The West U Examiner has a nice little piece on CD07 candidate Jim Henley.
The 18-year history and speech teacher has declared his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the 7th Congressional District seat now held by Republican John Culberson, and nearly 300 supporters turned out to kick off his campaign Sunday at a Rice Village restaurant.
The district stretches from southwest Houston, West U, Bellaire, the Museum District and River Oaks north to Memorial neighborhoods.
“I told students that after two decades of teaching, this is my last lesson plan, so to speak,” Henley explained. “A good teacher is always a living example. It’s more important for me to do this for them than for me. ‘’m hoping once they taste this kind of involvement that it will become part of their lives.”
Henley, 58, vowed a “bottom-up, grassroots campaign” devoid of political consultants, lobbyists and money from political action committees. “I’m looking to see if the people can get their voice back,” he said. “We’re facing a very entrenched opponent in a gerrymandered district.”
Actually, as it happens, CD07 is more favorable to a Democrat now than it was before, since it took on traditionally Democratic areas in Montrose and around Rice in order to gut the old CD25. I haven’t compared the precinct data from 2002 to 2004, but I’d be willing to bet it lost five to ten points of Republican-ness. Of course, that still left it a 65-35 district, but such is life. Culberson got 64% in 2004, 74% in 2000, and had no Democratic opponent in 2002.
Henley seems to have the youth vote locked up:
Grace Sun, a member of one of Henley’s national champion debate teams and a current ninth-grader at Bellaire High, echoed that sentiment in her speech introducing the candidate.
She characterized Henley’s approach to teaching as “an overwhelming desire to change the world for the better.”
Even a rival student – 13-year-old Ivan Espinosa, an eighth-grader at West Briar MS in West Houston – showed up with his mother in support of Henley.
“I’ve competed against him and his students, and I like what he’s doing,” said Espinosa. He said he has tried to correspond on “issues that concern me” with Rep. Culberson, to no avail.
“Maybe he doesn’t think someone my age matters,” Espinosa said. “I know Mr. Henley does.”
Muthu Alagappan, another national champion debater now in 10th grade at Bellaire High, characterized his former teacher as someone who “doesn’t like to go into a battle that he has no chance of winning.”
Bring those kids on the campaign trail with you, Jim. They can’t vote, but I think they’d be pretty persuasive.
So odd to see all these references and have them not be to my favorite libertarian poet/blogger.