Gordon Quan studies his odds in a DeLay challenge for Congress
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 09:20PM
TheSpook
Democrats are
wooing term-limited Houston City Councilman Gordon Quan as a possible
2006 challenger to House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.
Quan recently met with Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee officials in Washington and admits he
finds the idea intriguing. But he also has family and business
considerations. "I'm trying to decide whether it's an ego trip or a
real calling," he said. Quan, who says he already was eyeing a
congressional seat, now lives in the west Houston district represented
by Republican John Culberson. Though congressional candidates aren't
required to reside in the area they represent, it is a political
liability not to. Part of Quan's analysis will be demographic studies
of the district — especially of its Asian population. Quan, 56, is of
Chinese ancestry. In the 2000 Census, the district was 60 percent
Anglo, 20 percent Hispanic, 10 percent black and 10 percent other
ethnic groups, including Asian, according to the Texas Legislative
Council. DeLay's district encompasses his hometown of Sugar Land, Clear
Lake, and parts of Pasadena, League City and Galveston County. DeLay
engineered Texas' congressional redistricting that helped some new GOP
candidates get elected to Congress by margins of more than 10
percentage points. But it didn't work that way in his newly drawn
district, where Democrat Richard Morrison and two other candidates held
DeLay to 55 percent. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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