Tacos at the end. Updates to yesterday's Beto/redistricting post and a few new developments make for your early-week reading.
a little alarmed by how seriously the internet took today's beto-is-running story based on reporting where the only source was "Texas political operatives tell Axios"
— Jen Rice (@jen_rice_) September 20, 2021
.@HKronberg: To beat an increasingly unpopular @GovAbbott, @BetoORourke would have to demonstrate discipline he has previously eschewed https://t.co/jpdkxBrh8v #TXLege #TX2022
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) September 21, 2021
A couple other findings that caught my attention in yesterday's DMN/UT-Tyler poll:
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) September 20, 2021
- Biden 19 points underwater with Latino voters on approval
- 53% of GOP voters don't want Abbott to run for in 2024, 47% don't want Cruz to https://t.co/2brZivUdf7
Governor Fish Lips used the invisible hand of the free market to kill the Lincoln Project's ad, scheduled to air during Saturday's UT football game.
Lincoln Project ad slamming Abbott for 60,000 Texan deaths pulled minutes before airing on TV https://t.co/rnVlqf47LK
— mySA (@mySA) September 20, 2021
And there's an election to fill another open seat in the statehouse going on.
Early voting for the Texas House District 118 special election (eastern and southern San Antonio, Bexar County) started today.
— Kolten Parker (@KoltenParker) September 20, 2021
Successor to moderate Dem state Rep. Leo Pacheco will be decided Sept. 28. Read about candidates and district here: https://t.co/J0Fq33yexM #txlege
Certain to become a 2022 campaign issue, the Haitian immigrant crisis at the Del Rio border crossing has exploded onto the national scene, and in the worst possible way for Joe Biden.
Border Patrol agents on horseback cracking whips and charging into crowds of Haitian asylum seekers in Texas, shouting at them to go back to Mexico — strong reporting from @psskow on the situation in Del Rio/Ciudad Acuña https://t.co/ZVeS6j3gnM
— Ryan Devereaux (@rdevro) September 19, 2021
A thread 🧵 on what I heard and saw in #DelRioTexas and Acuña, where thousands of #Haitians and other migrants are hoping to get their shot at a life of safety and economic security in the US: pic.twitter.com/hyKQuFbq3a
— Elizabeth Trovall (@elizTrovall) September 20, 2021
Lots more on this to come, separately. At the Lege, as the third special session gets going ...
Texas GOP proposals include banning proof of vaccination in schools, imposing penalties on companies and hospitals that terminate or deny employment to the unvaccinated, and keeping insurance companies from denying benefits to the unvaccinated. https://t.co/XG7koQcSwG
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) September 21, 2021
Anti-trans & anti-intersex bills filed so far this Third Suppression Session:
— Mo Cortez (@7ouston) September 20, 2021
HB 10, HB 24, HB 26, HB 65, HB 84, SB 3, SB 27, SB 29https://t.co/BMtZRExnpT #txlege pic.twitter.com/gxBzDmFVya
Ah, it begins: These folks are chanting “no boys in girls sports!" as another special session of the Texas Legislature begins #txlege pic.twitter.com/EctOM8IY7Y
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) September 20, 2021
Note the Confederate flag and the "Pray to End Abortion" sign. Some of these things are not like the other, except in the Q-hive mind. Regarding new maps:
Formerly in SD 19, under the newly filed #TxRedistricting Senate map, former Sen. @PeteFlores_TX is now in the open SD 24. #txlege @EllenTroxclair and @ReitzForTexas who had formerly announced for this seat would be in SD 25 in proposed plan which is Sen. @DonnaCampbellTX seat. https://t.co/6aeED9rR0p
— Bonnie Bruce, vaccinated (@BonnieBruce) September 20, 2021
And just like that, Ector County loses our one Democrat. #txlege https://t.co/ZhP4PAhpUe
— David Logan (@A_DavidLogan) September 20, 2021
And the latest on women's reproductive (severely restricted) rights.
With no fanfare, @GregAbbott_TX signs more Texas abortion restrictions, penalties into law-this time, SB 4 from this yr's 2nd special session.
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) September 21, 2021
It outlaws providing abortion-inducing drugs to Texans after seven weeks of pregnancy. Via @mcohanlon. #txlege https://t.co/3ZVdifls62
The first heartbeat abortion lawsuit is in.
— Andrea Zelinski (@andreazelinski) September 20, 2021
"They said I can have a chance and I can go in there and I can sue and collect $10,000 for it. Well, that's the law and I want that $10,000 and I intend to be the fastest gun in the West." #txlege https://t.co/Q8aYwfVPIy via @statesman
The Texas doctor who wrote a WaPo op-ed about violating the six-week abortion ban, now faces TWO new state court lawsuits brought under the law, BOTH brought by out-of-state opponents of the ban. (w/@Arianedevogue) https://t.co/o6qo8BaIpx
— Tierney Sneed (@Tierney_Megan) September 20, 2021
“I reached out to a lot of these big agencies that have a presence in Texas. And I didn’t hear them comment for our story.” https://t.co/jqS8DcMtBC
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) September 20, 2021
And here is some criminal and social justice news.
The Texas Observer, KXAN's investigative unit, KTEP, and the Fort Worth Report are collaborating on an accounting of the Texas Rangers' failings in prosecuting corruption by public officials (perhaps a result of there being too much on their plate).
4/ Here’s a sampling from cases where prosecutors did take public action, or where we confirmed that they declined to do so, based on interviews, Rangers’ reports, media coverage, and other records. pic.twitter.com/TI538H4FnT
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) September 20, 2021
ONLINE INVESTIGATION: When state leaders are investigated for public corruption, bribery, and other white collar crimes, few are held accountable. In Texas, here’s why critics say that’s only Justice for Some: https://t.co/tRaUUXVZBo@TexasObserver pic.twitter.com/pWRNPXMf5t
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) September 20, 2021
#ATX needs accountable policing.
— Gregorio Casar (@GregCasar) September 21, 2021
Young people were maimed and nearly killed while exercising their right to peacefully demonstrate. If we don’t want this to happen again, we should be embracing police oversight, not ignoring it.https://t.co/TUjJsQ6XcN
In lawsuit, Harris County Sheriff Deputies seek full funding for or federal takeover of deeply troubled jail. Blame @LinaHidalgoTX and Commissioners past and present for willful neglect. #Fox26 https://t.co/2mofrifjy1
— Greg Groogan (@GrooganFox26) September 21, 2021
And Techdirt references D Magazine's story last month about the Dallas PD's accidental deletion of data, which they kept hidden from the DA's office and City Council for months.
Some climate items.
It’s time for our political leaders championing this project to acknowledge that the Ike Dike alone is not enough. But is it still worth it? We believe so, The Editorial Board writes. https://t.co/EHpbdiBfLC
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) September 19, 2021
Formosa Plastics, the Taiwan-based chemical giant, will pay nearly $3 million in fines for violating the Clean Air Act at its Matagorda Bay facility. The Texas Signal reports that Congressional Democrats from the Lone Star State want federal subsidies for Big Oil and Gas to stay in the Build Back Better Act, the $3.5 trillion spending bill. And they're catching some deserved hell for it.
“Unlike previous administrations, I don’t think the federal government should give handouts to big oil,” (President Joe) Biden said in January. “And I’m going to be going to the Congress asking them to eliminate those subsidies. We’re going to take money and invest it in clean energy jobs in America -- millions of jobs in wind, solar, and carbon capture.”
[...]
But this week the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee released the latest draft of the tax plan to fund the major spending bill that shows the subsidies for oil & gas companies largely intact.
The move comes after industry lobbying as well as a letter written by seven House Democrats from Texas in support of the subsidies [...] Reps. Henry Cuellar (Laredo), Vicente Gonzalez (McAllen), Lizzie Fletcher (Houston), Marc Veasey (Fort Worth), Filemon Vela (Brownsville), and Sylvia Garcia (Houston).
Biden, as close watchers know, is duplicitous about his green energy commitments. What's refreshing here is that the Signal goes where other Dem blogs *cough*Kuff*cough* don't (i.e. criticizing Democrats for being hypocrites and sell-outs). Our Revolution Texas piled on hard.
They had the gall to suggest that not subsidizing obscenely profitable oil and gas corporations with public money constitutes “punitive practices” which would somehow “impede the transition to a low carbon future.” This abused protest by these pro-oil politicians and clearly shows they’re shilling for Big Oil.And last: as promised at the top ... your lunch and/or dinner suggestion.
Joseph Quellar didn't invent the smoked brisket birria quesitaco that he's now famous for, but he did jump-start the popularity of this very specific taco, which has become part of Texas barbecue culture. A visit to his Houston joint is worth the drive.https://t.co/vXIZFwmoPt
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) September 19, 2021
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