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If you think most of Travis County’s next batch of elected leaders will be chosen in November, you’re wrong, according to Wayne Thorburn. The Austinite, a former director of the Republican Party of Texas whose book Red State: An Insider’s Story of How the GOP Came to Dominate Texas Politics comes out this spring, wrote in a Jan. 8, 2014, opinion column for the Austin American-Statesman : There are 27 county government offices up for election in 2014. Of these, only three have the potential of being settled in the November election. ... Nearly 90 percent of all county races will be settled by the time of the Democratic primary on March 4, 2014. Travis County’s pretty blue, as Thorburn noted and as PolitiFact Texas explored in a recent fact-check of U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett’s claim that its surrounding counties are red ( True ). Is it so blue that most of the county’s votes cast in the Nov. 4 election won’t really decide anything? By email, Thorburn pointed us to the state elections website and said, Please realize that I did not say 90 percent of all races that will appear on the November ballot in Travis County (which would include state, multi-county district, and state legislative positions). What I specifically said is county offices, including county judge, commissioners from precincts 2 and 4, several justices of the peace, and several county court at law positions. The only assumption he made, Thorburn said, is that no Libertarian or Green Party candidates will win. The secretary of state's web site does not include any Libertarian or Green Party candidates who may be nominated by a convention, rather than a primary, he said. County elections official Michelle Parker guided us by phone to a breakdown of races on the county’s election website. Next, from the state secretary’s elections web page of candidates who filed for the primary by the Dec. 9, 2013 deadline, we pulled the Travis County names . After setting aside the candidates for Congress, governor and other federal or state offices, we came up with 32 candidates running in 19 races and only three Republicans in the lot. District Judge 201st District Court Amy Clark Meachum DEM District Judge 250th District Court Karin Crump DEM District Judge 419th District Court Orlinda Naranjo DEM County Judge Andy Brown DEM County Judge Sarah Eckhardt DEM County Judge Mike McNamara REP County Court At Law Judge #1 Todd Wong DEM County Court At Law Judge #2 Eric Montgomery Shepperd DEM County Court At Law Judge #3 John Lipscombe DEM County Court At Law Judge #3 Paul Evans DEM County Court At Law Judge #4 Mike Denton DEM County Court At Law Judge #5 Nancy Hohengarten DEM County Court At Law Judge #6 Brandy Mueller DEM County Court At Law Judge #7 Elisabeth Earle DEM County Probate Court Judge Guy Herman DEM District Clerk Velva L. Price DEM County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir DEM County Treasurer Dolores Ortega Carter DEM County Treasurer Ramey Ko DEM County Commissioner Precinct 2 Raymond Frank REP County Commissioner Precinct 2 Brigid Shea DEM County Commissioner Precinct 2 Garry Brown DEM County Commissioner Precinct 2 Richard Jung DEM County Commissioner Precinct 4 Darla Wegner DEM County Commissioner Precinct 4 Margaret J. Gomez DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 1 Yvonne M. Williams DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 2 Randall Slagle DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 2 Glenn Bass REP Justice of the Peace Precinct 3 Susan Steeg DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 4 Raul Arturo Gonzalez DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 5 Herb Evans DEM Justice of the Peace Precinct 5 James Braxton Forrest DEM After we inquired, Thorburn said he had miscounted the number of races, and now tallied 19. The percentages are still valid if 84.2 percent is acceptable as nearly 90 percent,’ he said. Travis County Republican Party spokesman Andy Hogue confirmed by email that three Republicans are running for three Travis County offices, though he pointed out that more are bidding for offices Thorburn did not include: state House districts 47 and 50, both within the county’s boundaries. Most Travis County candidates are, so far, unopposed, so that unless a Green or Libertarian files, Democrats are set to claim 12 offices without having to campaign for them. Four more races will be settled in the Democratic primary in March (unless a Green, independent or Libertarian files) because they feature two Democrats facing off: county treasurer; county commissioner Precinct 4; county court at law judge No. 3; and justice of the peace Precinct 5. The three races with a Republican contender: county judge, Precinct 2 county commissioner and Precinct 2 justice of the peace. Our ruling Thorburn said nearly 90 percent of the Travis County government races this year will be settled by the March Democratic primary, thanks to the paucity of Republicans who filed to run. His declared count was too high. Still, 16 out of 19 races for county office lack a Republican candidate, which suggests that 84 percent of the positions will be all but settled once the primaries are over. We rate this statement as Mostly True. MOSTLY TRUE – The statement is accurate but needs clarification or additional information. Click here for more on the six PolitiFact ratings and how we select facts to check.
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