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Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price Announces Run For Tarrant County Judge

Betsy Price seated and talking to crowd at Texas Tribune Event
Thomas Meredith
/
For The Texas Tribune
Outgoing Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price is running for Tarrant County judge.

One of the last remaining Republican mayors of a big city is jumping back in to the political arena after not seeking reelection.

Outgoing Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price is running for Tarrant County judge in 2022, attempting a swift return to power in one of the state's most politically important areas.

"Not only do I have the fire and passion to continue serving the good people of our county, but my decades of business and public servant experience — both as Tarrant County Tax Assessor and Mayor of Fort Worth — make me an ideal and qualified candidate for this position critical to both our present and future," Price said in a statement Thursday morning. She added that she would "make a more formal and official announcement in the coming months."

The news of Price's decision comes two days after the current county judge, Republican Glen Whitley, announced he would not run for reelection. He has since 2007 been at the helm of the county, the third most populous in the state and a historically Republican place where Democrats have been making inroads recently.

Whitley said in a statement that he "enthusiastically" endorses Price to succeed him.

Price chose not to seek reelection as mayor this year after five terms. Her former chief of staff, Mattie Parker, won the runoff to replace Price on Saturday, defeating Deborah Peoples, chairwoman of the county Democratic Party, by 7 percentage points.

The county judge campaign is a quick turnaround for Price but not entirely unexpected. When she announced in January that she would not run for reelection as mayor, she kept open the possibility she could remain in public service.

Price will not be unopposed in the March primary for county judge. Before Whitley made his retirement official, Tim O'Hare, former chairman of the county Republican Party, announced he was running for county judge. He launched with a list of GOP endorsements including current county GOP Chairman Rick Barnes, county Sheriff Bill Waybourn, and five state representatives from the area. O'Hare has since rolled out endorsements from U.S. Reps. Beth Van Duyne of Irving and Michael Burgess of Lewisville.

In addition to Whitley, Price's campaign said she was starting her county judge bid with the endorsements of local elected officials including Arlington Mayor Jeff Williams and North Richland Hills Mayor Oscar Trevino.

While Democrats do not have any known candidates for county judge yet, they can be expected to seriously contest the race after the county went their way at the top of the ticket in the last two statewide elections. The Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in 2018, Beto O'Rourke, won the county, while President Joe Biden carried it two years later.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2021/06/10/betsy-price-tarrant-county-judge/.

Patrick Svitek is a reporter for the Texas Tribune. He previously worked for the Houston Chronicle's Austin bureau. He graduated in 2014 from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He originally is from Fort Wayne, Indiana.