FORT WORTH, Texas (AP)  A tea party leader is favored to    become Texas' lieutenant governor. A     Ted Cruz-endorsed newcomer is inching closer to replacing        Democrat Wendy Davis in the statehouse. On television,    millions of dollars in attack ads have given established    Republican incumbents all they can handle.  
    For all the talk of Texas growing competitive for     Democrats in 2016 and beyond, GOP voters are poised to make    a harder turn right on Tuesday.  
    Though the tea party has sputtered this year in elections    around the country, Texas' conservative insurgents are the    front-runners in Republican primary runoffs for major statewide    offices and positioned to bolster their ranks in the    Legislature. Victories now and again in November would signal    an aggressive new slate of Republican priorities  from    tightened spending to expanded gun rights  after Gov.     Rick Perry leaves office in January.  
    Of the four statewide GOP races, none have been nastier than    state Sen.     Dan Patrick trying to oust longtime Lt. Gov.     David Dewhurst. Republicans are also nominating an attorney    general to replace     Greg Abbott, who faces Davis in the governor's race, and    candidates for nearly a dozen statehouse races.  
    "We're supposed to be this very conservative state, and the    people in Texas are, yet our Legislature doesn't always reflect    that," said     Republican Konnie Burton, a tea party leader running for    Davis' state senate seat in Fort Worth. "We are going in a    different direction than many states, but I don't think we're    the only ones. We're probably just louder. We're Texans,    right?"  
    For Democrats, it's a less lively runoff. Their main decision    is choosing a     U.S. Senate nominee to serve as token opposition to    Republican John Cornyn, and Democrats have spent much of the    primary trying to dissuade their voters from picking     Kesha Rogers, who's called for impeaching President        Barack Obama and still forced a runoff against Dallas    dental mogul     David Alameel.  
    But most attention  and money  has been on the Republican    ballot.  
    Dewhurst, who finished a distant second in March, has spent $5    million of his own fortune in trying to mount a comeback and    shed accusations that he's become too entrenched and moderate    after 11 years in office. But Patrick, founder of the state    Senate's tea party caucus, has attracted more outside support     a $4 million haul in the last two months, impressive even by    Texas' political fundraising standards.  
    Candidates have wooed GOP voters by saying Texas can do more to    expand gun rights, restrict access to abortions and tackle    illegal immigration. Tea party-backed candidates have also    admonished the Republican-controlled Legislature as financially    reckless and vowed to slash economic incentives they deride as    corporate welfare.  
    That troubles     Bill Hammond, a Republican and president of the influential        Texas Association of Business, who said he's worried about    Texas losing a competitive edge in luring companies and the GOP    turning away Hispanic voters.  
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Tea party poised for big wins in Texas GOP runoffs