We're still reading cabrito entrails from the session just past.
For Abbott and other top Republicans, the 87th legislative session was all about political posturing ahead of a primary. https://t.co/qJZvP7zfzS
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) June 19, 2021
And reacting to Governor Wheels' latest temper tantrum/diversion.
'Half-baked': @GregAbbott_TX scorched by #Austin American @Statesman for 'ludicrous' plan to finish Trump's border wall https://t.co/QVTzyghyb7 #TXLege #ATX
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) June 20, 2021
Setting aside how crazy Texas politics is, could you imagine how American reporters would cover a foreign leader halting pay for the entire legislative branch? https://t.co/bS084o6myE
— Zach Despart (@zachdespart) June 19, 2021
250k households in Austin and San Antonio combined owed an average of $600 for past-due bills as of late May.
— Texas Poor People's Campaign (@texas_ppc) June 20, 2021
When @GovAbbott vetoed the #txlege’s budget, he was trying to distract from this crisis.@UniteThePoor @Kairos_Center #txlegehttps://t.co/j2Ijc1ZWDe
As well as the rest of the nutty Tejas fringe.
Thumbs: Ivory Hecker leads another week of Texas crazy https://t.co/xCLOx3xWW2
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) June 19, 2021
Here's a few posts from yesterday's rally at the Capitol.
Welp. @BetoORourke is supposed to be holding a voting rights rally at the south steps of the Texas Capitol in a few hours and it looks like police cordoned off the steps today? pic.twitter.com/LFUo55nvoK
— Ashley Lopez (@AshLopezRadio) June 20, 2021
Greg Abbott is never going to be above petty maneuvering.
Former U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke joined lawmakers at the Texas State Capitol on Sunday for a voter outreach rally. Full video here:
— KENS 5 (@KENS5) June 21, 2021
https://t.co/SWrvj20U7E
The Texas Signal sums up the next moves.
These legislators bought us some time. The question is what do we do with it. -@BetoORourke #sb7 #hr4 #txlege pic.twitter.com/tujUCQn9Tn
— Texas Signal (@TexasSignal) June 20, 2021
I do not favor passage of the For The People Act because of its onerous penalties to minor parties.
HR 1, also known as the “For The People Act,” is sold as a way to get money out of politics and to protect voters, but it contains several poison pills for democracy and opposition parties like the Green Party. Most alarmingly, HR1 quintuples the amount of money Green presidential campaigns will be required to raise to qualify for federal matching funds: from $5,000 in each of 20 states to $25,000 per state. Other poison pills in HR1 would:
1. Abolish the general election campaign block grants that parties can access by winning at least 5% of the vote in the previous presidential election. HR1 would eliminate this provision that was created to give a fair shot to alternative parties that demonstrate significant public support.
2. Replace the general election block grants (where each qualified candidate receives a set, lump sum of public funding for campaign expenses) with matching funds through Election Day -- a huge step backwards for public campaign finance reform -- using the above-mentioned criteria designed to squeeze out alternative parties and independent candidates.
3. Eliminate the limits on donations and expenditures candidates can receive and make. What kind of campaign finance reform is that?
4. Inflate the amount of money national party committees can give to candidates from $5000 to $100 million, an astonishing increase of 1999900% that would give party bosses virtually unlimited power to flood elections with big money.
And Joe Manchin's efforts to sell it -- and anything else -- to his good friends in the Senate Republican Caucus got caught in Mitch McConnell's wedge politics.
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO) says when Stacey Abrams endorsed Sen. Joe Manchin's (D-WV) voting rights proposal, "it became the Stacey Abrams substitute, not the Joe Manchin substitute." pic.twitter.com/0tdvvLmwGw
— The Recount (@therecount) June 17, 2021
Joe Manchin asked McConnell for assistance in recruiting Republicans to support creating a Jan. 6 commission: “I said, ‘Mitch, I need your help on this, I can’t continue to do it all by myself.’ And he said, ‘Joe, that’s just not good for our politics.’” https://t.co/v5HAPIMxpT
— James Hohmann (@jameshohmann) June 20, 2021
Opinion | Wedge politics https://t.co/9oX1qri9Bz
— Michael de Adder (@deAdder) June 18, 2021
And we already know that Texas Democrats can't play any fairer when it comes to the Texas Green Party than the TXGOP plays with them.
Democrats suing to prevent Greens from being on the ballot is just as bad as Republicans suppressing the vote with voter ID laws. Both parties have contempt for true Democracy. If you think only one party is the problem, you're probably in a cult.
— Prof Zenkus (@anthonyzenkus) June 21, 2021
So as I mentioned, it's best for TexDems and best for democracy if they have DOJ sue, get the courts to suspend the laws the TXGOP passes until the SCOTUS rules (which will be a year from now at the earliest), and hope for the best. In the meantime, do what they should have been doing all along: blockwalking, voter registration, GOTV. The Pukes did that during the pandemic, after all.
And think about replacing that tired old Padron chairman with a Black woman.
Here's a few scenes from Juneteenth.
I went to Galveston, the origin site of Juneteenth, to see this beautiful mural called "Absolute Equality." That promise, in Granger's General Order No. 3, is not yet fulfilled. But, as a Black Texan, I will keep celebrating Juneteenth unapologetically. https://t.co/0aAZo1vShg
— Erin E. Evans (@heyerinevans) June 19, 2021
You can see our full 'Juneteenth: 1865-2021' special here. https://t.co/ZrB4Fk2zot @JacksonLeeTX18 @JohnCornyn @RepAlGreen @SylvesterTurner @LinaHidalgoTX @RepSylviaGarcia @GovAbbott @SenTedCruz @GFColeman
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) June 18, 2021
This program was expertly done, with both Houston and Galveston's history, conversations with activists, and a lot more you did not know. Highly recommended viewing. And here's a blast from Dallas' past celebrations.
Footage of Juneteenth parades and events from 1979-1991 from the KXAS-TV station in Fort Worth, Texas.
— BLACK ARCHIVES (@blackarchivesco) June 19, 2021
This compiled footage features b-roll and news clips held at the UNT Library, Special Collections. pic.twitter.com/4l91vSqBEU
One of the chapters in HOW THE WORD IS PASSED describes a trip I took to Galveston, TX to spend Juneteenth on the same land where enslaved Texans had learned of their freedom. It was a remarkable experience. You can read an excerpt in the @parisreview: https://t.co/V12QUonUHi
— Clint Smith (@ClintSmithIII) June 18, 2021
And an online event today.
7pm - MONDAY, 6/21 #TEXAN #Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award Winner @agordonreed (also streaming event)
— Liana Lopez (@LianaLisa) June 19, 2021
#Houston #htown #HTX #TX #Texas #JuneTeenth2021 https://t.co/SF9EMBCj9a
Commemorating Hope: On Juneteenth Author Annette Gordon-Reed Reflects on the Meaning of the Holiday https://t.co/fIfp5Zp3xG pic.twitter.com/ApymfTDS9m
— The Root (@TheRoot) June 17, 2021
"We never knew it was called Juneteenth."
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) June 18, 2021
In Nacimiento, the Mexican village of descendants of slaves who escaped across the southern border, June 19 is celebrated as el Día de los Negros, the Day of the Blacks. https://t.co/p2vi866flt
Finally, let's not forget that Juneteenth did not celebrate the end of slavery. It marked the day when the US Army sailed into Galveston harbor and told Texans that slavery had ended two years before, and to cut it out. And Texas -- and a lot of other states -- didn't. And still don't.
“Men—mostly Black and brown—are still forced to work in the fields. They still harvest cotton. They still don’t get paid ... They are prisoners at the Darrington Unit, one of Texas’s 104 prisons. And not the only one in the South named after slaveholders.”https://t.co/BFIMcES4NG
— The Marshall Project (@MarshallProj) June 19, 2021
Bud Kennedy at the Star-Telegram wrote about how a 1939 Fort Worth race riot sparked Opal Lee’s long effort for a Juneteenth federal holiday. And Kimiya Factory for the San Antonio Report tells why she celebrates.
I think that catches me up to current. I'll go back and pick up my environmental and social and criminal justice news in posts I said I would get to earlier in short order. Here's today's soothers.
Many names were considered when the Colt .45s were renamed after the 1964 season. Astros and Stars were the finalists and these are some of the logo concepts as the team looked forward to opening the Astrodome in 1965. These renderings come from the Roy Hofheinz estate. pic.twitter.com/s3AdH1M2pR
— Mike Acosta (@AstrosTalk) June 18, 2021
The ghost town of Barstow, Texas. As I was waiting for the light to get just right, an old man drove slowly up in a rusty pickup and said "we'll sell you the whole town for 117 bucks and a six pack of Lone Star beer." It was that kind of day and that kind of place. pic.twitter.com/Zqm7GWNTiy
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) June 19, 2021
No comments:
Post a Comment