Two Republican foes of Dan Patrick support Democrat Mike Collier for lieutenant governor
In Texas, the Lt. Governor has far more power that the governor. The LT. Governor has almost full control of the Texas Senate. Greg is an asshole, but Dan Patrick is a major league asshole and crook. Dan Patrick is a crook and scam artist
Mike Collier is a CPA and is good contrast to Dan Patirek
This makes me smile
https://www.texastribune.org/2022/09/04/glen-whitley-mike-collier-dan-patrick/?utm_campaign=trib-social&utm_content=1662473079&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter
Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley, one of Texas most prominent Republican local leaders, is backing Lt. Gov. Dan Patricks Democratic challenger.
The one person who Ill support statewide that will get me a little in trouble: Mike Collier for lieutenant governor, Whitley said on Yall-itics, a WFAA politics podcast.
Whitley and Patrick have frequently clashed, and on the podcast Whitley slammed Patrick for waging war on local elected officials.
Just days after Whitley made the endorsement that crossed party lines, an outgoing Republican state senator from Amarillo has followed suit. Kel Seliger told The Texas Tribune he plans to vote for Collier in November. Seliger is one of the most senior Republicans in the upper chamber but has also famously been at odds with Patrick. Neither Whitley nor Seliger are running for reelection.
At the center of Whitleys disdain for Patrick is a bill shepherded by the lieutenant governor in 2019 meant to slow the growth of Texans property tax bills. The bill requires many cities, counties and other taxing units to hold an election if they wish to raise 3.5% more property tax revenue than the previous year, not counting the growth added by new construction.
But Whitley said the bill put Tarrant County in a tight position because property taxes are a major source of revenue for local governments. Meanwhile, Whitley said Tarrant County jails are housing more than 700 inmates that should be in state custody without additional funding from the state. The COVID-19 pandemic and the inability to make jail transfers contributed to state inmates being held in county jails, Community Impact reported.