With the start of early voting in Travis County on October 16, the 1996 General
Elections have officially begun. And for some candidates, who have been hitting
the neighborhoods and chamber talk circuit since the primaries last March, the
civility is wearing thin. Witness the accusations of political mud-slinging
between D.A. candidates Ronnie Earle and Shane Phelps, behind-the-scenes
maneuverings by the religious right in the State Board of Education races, or
the refusal of U.S. Rep. candidate Ron Paul to meet with opponent Charles
“Lefty” Morris because, his PR officer says, Morriss called Paul a Nazi. Ahh,
so many races, so little time.
Last issue we kicked off our campaign coverage with a story on the District 10
State Board of Education race, “Right–Wing Revolution,” by Roseana Auten, and
a brand new Election Board on the Chronicle web site, at
/election//election/.The
web site includes a list of polling places for early voting, links to the web
sites of political candidates, state and county election divisions, and links
to your favorite partisan sites.
This week we continue our coverage with stories on two Travis County races:
the District Attorney’s and Sheriff’s offices. Next week we will serve up
stories on three state and federal races: Phil Gramm’s U.S. Senate seat, Lloyd
Doggett’s U.S. Representative District 10 seat, and the campaign for Railroad
Commissioner between Republican Carol Keeton-Rylander and Democrat Hector
Uribe. And, just in time to show us that the idea of a three, or maybe even a
four-party system is not dead, the Natural Law Party comes along to spice up
all these races. We’ll report on the “less-stress” party phenomenon next week
as well.
The Chronicle will offer its endorsements in next week’s issue.
Early polling ends November 1 and election day is Tuesday, November 5. Happy
voting.
This article appears in October 18 • 1996 and October 18 • 1996 (Cover).
