So the first serious write-in Republican candidate has emerged in Tom DeLay's old district . When I heard that "David Wallace" had thrown his hat into the ring, I was looking forward to reading dense, narratively experimental campaign literature, featuring erudite and increasingly loony footnotes. But apparently the David Wallace in question is the mayor of Tom DeLay's home town of "Sugar Land," which is not a magical realm of giant candy canes and chocolate rivers but is apparently in Texas somewhere. (City nickname, according to Wikipedia, which is never wrong: "The land of sugar.")
The Man Who Would Be Hammer
The Man Who Would Be Hammer
The Man Who Would Be Hammer
So the first serious write-in Republican candidate has emerged in Tom DeLay's old district . When I heard that "David Wallace" had thrown his hat into the ring, I was looking forward to reading dense, narratively experimental campaign literature, featuring erudite and increasingly loony footnotes. But apparently the David Wallace in question is the mayor of Tom DeLay's home town of "Sugar Land," which is not a magical realm of giant candy canes and chocolate rivers but is apparently in Texas somewhere. (City nickname, according to Wikipedia, which is never wrong: "The land of sugar.")