Former State Rep. Gooden to challenge anti-gay incumbent Spitzer in Republican Primary




Former State Representative Lance Gooden announced this week that he will seek the Republican nomination for House District 4 in the March GOP primary.

He held the seat, representing Henderson and Kaufman Counties, for two terms before being narrowly defeated by Stuart Spitzer in 2014 by two percentage points.   Gooden said he is running again at the urging of supporters in communities across the district and after observing Spitzer's ineffectiveness during the 84th legislature in which he failed to pass any of the legislation that he authored.
 
"The people of Henderson and Kaufman Counties deserve a representative who can achieve real conservative results for them in Austin," said Gooden.  "This job is not about empty rhetoric.  It's about rolling up your sleeves and accomplishing results.  I sincerely hoped that Dr. Spitzer could have stepped forward and been a strong leader for our district, but the reality is that he simply could not deliver.  In spite of being surrounded by huge Republican majorities in both chambers, he was unable to pass a single bill."

In a statement Spitzer released earlier in the year, the incumbent touted his work promoting anti-LGBT legislation as an example of his success.

"In my first session in the Legislature, we made history," Spitzer said in a press release. "But there is more to be done to protect the conservative values of Kaufman and Henderson Counties..."

Spitzer fought for the Pastoral Protection legislation preventing people from suing clergy members who refuse to perform same-sex marriage ceremonies.

"Now we need to pass a law expanding that protection to judges, small business owners like bakeries, dressmakers and florists who do not want to be forced to participate in non-traditional marriage ceremonies," Spitzer said.

Republican representatives traditionally win the District 4 seat held by Spitzer, but Cedar Creek Lake also has a significant socially-liberal population, including  a large community of full-time LGBT residents and weekenders.

In the 2014 GOP Primary, Spitzer unseated two-term State Rep. Lance Gooden, who never spoke on the issue of LGBT rights or same-sex marriage. Kaufman County Tea Party officials, who backed Spitzer, portrayed Gooden as a liberal.

During his two sessions in the Texas House, Gooden was recognized as one of the state's rising Republican leaders.  He was endorsed by conservative organizations such as the N.R.A., Texas Alliance for Life, Texans for Lawsuit Reform, the Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas, and many others because of his ability to pass meaningful legislation to protect the life, liberty and property of hard-working Texas families.
 
One of Gooden's signature pieces of legislation during the 83rd legislature was the "Texas Privacy Act," a new law that protects property owners from the growing number of surveillance drone aircraft flying in our skies.  Because of his efforts, it is now illegal for a drone to conduct surveillance on a home or property in Texas without the consent of the owner. Other states have modeled similar legislation after Gooden’s bill.
 
Gooden was also instrumental in passing a voter ID bill and increasing the state’s patrols of our porous border with Mexico, protecting the sanctity of life and fighting to defend our conservative family values.  Gooden did all of this while balancing the state budget twice and providing more than a billion dollars in tax relief to Texans.
 
Athens Mayor Jerry Don Vaught and Kaufman Mayor Jeff Jordan said this week that they are proud to endorse Gooden for re-election in 2016 because of the results he delivered for HD 4 and his commitment to a shared set of conservative values. 
 
Mayor Vaught explained, “Lance is someone who is effective at passing legislation, but who is also principled and committed to remaining true to our core values.” Mayor Jordan agreed,  “We were fortunate to have Lance Gooden in the legislature working for us, and I believe we need to send him back. House District 4 cannot afford another session where we have no voice in the Texas House."

Pictured below are Gooden and Spitzer




Tell us what you think!

Beacon Hill at Cedar Creek Lake

Cedar Creek Lake Email Updates


 

Visit our Cedar Creek Lake Sponsors!

Cedar Creek Lake on Social Media

 
       

Cedar Creek Lake Current Weather Alerts

There are no active watches, warnings or advisories.

 

Cedar Creek Lake Weather Forecast

Saturday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 89

Saturday Night

Mostly Cloudy

Lo: 75

Sunday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 89

Sunday Night

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Lo: 75

Monday

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 89

Monday Night

Mostly Clear

Lo: 77

Tuesday

Mostly Sunny

Hi: 89

Tuesday Night

Partly Cloudy

Lo: 77


Cedar Creek Lake Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 6/14: 322.49 (+0.49)



Cedar Creek Lake

Fishing Report from TPWD (Jun. 11)

GOOD. Water slightly stained; 81 degrees; 0.46 feet above pool. The hybrid striped bass and white bass bite is on fire and with fish on a feeding frenzy! Start looking for these fish on flats throughout the lake and on edges of drop-offs, especially on cloudy and overcast days. Focus on drop-offs and along seawalls early in the mornings in 5-14 feet of water with slabs. Reports of great catches in 17–26 feet of water using silver or white slabs and spinnerbaits off the bottom with a very slow retrieve. The crappie have also migrated back into the main lake. Look for fish under bridge pylons or under docks in 3-10 feet. Guides have been reporting exceptionally nice catches on sunny warmer days. Report by Brent Herbeck, Herbeck’s Lonestar Fishing Guide Service. Numbers of catfish can be caught targeting humps in 10-20 feet of water, but there are a lot of small fish. Bigger fish can be caught drifting cut shad, carp, drum or bream. Report by Jason Barber, Kings Creek Adventures.

More Fishing Reports