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Background on Tony Sanchez. His father founded IBC (International Bank of Commerce) and he's something of a hero in Laredo and parts of the Valley. Sanchez was a Bush supporter until he decided to run for governor in 2002. His conversion away from Bush was never convincing, and he ran a very weak campaign. Some speculate he wanted to lose, others that he was insurance, in case Perry blew it, so that Bush would have a supporter in the Governor's Mansion. Others just think Sanchez was exactly as he seemed--a conservative Democrat who saw a chance to become governor.
IBC is a very Republican company, and their leaders are mostly, if not entirely, active Republicans. This is hardly surprising in Texas. The leaders of this bank were big Cuellar supporters, too.
In 2004 Henry Cuellar, a Bush supporter and appointee who ran as a Democrat, lost in the initial count of the primary vote to incumbent Representative Ciro Rodriguez. A recount (mandatory, I think) gained several hundred votes for Cuellar (a huge number in a local election), and he took the lead. These new votes came from two counties--Webb (Cuellar's home county) and Zapata (Cuellar's wife's county). Rodriguez did not pick up any significant new votes in his strongholds, interestingly. The votes in Zapata County were curious. Earlier that evening the counting machine had malfunctioned, and the votes had to be counted by hand, including by a batch of volunteers recruited at the last minute. During the recount, the votes were retallied, and Cuellar gained 300 new votes from two early voting ballot boxes. They weren't new ballots, apparently, just votes that had not been included in the original tally.
There was no way these votes were tampered with, officials claimed. They spent the entire night after the election locked up--in the Zapata IBC branch...
Oh yeah, and the Webb county votes? Cuellar picked up 117 new votes in the initial recount. Then someone realized that there were 115 more votes counted than ballots cast... I'm not sure how that finally turned out. Cuellar is credited with winning by 58 votes, so some of his new votes weren't counted, I take it. Just enough to give him the victory.
Anyway, I hate conspiracy theories, but this is a fun one. Some places are just made for political scandal, and south Texas is one of them.
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