Bo French

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Bo French
Image of Bo French

Republican Party

Elections and appointments
Last election

March 6, 2018

Education

High school

New Mexico Military Institute

Bachelor's

Texas Christian University

Personal
Profession
Business owner
Contact

Campaign Facebook

Bo French (Republican Party) ran for election to the Texas House of Representatives to represent District 99. French lost in the Republican primary on March 6, 2018.

French 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[edit]

Bo French was born in Fort Worth, Texas. He graduated from New Mexico Military Institute. He earned a bachelor's degree in history from Texas Christian University in 1993. French's career experience includes starting his own investment firm.[1]

Campaign themes[edit]

2016[edit]

French's campaign website highlighted the following issues:

Immigration and Border Security: I am deeply concerned about the lack of security on our border and our broken immigration system. Our government continues to look the other way instead of instituting real reforms, such as eliminating the magnets of chain migration, in-state tuition, free healthcare and education. Politicians in Austin have done very little to protect our state from this burden, which is unsustainable. The lawlessness from this administration must stop and as Texans we can do better.

Education: I support local control of schools including charter schools and any other system that protects parents’ rights to ensure their child gets a great education. We are punishing low-income children by forcing them to stay in underperforming schools. If we don’t unchain our youth from the shackles of our current system, every generation that follows will be worse off than we are now, and American exceptionalism will become a thing of the past.

Budget and the Economy: I believe we should, at minimum, institute a cap on the growth of government at no more than population plus inflation and then work to reduce the burden on taxpayers. The Legislature should institute zero-based budgeting making every agency budget for their needs instead of adding to what they already get. Nothing will spur our economy more quickly than our hard working taxpayers keeping a larger percentage of their money so they can spend, invest, or risk it on new business. That is the key to economic growth.

Family Values: We cannot expect prosperity when we continue to kick out pillars, redefine what a family unit looks like, redefine the purpose of family, and redefine how God intends a family to operate with two equal in value individuals who have distinct roles and responsibilities. This is a direct attack on our religious liberty. I will strongly defend traditional family values; it is the only way to preserve our society.

States Rights: We are blessed to have choices in this country; with 50 different states acting as 50 laboratories of democracy, people can choose which state’s policies work the best for them. The states should be pushing back against an increasingly out of control central government. Other states are looking to Texas to lead the fight against this overreach and I will lead the charge to ensure we remain the tip of the spear.[2]

—Bo French[3]

Elections[edit]

2018[edit]

See also: Texas House of Representatives elections, 2018

General election

General election for Texas House of Representatives District 99

Incumbent Charlie Geren defeated Michael Stackhouse in the general election for Texas House of Representatives District 99 on November 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of tmp/2LXde3c5ecrc/data/media/images/CharlieGeren.jpg
Charlie Geren (R)
 
64.3
 
38,048
Image of tmp/2LXde3c5ecrc/data/media/images/Michael_Stackhouse.jpg
Michael Stackhouse (D)
 
35.7
 
21,111

Total votes: 59,159
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for Texas House of Representatives District 99

Michael Stackhouse advanced from the Democratic primary for Texas House of Representatives District 99 on March 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of tmp/2LXde3c5ecrc/data/media/images/Michael_Stackhouse.jpg
Michael Stackhouse
 
100.0
 
4,241

Total votes: 4,241
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Republican primary election

Republican primary for Texas House of Representatives District 99

Incumbent Charlie Geren defeated Bo French in the Republican primary for Texas House of Representatives District 99 on March 6, 2018.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of tmp/2LXde3c5ecrc/data/media/images/CharlieGeren.jpg
Charlie Geren
 
56.8
 
7,909
Image of tmp/2LXde3c5ecrc/data/media/images/Bo_French.jpg
Bo French
 
43.2
 
6,014

Total votes: 13,923
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Overview of 2018 Republican primaries[edit]
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[edit]
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?

Yes.

What made this a race to watch?

The Texas Observer identified this Republican primary as potentially competitive. The race featured a rematch of a 2016 primary between incumbent Charlie Geren, a Joe Straus ally, and Bo French. In 2016, Geren defeated French by a 16.5 percent margin.[4] As of January 31, 2018, only French had signed the form committing to vote for the Republican caucus' choice for speaker on the House floor. French said he might join the Texas Freedom Caucus if elected.[5]

Support and endorsements for French

  • Empower Texans
  • Texas Right to Life
  • New Leadership PAC
  • Young Conservatives of Texas
  • U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said French "displayed a passion for his conservative principles and a commitment to his community that is not often seen in politics."[6]

Endorsements for Geren

  • Texas Medical Association
  • Texas Association of Business
  • Fort Worth Star Telegram[7]
  • Texas Parent PAC
  • Texas Association of Realtors
  • National Federation of Independent Business[8]
Campaign finance[edit]
See also: Texas state legislative Republican primaries, 2018/Campaign finance

2016[edit]

See also: Texas House of Representatives elections, 2016

Elections for the Texas House of Representatives took place in 2016. The primary election was held on March 1, 2016, and the general election was held on November 8, 2016. The candidate filing deadline was December 14, 2015.[9]

Incumbent Charlie Geren defeated Dan Hawkins in the Texas House of Representatives District 99 general election.[10]

Texas House of Representatives, District 99 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.png Charlie Geren Incumbent 82.79% 45,201
     Libertarian Dan Hawkins 17.21% 9,393
Total Votes 54,594
Source: Texas Secretary of State



Incumbent Charlie Geren defeated Bo French in the Texas House of Representatives District 99 Republican Primary.[11][12]

Texas House of Representatives, District 99 Republican Primary, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.png Charlie Geren Incumbent 58.23% 13,312
     Republican Bo French 41.77% 9,551
Total Votes 22,863

Primary[edit]

Main article: Notable Texas primaries, 2016

Geren received the endorsements of the following state professional groups:[13][14][15]

  • Texas Realtors Association
  • Texas Municipal Police Officers Association
  • Manufacturers PAC of Texas

French received the endorsements of the following state conservative groups:[16]

  • Texans for Fiscal Responsibility
  • Conservative Republicans of Texas
  • Texas Right to Life
  • Texas Home School Coalition
  • National Association for Gun Rights
  • Texas Values Action

The Fort Worth Star‑Telegram called the race between Geren and French "one of the most costly, controversial local races that pits moderate conservatives against movement conservatives." Describing himself as part of "the next generation of conservative leaders," French received the support of conservative groups and donors trying to oust representatives like Geren for being too moderate. Meanwhile, Geren received "strong support from the Fort Worth business community and the Austin lobby," according to Mark P. Jones, a political science professor at Rice University.[17]

2016 Republican National Convention[edit]

See also: Republican National Convention, 2016
Bo French
Republican National Convention, 2016
Status:District-level delegate
Congressional district:12
State:Texas
Bound to:Ted Cruz
Delegates to the RNC 2016
Calendar and delegate rules overview • Types of delegates • Delegate rules by state • State election law and delegates • Delegates by state

French was a district-level delegate to the 2016 Republican National Convention from Texas. French was one of 104 delegates from Texas bound by state party rules to support Ted Cruz at the convention.[18] Cruz suspended his campaign on May 3, 2016. At the time, he had approximately 546 bound delegates. For more on what happened to his delegates, see this page.

Delegate rules[edit]

See also: RNC delegate guidelines from Texas, 2016 and Republican delegates from Texas, 2016

At-large delegates from Texas to the national convention were selected by a state nominations committee and approved by the Texas State GOP Convention in May 2016. District-level delegates were elected by congressional districts at the state convention and then approved by the convention as a whole. At the national convention, all delegates were bound on the first ballot unless their candidate withdrew from the race or released his or her delegates. A delegate remained bound on the second ballot if his or her candidate received at least 20 percent of the total vote on the first ballot. On the third and subsequent ballots, all delegates were to become unbound.

Texas primary results[edit]

See also: Presidential election in Texas, 2016
Texas Republican Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes Delegates
Jeb Bush 1.2% 35,420 0
Ben Carson 4.2% 117,969 0
Chris Christie 0.1% 3,448 0
Green check mark transparent.pngTed Cruz 43.8% 1,241,118 104
Carly Fiorina 0.1% 3,247 0
Lindsey Graham 0.1% 1,706 0
Elizabeth Gray 0.2% 5,449 0
Mike Huckabee 0.2% 6,226 0
John Kasich 4.2% 120,473 0
Rand Paul 0.3% 8,000 0
Marco Rubio 17.7% 503,055 3
Rick Santorum 0.1% 2,006 0
Donald Trump 26.8% 758,762 48
Other 1% 29,609 0
Totals 2,836,488 155
Source: Texas Secretary of State and CNN

Delegate allocation[edit]

See also: 2016 presidential nominations: calendar and delegate rules
Logo-GOP.png

Texas had 155 delegates at the 2016 Republican National Convention. Of this total, 108 were district-level delegates (three for each of the state's 36 congressional districts). District-level delegates were allocated on a proportional basis; a candidate had to win at least 20 percent of the primary vote in a district in order to be eligible to receive any of that district's delegates. If only one candidate met the 20 percent threshold in a district, he or she won all of the district's delegates. If two candidates met this threshold, the first place finisher received two of the district's delegates; the second place finisher received the remaining delegate. If no candidate won 20 percent of the vote, the top three finishers in a district each received one of the district's delegates. If a candidate won more than 50 percent of the vote in a district, he or she received all of the district's delegates.[19][20]

Of the remaining 47 delegates, 44 served at large. At-large delegates were allocated on a proportional basis; a candidate had to win at least 20 percent of the statewide primary vote in order to be eligible to receive any of the state's at-large delegates. If only one candidate broke the 20 percent threshold, the second place finisher still received a portion of the state's at-large delegates. If a candidate won more than 50 percent of the statewide vote, he or she received all of the state's at-large delegates. In addition, three national party leaders (identified on the chart below as RNC delegates) served as bound delegates to the Republican National Convention.[19][20]

Recent news[edit]

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Bo French Texas House. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

Bo French - Google News

See also[edit]

  • State legislative elections, 2018
  • Texas House of Representatives elections, 2018
  • State legislative special elections, 2018
  • Texas House of Representatives
  • Texas House of Representatives District 99
  • Texas House of Representatives elections, 2016
  • Texas State Legislature

External links[edit]

  • Search Google News for this topic
  • Campaign website
  • Campaign Facebook page
  • Campaign Twitter page
  • LinkedIn page
  • Texas Legislature website
  • Texas House of Representatives

Footnotes[edit]

  1. Bo French | Republican for State House, "About Bo," accessed February 17, 2018
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Bo French for Texas House, "Issues," accessed February 23, 2016
  4. Texas Observer, "Four Things to Watch as Election 2018 Gets Underway in Texas," December 13, 2017
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named FreedomC
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Blastf20
  7. Star-Telegram, "Geren has a record of working for Tarrant County," February 6, 2018
  8. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named NFIB
  9. Texas Secretary of State, "Important 2016 Election Dates," accessed December 14, 2015
  10. Texas Secretary of State, "2016 General Election," accessed December 2, 2016
  11. Texas Secretary of State, "2016 March Primary Election Candidate Filings by County," accessed August 22, 2016
  12. Texas Secretary of State, "1992 - Current Election History results," accessed August 22, 2016
  13. Charlie Geren on Twitter, "TX Manufacturers PAC endorsement," accessed February 22, 2016
  14. TMPA.org, "2016 primary endorsements," accessed February 22, 2016
  15. Texas Realtors, "Why We Support Charlie Geren," accessed February 22, 2016
  16. Bo French, "Endorsements," accessed February 22, 2016
  17. Star-Telegram, "GOP battle for Texas House District 99," February 10, 2016
  18. Texas GOP, "National Convention," May 19, 2016
  19. 19.0 19.1 Republican National Committee, "2016 Presidential Nominating Process," accessed October 6, 2015
  20. 20.0 20.1 CNN.com, "Republican National Convention roll call vote," accessed July 20, 2016


[show]
Current members of the Texas House of Representatives
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Dade Phelan
Representatives
District 1
Gary VanDeaver (R)
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Jill Dutton (R)
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Cecil Bell (R)
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Keith Bell (R)
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Cole Hefner (R)
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Matt Schaefer (R)
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Jay Dean (R)
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Cody Harris (R)
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Trent Ashby (R)
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Brian Harrison (R)
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Travis Clardy (R)
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Kyle Kacal (R)
District 13
Angelia Orr (R)
District 14
John Raney (R)
District 15
Steve Toth (R)
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Will Metcalf (R)
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Stan Gerdes (R)
District 18
Ernest Bailes (R)
District 19
Ellen Troxclair (R)
District 20
Terry Wilson (R)
District 21
Dade Phelan (R)
District 22
Christian Manuel (D)
District 23
Terri Leo-Wilson (R)
District 24
Greg Bonnen (R)
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Cody Vasut (R)
District 26
Jacey Jetton (R)
District 27
Ron Reynolds (D)
District 28
Gary Gates (R)
District 29
Ed Thompson (R)
District 30
Geanie Morrison (R)
District 31
Ryan Guillen (R)
District 32
Todd Hunter (R)
District 33
Justin Holland (R)
District 34
Abel Herrero (D)
District 35
Oscar Longoria (D)
District 36
Sergio Munoz (D)
District 37
Janie Lopez (R)
District 38
Erin Gamez (D)
District 39
Armando Martinez (D)
District 40
Terry Canales (D)
District 41
Robert Guerra (D)
District 42
Richard Raymond (D)
District 43
J.M. Lozano (R)
District 44
John Kuempel (R)
District 45
Erin Zwiener (D)
District 46
Sheryl Cole (D)
District 47
Vikki Goodwin (D)
District 48
Donna Howard (D)
District 49
Gina Hinojosa (D)
District 50
James Talarico (D)
District 51
Maria Luisa Flores (D)
District 52
Caroline Harris (R)
District 53
Andrew Murr (R)
District 54
Brad Buckley (R)
District 55
Hugh Shine (R)
District 56
Vacant
District 57
Richard Hayes (R)
District 58
DeWayne Burns (R)
District 59
Shelby Slawson (R)
District 60
Glenn Rogers (R)
District 61
Frederick Frazier (R)
District 62
Reggie Smith (R)
District 63
Ben Bumgarner (R)
District 64
Lynn Stucky (R)
District 65
Kronda Thimesch (R)
District 66
Matt Shaheen (R)
District 67
Jeff Leach (R)
District 68
David Spiller (R)
District 69
James Frank (R)
District 70
Mihaela Plesa (D)
District 71
Stan Lambert (R)
District 72
Drew Darby (R)
District 73
Carrie Isaac (R)
District 74
Eddie Morales (D)
District 75
Mary Gonzalez (D)
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Suleman Lalani (D)
District 77
Evelina Ortega (D)
District 78
Joseph Moody (D)
District 79
Claudia Ordaz (D)
District 80
Tracy King (D)
District 81
Brooks Landgraf (R)
District 82
Tom Craddick (R)
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Dustin Burrows (R)
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Carl Tepper (R)
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Stan Kitzman (R)
District 86
John Smithee (R)
District 87
Four Price (R)
District 88
Ken King (R)
District 89
Candy Noble (R)
District 90
Ramon Romero (D)
District 91
Stephanie Klick (R)
District 92
Salman Bhojani (D)
District 93
Nate Schatzline (R)
District 94
Tony Tinderholt (R)
District 95
Nicole Collier (D)
District 96
David Cook (R)
District 97
Craig Goldman (R)
District 98
Giovanni Capriglione (R)
District 99
Charlie Geren (R)
District 100
Venton Jones (D)
District 101
Chris Turner (D)
District 102
Ana-Maria Ramos (D)
District 103
Rafael Anchia (D)
District 104
Jessica Gonzalez (D)
District 105
Terry Meza (D)
District 106
Jared Patterson (R)
District 107
Victoria Neave Criado (D)
District 108
Morgan Meyer (R)
District 109
Carl Sherman (D)
District 110
Toni Rose (D)
District 111
Yvonne Davis (D)
District 112
Angie Button (R)
District 113
Rhetta Bowers (D)
District 114
John Bryant (D)
District 115
Julie Johnson (D)
District 116
Trey Fischer (D)
District 117
Philip Cortez (D)
District 118
John Lujan (R)
District 119
Elizabeth Campos (D)
District 120
Barbara Gervin-Hawkins (D)
District 121
Steve Allison (R)
District 122
Mark Dorazio (R)
District 123
Diego Bernal (D)
District 124
Josey Garcia (D)
District 125
Ray Lopez (D)
District 126
Sam Harless (R)
District 127
Charles Cunningham (R)
District 128
Briscoe Cain (R)
District 129
Dennis Paul (R)
District 130
Tom Oliverson (R)
District 131
Alma Allen (D)
District 132
Mike Schofield (R)
District 133
Mano Deayala (R)
District 134
Ann Johnson (D)
District 135
Jon Rosenthal (D)
District 136
John Bucy (D)
District 137
Gene Wu (D)
District 138
Lacey Hull (R)
District 139
Jarvis Johnson (D)
District 140
Armando Walle (D)
District 141
Senfronia Thompson (D)
District 142
Harold Dutton (D)
District 143
Ana Hernandez (D)
District 144
Mary Perez (D)
District 145
Christina Morales (D)
District 146
Shawn Thierry (D)
District 147
Jolanda Jones (D)
District 148
Penny Shaw (D)
District 149
Hubert Vo (D)
District 150
Valoree Swanson (R)
Republican Party (85)
Democratic Party (64)
Vacancies (1)











Categories: [Texas] [Republican Party] [RNC delegates Texas, 2016] [Ted Cruz delegates, 2016] [RNC delegates, 2016]


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