorrow.

The list and more information as it is available.

Update by KT: In addition to other announcements from Rep. Thompson and most of the San Antonio delegation...

Hubert Vo signed a pledge card for Joe Straus on Saturday.

Karen Loper    
Chief of Staff for State Representative Hubert Vo

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Bexar County Democrats Announce Support for Straus


by: Matt Glazer

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 04:09 PM CST

Democratic Representatives  Joaquin Castro, MALC Chair Trey Martinez Fischer, Mike Villarreal, Joe Farias, Roland Gutierrez, and David Leibowitz have all just announced their "enthusiastic support" for fellow San Antonian Republican Joe Straus.

Democratic members of the Bexar County Delegation have enthusiastically thrown their support behind Representative Joe Straus (R-San Antonio), who will be elected Speaker of the House of Representatives on January 13th.

After bipartisan discussions this weekend in Austin, Representative Straus has been selected as the consensus candidate to run the House of Representatives. He is expected to have the majority of votes from House members, including the support of most Bexar County Democrats.

Representatives Joaquin Castro, Trey Martinez Fischer, Mike Villarreal, Joe Farias, Roland Gutierrez, Jose Menendez, and David Leibowitz have all extended their full support to Representative Straus and believe his election as Speaker will be a historic victory for the Alamo City, especially in a moment when the stakes are so high.

Representative Straus will significantly help advance San Antonio's agenda in the upcoming legislative session.

During the 81st Legislative Session, lawmakers are expected to name a third top tier research university in the state, making the University of Texas at San Antonio a front runner for consideration. Straus as Speaker of the House would make up for the absence of a San Antonio member on the important Texas Transportation Commission, and a Speaker Straus will be invaluable in securing funding for critical infrastructure projects, and private sector development in Bexar County.

Democratic members of the Bexar County Delegation are excited to join Republicans and Democrats from across the state to support Representative Straus in his candidacy for Speaker of the House of Representatives, and they look forward to the opportunities this will present for San Antonio in 2009. The Delegation urges other uncommitted lawmakers to throw their support behind Representative Straus.

Representative Straus is expected to publicly identify his list of more than 76 supporters within the next 18 to 24 hours.

The most interesting part of this whole release is the very last paragraph.

Elise Hu wrote earlier today about the pros and cons of announcing the full pledge list.   Clearly the Straus camp is feeling confident and with Team Craddick meeting in just a few hours, it will be interesting to see what they do in response to the Straus momentum.

Discuss :: (15 Comments)

Aaron Pena's Twitter Spreads Speaker News, Confirms Rumor


by: Matt Glazer

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 02:00 PM CST

Aaron Pena's twitter feed has been solid since the Speaker race started moving.

Pena points out Quorum Reports point that Rep. Senfronia Thompson has withdrawn from the race and thrown her support behind Republican Joe Straus.

Meanwhile, Speaker candidate QR Rep. Senfronia Thompson (D-Houston) has withdrawn her speaker candidacy and is contacting her supporters endorsing Straus.

Thompson told QR, "I am going to support this guy. I looked at the other candidates but he is the best. I think it might be the beginning of something different."

In addition, Pena confirms rumors that John Smithee has faxed in his paperwork to the Texas Ethics Commission to be a candidate for Speaker.  However, sources are reporting Smithee's candidacy is a day late and a dollar short.  It appears that Straus has locked this up. The question is who will be last to the Straus camp.

Discuss :: (0 Comments)

Where is Tom Craddick: Without the Votes


by: Matt Glazer

Sun Jan 04, 2009 at 00:23 PM CST

Where's Tom Craddick? The Capitol press knows the beleaguered House Speaker has called a meeting today for his "team," meaning a meeting of his mythical majority. And it's the mythical nature of that majority that's causing him to play hide-and-seek with his meeting.

The Gang of 11 (anti-Craddick Republicans) guarantees 11 votes or more for Joe Straus. The Democrats have released 64 votes committed to voting against Tom Craddick.   John Smithee has all but announced. Warren Chisum is trying to talk Craddick out of the race, and he puts Craddick's support in the 50s. That's 77 members, two more than half the House.  It's a clear majority, even if Chisum retreats back to Craddick the way he's retreated from some of his public comments.

Some members formerly known as "Craddick Ds" appear to be walking away from that dangerous adjective, "Craddick," before the "D."  And they will vote against Craddick.

Uncommitted members of both parties are meeting and talking one-on-one with Straus, who has collected more pledges already, making that easy-to-count 77 even bigger.

Some time today Craddick (R-Midland), is having a meeting. However, the location of the meeting is more illusive than Craddick's support for re-election.

So far the list of rumored locations includes:

  • Agriculture Room in the Texas Capitol
  • Sullivan's  Steakhouse
  • The Austin Club
  • Ruth's Chris on 6th Street

With three very different venues and the needed space small, its hard to tell where Tom Craddick will go.

Craddick has never been one to shy away from announcing his numbers or shielding his supporters. Why now?  Simple answer, he doesn't have the votes and he is playing hide-and-seek with the press and public to hide his obvious vulnerability.

That's why we need your help.

We can't be at all of these place at once (and there's no certainty the meeting will be at any of them).  We need your help finding Craddick's super secret meeting and if possible getting video of it.  Who was there?  Who wasn't?  Did the press show up?  What did the press miss?

This is citizen journalism at its best and your help, well, helps.

This wouldn't be BOR if we didn't offer a super secret prize to anyone who gets video of the meeting or a verified list of its attendees. Or even correctly identifies the time and location.

We continue to speculate that Craddick doesn't have the votes.  Phil has shown his shrinking ceiling.  Now, help us uncover the ceiling under which Craddick's shrunken support will huddle. Look for venues where 50 or so could gather n private. No need to look for larger venues.

Update: The more will not be the merrier for Tom Craddick.  A source tells me that the members still pledged to Craddick will ask him to release them and withdraw from the Speaker race today.   He doesn't have the votes.  His people know he doesn't have the votes and nobody wants to be the last one to rally to the new speaker.

Will Craddick honor his few supporters and withdraw?

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

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