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To: leadpenny
Johnson stole the senate election with 10s of thousands phoney votes.
6 posted on 04/07/2002 11:25:10 AM PDT by breakem
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To: breakem
The descendants of the LBJ Democrats in TX are coming to the polls in the April 9 party runoff to choose a senatorial candidate, ironically to fill the Senate seat once held by LBJ himself. The Johnson political descendants are divided -- into black and brown camps. The "blacks" favor Ron Kirk, liberal former mayor of Dallas and secretary of state and "like a son" to former liberal Governor Ann Willis Richards. The "browns" favor gadfly school teacher Victor Morales of the Dallas area. Almost forgotten are the "whites," sitting on the sidelines and unsure what to do. Some of them are probably longing for a new LBJ to emerge. People outside TX don't understand the admiration many traditional liberals have in this state for LBJ. Even those who opposed his Vietnam policies, like Doris Kearns Goodwin, still revere him. It's a peculiar attachment. This year the Democrats actually think they can regain the Senate seat that LBJ vacated to become vice president in 1961 -- the seat held for 41 years by two Republicans, John Tower and Phil Gramm. It could be that the overconfident Republicans are facing an unexpected defeat in the fall, as improbable as such a scenario might otherwise seem. John Cornyn, the Republican nominee, is practically a stealth candidate at this point of the campaign. I don't think he has sufficient name recognition, though he has been a low-key attorney general, to expect to win the Senate seat without a fight with the Democrats, whose morale is the greatest in TX in 20 years.
7 posted on 04/07/2002 2:20:30 PM PDT by Theodore R.
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