Trojan Gift Horse:

March 19, 2009

Gambling Interests Bet $7.6 Million On Texas Politicians In 2008 Cycle

 

As they consider expanding Texas’ gambling hoof print, Texas politicians are awash in $7.6 million that gambling interests spent on the state’s 2008 elections. Texas’ horse-racing industry led the charge, supplying almost $6 million (78 percent). This included $841,214 from Texas’ top gambling PAC, Texans for Economic Development (TED PAC).1

This horseracing money includes political contributions by wealthy people whose investments in racetracks or racehorses are sidelines from their primary business interests. Houston Texans owner Robert McNair owns thoroughbred stables,2 for example, and Peter Holt, a Caterpillar equipment dealer in San Antonio, is an investor in Retama Park (see the table “Top Gambling Contributors”). These men are major Republican underwriters whose primary interests are not horseracing. Just as they invested a fraction of their fortunes in gambling, however, they can use some of their political capital to push slot machines for racetracks.

Casino and slots interests paid out nine percent of the political gambling money. This sector’s top donor was Austin’s Gordon Graves. Grand juries indicted Graves and his Aces Wired, Inc. last November for allegedly operating illegal gambling machines in several Texas cities. The top casino interests feeding Texas politicians were Houston’s Landry’s Restaurants PAC and Landry’s CEO Tilman Fertitta—who would like to expand his Vegas casinos into Texas. Dallas’ Jack Pratt, who founded Hollywood Casino Corp., and Pratt’s Texas Gaming Association PAC also made plays to legalize casinos in Texas.

Indian tribes accounted for 7 percent of gambling money, led by the Oklahoma-based Chickasaw and Choctaw nations. These flush tribes collectively spent $477,508 on Texas elections. The Oklahoma tribes have opposed Texas gambling expansions that would compete with their casinos across the Red River.3

The entrepreneurial Chickasaw own Solara Healthcare LLC, which operates long-term care hospitals in Oklahoma and Texas. Choctaw Chief Gregory Pyle also contributed $11,000 to the Associated Republicans of Texas PAC in late 2008.

The Texas-based Kickapoo and Alabama-Coushatta tribes collectively spent a paltry $43,250 on Texas’ 2008 election cycle. No state PAC or candidate reported a contribution from the Tigua’s Ysleta del Sur Pueblo near El Paso.

Texas’ two troubled greyhound tracks accounted for 6 percent of the gambling money. This sector’s top dogs were Robert and Gordon Johnson, who run Austin’s Johnson & Johnson lobby firm. The Johnsons own stakes in Gulf Greyhound, lobby for that track and oversee its Gulf Greyhound Partners PAC (which contributed another $75,000).

Contributions By Interest

Gambling
Interest
Donations
(‘07 & ‘08)
Share of
Total
 Horse Racing
$5,952,947
78%
 Casinos/Slots
$675,615
9%
 Indian Tribes
$533,758
7%
 Dog Racing
$478,689
6%
 Other
$5,000
<1%
TOTAL:
$7,646,009
100%

 

Top Recipients of Oklahoma Tribal Money
Amount
(’07 - ’08)
  Recipient (Party)
 Tribe
$35,000
 Lt. Governor David Dewhurst(R)  Choctaw
$25,000
 Stars Over Texas PAC(R)  Choctaw
$20,000
 Lt. Governor David Dewhurst(R)  Chickasaw
$15,000
 TX Repub. Legislative Caucus(R)  Chickasaw
$10,000
 Attorney General Greg Abbott(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 Sen. Kip Averitt(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 Sen. Kim Brimer(R)*  Choctaw
$10,000
 Rep. Tom Craddick(R)  Chickasaw
$10,000
 Sen. Bob Deuell(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 Sen. Kevin Eltife(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 Sen. Chris Harris(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 House Dem. Campaign Com.(D)  Chickasaw
$10,000
 Sen. Jane Nelson(R)  Choctaw
$10,000
 Sen. Tommy Williams(R)  Choctaw
                                                        *Lost 2008 election.

 

Houston trial lawyer Michael Gallagher was the top donor who owns stakes in the indefinitely suspended Corpus Christi Greyhound track. Gallagher also is trading lawsuits with Dallas dental-clinic mogul David Alameel, alleging that Alameel defrauded him out of his stakes in the dormant Longhorn Downs horse license.4

Gambling interests awarded 58 percent of their spoils in the 2008 cycle to Republican PACs and candidates. Democrats settled for just 24 percent of the gambling purse. The remaining 18 percent of all gambling funds went to political committees that give at least some of their money to members of both parties.

With Republicans controlling every statewide office, some of the top recipients of gambling money were Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst ($851,350), Governor Rick Perry ($793,356), Comptroller Susan Combs ($157,800) and Attorney General Greg Abbott ($155,174), whose office assisted in the Aces Wired bust.

Once viewed as a conservative gambling foe, Governor Perry endorsed installing slot machines at race tracks and Indian reservations in 2004 and then let the proposal die. Among Perry’s recent gambling contributors is Sheldon Adelson, founder of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Perry reported that the casino kingpin paid $1,856 for a Perry campaign event in early December 2007. On New Year’s Eve that month, Governor Perry received three $5,000 checks from Adelson, his daughter Shelley and Adelson assistant Yasmin Lukatz.

Just two lawmakers received more than $100,000 from gambling interests. Houston Senator Joan Huffman, who won an expensive special election for an open seat in December, took in $225,000 from gambling interests. Her top gambling donors were Robert McNair and Odessa nightclub owner and horse breeder Herbert Graham.

Dallas Rep. Dan Branch received almost $150,000 from gambling interests. Branch’s top donor is Dallas developer Harlan Crow. The Crow family sold its interest in Grand Prairie-based Lone Star Park to the now-bankrupt Magna Entertainment Corp. in 2002. Yet the Crows retained a 10 percent stake in future track gaming revenues if the state legalizes slot machines at Lone Star Park.

Other top recipients of gambling money include Rep. Tom Craddick, the former House Speaker recently toppled by Rep. Joe Straus, and Rep. Kino Flores, who chaired the House Licensing Committee under Craddick. Travis County prosecutors are investigating allegations that the LaMantia family, which owns a South Texas Budweiser distributorship, improperly flew Flores around the state in 2007.5 At the end of the 2007 session, Flores sponsored a provision that raised Texas racetrack ownership caps from two to three tracks per owner.6 The main beneficiaries of the change were Maxxam, Inc., which now owns three track licenses,7 and the LaMantias, who boast two.8

Apart from the absolute amount of gambling money that officials received, this report analyzes which politicians relied on gambling interests for the largest share of money that they raised in the 2008 cycle. Democrat Bob Romano, who made a failed challenge to Irving Republican Rep. Linda Harper-Brown, topped this list (see the table “Politicians Most Dependent On Gambling Money”). Gambling interests led by Alameel’s North Texas Leadership PAC and TED PAC supplied 65 percent of Romano’s war chest.

 

Texas Gambling Money By Party

 Party
Contributions
(2007 & 2008)
Share of
Total
 Republicans
$4,418,483
58%
 Democrats
$1,854,444
24%
 Bipartisan PACs
$1,372,182
18%
TOTAL:
$7,646,009
100%

 

Politicians Receiving the Most Gambling Money

Amount
(’07 & ’08)
 
 
 Recipient
Party
Office Held
Or Sought
Top Gambling
Contributor
$851,350
 David Dewhurst
R
Lt. Governor
 David Alameel
$793,356
 Rick Perry
R
Governor
 Peter Holt
$225,000
 Joan Huffman
R
S-17
 Robert McNair
$157,800
 Susan Combs
R
Comptroller
 Peter Holt
$155,174
 Greg Abbott
R
Attorney General
 David Alameel
$146,935
 Dan Branch
R
H-108
 Harlan Crow
$80,300
 Elizabeth Ames Jones
R
Railroad Com.
 Peter Holt
$73,250
 Kim Brimer*
R
S-10
 Joe LaMantia
$71,100
 Tom Craddick9
R
H-82
 Peter Holt
$66,650
 Kino Flores
D
H-36
 TED PAC
$60,055
 Doug Miller
R
H-73
 TED PAC
$53,500
 Joseph Moody
D
H-78
 TED PAC
$53,018
 Chris Harris
R
S-9
 Johnson & Johnson
$52,075
 Michael Williams
R
Railroad Com.
 David Alameel
$48,500
 Charlie Geren
R
H-99
 TED PAC
$47,650
 Judith Zaffirini
D
S-21
 Johnson & Johnson/TED PAC
$45,500
 John Carona
R
S-16
 Jack Pratt
$45,250
 Kip Averitt
R
S-22
 Choctaw/Johnson & Johnson/TED
$44,000
 John Whitmire
D
S-15
 TED PAC
$43,000
 Kirk Watson
D
S-14
 TED PAC
$42,750
 Juan Hinojosa
D
S-20
 TED PAC
$42,611
 Carlos Uresti
D
S-19
 Kickapoo/TED PAC
$42,000
 Juan Escobar*
D
H-43
 TED PAC
$40,000
 Jon Cole*
R
H-67
 David Alameel/TED PAC
$40,000
 Pete Gallego
D
H-74
 Joe LaMantia/TED PAC
$38,750
 Jim Dunnam
D
H-57
 Gerald Ford/Joe LaMantia/TED
$38,150
 Jeff Wentworth
R
S-25
 TED PAC
$38,000
 James 'Mike' Jackson
R
S-11
 Robert McNair/TED PAC
$37,900
 Trey Martinez Fischer
D
H-116
 Joe LaMantia/TED PAC
$37,200
 Aaron Pena
D
H-40
 TED PAC
$35,101
 Joe Straus III
R
H-121
 George Hixon
$34,500
 Rodney Ellis
D
S-13
 Jack Pratt/TED PAC
$33,851
 Dawnna Dukes
D
H-46
 TED PAC
$33,558
 Bob Romano*
D
H-105
 North Texas Leadership PAC
$32,000
 Chris Turner
D
H-96
 TED PAC
$31,615
 Abel Herrero
D
H-34
 TED PAC
$31,300
 Wendy Davis
D
S-10
 North Texas Leadership PAC
$30,185
 Juan Garcia*
D
H-32
 Anthony LaMantia
$29,500
 Kel G. Seliger
R
S-31
 Joe LaMantia
$29,075
 Wallace Jefferson
R
Supreme Court
 Harlan Crow/Peter Holt
$28,404
 Craig Eiland
D
H-23
 Gerald Ford
$28,250
 Joe Jaworski*
D
S-11
 Trammell Crow
$27,850
 Leticia Van De Putte
D
S-26
 TED PAC
$27,600
 Diana Maldonado
D
H-52
 TED PAC
$27,000
 Kevin Bailey*
D
H-140
 TED PAC
$27,000
 Allen Vaught
D
H-107
 TED PAC
$26,500
 Rene Oliveira
D
H-37
 Jack Pratt
$26,500
 Kirk England
D
H-106
 TED PAC
$25,500
 Tommy Williams
R
S-4
 Choctaw Nation
               * Lost 2008 Election.

Two failed GOP House candidates got at least a third of their funds from gambling interests. Led by TED PAC, gamblers supplied 46 percent of the money raised by Lee Jackson—who lost a primary challenge to then-Rep. Bill Zedler of Arlington. Gamblers also anted up one-third of the money raised by Jon Cole, who lost a primary challenge to Richardson Rep. Jerry Madden. Cole’s top gambling donors were North Texas Leadership and TED PAC, which sponsored candidates challenging incumbent gambling foes.

 

Politicians Most Dependent On Gambling Money

Gambling Money
As Share of
‘08 Cycle Total
 
 Recipient (Party)
Office
Itemized
Donations
In ‘08 Cycle
Gambling
Donations
In ‘08 Cycle
Top Gambling Contributor(s)
64.9%
 Bob Romano*(D)
H-105
$51,721
$33,558
 North Texas Leadership PAC
46.2%
 Lee Jackson*(R)
H-96
$27,045
$12,500
 TED PAC
32.7%
 Jon Cole *(R)
H-67
$122,204
$40,000
 David Alameel/TED PAC
16.0%
 Jim Dunnam(D)
H-57
$241,854
$38,750
 Gerald Ford/Joe LaMantia/TED PAC
15.9%
 Juan Escobar*(D)
H-43
$264,354
$42,000
 TED PAC
13.5%
 Paul Moreno*(D)
H-77
$155,681
$21,000
 Johnson & Johnson/Val Peisen
12.9%
 Scott Hochberg(D)
H-137
$139,201
$18,000
 Joe LaMantia
12.5%
 Craig Eiland(D)
H-23
$227,250
$28,404
 Gerald Ford
12.1%
 Trey Martinez Fischer(D)
H-116
$311,988
$37,900
 Joe LaMantia/TED PAC
11.1%
 David Leibowitz(D)
H-117
$31,450
$3,500
 Johnson & Johnson
11.1%
 James M. Young*(R)
H-45
$45,130
$5,000
 Gallagher Law  Firm
10.9%
 Joe Farias(D)
H-118
$176,080
$19,150
 TED PAC
10.3%
 Borris Miles*(D)
H-146
$97,510
$10,000
 TED PAC
10.2%
 Eddie Rodriguez(D)
H-51
$88,010
$9,000
 Verna Peisen
10.1%
 Jessica Farrar(D)
H-148
$217,057
$22,000
 TED PAC
10.1%
 Joan Huffman(R)
S-17
$2,227,507
$225,000
 Robert McNair
10.0%
 Joaquin Castro(D)
H-125
$100,181
$10,000
 Joe LaMantia
9.8%
 Joe Straus III(R)
H-121
$357,510
$35,101
 George Hixon
9.5%
 Dan Branch(R)
H-108
$1,541,464
$146,935
 Harlan Crow
9.3%
 Robert Alonzo(D)
H-104
$150,225
$14,000
 Val Peisen/TED PAC
9.1%
 David Dewhurst(R)
Lt. Gov.
$9,370,120
$851,350
 David Alameel
9.0%
 Edmund Kuempel(R)
H-44
$204,519
$18,400
 TED PAC
8.9%
 Pete Gallego(D)
H-74
$449,092
$40,000
 Joe LaMantia/TED PAC
8.8%
 Yvonne Gonzalez(D)
H-35
$108,313
$9,500
 Johnson & Johnson
8.7%
 Rene Oliveira(D)
H-37
$303,523
$26,500
 Jack Pratt
8.2%
 Doug Miller(R)
H-73
$728,168
$60,055
 TED PAC
8.1%
 Carlos Uresti(D)
S-19
$525,633
$42,611
 Kickapoo/TED PAC
8.1%
 ‘Chente’ Quintanilla(D)
H-75
$105,345
$8,500
 Joe LaMantia
8.0%
 Kino Flores(D)
H-36
$830,076
$66,650
 TED PAC
7.9%
 Rodney Ellis(D)
S-13
$436,098
$34,500
 Jack Pratt/TED PAC
7.9%
 Dawnna Dukes(D)
H-46
$430,511
$33,851
 TED PAC
7.8%
 Rick Perry(R)
Gov.
$10,150,529
$793,356
 Peter Holt
7.8%
 Elliot Naishtat(D)
H-49
$123,127
$9,600
 Joe LaMantia
7.6%
 Kirk England(D)
H-106
$347,080
$26,500
 TED PAC
7.6%
 Frank Corte(R)
H-122
$285,927
$21,700
 Peter Holt
7.6%
 Joseph Moody(D)
H-78
$708,478
$53,500
 TED PAC
7.4%
 Kevin Bailey*(D)
H-140
$363,126
$27,000
 TED PAC
7.4%
 Jeff Wentworth(R)
S-25
$514,000
$38,150
 TED PAC
7.4%
 Eliot Shapleigh(D)
S-29
$273,560
$20,300
 TED PAC
7.3%
 Leo Berman(R)
H-6
$68,734
$5,008
 Choctaw Nation
7.2%
 Aaron Pena(D)
H-40
$515,397
$37,200
 TED PAC
7.0%
 Alma Allen(D)
H-131
$50,013
$3,500
 Chickasaw/TED PAC
    *Lost 2008 election.

 

Top Gambling Contributors

Amount
(‘07 & ’08)
  Contributor
  City
 Gambling Interest
$1,061,500
 Robert C. McNair  Houston  Horse breeding
$841,214
 Texans for Econ. Development  Austin  Biggest gambling PAC
$466,430
 Peter & Julianna Holt  Blanco  Retama Park
$458,611
 Harlan & Katherine Crow  Dallas  Lone Star Park
$307,659
 Robert & Gordon Johnson  Austin  Gulf Greyhound
$270,805
 Michael T. Gallagher  Houston  Longhorn Downs
$265,750
 Trammell S. Crow  Dallas  Lone Star Park
$259,500
 Chickasaw Nation  Ada, OK  Tribe
$258,060
 Joe LaMantia  McAllen  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$239,204
 B.J. 'Red' McCombs  San Antonio  Retama Park
$232,782
 MAXXAM Inc. PAC  Houston  Sam Houston Race Park
$232,500
 David & Martha Alameel  Dallas  Longhorn Downs
$218,008
 Choctaw Nation  Durant, OK  Tribe
$181,502
 Gordon T. Graves  Austin  Slot machines
$137,000
 Gallagher Law Firm  Houston  Longhorn Downs
$132,650
 Landry's Restaurants PAC  Houston  Casinos
$129,710
 Tilman J. Fertitta  Houston  Casinos
$111,992
 Greg LaMantia  McAllen  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$101,500
 Herbert Graham  Odessa  Horse breeding
$95,650
 Anthony & Jennifer LaMantia  Corpus  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$92,000
 Jack E. Pratt  Dallas  Casinos
$84,147
 Phil D. Adams  Bryan  Longhorn Downs
$76,000
 Bobby D. & Leona Cox  Ft. Worth  Horse breeding
$75,000
 Gulf Greyhound Partners PAC  La Marque  Gulf Greyhound
$74,250
 Verna Peisen  McAllen  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$72,750
 Steve LaMantia  Laredo  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$65,000
 TX Gaming Assn.  Austin  Casinos
$61,551
 George C. Hixon  San Antonio  Retama Park
$54,750
 Larry Martin  Houston  Laredo Downs/Tesoros
$52,900
 Helen Kleberg Groves  San Antonio  Retama Park
$52,483
 North TX Leadership PAC†  Dallas  Longhorn Downs
$50,000
 Alameel Family Partners LTD†  Dallas  Longhorn Downs
                               †Controlled by David Alameel.

 

Non-Gambling PACs Receiving the Most Gambling Money

Amount
(’07 & ’08)
 
 Political Committee
 Top Gambling Contributor
$665,500
 Texans For Lawsuit Reform  Robert McNair
$200,000
 Texans for Insurance Reform  Michael Gallagher
$195,000
 Stars Over TX  Robert McNair
$173,600
 Republican Party of TX  Robert McNair
$164,900
 Associated Republicans of TX  Robert McNair
$155,000
 TX Business for Clean Air  Trammell Crow
$107,500
 House Democratic Campaign Committee  Gulf Greyhound Partners
$91,700
 TX 2020 PAC  Johnson & Johnson
$35,000
 Brown McCarroll PAC  Joe LaMantia
$25,000
 Rio Grande Valley Business PAC  Greg LaMantia/Joe LaMantia
$22,497
 Wholesale Beer Distributors of TX  Greg LaMantia/Joe LaMantia
$21,000
 TX Republican Legislative Caucus  Chickasaw Nation

 

Republicans accounted for 58 percent of all gambling dollars, due in part to their lock on statewide offices. Yet the current lawmakers who received the greatest share of their campaign funds from gambling interests overwhelmingly hail from the Democratic Party. Gambling interests filled 16 percent of the war chest of Waco Rep. Jim Dunnam, who helped swing the House’s Democratic minority behind new Speaker Straus.

Of the 11 other current lawmakers who relied on gambling interests for 10 percent or more of their war chests, just three are Republicans: Senator Joan Huffman, Rep. Dan Branch and Speaker Straus. The top gambling donor to Straus is San Antonio developer George Hixon. Hixon is an investor in Retama Park’s owner company—which is chaired by the father of Speaker Straus.

Speaker Straus and Dallas Democratic Rep. Yvonne Davis are the only lawmakers known to have racetrack investments of their own. David Alameel sold a 5 percent stake in his Longhorn Downs track claim to Rep. Davis (whose top gambling donor was now-indicted Aces Wired executive Knowles Cornwell). Alameel bought the Longhorn Downs license from the Retama-tied Austin Jockey Club, which counts Speaker Straus among its investors. The Texas Racing Commission has not approved Alameel’s pending request to transfer the license from Austin Jockey Club to Alameel.■

 


1  Headed by Tommy Azopardi of the Texas Horsemen’s Partnership, TED PAC collected the vast majority of its money from horseracing interests. To avoid counting the same gambling dollars twice, this report counts contributions that gambling PACs give to candidates but does not count donations that gambling interests give to gambling PACs. This prevents the double-counting problems that arise when Tommy Azopardi gives $5,000 to TED PAC, for example, and TED PAC gives that same $5,000 to Rep. Roberto Seabiscuit.
2  One beneficiary of McNair’s political largess is the pro-gambling Texas Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association PAC. McNair owns Stonerside Stables.
3  If the Texas Legislature moves to expand gambling, these tribes will likely remain at the table to promote policies that are as favorable as possible to their interests.
4 See “Lawmaker Runs Inside Track at Racing Commission,” TPJ’s Lobby Watch, January 8, 2009. http://info.tpj.org/Lobby_Watch/01-08-09_yvonnedavistrack.html In the last election-cycle, the top beneficiaries of Gallagher’s political funds were the trial-lawyer Texans for Insurance Reform PAC ($200,000) and Governor Rick Perry ($50,000). Gallagher spent $270,805 on the 2008 elections; the Gallagher Law Firm spent another $137,000.
5  “Flores Focus of Inquiry Into Travel Payments,” Austin American-Statesman, November 8, 2008. “Lawmaker in the Middle of Power Struggles,” Austin American-Statesman, December 14, 2008.
6  “Law Change May Benefit Racing Industry,” Houston Chronicle, January 21, 2008.
7  Maxxam operates Houston’s Sam Houston Race Park and also holds the licenses of Laredo Race Park and Harlingen’s Valley Race Park.
8  Laredo Downs and Valle de los Tesoros, which both forfeited Texas Racing Commission security deposits after failing to open their tracks on time.
9  The Craddick-aligned Stars Over Texas PAC received another $195,000 from gambling interests.