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CNN Special Reports

CNN Special Report: Deep in the Pockets of Texas. Aired 11p-12a ET

Aired July 29, 2022 - 23:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[23:00:00]

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

UNKNOWN (voice-over): The following is a CNN special report.

SEN. KEL SELIGER, TEXAS STATE SENATOR: Wealthy people spend a lot of money to get policy made the way they want it, and they get it.

Now to sign the law.

ED LAVANDERA, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: The average voter doesn't know what's happening behind the scenes.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): A Texas bill targeting LGBTQ plus children.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): They want to keep it secret.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): And a Texas law banning abortions.

DOROTHY BURTON, FOUNDER OF CHRISTIANS IN PUBLIS SERVICE: They really believe that they've been given a mandate by God.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): He has set us free from the law.

BOB DEUELL, FORMER TEXAS STATE SENATOR: They want to destroy the public school system.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): We are not contending against flesh and blood.

MENDI TACKETT, GRANBURY RESIDENT: The money is all tied back to the same people.

JAMES WHITFIELD, FORMER HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL: Follow the money.

SHELLEY LUTHER, TEXAS HOUSE CANDIDATE: I am not comfortable with the transgenders.

LAVANDERA: More than 90% of your financing came from billionaires.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): I don't think he would have any comment.

LAVANDERA: We're going to go inside and see if he'll talk to us.

Is it about control --

UNKNOWN (voice-over): Senator Ted Cruz.

LAVANDERA: And power?

UNKNOWN: It is a Russian-style oligarchy, pure and simple.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Only ten states allow unlimited donations to state- wide political candidates from individuals and political action committees.

Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia.

LAVANDERA: It's election day. We're in the city of Sherman, Texas which is right on the Texas/Oklahoma border. This is a ruby red area of Texas and the republican primary is essentially the election that matters here.

Come November in the general election, whoever the Republican is that comes out of the primaries will very likely win whatever seat they're running for here in Sherman.

LUTHER: I thought I need to run because the people that are running here claim to be conservative but aren't as conservative as they should be.

I am not comfortable with the transgenders. The kids that they brought in my classroom, when they said that this kid is transgendering into a different sex, that I couldn't have kids laugh at them.

LAVANDERA: People outside of Texas who look and say Texas is one of the most conservative states in the country, you're trying to make it even more conservative.

LUTHER: We still have kids that, you know, can have gender mutilation. We just want to make sure that we keep our conservative values.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): Welcome to another exciting night of Texas high school football.

LAVANDERA: Your experience as a school board member seems to have opened up your eyes to the world of Texas politics.

CHRIS TACKETT, GRANBURY RESIDENT: It did. I felt like I could do more for the community. And school board felt like a good place to try and do that. While I was serving.

MIKE LANG, FORMER TEXAS REPRESENTATIVE: I'm running for state representative in district 60.

TACKETT: We had a new member joined the Texas House. He voted against the interests of the public schools multiple times.

UNKNOWN: Christian values, they're under attack in the schools with LGBTQ. TACKETT: That is what really got me thinking why.

M. TACKETT: I think you find in a lot of Texas towns the school district is kind of the heart of the community, right? So, it was kind of strange.

LAVANDERA: So, what did you start doing?

C. TACKETT: Well, I started pulling the money. I'm going in and I'm pulling Mike Lang. It was outrageous when you started looking at the pie chart seeing how big a section was coming from the same donor or just a handful of donors.

They'll write massive checks to individual candidates and then write massive checks to all these PACs which write massive checks to individual candidates.

M. TACKETT: And a lot of people don't have any idea. They don't know.

LUTHER: I'm Shelley Luther. This is what I think about Chinese communist drones flying over my property.

LAVANDERA: You ran for Texas State Senate in 2020?

LUTHER: Yes, I did.

LAVANDERA: You lost that election.

LUTHER: I did.

[23:04:58]

LAVANDERA: When we look through the campaign finance report back in 2020, more than 90% of your financing came from two West Texas billionaires.

LUTHER: Yes.

LAVANDERA: Farris Wilks and Tim Dunn.

LUTHER: Yes.

LAVANDERA: In this election, it's over 80%. What do those men mean to your campaign?

LUTHER: Without them, I couldn't have even run. They're great men. They're great people.

LAVANDERA: You've been a columnist in Fort Worth for how long?

BUD KENNEDY, COLUMNIST, FORTH WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM: Oh, my gosh, I tell people since the last century.

(LAUGHTER)

KENNEDY: I've followed 18 sessions of the Texas legislature. UNKNOWN (voice-over): S.B.8 has virtually shut down all abortions in

Texas. People can now carry handguns in public without any kind of license or training.

LAVANDERA: Do you think Texas can get more conservative that it is right now?

KENNEDY: Texas can very much get more conservative. But I don't think regular Texans are as conservative as their elected officials. I don't think people realize that there are only a handful of millionaires who really control a large number of the members of the Texas House.

LAVANDERA: Who are the people that you think have the biggest sway and control of the Republican Party in Texas?

KENNEDY: Tim Dunn in Midland.

TIM DUNN, POLITICAL DONOR: I'm going to talk a little bit about my background. I grew up in Big Spring. I worked at (INAUDIBLE) Refinery in the summers going to school.

KENNEDY (voice-over): For 20 years, Tim Dunn in Midland has been the leader of this Midland oil team.

DUNN: CrownQuest has now drilled about 800 Wolfberry wells. I've ended up making more money than I ever thought possible.

KENNEDY (voice-over): Then you have the Wilks brothers in Cisco.

FARRIS WILKS, POLITICAL DONOR: This is where I lived for the first six years of my life.

UNKNOWN: You've come a long way.

WILKS: Yeah, we have.

KENNEDY (voice-over): They used to be in the fracking business and they made billions.

WILKS: We didn't expect a lot of the good things that did happen.

LAVANDERA: I can hear the critics already saying, you can't expect me to believe that there's a handful of billionaires that can have this kind of influence of an entire state of nearly 30 million people.

KENNEDY: I don't think anybody can identify any other reason that that money is what's pushing Texas to the far right. These Texas districts are so big and sprawling. It's impossible to find somebody that everybody knows.

So, you have the West Texas money that comes in, hand picks a candidate that nobody has ever heard of, and they put $2 million into a campaign and they beat all the local candidates.

There is a difference between these millionaires. They've got a faith in values, component to them, too. (ON SCREEN TEXT): Tim Dunn and the Wilks brothers did not respond to CNN's multiple interview requests.

Sermons by Dunn and Farris Wilks, available online, cast some light on their beliefs.

CNN has also obtained older sermons that are no longer broadly accessible.

DUNN: There are forces in America today that are trying to shame marriage. Marriage was an honorable thing and it's trying to shame marriage, trying to shame men, trying to shame all kinds of things.

WILKS (voice-over): Male on male or female on female is against nature. So this lifestyle is a predatory lifestyle in that they need your children and straight people having kids to fulfill their sexual habits. They want your children.

LAVANDERA: For people who don't know Farris Wilks and Tim Dunn, what are they like?

LUTHER: Mr. Dunn is super down to earth, jeans and a -- like a button-up flannel shirt kind of guy. I did go to West Texas and talk to them because they wanted to see what I was all about.

LAVANDERA: So, you get put through the gauntlet of questions?

LUTHER: Absolutely because they want to make sure that I am who I say I am, and I do have those Christian values. They asked me about my childhood and what my morals are and what I believe in.

UNKNOWN: All right, your mark, get set.

UNKNOWN: Go!

(LAUGHTER)

LIBBY GONZALES, 11 YEARS OLD: I like to do swimming, karate, and I used to play soccer.

LAVANDERA: What do you want people who are passing these bills to know about transgender kids?

GONZALES: We're just normal kids that want and need normal lives.

FRANK GONZALES, FATHER OF LIBBY GONZALES: With the last bill in Texas that passed, H.B. 25, she's unable to play sports at her school.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): A Texas bill targeting LGBTQ plus children.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): The bill will ban transgender youth from participating on the sports team of the gender to which they identify.

F. GONZALES: At this age, this is a time where kids are trying to figure out what sports do I really enjoy playing and which sports am I really good at and promotes a healthy lifestyle, and she doesn't have that ability.

[23:10:01]

LAVANDERA: You've heard of these Texas billionaires, Tim Dunn, Farris Wilks.

RACHEL GONZALES, MOTHER OF LIBBY GONZALES: Yes.

LAVANDERA: The bill's author and primary sponsor, Representative Valoree Swanson, received campaign funding from Wilks, Dunn, and organizations they fund in her 2016 campaign. How involved do you think they are in these issues?

R. GONZALES: Money always talks. And if these legislators are getting their funding from them and their funding could potentially stop if they're not doing what these donors are asking them to do, then I think that speaks for itself.

LAVANDERA: Your senator here in the Dallas area --

UNKNOWN (voice-over): Senator Bob Hall is ranked as the top conservative in the Texas Senate.

LAVANDERA: -- received nearly half of his 2018 campaign funding from the Wilks and Dunn network.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): On June 22, 2022, the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a right-wing think tank where Tim Dunn is vice chairman, called on state legislators to prohibit gender-affirming medical care for transgender children in Texas.

Rep. Valoree Swanson and Sen. Bob Hall did not respond to CNN's multiple requests for comment.

LAVANDERA: When we return --

UNKNOWN: A friend of mine called me (INAUDIBLE) please don't do that interview.

LAVANDERA: Former employee to Tim Dunn.

UNKNOWN: You were kept under lock and key.

LAVANDERA: And conservative Texas lawmakers.

UNKNOWN: You can take an unqualified person and make them look like a legitimate office holder.

LAVANDERA: Speak out for the first time on camera.

Is this about being conservative or is it about control?

UNKNOWN: It's about control. Being conservative is not good enough. They dance to whatever tune Tim Dunn wants to play.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) LAVANDERA: Texas isn't the only state in the country where we've seen really conservative legislation take hold.

[23:15:00]

LAVANDERA: But what makes Texas different is that it's usually on the forefront of pushing that legislation. And even conservative Republicans here in Texas will tell you that this isn't all just about political ideology. There's something else happening here.

DUNN (voice-over): No matter what rules you grew up with, none of them are enforceable in God's kingdom.

LAVANDERA: This is the private school that Tim Dunn founded back in 1998.

This is Midland Bible Church. Tim Dunn has preached here many times.

DUNN: He has set us free from the law. There's no condemnation for those who walk according to the spirit.

LAVANDERA: We're here in Midland, Texas. It's part of your own district. It's also home to Tim Dunn.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Republican Sen. Kel Seliger has served in the Texas Senate since 2004.

He agreed to speak on camera about Tim Dunn's influence on the Texas legislature.

LAVANDERA: Your voting record is just as conservative as many of the people who might be supported by these West Texas billionaire. You voted for the abortion bill.

SELIGER: Uh-hmm.

LAVANDERA: You voted for the no permit gun carry bill.

SELIGER: Uh-hmm.

LAVANDERA: And the bill that limits the discussion of race and gender in classrooms, you voted for that as well.

SELIGER: Uh-hmm.

LAVANDERA: So why haven't Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks supported you? It seems like you're doing stuff that they would agree with.

SELIGER: My voting record is very conservative. Is it 100% conservative? No. They're 100% and you're either owned or you're not owned.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): In 2004, Tim Dun gave Sen. Kel Seliger's campaign $1,000.

LAVANDERA: In 2006, Dunn actually donated $500 to your senate campaign. And since then, Dunn has donated to Texas politicians and political action committees across the state. None of that money has gone to you.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Tim Dunn donated over $18 million to Texas politicians and PACs.

SELIGER: I met him in my first campaign and we talked. And I told him I would be open-minded toward what was his sole issue in 2004, which was taking public money and giving it to private schools. Once I looked at the legislation there, I couldn't support it, and so I guess that was alienating.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Largest Donors to Sen. Kel Seliger 2003-2022.

LAVANDERA: We went back and looked at some of your campaign donation numbers, and what stood out was, if you look over your entire political career as a state senator, your largest donor accounted for about 4% of your total campaign funding. Does that make you a different kind of public servant?

SELIGER: I would like to think so. You want to make sure people know that it's about them, not about money.

LAVANDERA: So, the way you describe this is, it almost sounds like, you know, Senator Joe Smith, to make up a name, if they've got a ton of money that is coming from these West Texas billionaires, those billionaires are really the elected official.

SELIGER: It is a Russian-style oligarchy, pure and simple. Really, really wealthy people who are willing to spend a lot of money to get policy made the way they want it, and they get it.

WILKS (voice-over): The cornerstones of our government are crumbling and starting to come apart. And it's because of the lack of morality, the lack of belief in our heavenly father.

LAVANDERA: For more than a decade, you were winning elections out here in East Texas.

UNKNOWN: Uh-hmm.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Former Republican Sen. Bob Deuell served in the Texas Senate from 2003 to 2015.

For the first time, he agreed to speak on camera about Tim Dunn's and Farris Wilks' influence on the Texas legislature.

DEUELL: I looked at myself more as a Reagan conservative, someone that was interested in good government and policy.

LAVANDERA: In all of your time in the Texas Senate, you never received any money from Tim Dunn, Farris Wilks --

DEUELL: Oh, no.

LAVANDERA: -- any of the PACs that they represent?

DEUELL: No.

LAVANDERA: And someone who says, look, I have a hard time believing that a couple of guys who are donating to candidates across the state can really have this much influence. I just don't buy it.

DEUELL: I had one senator literally open a book and said, I think I can vote for that because I haven't really voted against them on anything so far. What kind of public policy? I'm not going to name him, but, you know. Someone that's still there.

LAVANDERA: But that's what governing has become in Texas right now.

DEUELL: The scorecard voters. That's what we used to call them, the scorecard voters. They don't look at the merit of an issue.

LAVANDERA: What is the score card?

KENNEDY: You have the Dunns and the Wilks. They're going to put up a big money challenger against anybody who doesn't vote the way they want. And so, the Republicans in Texas, they're watching their scorecard. Am I conservative enough? You know, oh, my gosh, are the Wilks brothers going to send an opponent up against me?

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Since 2007, Texas State lawmakers have been graded on a scorecard that claims to measure their "fiscal responsibility" and "governing philosophy."

[23:20:00]

(ON SCREEN TEXT): The scorecard is published by Texans for fiscal responsibility, a non-profit organization chaired by Tim Dunn.

KENNEDY: They let everybody know before a vote, they say, this will be a scorecard vote. Records are going to be kept, you know, on how you voted on this.

They hand pick those bills. They publish a list on who's the most conservative based on their scorecard.

LAVANDERA: That scorecard still exists?

KENNEDY: They do at every election, every cycle.

LAVANDERA: We're driving through downtown Cisco.

ZACHARY MAXWELL, FORMER CHIEF OF STAFF FOR REP. MIKE LANG: I call it the heart of Texas. Austin is about three and a half hours southwest of us.

This is the Texans (INAUDIBLE) responsibility website where the scorecard, if you will, is published. This is my former boss, Mike Lang. In 2017 session, he got an A+. In 2019, he got an A-.

LAVANDERA: This is a scorecard that's going to show up in republican primary voter mailboxes come primary season.

MAXWELL: Right. So, this is Senate -- this is whenever I was still in the House. So, Jonathan Stickland, there you go, top 98.

LAVANDERA: He's no longer a lawmaker.

MAXWELL: Now, he is the treasurer of the PAC that Farris Wilks and Tim Dunn primarily funded with millions of dollars.

LAVANDERA: Defend Texas Liberty.

MAXWELL: Yes, Defend Texas Liberty PAC.

LAVANDERA: It's no coincidence that he has one of the highest ratings on this website for that particular year. And now, he works for them.

Former Rep. Mike Lang, he got campaign money from Farris Wilks and his PACs. You were his former campaign manager?

MAXWELL: Yes.

LAVANDERA: And then his chief-of-staff.

MAXWELL: Correct.

LAVANDERA: Before you went to work for Mike Lang, you used to work for Empower Texas, Tim Dunn's organization.

MAXWELL: I have to be very careful with what I say because I'm underneath a nondisclosure agreement myself.

LAVANDERA: The Wilks family is from Cisco. Did you know about them when you were growing up here?

MAXWELL: Yeah. We go way back to one of my really close friends, actually Dan's daughter, Farris's brother. Farris and his side of the family, and that's more the political side of the family. And then you've got Dan and his wife Stacy (ph), you know, they're more philanthropic, a little less on the political side. I think they kind of got into politics a little bit and was just, like, I don't think that's for us.

LAVANDERA: How well do Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks know each other?

MAXWELL: They have a relationship for sure, and I think that it has grown. I mean, if you look at some of their public expenditures, it's pretty obvious that they share a lot of the same beliefs and they share a lot of the same organizations that they fund.

LAVANDERA: Coming up --

UNKNOWN: They really believe that they've been given a mandate by God to take dominion over society.

LAVANDERA: You heard Farris Wilks talk like that?

UNKNOWN: Yes, they really believe that. (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[23:25:00]

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

LAVANDERA: Former Rep. Mike Lang, do you think he could have won without the money that he got from Farris Wilks and his --

MAXWELL: Absolutely not. There is no way. It takes money to run a campaign. And as you can see from Mike's donor list, it's not going to get you very far.

LAVANDERA: What kind of influence did Farris Wilks have over Mike Lang?

MAXWELL: Whenever he calls, he answers. There is a lot of control.

LAVANDERA: Farris Wilks and his people expected Mike Lang to vote the way they wanted him to vote every time? You're his chief of staff, how would that work?

MAXWELL: A lot of the time, the reps are controlled through other arms. So, for example, Texas Right to Life. They put out these vote recommendations.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): During Lang's campaign and first term in office, Texas Right to Life PAC received 58.58 percent of its funding from Tim Dunn and the Wilks brothers.

MAXWELL: Of course, no, they're just recommendations. They're just how we feel. I'm not telling you that you have to vote this way, but if you don't --

LAVANDERA: So, the tentacles of this political operation are long --

MAXWELL: Yes.

LAVANDERA: -- and can squeeze very tightly?

MAXWELL: Yes.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Former State Rep. Mike Lang did not respond to CNN's multiple requests for an interview.

MAXWELL: We're coming up on the Assembly of Yahweh, Farris's church.

WILKS (voice-over): We are not contending against flesh and blood, but against the world rulers of this present darkness.

BURTON: You got to be you. You start changing one time for people and it's over.

I went to seminary after being on city council for my fourth term. It's almost like hallowed ground here. After I graduated in 2013, founded an organization, Christians in Public Service, to help train public servant leaders who are Christians how to serve God's way. It had nothing to do with government. I'm just speaking around the country training, teaching --

LAVANDERA: From a conservative, theological viewpoint?

BURTON: Exactly. I don't know anything else.

LAVANDERA: You got invited to speak at the Christian Values Summit.

BURTON: Right. I became one of the speakers. I was on the circuit from 2015 through 2016. The pastor who was sponsoring -- he says, my brother-in-law supports it. I didn't know who his brother-in-law was. So, it turned out his brother-in-law was Farris Wilks. They speak and they speak on liberty and freedom, Christianity and government and all those things. I was doing it because we were all Christians and we all want America to be better.

We wouldn't be the country that we are today if it had not been for the involvement of the church.

We went to D.C., to CPAC.

Farris was always there. Very quiet man, very nice man. You would look at him and you would never think that he was a billionaire.

LAVANDERA: What made you want to break away from the Christian Values Summit?

BURTON: When I began to put it all together. Being theologically trained and having been in politics for so long in Texas -- I almost say this because I don't know how to say it.

[23:30:02]

BURTON: We know shit from shooter (ph) in Texas.

(LAUGHTER)

BURTON: They really believe that they've been given a mandate by God to take dominion over society and run all these areas.

And they call it the seven mountains or the seven pillars. Government, religion, education, the family, business, media, and arts and entertainment.

They believe that they have been given that mandate by God in Genesis 128. When God says, I give you dominion over the earth to have dominion over the fish and the sea and the birds and the air.

LAVANDERA: And by dominion, you mean --

BURTON: Take control.

LAVANDERA: And establish the rules by which we live --

BURTON: Yes. LAVANDERA: -- and play and --

BURTON: Yes. That's dominionism.

LAVANDERA: And you heard Farris Wilks talk like that?

BURTON: Yes, yes. They'd really believe that.

If I had not known theology better, I would have believed it, too. But that's not what God meant. That's not what God said. Dominion is not domination. He said, take dominion, which means actually caretaker, manager, not overtake and dominate. It's a theological error, but it's one that they operate from and one that they really, really believe.

WILKS: Our families are under attack and our place as men and leaders and our home is under attack.

DAVID BROCKMAN, ADJUNCT PROFESSOR OF RELIGION, TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY: Dominion has a much broader agenda than Christian nationalism.

LAVANDERA: What is Christian nationalism?

BROCKMAN: Christian nationalism is a religious and political ideology that believes that America's founders intended for the United States to be an explicitly Christian nation governed and guided by biblical Christian principles, that the nation has departed from those principles and that it should become a Christian nation again.

DUNN: America chose God as king over a tyrant. Today, the choice is still before us.

LAVANDERA: Tim Dunn, Farris Wilks, is it fair to say that they're Christian nationalists?

BROCKMAN: Those sermons suggest that they hold certain Christian nationalist beliefs, and they're putting their money to support Christian nationalism.

WILKS (voice-over): We're seeing a trend in our nation that will force us in the Christian community to be sure of what our values are going forward, because I think that we will be persecuted. And so, it's time that we stand up.

LAVANDERA: When you say Christian nation, I take that to mean you don't believe in separation of church and state.

BROCKMAN: Some Christian nationalists say church and state separation is a myth. Rafael Cruz --

RAFAEL CRUZ, PROTESTANT PREACHER: Separation of church and state is not in the Constitution. It's not in the declaration.

BROCKMAN: The pastor, father of U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz talked about separation of church and state as being a one-way wall of separation, that is it's meant to keep the government out of religion but not to keep religion out of government.

CRUZ: The word of God tells us, we should be having an influence upon government, every area of life. It is about time that we draw a line in the sand and we say, no more, we will take it no more.

BROCKMAN: That's not church and state separation. That is Christian domination.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): The Wilks brothers have donated $25 million to media organizations, think tanks, law firms, activist groups, and speakers I the Christian nationalist movement since 2011.

LAVANDERA: Coming up --

UNKNOWN: They want to destroy the public school system as we know it.

LAVANDERA: Had you ever been targeted like that in your education?

UNKNOWN: Never, never.

LAVANDERA: And later --

Do you think that their vision is to take their political agenda beyond Texas?

SEN. TED CRUZ (R-TX): God isn't done with America yet.

UNKNOWN: Absolutely.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[23:35:00]

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WILKS (voice-over): How do you protect your children and educate them at the same time? The people that are supposed to be the shepherds are not teaching the truth.

WHITFIELD: Every school, I've been a principal. I've been the first Black principal. Those kids are awesome, they are amazing. This is (INAUDIBLE). This is the PTSA, had an ice cream social, like meeting new principal.

LAVANDERA: You were the first Black principle of Colleyville Heritage High School. Do you think about what that means?

WHITFIELD: I didn't really think about it a lot. What I knew, there is so much to the job. It was just hit the ground running.

LAVANDERA: When did it all turn?

WHITFIELD: Over the course of the last school year, that's when things changed.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): In the summer, a former board candidate accused Whitfield of advocating for critical race theory as principal. Whitfield was placed on leave after the accusations.

UNKNOWN: The school board voted to not renew Whitfield's contract, meaning he's officially out as principal at Colleyville Heritage.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): Whitfield says this all started back in the summer of 2020 when he penned a heartfelt note to the school community after George Floyd's murder.

LAVANDERA: Can you read some of the letter for us?

WHITFIELD: Dear family, I trust this message finds you safe and well as I type these words. It's 4:30 in the morning and I can't sleep. I encourage us all to not grow weary in the battle against systemic racism, commit to being anti-racist. While there are great obstacles to face, please know that I am with you on this journey towards conciliation of our nation. Sincerely, James.

LAVANDERA: Had you ever been targeted like that in your education career?

WHITFIELD: Never, never. Never had any issues, any concerns. My time in the district was great up until that July 26 school board meeting.

[23:40:00]

STETSON CLARK, FORMER SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATE: I was first made aware of mid Mr. Whitfield's extreme views on race when a concerned friend of mine shared with me a letter.

LAVANDERA: Stetson Clark, school board candidate, was the first person to call for you to be fired?

WHITFIELD: Right

(ON SCREEN TEXT): True Texas Project, a local activist group, paid for advertisements supporting Stetson Clark's school board campaign.

The group's largest donors are Tim Dunn and PACs he funded.

CLARK: Because of these extreme views, I ask that a full review of Mr. Whitfield's tenure in our district be examined and that his contract be terminated effective immediately.

LAVANDERA: He described systemic racism as a conspiracy theory.

CLARK: Encouraging all members of our community to become revolutionaries by becoming antiracist. He is encouraging the disruption and destruction of our districts.

WHITFIELD: You want that kind of person who lacks that level of understanding to be responsible for making decisions that are in the best interests of kids and educators on a daily basis?

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Stetson Clark did not respond to CNN's request for comment. LAVANDERA: I wanted to read this other letter. There's this group called the Texas Public Policy Foundation, and they wrote a letter on November 8th of 2021. And the vice chairman has been Tim Dunn. It's a right-wing think tank, and I wanted to read part of it to you.

It says, education freedom -- setting the captives free -- would break the woke stranglehold of critical race theory, queer theory, sexual anarchy, and hate America curricula. Bad education will lose funding and that means the indoctrination will not survive.

When you hear that kind of language about Texas public schools, what's your reaction?

WHITFIELD: It really has nothing to do with critical race theory. It has nothing to do with a lot of the things that they're spewing. They want to disrupt and destroy public schools because they would much rather have schools that are faith-based.

DUNN: The Bible is a book mainly about politics. But the most important thing to do is don't surrender. It doesn't matter what they tell us. If we stand and we are vigilant, we will win.

WILKS (voice-over): For our children, we must be sure that they know how to follow toward teaching rather than social conscience. When the Bible plainly teaches one thing and our culture teaches another, what do our children need to know what to do.

LANG: Good afternoon. I'm Mike Lang, House representative from H.D. 60. I tell you what, oil and gas is great for our school districts.

LAVANDERA: Did Farris Wilks ever direct former State Representative Mike Lang on how to vote on any specific legislation regarding public schools, for example?

MAXWELL: Farris would make sure that Mike is towing the line, make sure that he's supporting specific legislation. Anything that was in any sort of way propping up the current system of public school was not an okay stance to have.

What did you do in school?

LAVANDERA: The goal is to --

MAXWELL: The goal is to knock the legs out from under it, 100%. He has gotten direct phone calls saying, hey, you know, just want to make sure that you're on the right path, from Farris.

LAVANDERA: When we return --

Do you think the average voter in this state understands the magnitude of what this political movement is pushing?

MAXWELL: No, they don't.

LAVANDERA: Clearly, you knew then you were a target?

UNKNOWN: That's the law of the jungle now in Texas.

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[23:45:00]

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LAVANDERA: There are more than 17 million registered voters in Texas, but less than two million people voted in the 2022 republican primary.

Do you vote in primaries?

UNKNOWN: I voted early voting.

LAVANDERA: Have you ever heard of Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks?

UNKNOWN: No.

LAVANDERA: And if I told you that they are West Texas billionaires who donate millions of dollars to candidates all over the state, would that surprise you?

UNKNOWN: No.

LAVANDERA: Does it bother you in any way?

UNKNOWN: Yes.

LAVANDERA: How so?

UNKNOWN: Can you help the little people?

LUTHER: Can you talk about the influence that those two men have on the state's republican politics?

LUTHER: I think what you're getting at is, what do they want for this money? Yeah, nothing. He wants me to do what I say that I represent.

LAVANDERA: Did you vote for Shelley Luther?

UNKNOWN: I did.

LAVANDERA: Wilks and Dunn have donated the lion's share of the campaign financing for Shelley Luther's campaign. So, I'm wondering, does that bother you in any way or does it influence how you vote?

UNKNOWN: If I knew more about them, possibly, if it was bad, but no because I think all of them get money from somewhere.

LAVANDERA: Do you just get inundated with these flyers in the mail all the time?

UNKNOWN: I've gotten -- I don't know how many fliers in the mail and emails on my phone.

LAVANDERA: So, the Texas scorecard scores candidates on who's the most conservative 100% and they kind of go down the line. Did you know that it was a West Texas billionaire that was behind that scorecard?

UNKNOWN: No, I did not.

LAVANDERA: Does that make you question it at all or make you weary of it in any way or does it make you embrace it a little bit more?

UNKNOWN: Now that I know, it might. Yeah, it probably would affect me more. I should have found that out, I guess.

LAVANDERA: I don't mean to make you feel --

(LAUGHTER)

UNKNOWN: No, I don't because, like I said, I did all the information gathering I could.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Shelley Luther lost to Rep. Reggie Smith in the republican primary for House district 62.

Luther received 41.3 percent of votes cast.

SCOTT BRADDOCK, EDITOR OF QUORUM REPORT: This is the Texas House of Representative. One hundred and fifty members from all over the state come in to make the laws we all live under for 30 million people.

LAVANDERA: How long have you covered Texas politics?

BRADDOCK: About 20 years. They don't have to win the election to have moved the needle in Texas.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Defend Texas Liberty PAC, funded mainly by Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks, donated to 25 Texas politicians in the 2022 republican primaries.

12 won.

[23:49:57]

BRADDOCK: Let's say you're a Republican representative in the Texas House and you get a well-funded challenger, and that challenger is funded by some of these West Texas billionaires, and therefore, you have a tough race, you will adopt some positions that you otherwise might not have adopted.

LAVANDERA: They force Republicans to the right, whether they win or lose.

BRADDOCK: That's right!

LAVANDERA: When Bob Hall runs against you in 2014, did you know much about him?

DEUELL: Well, we did our research, but basically money from outside the district, all this West Texas money made him into a viable candidate.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): Bob Deuell turned his back on life and on disabled patients. Proudly paid for by Texas Right to Life.

LAVANDERA: Texas Right to Life spent over $150,000 on mailers, voter guides and political consultants for Bob Hall who ran against you and beat your back in 2014.

DEUELL: Pro-life issue is very important to Republicans, and all of a sudden, one of the older, you know, established pro-life groups is saying that I'm not pro-life, you know, which is ridiculous.

LAVANDERA: I just want to be clear about how conservative of a senator you were. You co-authored an abortion bill in 2013 that was considered among the strictest in the country. The bill became law. I think it closed 22 of 41 abortion clinics in Texas at the time. In 2016, the Supreme Court said your provision in particular was so restrictive, it was actually unconstitutional. I'm not bringing that up to --

DEUELL: That's fine.

LAVANDERA: I'm not bringing that up to debate the merits of the bill or any policy but it's just to ask, why would a group called Texas Right to Life then turn around and try to knock you out as a legislator?

DEUELL: Because I didn't do what they wanted me to do on the end of life issue.

LAVANDERA: What was it about your end of life bill that caused you so many problems?

DEUELL: Well, they wanted, no matter what the patient's condition is, if the family said treat them even though it might be very cruel to the patient, to do so.

LAVANDERA: That was too extreme?

DEUELL: Yeah. I'm pro-life, but one or two issues and they turn on you.

LAVANDERA: That 2014 election, you end up losing about 300 votes.

DEUELL: Three hundred votes, yeah.

LAVANDERA: And the year after your lost, Wilks gave Texas Right to Life PAC 80% of their money.

You had two close elections, both against Michael Canon, the second was in 2018. And Canon received more than half of his money from Wilks and Dunn. And you won that by about 15,000 votes to almost push you into primary runoff there.

SELIGER: Right.

LAVANDERA: Clearly, you knew then you were a target.

SELIGER: It was no mystery and no surprise. That's the law of the jungle now in Texas. And that's why a lot of Republican House members, the majority of Republican Senate members just -- they dance to whatever tune Tim Dunn wants to play.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Sen. Kel Seliger is retiring from the legislature after 18 years representing Senate district 31.

Kevin Sparks, a Midland oilman and Tim Dunn's longtime colleague, won the district's republican nomination.

Sparks will run unopposed in November.

LAVANDERA: When Ted Cruz ran for president in 2016, Farris Wilks and his brother, Dan, gave $15 million. Cruz only had $23 million in his Super PAC at that time. Do you think that their vision is to take their political agenda beyond Texas?

MAXWELL: Absolutely. I think they're starting to push more local and try to build up.

LAVANDERA: School board races, city council races, county commissioner races, they're not as sexy as the statewide Senate race or a presidential campaign --

MAXWELL: No.

LAVANDERA: -- but those are the offices that have far more influence on people's lives.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Sen. Ted Cruz said in a statement to CNN, "It's a shame that CNN is focusing their time and energy on demonizing people of faith. Dan Wilks and Farris Wilks are the epitome of the American dream. They are good friends, and our country is stronger because of the tireless work they do."

R. GONZALES: Do you want your own cards or are you going to be on my team? Don't look at my cards.

GONZALES: I have no idea why people don't understand that I'm just a girl, an 11-year-old girl living in Texas with amazing hair.

(LAUGHTER)

LAVANDERA: In December of 2021, on a website called Texas Scorecard, this is an organization Tim Dunn launched several years ago and he remains on the board of directors, there is this article titled "Cowards in the Pulpit." And in the last section, the author writes -- quote -- "This is a time that requires physical boldness, not spiritualized cowardice. We need strong pastors. We need shepherds in the pulpits willing to kill the wolves, literally."

It was one of Tim Dunn's top political advisers that wrote that. What do you think "kill the wolves" literally means?

R. GONZALES: I'm scared to even hypothesize.

F. GONZALES: It makes me think of the crusades and the dark ages.

LAVANDERA: I imagine from where you sit, maybe someone views you as the wolves.

R. GONZALES: Sounds like it.

[23:55:00]

F. GONZALES: Sounds like it. It's strange to think that. It really is.

LAVANDERA: Do you worry that it's just an escalation of the rhetoric, it's an escalation of the anger in our politics, and ultimately, that could mean something very bad for you, guys?

F. GONZALES: When you use inflammatory speech like that, it riles the base. Having an enemy is a strong way to unite people and it seems like that's what they're trying to do.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): The author, Michael Quinn Sullivan, wrote on social media, "The piece wasn't about LGBTQ stuff. The comment was about weak lefty pastors."

LAVANDERA: We have been trying to reach Farris Wilks and Tim Dunn for weeks. We're going to Farris's office here in Cisco, Texas.

UNKNOWN (voice-over): I don't think he would have any comment, anyway. But thank you for reaching out.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Dan and Farris Wilks did not respond to our multiple interview requests. Both men last spoke to CNN in 2016, after donating to Ted Cruz's Super PAC.

In the statement, Dan said, in part, "We need a true leader in Washington. A leader that will stand up for biblical morals."

Farris said, in part, "Our country was founded on the idea that our rights come from the creator, not the government."

LAVANDERA: This is CrownQuest, operating Tim Dunn's business, and we are going to go inside and see if we can track him down to talk to us. They took my name and number down. They're going to get the message to the assistant.

(ON SCREEN TEXT): Tim Dunn defended his political spending in a 2018 op-ed in the Midland Reporter-Telegram. He wrote, "It is important for taxpayers and voters to understand that the primary outside group the insiders fear is us - the educated and motivated voters."

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