Californians along with out-of-state donor George Soros have contributed heavily to Democrat Beto O'Rourke’s gubernatorial campaign to unseat Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.
O'Rourke, who unsuccessfully ran for the U.S. Senate against Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in 2018 and the Democratic nomination for president in 2020, amassed $27.6 million in campaign contributions from late February through June. Abbott raised $24.9 million in the same period.
Abbott maintained $45.7 million cash-on-hand, well above O'Rourke’s $23.9 million.
In addition to Soros’ $1 million contribution, O'Rourke received $1 million each from Tench and Simone Coxe, an Austin, Texas, couple formerly of California. He is a venture capitalist, and she is co-founder of Blanc & Otus public relations.
Texas campaign records show many of O'Rourke’s large donations came from out of state. He received a total of $500,000 from 28 California donors who gave $10,000 or more. Our Texas Pac of Colorado donated $500,000, and the American Federation of Teachers in Washington D.C. gave $300,000.
Meanwhile, many of Abbott’s campaign donations came from Texans. His top donor was S. Javaid Anwar, a Midland oilman and regular GOP contributor, who gave the governor’s campaign $750,000. Abbott appointed Anwar to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board twice.
Only one of Abbott’s top donors, Ed Roski, a California billionaire who contributed some $500,000, was out of state.
O‘Rourke began a seven-week campaign swing this week across the Lone Star State, where he is scheduled to make 70 stops. Abbott has vowed to follow O’Rourke’s campaign with an ambulance listing what the “real” candidate actually stands for, while launching ads against his oponent.
Abbott wasted no time seizing O'Rouke’s ties to the left with an ad titled: “Defend Texas from George Soros!”