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Texas' comptroller is the state's top accountant. The candidates are campaigning on culture wars

A protestor holds a trans flag at demonstration on Tuesday Jan. 13, 2026 in San Antonio.
Salgu Wissmath
/
for The Texas Tribune
A protestor holds a trans flag at demonstration on Tuesday Jan. 13, 2026 in San Antonio. 

This election season, Don Huffines to end woke ideology. Christi Craddick vowed to 鈥溾 on keeping boys out of girls鈥 sports in Texas. And Kelly Hancock has touted his for President Donald Trump鈥檚 immigration crackdown.

So one would be forgiven for not realizing the three Republicans are running to be the Texas comptroller 鈥 the state鈥檚 top accountant, whose main responsibilities include collecting taxes, writing checks and predicting the state鈥檚 revenue so the Legislature can decide how to spend it.

鈥淭his is an office that is boring,鈥 said Jon Taylor, a political science professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio. 鈥淚t is supposed to be more administrative, more low-key.鈥

The state agency has received increased attention since the Legislature last year added a beyond its fiscal ones: implementing a new $1 billion program for parents to send their children to private schools using .

Historically an apolitical office, the GOP primary for the open seat is a hotly competitive and colored by the same culture war issue that have animated more high-profile races up and down the ballot. The attention on those issues outside the office鈥檚 main purview, reflects what candidates think will resonate with Texas Republican voters who have elected an increasingly conservative crop of state leaders in recent years. But it also opens a window into how whoever wins the contest might try to change the office and its traditional responsibilities should they occupy it.

Ultimately, decisions about how Texas spends money, funds state agencies and cuts budgets or staff are made by the Legislature.

But Hancock, the acting controller, told The Texas Tribune he wants the agency to have more audit powers to probe fraud and waste, and keep local municipalities 鈥 like cities and school districts 鈥 in check with state laws.

All three contenders have vowed to use the agency in a similar fashion, embracing the GOP electorate鈥檚 zeal for tackling government waste in the vein of Elon Musk鈥檚 federal DOGE effort.

They鈥檝e imbued their talk about dollars and cents with promises to go after a variety of social conservatives鈥 worries like terrorist organizations, illegal immigrants and Muslims who they claim are imperiling the future of Texas.

In a , Huffines, a former state senator, encouraged people to vote for him 鈥渋f you want a comptroller who will eliminate woke DEI from government.鈥 He told the Tribune that he has long fought for these values and that his opponents 鈥渁re playing catch up.鈥

鈥淚 was on the front lines of this fight when it was difficult,鈥 said Huffines, whose unsuccessful gubernatorial bid for the Republican nomination in 2022 .

Hancock, as acting comptroller, has claimed victory for already ending DEI in some state contracts after from a program that aims to boost businesses owned by economically disadvantaged groups.

鈥淲e鈥檝e delivered results at the speed of business,鈥 Hancock said in a statement. 鈥淭exans deserve a Comptroller who is already doing the job, understands the responsibility of the office, and has proven they can deliver results.鈥

Meanwhile, Craddick, a railroad commissioner, made a that Texans 鈥渟houldn鈥檛 have to check the fine print to make sure their tax dollars aren鈥檛 funding radical ideology.鈥

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 gender theory in schools or climate alarmism disguised as infrastructure, I鈥檒l say it plainly: I won鈥檛 let Texas taxpayers bankroll nonsense,鈥 Craddick said in the social media post.

Craddick鈥檚 campaign said she was not available for an interview. In one social media post, she campaigning on culture war issues and doubled down.

鈥淚鈥檒l say it again just so I鈥檓 clear: boys don鈥檛 belong in girls鈥 sports. I鈥檓 also pro-life, pro-2A, anti-DEI, and strongly support [President Trump鈥檚] efforts to deport those who are here illegally,鈥 Craddick wrote. 鈥淎s Comptroller, I will do everything within my power to uphold these values.鈥

Despite lofty promises to DOGE Texas, the comptroller鈥檚 office has little authority to investigate waste, in part by design through almost three decades of political realignment amid Republican domination of state government.

In the 1990s, former Comptroller John Sharp, a Democrat, was lauded nationally for the state鈥檚 performance review program that uncovered state government waste and abuse and led to state lawmakers adopting dozens of recommendations to cut costs and inefficiencies.

In 2003, however, the Legislature of the performance review authority after Sharp鈥檚 successor, a Republican, began clashing with then-Gov. Rick Perry. The authority was given to the Legislative Budget Board, made up of leaders from the House and Senate.

The comptroller seat is open for the first time in more than a decade, after former Comptroller Glenn Hegar last year to become the next chancellor of the Texas A&M University System.

Gov. Greg Abbott , a former state senator from North Richland Hills, to finish the remainder of the tenure. The winner of the Republican primary will face the winner of the Democratic primary this November, though a Democrat hasn鈥檛 won a statewide office in more than three decades.

Hegar, a former state senator, spent his first two terms . But that changed as he campaigned for his third term, when the state鈥檚 then-CFO started reaching for new tools in his office to try to punish left-leaning county leaders and bat down progressive policies.

In 2022, he threatened to block Harris County鈥檚 revenue streams after accusing officials of shrinking the constables鈥 budget in what he described as an apparent 鈥渄efund the police鈥 effort. That year he also banned the state from doing business with financial firms with environmental policies that didn鈥檛 support the oil and gas industry.

Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said the campaigns in the comptroller election aren鈥檛 reflective of the day-to-day responsibilities of the office. To be sure, the office conducts comprehensive research and analysis on a variety of measures, which observers note a new leader could focus on partisan issues.

鈥淣o matter what the office is you鈥檙e running for, you make the argument that you are dependable and solid,鈥 Jillson said. 鈥淵ou are a fighter on these social issues like DEI, transgender rights, Islam, Sharia Law, which have nothing to do with what you鈥檙e going to do if you鈥檙e elected comptroller except that you can use your megaphone.鈥

Disclosure: Southern Methodist University, Texas A&M University System and University of Texas at San Antonio have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete .

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