The most interesting thing in this story about how hard it will be for Shelley Sekula-Gibbs to win as a write-in candidate is this bit here:
Sekula-Gibbs may not be the lone Republican write-in candidate. Sugar Land Mayor David Wallace, who earlier said he would run as a write-in candidate even if the party endorsed someone else, is “considering his options,” said Fort Bend County Republican Chairman Gary Gillen.
Wallace did not return calls.
“Considering his options”? That’s quite a change for the guy who announced his candidacy before the Thursday meeting of the Benkiser Gang. He’s acted like a candidate – like the One True Candidate – from the beginning. Now he’s “considering his options”?
I could spend a few hours doing dime-store psychology on Wallace’s motives and actions throughout this process. Bottom line is that if he thought running to the front of the class at every opportunity would bring rewards, he was sorely mistaken. I guess the question now is what he has to lose if he presses on in the face of threats of retailiation from the Republican hierarchy, and what could he have to gain by sublimating his desire to be a good team player. Is this Congressional seat all he wants, or is there something else that could satisfy him enough to make him go away? Will he look like a bigger fool if he folds his tent now, or if he sticks it out and risks a fourth-place, single-digit-percentage finish?
Heck if I know. I don’t believe his presence or absence in the race affects Sekula-Gibbs’ prospects very much. I want him to run if only to foment maximum discord in the district, but it probably doesn’t matter. Chris Elam thinks he’ll drop out on Monday (so as to maximize coverage of it). while Juanita thinks Wallace is being gently pressured to keeping considering those options of his. She also discusses the four sucessful write-in candidacies for Congress in the 20th century.
One last thing:
The 2004 Democratic candidate in the 22nd District, Richard Morrison, received about 67,000 votes, [Harris County Tax Assessor Paul] Bettencourt said, and Lampson probably will get that many Nov. 7.
Huh? Morrison got 112,034 votes in 2004, compared to DeLay’s 150,386, according to the Secretary of State. I have no idea where Bettencourt got that figure from. If you assume turnout is about 2/3 in a non-Presidential year as it is in a Presidential, then there will be about 170,000 to 180,000 ballots cast this year (in 2002 in the old CD22 there were 159,000 votes, with DeLay getting 100,000 and Dem Tim Riley collecting almost 56,000), and if you assume Lampson gets the same share as Morrison did, he’d be in the 70,000-75,000 vote range. I think it’s a pretty safe bet that Lampson, with five times Morrison’s cash and operating in a more favorable environment overall, beats that pretty easily. I’d also expect Bob Smither to get at least 20,000 votes. That means Sekula-Gibbs has to get at least 80%, maybe 90% of the at most 100,000 remaining voters to write her name in, and that’s assuming that Lampson hasn’t already claimed a majority share of the electorate. What do you think the odds are of that?
Perhaps Bettencourt is just counting Harris County votes inside of CD22.
Steven – Nope. Here’s Morrison’s votes by county:
Fort Bend = 46,151
Harris = 41,778
Galveston = 12,377
Brazoria = 11,728
As far as I can tell, Bettencourt pulled that 67,000 figure from his hindquarters.