Texas District 17 does more than just lean Republican. In 2008,
67 percent of voters chose John McCain for president. The
district, which includes Waco, College Station, some southern
Dallas suburbs, and President Bush’s Crawford Ranch, would seem
to be an easy fit for conservative Republican Congressmen. Yet,
Democrat Chet Edwards has held the seat for the last six years,
and represented Texas’s 11th District prior to redistricting in
2004.
Edwards has campaigned as a moderate, conservative Democrat in
the past, but recent votes and national trends have enticed
several Republicans to challenge Edwards this year. Five
candidates ran in the March 2 primary, of those the former oil
and gas industry CEO Bill Flores came out ahead with 33 percent
of the vote. The former sports broadcaster and video production
owner Rob Curnock came in second place with 29 percent. With no
candidate taking in over 50 percent, a runoff is scheduled for
April 13.
When both candidates spoke to TAS on Friday, they each
emphasized their own conservative values and agreed that the
other candidate was generally conservative as well. Both
candidates are campaigning on repealing healthcare reform, and
support lowering taxes, although Curnock also added that he would
support a FairTax. Both candidates criticized Edwards for
supporting TARP, and voting against a ban on partial birth
abortion in 2003. Both Republican candidates identify as
pro-life, but Flores boasts the endorsements of Texas Right to
Life and Concerned Women for America. Edwards also voted for the
stimulus, and against the most recent Stupak Amendment. Curnock
also expressed his distaste towards Edwards’s vote for cutting
off funding for troops in Iraq, and his voting against the Iraq
surge, and his opposing the Bush tax cuts while Flores hammered
Edwards for voting for the Federal Budget.
Edwards did, however, vote against the Healthcare bill, and voted
against Cap-and-Trade. “He has been surviving by convincing
enough Republicans and conservatives that he is indeed a
conservative. But when he came out and endorsed Barack Obama, he
finally came out of the closet,” Curnock declared.
Both candidates contended that they were the more electable
challenger, with Flores mainly citing his business background and
Curnock highlighting his experience campaigning in a previous
close for the seat. “I’ve created more jobs, I have
balanced more payrolls, met more budgets, repaid more debt, and
purchased more health insurance than Rob Curnock and Chet Edwards
put together,” said Flores while asserting his experience in
creating jobs. When asked his ideas for cutting the
deficit, Flores suggested cutting funding for the Department of
Energy, scaling back United Nations funding, and making sure that
Planned Parenthood and ACORN were not funded.
Curnock emphasized his electability by citing his close race in
the 2008 general election against Edwards and argued that his
previous campaigns indicate that he is a less risky candidate in
that he has been vetted several times. “I ran in 2008 when
no one else was willing to go up against Chet Edwards,” Curnock
said. He received slightly more than 45 percent of the vote. He
cited extra support that he would receive this year from National
and State parties, as well as lower minority turnout caused by
Obama not being on the ballot, and national trends favoring
Republicans as reasons why this year he could get more than 50
percent of the vote in the general election. Curnock attacked
Flores for his prior non-participation, saying that “we didn’t
get any help from any of the Republican candidates that jumped in
the primary [this year]. If we had, we might have won,” Curnock
pondered. He told TAS that he believed he had an upward
trend showing that he was a strong candidate due to his ability
to tighten the race in a year where Republicans had generally
done worse than in previous elections. In 2006, Republican
challenger Van Taylor received five percentage points fewer than
Curnock received in 2008, 40 percent of the vote.
Flores did not share his view that Curnock’s previous campaigning
was a sign that he was more electable. “He could make the case
that he’s more experienced [campaigning] … but his track record
has not been one of success in running in this district,” Flores
observed. Curnock also ran unsuccessfully in the 2000 and 2002
Republican primaries.
Flores has outraised and outspent Curnock. As the money dries up
during the runoff season, fundraising could become a problem for
Curnock, although either candidate is likely to receive
substantial support once the primary is over.
Geographically, Curnock has held strong in Waco, the most
populous city in the district, however 4th place challenger and
Waco native Chuck Wilson has since endorsed Flores.
When looking at a colored map of
Congressional Districts, District 17 looks like
West Berlin during the Cold War — surrounded by red, albeit
a different kind of red. Regardless of which candidate comes out
on top in the next two weeks, it will be interesting to watch
Edwards try to hold onto the seat in the fall.