TX-Sen: Field Clears For Noriega

As Boadicea reported earlier today, some big news out of Texas this morning:

Texas Senate candidate Mikal Watts (D) has decided to end his exploratory campaign for the seat of Sen. John Cornyn (R).

Watts's exit leaves state Rep. Rick Noriega as the only top Democratic contender in the field.

In a statement, Watts cited concerns for his family as the primary reason for his dropping out and pledged to help elect whoever the Democratic nominee is.

The reasons for creating my exploratory committee still exist. As I have criss-crossed the state and met and talked with tens of thousands of good Texans, it is evident how much the people of Texas want and need a Senator who will fight every day for their interests and not the special interests. We need to elect a new Senator in Texas and I will personally do everything possible to support the Democratic nominee.

Thanks to Watts's decision, it looks like we can look forward to State Senator Rick Noriega's unimpeded nomination. Glad to see Watts will be actively involved in helping Noriega send John Cornyn packing. From Noriega's statement:

As Teddy Roosevelt once said, the credit goes to the man in the arena.  And Mikal Watts will always have my utmost respect for standing in the arena and highlighting how John Cornyn has let Texas down, placing political extremists and his financial contributors ahead of the people of Texas. [...]

Today, Mikal made a very difficult and personal decision to put his family first.  That's a reflection of a strong character and a truly grounded leader.

Mikal and I made plans to sit down together in the next couple of weeks.  In the meantime, I'll continue the campaign that we started together and fight for the vision for a better Texas that we continue to share.

Looking at Kos's Research 2000 poll from September, which found Noriega starting off with a 35%-51% deficit against Cornyn, this will be an uphill climb to be sure. But as Jonathan and Markos reminded us yesterday, we've done it before and we can do it again.

Check out Noriega's website HERE and give to his campaign via ActBlue.

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TX-Sen: Watts Withdraws from Race

Mikal Watts has just released a statement withdrawing from the race for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator from Texas.

I've included his statement under the fold, but first I'd like to thank Mikal, his family, and his supporters for their efforts.  The contest so far has helped to raise the profile of this race, and when we send a new Senator who actually represents Texas interests next year, in will be in part due to his strong entry into the race.

I look forward to seeing what the future holds for Mikal in the  Texas Democratic Party.

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TX-Sen: Texas Pundits Agree -- Only Thing Missing for Noriega is Money

cross-posted at Burnt Orange Report

 While plutocrat Mikal Watts was getting some well deserved tough love from the Houston Chronicle, the people-powered candidate Rick Noriega was getting some great press around the state. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram has a particularly glowing piece that points out the prescience of Noriga supporter State Rep Lon Burnam, one of the first to endorse Rick and also  THE first to totally reject the corrupt leadership of the Texas GOP:

In a church turned reception hall, state Rep. Rick Noriega, D-Houston, told local Democrats last week that Fort Worth Rep. Lon Burnam is a prophet.

Burnam was the lone representative in 2005 to vote against electing Tom Craddick as speaker of the Texas House. In 2007, Burnam led another House dissent against Craddick, but this time he wasn't standing alone.

Perhaps Burnam is foretelling the future with his endorsement of Noriega to win the Democratic nomination for the 2008 U.S. Senate race. Noriega, citizen-solider, believes that Texans are as frustrated as other Americans with the Iraq war debacle and yearn for experienced leadership to end that conflict.

As battalion commander of an infantry unit in the Texas National Guard, he has led troops in Afghanistan and guarded the southern U.S. border.

Noriega said he's running partly because of his warrior ethos, which demands you leave no soldier behind.

"We have 160,000 brothers and sisters right now who I think are being misled by civilian leadership that has never walked the walk," he said.

Noriega claims that his experience at the front lines and the border gives him the expertise to formulate policy based on the realities of war and diplomacy. After five terms as state representative from District 145, he said he's ready to go to Washington to help fill the leadership void.

 There's no need to worry that Noriega will be a "Bush Dog"  when we send him to Washington to represent Texas in the U.S. Senate.  Here's a man who knows why he's running and knows that there are real life consequences to political action. 

Still, the citizen-soldier, like Noriega, has an unromantic, unsanitized understanding of war that tempers the zeal to shock and awe the enemy. As any grunt in Iraq will tell you, the mission is far from accomplished.

Turning his attention to immigration, Noriega claimed that Sen. John Cornyn was the administration's first lieutenant in supporting every policy introduced in the Senate except for comprehensive immigration reform. Instead, he said, Cornyn joined the ideological extreme and became an obstructionist.

Noriega said that obstructionists oppose reform because it offers them a punching-bag issue in the next election cycle. Doing nothing provides employers with an easily exploitable work force. The Noriega plan recognizes that this country will continue to need professional and manual immigrant labor as the baby boomers age. At the same time, he wishes to secure the borders with more law enforcement officers.

His five months serving along the U.S.-Mexico border taught him something valuable: "There are bad guys over there doing bad things," he said. Those "bad things" include human and drug trafficking. 

 Unlike most politicians, Democrat and Republican who would be happy to stop there, Noriega goes on to offer real solutions. Solutions that recognize the messy realities of our situation here on planet Earth in the year 2007 AD:

Noriega recognizes that as long as the enormous economic difference exists between the United States and Mexico, the flow of undocumented immigrants will not end. He said that "people will continue to do risky things for $15 an hour."

He proposes foreign aid to Mexico that will help build its infrastructure. Mexicans building roads, schools hospitals and dams will give them the opportunity to work with dignity and will reduce the temptation to come to the United States.

"They may make $8 an hour, but they won't take the risk or leave their families to do something treacherous." he said. Noriega's comprehensive plan would address the supply-and-demand side of the immigration equation.

 In short, Rick Noriega is so obviously the real deal, a once-in-a-lifetime candidate with obvious cross-over appeal that even the Texas press corps can recognize the potential. But here's the catch. Texas is a huge state. More than 23 million residents. More than 15 million eligible voters. More than 8 million likely voters. More than 261,000 square miles. More than 20 media markets. Winning a state-wide election will likely take more than $20million. (!)

And since, unlike his primary opponent Mikal Watts, Rick Noriega only makes around $100,000 a year rather than $109,589.04 a day, the "smart money" in Texas politics is asking the obvious question, how's Noriega, a citizen-soldier going to fund a race like that? 

If Noriega wins the Democratic Senate nomination, the citizen-solider will certainly give the Republicans a run for their money.

But first we may need to consult with prophet Burnam to discern where Noriega will find the war chest required to run a statewide Senate race.

 Paul Burka, the dean of Texas political pundits agrees:

If Watts wins the primary, his background as a trial lawyer will hurt him, but Cornyn will carry a lot of the baggage that has piled up during Bush's second term. Watts will have enough money to focus the race on Cornyn's record. Noriega has the better shot to beat Cornyn--if he can raise the money.

There are two factors here. 1) The pundits and political know it alls in Texas don't understand the power of the netroots. -- the same netroots that just raised a congressional candidate from Washington state named Darcy Burner more than $87,000 in a week and won her primary without a ballot being cast. The same netroots that has already helped Rick Noriega raise over $50,000 and is on a pace to raise him more than $500,000 in time for the primary.

The other factor is this -- the netroots has never faced a challenge of this magnitude at less than a presidential level. The biggest netroots senate campaign in history -- Jim Webb's amazing win over George Allen -- only required a little under $8 million -- half of that raised online. This race will require an unprecedented committment from the netroots. Can we do it? Throw some turkee on the pile today

 This is also a unique opportunity -- a chance to defeat one of Karl Rove's personal projects in John Cornyn, a chance to build a historic alliance between the overwhelmingly white online progressive community and the Tejano community, and most importantly a chance to win a filibuster proof majority in the US Senate.

 Let's do it.

 

Note: I do NOT work for the Noriega for Senate campaign. I just care about the race.

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Online Video in the Texas Senate Primary

Both contenders to dethrone John Cornyn have launched videos to introduce themselves to voters online.

Here's Rick Noriega's:

And here's Mikal Watt's:

Oh wait, his isn't embeddable so I'll just have to post Roll Call political analyst Stu Rothenberg's take instead.

... the candidate you meet in July of the off-year is not always the same person you see again 15 months later. Candidates, and their campaigns, often improve with experience, and they start to look better if and when their opponents start to fade.

Texas Senate hopeful Mikal Watts is getting plenty of attention these days because he has committed to putting as much as $10 million behind his bid for the Democratic nomination (against state Rep. Rick Noriega, a favorite of some in the party's netroots) and his challenge to incumbent Sen. John Cornyn (R). I haven't yet met Watts, so I have little to judge him by except for his campaign bank account - currently standing at more than $4 million -- and his Web site.

His money obviously is impressive. But money rarely is enough. If it were the only thing that mattered, Michael Huffington (R) would have been elected to the Senate from California in 1994, Al Checchi (D) would have been elected governor of that state in 1998 (or at least won the Democratic nomination), Blair Hull (D) would now be a senator from Illinois and Tony Sanchez (D) might have come close in his Texas gubernatorial bid in 2002.

So Watts' wallet gets my attention, but where do I look after that? His video is one of the few things on his Web site, other than a bunch of photographs of early campaign events, a bio and a donation form. So I watched it. The first half of the four-minute, 15 second video is straightforward enough. Watts introduces himself and talks about his education, his parents, his own family and his interest in public service. He's a trial lawyer, so it's not surprising that he's poised, articulate and polished. The second half of the video probably is the silliest, most transparent attempt to deliver a message I have ever seen.

Watts wants us to know that he is a "fighter" and a "leader," and he apparently thinks that viewers of his video are a little dense. You'd either have to be in a coma or not understand English to miss Watts' message. The Democratic hopeful uses a form of the word "fight" 11 times in the last two minutes and 15 seconds of the video. And he uses a form of the word "leader" another eight times during that same period. In one section of the video lasting 37 seconds, Watts uses the word "fighter" six times -- an average of once every 6.17 seconds:

"I have been a fighter my entire career, fighting for the rights of average, working families here in Texas. And I have proven that I will stay in that fight and give it my all until we win. Texans are looking for a Senator who is a leader, who will fight for them. Someone who will fight for families here in Texas rather than special interests there in Washington. I am certain that as we travel around the state and see more and more good Texans, that my message of real leadership and real change in Washington is a message that is going to hit home here in Texas. I am confident that Texans will join me in this fight."

There are plenty of attributes that voters want in their candidates. They certainly want leaders and, at least now, forces for change. I certainly wouldn't criticize Watts or any candidate for mentioning them. It's the way he talks about them that is so aggravating. It sounds as if he thinks he's the first guy to run on those buzzwords.

I'm not certain whether Watts' rhetoric is classic political boilerplate or an effort to neutralize the positioning of Noriega, a state legislator and veteran of the war in Afghanistan. If and when I meet Watts, I may have a completely different view of him and his prospects. But for now, I'd suggest that he re-do his video, making it more professional and more thoughtful.

Watts' video is here.

[Note: These are both videos intended strictly for internet use so don't post comments saying they're not good enough for TV. They are NOT TV ads.]

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Laying Down a Netroots Marker in the Texas Senate Race

Digby wrote something yesterday about primaries that I think is a good starting point for this diary:

The truth is that I think primaries are vital and necessary. And I also hate them. It goes against my grain to be trashing someone repeatedly and then have to make nice when they get the nomination, which is how the system works. I accept this, and I honestly can't think of a better way to air out all the differences, but it's temperamentally difficult for me to get down and dirty in races where I actually like the opponents and may have to advocate for them in the end.

There's a primary starting in the Texas Senate race. And unlike Digby, Texas Democrats don't have any "temperamental difficulty" in getting down and dirty in a primary. Like all Texans, we like to fight and we're famous for our circular firing squads. But this year there is a primary fight brewing over a matter of principle, a matter of "Crashing the Gates" if you will.

Over the decade I've worked in Texas politics, the insiders have used one criteria -- and one criteria only -- when selecting which candidates to support for state-wide office. Money.

And even though we haven't won a top-of-the-ballot statewide election since 1990, the insiders are trying to make money the sole qualifier for the 2008 Senate nomination.

The lessons of the Jim Webb and Jon Tester campaigns have not yet made an impact in Texas. But they can and with your help we can apply those lessons and win.

Lieutenant Colonel Rick Noriega

There is a clear choice in the Texas Senate primary. State Rep Rick Noriega has the unique mix of qualities and qualifications that can transform the political landscape. Even in Texas.

As Kos said, "Noriega would be the first real people-powered candidate to emerge this cycle setting up a dynamic somewhat similar to what we saw in Montana in 2006 (populist state legislator versus well-liked institutional-backed rich guy with all the "right" connections)."

Veteran. Progressive. Proven legislator. Favorite of the Netroots but also the favorite of his colleagues in the Texas Legislature.

Here's what Charles Kuffner, the dean of the Texas netroots has to say about Noriega:

I don't expect to ever have to say "Yeah, but" to a fellow Democrat about Rick Noriega....I think he can be a game-changer, someone who can alter politics in this state in a fundamental way, and in doing so alter Texas' image nationally.

I think Rick Noriega is exactly the right candidate to run against John Cornyn. Noriega spent a year in Afghanistan on the front lines of the "war on terror". He's also been deployed to the Texas border to train National Guardsmen on matters of border security. What are the two biggest issues these days? John Cornyn can talk about these things. Rick Noriega has actually been there and done them.

Last week Noriega officially launched his campaign and the Texas netroots launchedan effort to recruit 800 donors to support his campaign. The number 800 was chosen because that's how many big money donors his primary opponent had last quarter.

Now if I were running the show, I would not have begun the campaign asking for money. But like I said, Texas is an expensive state. There are 19 media markets in the huge state. This race is literally the biggest challenge the netroots has ever taken on. We're backing a grassroots candidate against a primary opponent who has already pledged to put $10 million into the race and after we beat him we'll be taking on Karl Rove product John Cornyn deep in the heart of Texas.

So forgive the Texas bloggers if they're a bit audacious in their plans, it's kind of a Texas tradition to take on  challenges against overwhelming odds and you know what, sometimes we win.

Show the Texas insiders that the Netroots is changing the game. Join the Noriega Express.     

Background info in the extended entry.

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