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Brad Perry

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Brad Perry

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Elections and appointments
Last election

March 6, 2018

Education

Law

Southern Methodist University

Contact

Brad Perry (Republican Party) ran for election to the Texas House of Representatives to represent District 107. Perry lost in the Republican primary on March 6, 2018.

Perry ran in one of 48 contested Texas state legislative Republican primaries in 2018. To read more about the conflict between Republican factions in the primaries, including who the factions were, which races were competitive and who key influencers lined up behind, click here.

Biography

Brad Perry earned a degree from Louisiana State University and a law degree from Southern Methodist University.[1] Perry's career experience includes working as an assistant general counsel with a national nonprofit organization.[1][2]

Elections

2018

See also: Texas House of Representatives elections, 2018

General election

General election for Texas House of Representatives District 107

Incumbent Victoria Neave Criado defeated Deanna Maria Metzger in the general election for Texas House of Representatives District 107 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Victoria Neave Criado
Victoria Neave Criado (D)
 
57.1
 
29,058
Image of Deanna Maria Metzger
Deanna Maria Metzger (R)
 
42.9
 
21,829

Total votes: 50,887
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Republican primary runoff election

Republican primary runoff for Texas House of Representatives District 107

Deanna Maria Metzger defeated Joe Ruzicka in the Republican primary runoff for Texas House of Representatives District 107 on May 22, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Deanna Maria Metzger
Deanna Maria Metzger
 
56.1
 
2,247
Joe Ruzicka
 
43.9
 
1,758

Total votes: 4,005
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for Texas House of Representatives District 107

Incumbent Victoria Neave Criado advanced from the Democratic primary for Texas House of Representatives District 107 on March 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Victoria Neave Criado
Victoria Neave Criado
 
100.0
 
6,494

Total votes: 6,494
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Republican primary election

Republican primary for Texas House of Representatives District 107

Deanna Maria Metzger and Joe Ruzicka advanced to a runoff. They defeated Brad Perry in the Republican primary for Texas House of Representatives District 107 on March 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Deanna Maria Metzger
Deanna Maria Metzger
 
45.3
 
3,413
Joe Ruzicka
 
27.4
 
2,064
Brad Perry
 
27.3
 
2,058

Total votes: 7,535
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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This was one of the 10 closest elections in the first half of 2018. Click here for the full list »

Overview of 2018 Republican primaries
See also: Factions in Texas state legislative Republican primaries, 2018 and Texas state legislative Republican primaries, 2018

The 2018 Texas state legislative Republican primaries featured conflict between two factions. One group was opposed to House Speaker Joe Straus (R) and his preferred policies on issues like education financing and property taxes. The anti-Straus wing included members of the Texas Freedom Caucus and organizations such as Empower Texans and Texas Right to Life. The other group was supportive of Straus and his policy priorities. The pro-Straus wing included incumbent legislators allied with Straus and organizations such as the Associated Republicans of Texas and the Texas Association of Business. To learn more about these factions and the conflict between them, visit our page on factional conflict among Texas Republicans.

The primaries occurred on March 6, 2018, with runoffs on May 22, 2018. There were 48 contested state legislative Republican primaries, outnumbering contested primaries in 2016 (43) and 2014 (44). To see our full coverage of the state legislative Republican primaries, including who key influencers were backing and what the primaries meant for the 2019 House speaker's race, visit our primary coverage page.

The charts below outline the March 6 primary races for the state Senate and the state House. They show how the factions performed on election night.

Texas Senate Republicans
Party Before March 6 primaries After March 6 primaries
     Pro-Straus 2 1
     Anti-Straus 1 3
     Unknown 3 3
     Open seats 1 -
     Runoffs - -
     Too close to call - -
Total 7 7



Texas House Republicans
Party Before March 6 primaries After March 6 primaries
     Pro-Straus 20 20
     Anti-Straus 4 9
     Unknown 2 5
     Open seats 15 -
     Runoffs - 7
     Too close to call - -
Total 41 41
Primary we watched
See also: Texas state legislative Republican primaries, 2018/Races to watch

This primary was one of 48 we tracked for the March 6 elections.

Did the incumbent file to run for re-election?

No.

What made this a race to watch?

Three Republicans filed to run in this primary: Deanna Maria Metzger, Brad Perry, and Joe Ruzicka. The winner faced incumbent state Rep. Victoria Neave Criado (D) in the general election. In its endorsement of Ruzicka in the primary, the Dallas Morning News said that Ruzicka's top priorities were education and transportation policy, Perry would support a speaker similar to Joe Straus if elected, and Metzger supported the bathroom bill and a stricter form of Texas' voter ID law. As of January 31, 2018, only Metzger had signed the form committing to vote for the Republican caucus' choice for speaker on the House floor.[3]

See our coverage of the primary runoff in this race here.

Endorsements for Metzger

  • Empower Texans
  • Texas Right to Life
  • Young Conservatives of Texas

Endorsements for Ruzicka

  • Dallas Morning News[3]
Campaign finance
See also: Texas state legislative Republican primaries, 2018/Campaign finance


See also

External links

Footnotes


Current members of the Texas House of Representatives
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Dustin Burrows
Representatives
District 1
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Jay Dean (R)
District 8
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Pat Curry (R)
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Ken King (R)
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Toni Rose (D)
District 111
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Ray Lopez (D)
District 126
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John Bucy (D)
District 137
Gene Wu (D)
District 138
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Hubert Vo (D)
District 150
Republican Party (88)
Democratic Party (62)