Abbott faces first GOP opponent in bid for third term as Huffines says he will 'finish the wall, lower taxes and protect elections'

Politics
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is already facing GOP opposition for a third term. | Facebook

Former Texas state Sen. Don Huffines is running for governor in 2022, challenging fellow Republican Greg Abbott for a third term.

“Together we will finish the wall, lower our taxes and protect our elections,” Huffines said on Twitter. “It’s past time to root out corruption in the Austin swamp. Leadership. No excuses.”

For the past year, Huffines has been criticizing Abbott’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, Fox 4 in Dallas reported.

He is a businessman who served a single term the Texas Senate before losing  in 2018, Fox 4 reported.

Huffines said Abbott was too slow to reopen the state and spoke last fall at a protest outside the Governor’s Mansion, the Texas Tribune reported.

"Texas deserves actual Republican leadership that will act urgently and decisively—no more excuses or lies," Huffines said in a statement, the Tribune reported.

Abbott could potentially face other GOP opponents in his bid for a third term including Texas GOP chairman Allen West and Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, the story said.

At the end of 2020, Abbott had a campaign war chest of nearly $38 million, the Tribune reported.

He also had a very high approval rating among Republications voters at 77% in the University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll, the story said.

In 2014 and 2018, Abbott did not face major opposition in the primaries, receiving more than 90% of the vote in each race, the Tribune said.

In the state Senate, Huffines represented District 16 in northern Dallas County. He defeated Sen. John Carona (R-Dallas) in the primary, criticizing him as too moderate.

But then Huffines lost the seat after one term to a Democrat, Nathan Johnson, by eight percentage points in 2018, the Tribune said.

The filing deadline for the 2022 governor’s race is Monday, Dec. 13, the story said.

Huffines is the brother of James Huffines, whom Abbott chose to chair the Governor’s Strike Force to Open Texas last spring, the Tribune reported.