Everybody else has posted their takes and takeaways, so if you're not tired of that yet, I'll get started with the not-trending-but-ought-to-be hashtag.
Blaming the customers is damned poor politics. #FireLongoria https://t.co/ahTxc5SQtp #HouNews #TexasPrimary
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 3, 2022
Judge Hidalgo, fresh off a convincing primary win, is going to wait for the investigation to determine precisely what the issues were and what action she should take to fix them. The haste with which she decides will probably be determined by the amount of screeching from her runoff-bound Republican challengers. So thirty days, maybe 60 or 75 (when her fall opponent is chosen) or soon thereafter, because the caterwauling will certainly increase in volume then. Longoria is heavy baggage and getting heavier every day, and the judge doesn't need that.
Besides her more obvious problems, the elections admin has a tin ear for PR.
"Peeing blood"? TMI https://t.co/IUIYzzY9J7
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 3, 2022
Anyone working in the central counting station who is urinating blood has a greater health concern than the stress caused by 'voter errors with new machines', and needs to be at the doctor's office stat.
Let me post this in Longoria's defense.
Time it took Harris County to report full midterm primary results after polls closed:
— Zach Despart (@zachdespart) March 4, 2022
'10 - 6 hrs
'14 - 6 hrs
'18 - 7 hrs
'22 - 28 hrs (last of 254 TX counties)
Elections office said this may be new normal. Don't expect biggest TX county to fully report on election night.
Absolutely correct. The days of election returns being mostly in for reporting on the 10 p.m. local news are long gone. Accuracy over speed is the better choice. If we wanted the most secure elections possible, then hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots would be what we ought to do. And everyone sitting around eating cold, shitty, unhealthy food and hitting 'refresh' on the SoS website, and the counties', could find something better to do with their life.
Mrs. Diddie and I had a wonderful, fun, Mardi Gras dinner with lots of booze. We wore masks and toasted our table guests, thanking them for not being those people who kept checking their phones for election results, or the State of the Union, or whether World War Three was about to be launched. (Everywhere else, as they say, it was just another Tuesday; in New Orleans, it was Phat. And unlike the Catholics I didn't have to bother getting up early to get ashes on Wednesday, and I'm not giving up anything for Lent. Religion can be such a downer.)
Conflicting takes on turnout, but the almost-final analysis says it was ahead of 2018 -- the proper comparison -- with the GOP up and the Dems down. Yes, the SB1 suppression effects were felt everywhere but nowhere greater than the mail ballots.
How many Texas voters were effectively disenfranchised by new state ID requirements for mail-in voting won’t be known for another week. https://t.co/FFFgd7pPmm
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 3, 2022
Captain Obvious with two weak takes. On to a few results:
As a whole, Harris County criminal court judges came under fire for issues relating to releasing violent offenders on low bonds. https://t.co/xDjsCkO4W1
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) March 3, 2022
This report comes just a little too late for those judges who got turned out yesterday. https://t.co/iaPjctVkqA #HarrisCounty #HouNews #TexasPrimary #TX2022 #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 3, 2022
Harris County DA Kim Ogg -- and her minions down the Democratic judicial ballot -- are Republicans in camo. Undervote accordingly in the fall. Houston DSA struck out twice, and I'm truly sorry about that. I don't know if they're falling in the Donkey line for the runoffs or in the fall, but the Texas Greens could sure use their help if they don't (or don't want to). Sure, there's Greg Casar and Jessica Cisneros and Claudia Zapata and a few others, but the path to social progress in the Texas Democratic Party leads to the cemetery, and the sooner the younger generation understands that, the better off we all will be.
A personal appeal: Please. For the love of whatever higher power you do or do not believe in, don't waste 45 years of your life trying to change the Dems from within like I did. There just isn't that much time left for starters, and the fact is they don't want to change, and they certainly don't want you trying to change them. Let them fail.
The most competitive US House race in Texas this year could come in the 15th, a South Texas district that stretches from towns east of San Antonio to the Rio Grande Valley. Republican Monica De La Cruz, who came within 3 percentage points of defeating Democratic Rep. Vicente Gonzalez in 2020, (won) the Republican nomination ... Democrats will choose her opponent on May 24 in a runoff between Ruben Ramirez, an attorney and Afghanistan war veteran, and Michelle Vallejo, a progressive favorite.
More of a Warren progressive than a Bernie one. The 15th is probably flipping blue to red in November no matter who, which is why incumbent Vicente Gonzales is running in the 34th.
Candidate who got 30 percent of the vote in Tuesday's Dem lite gov primary calls on candidate who got 42 percent to drop out of the race https://t.co/2qP7MsoEhG via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) March 3, 2022
I'm with her. I'll have more on the Dems later, but probably next week, and also some Tweets about the Republican clowns, the cops behaving badly as usual, the environment, and some social justice updates, one of those possible before the Funnies on Sunday.
No comments:
Post a Comment