Democrat Joins Gubernatorial race, Says He’ll Spend $10 Million in Primary
Houston hair executive Farouk Shami says his focus is stimulating economy.
By Corrie MacLaggan, American Statesman
Houston hair care executive Farouk Shami said Tuesday that he’s definitely running for governor and that he’ll put in $10 million for the Democratic primary alone.
“I am in,†said Shami, 66, a political novice whose company sells CHI hair-straightening irons and BioSilk hair products. “I am 100 percent sure I will be the next governor of Texas.â€
Democrat Farouk Shami says he’ll put in $10 million.
For Capitol watchers who weren’t paying close attention to Shami’s declarations in recent months that he was thinking of running, his promise of $10 million of his own money might make them listen.
“Nobody else can begin to say that,†said Chuck Herring, president of the Central Texas Democratic Forum, which hosted Shami at a lunch meeting Tuesday.
As of July, the leading fundraiser in the Democratic primary for governor, former U.S. Ambassador Tom Schieffer, had $454,000 on hand. In the GOP race, Gov. Rick Perry and U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison had $9.3 million and $12.5 million, respectively.
Shami, a native of Palestine who arrived in the United States in 1965 and likes to say he’s “living the American dream,†said he’s planning a formal campaign announcement Nov. 19 at CHI USA in Houston.
Shami, founder and chairman of Farouk Systems Inc., said he’s not looking for fame or money and that he’d accept a salary of $1 as governor. (Gov. Rick Perry earns $150,000 a year and accepts about $115,000 of that, a spokeswoman said.)
“The people of Texas are really tired of career politicians who talk and work for special interest groups,†Shami said.
Shami, who recently announced that his company is bringing 1,200 manufacturing jobs from South Korea and China to Texas, said his campaign’s top priority is stimulating the economy, particularly with green jobs. He said that, as governor, he would create about 150,000 jobs by opening factories that would hire Texans to produce solar panels.
Shami “has a sincerity and a genuineness that are very attractive,†Herring said. “He’s untrained politically — that’s clear as well.â€
Andy Brown, chairman of the Travis County Democratic Party, said an Austin reception for Shami on Monday evening drew people Brown hadn’t seen at party functions, particularly members of Austin’s Arab American community. “If his candidacy brings new communities to the active Democratic party structure, I think that’s a great thing,†Brown said.
Feras Mousilli, president of the Austin chapter of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, was also at the reception and called Shami refreshing.
“Obviously, he’s got a tremendous uphill battle ahead of him—he doesn’t have a typical name, the look, the background of most career politicians,†Mousilli said. But he said he found it appealing that Shami is not indebted to PACs or lobbyists.
“It’s rare to find somebody without those kind of ghosts in their closet.â€
11-48
2009
864 views
views
0
comments