The Twenty-Second Congressional District in Texas, Sugarland to be specific, became an exciting race when Tom Delay, the former powerhouse representative for the Republicans, was abandoned by his party and decided to leave Congress for more hospitable climes. Virginia, to be specific.
The Democrats, in a move which seemed to be smart at the time, demanded Delay's name be kept on the ballot. The plan was a clearly hypocritical move by the party, since in the previous election they went to court to allow themselves to replace their badly-losing candidate on a New Jersey ballot, well after the statutory deadline for such an action. The plan seemed to backfire on Democrats when Delay mused that if he could not be removed from the ballot, he might go ahead and run for his old seat; local polls showed Delay would be a strong favorite in such a case.
But Delay was made sick of politics by the collapse of support from the GOP, and the weak-willed abandonment of Delay by so many colleagues he had supported and defended convinced Tom that there was little good to be had in returning to Congress. So it is, that Delay went ahead to get his name out of the race, and to support a write-in candidate. This marked a poor condition for Republicans, since write-in candidates have almost no chance to win, especially against a known opponent, and Nick "Satan's Not Such A Bad Guy" Lampson is well known in the area. Enter Shelley Sekula-Gibbs.
Sekula-Gibbs may appear to be a relative unknown to people outside Houston, but S-G (as I will call her here for convenience) is a courageous and outspoken Republican, and quite popular among Houston conservatives. I know this as a Houston conservative. Also, unlike some politicians, S-G already lives in the necessary area and so is no outsider or interloper. It should be noted that while Lampson lives in the greater Houston area, he has moved around to suit his goals - from Beaumont where he originally won election to Congress, now to Sugarland in order to try to claim Delay's old seat; the redistricting which corrected half a century of Democrat gerrymandering cost Lampson his seat, so like all bad movie villains or nominal Democrats, Lampson is seeking a measure of revenge by going after his nemesis' seat.
To be blunt, the Republicans have done a poor job with regard to this issue; they owed Delay much better support than they gave him when Ronnie Earle started his latest vendetta, and they effectively forced Tom to run for a seat he no longer wanted, in order to play tactical games which did not work out. The current mess is the responsibility of the national and Texas GOP committees, and if Lampson is able to steal it away, it's because people like Hastert and Mehlman let it happen. Fortunately, the GOP has a very good candidate in Sekula-Gibbs, and for all the obstacles they have put in her path, she can win this thing. It's by no means going to be easy, but by selecting S-G for the candidacy, at least the GOP has finally done something right, and given the voters of District 22 a decent chance to have effective representation. It remains to be seen if the write-in obstacle will be too great an obstacle, or Lampson's clearly deficient qualities will leave the door open for Sekula-Gibbs' run.



Comments (7)
The whole nightmare amounts... (Below threshold)1. Posted by Jim Addison | August 18, 2006 2:53 PM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
The whole nightmare amounts to a "dirty trick" the GOP played on itself.
It was the House Republican Caucus who adopted a rule beyond the House rules, which stated those in leadership positions had to step down if indicted. Obviously, that rule did not anticipate purely political prosecutions like the vendetta Ronnie Earle has pursued against Republicans for years.
The GOP made a move to change the rule when Earle indicted DeLay, but the PR backlash made them reinstate the rule. Of course, the Democrats, who have no such rule for their own Members, fanned the flames with ethical accusations.
I think the main reason DeLay had decided to leave Congress had less to do with his shabby treatment by his colleagues - who was it who said, decades ago: "If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog"? - and more with the extreme odds against his ever being able to regain his old position.
Once politicians have tasted the power, they don't give it up easily. Staying around Washington after being politically castrated turns people into bitter, hollow shells of their former selves. As a case in point, take Trent Lott - please.
A big question, raised by reader "yetanotherjohn" when we previously reported on this race, is how well voters will remember a name like "Sekula-Gibbs" to write in. Another important related question is: What is the Texas law on write-in votes? Do they count if "voter intent" is obvious - shades of Dade 2000 - or must the write-in be spelled perfectly?
1. Posted by Jim Addison | August 18, 2006 2:53 PM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 18, 2006 14:53
2. Posted by Chell | August 18, 2006 3:59 PM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Delay is among the long lines of crooked politicians who come out of Texas such as Jim Wright, Lyndon Johnson, Governor Clemente..or is he among the long line of crooked Texans including Ken Lay, Skilling and Faustow? He deserved what he got!
2. Posted by Chell | August 18, 2006 3:59 PM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 18, 2006 15:59
3. Posted by Drew | August 18, 2006 11:53 PM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
ya see..everything we know is wrong...2 years ago Delay was probably the most powerful person in govt.
Like Jefferson from LA..the Dukester CA..Bob Ney OH..etc...(though not illegal his ego the same..Lieberman CT
People assume, in their minds, they are invincible..
Irony is the fulcrum of our lives...Delay is gone because he knows he is guilty..cut and run...what brought him down were his probable illegal activities to secure more U.S. Reps. for Rebublicans in Texas...and now he has assured a Democratic pick-up here.
3. Posted by Drew | August 18, 2006 11:53 PM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 18, 2006 23:53
4. Posted by hNAV | August 19, 2006 2:09 AM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
great article Mr. Drummond...
thank you...
Sekula-Gibbs seems impressive...
4. Posted by hNAV | August 19, 2006 2:09 AM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 19, 2006 02:09
5. Posted by The Exposer | August 19, 2006 6:15 AM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Keep dreaming, Drew (you wouldn't be the infamous Drew Pritt, now would you?).
The only thing DeLay is guilty of is being a Republican leader. The real criminal rodent class goes unpunished, starting with the biggest 'RAT in the state of Texas, Ronnie Earle, who ought to be in the gray-bar hotel for abuse of office and taxpayer funds (of course, if just being an a$$hole were a criminal offense, he'd get the death penalty).
5. Posted by The Exposer | August 19, 2006 6:15 AM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 19, 2006 06:15
6. Posted by Gulf Coast Bandit | August 19, 2006 9:36 PM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
With regards to the name spelling thing, could she register her candidacy as Shelley Gibbs and make it that much simpler?
6. Posted by Gulf Coast Bandit | August 19, 2006 9:36 PM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 19, 2006 21:36
7. Posted by Jim Addison | August 20, 2006 4:03 AM | Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Back in the early '90s, some independent candidate for Congress sued to have his name listed as "None Of The Above," but the judge refused to allow it.
Said it would give him an unfair advantage.
7. Posted by Jim Addison | August 20, 2006 4:03 AM |
Score: 0 (0 votes cast)
Posted on August 20, 2006 04:03