-- Chris Christie will be in the Metroplex today, raising money for the Republican Governors Association. And neither Rick Perry nor Greg Abbott is going to meet him while he's in town.
There was a third Republican who wasn't going to be able to meet Christie also, but nobody can remember who it is. Oops.
-- Abbott does have his plate full, to be sure. In a remarkable gaffe earlier this week, he revealed that South Texas is like a whole other country... a third-world one. From my inbox:
State Rep. Terry Canales of Edinburg took exception.
I don't think even Abbott's Latina wife is going to be able to help him out with this. That mistake is going to cost him another couple of million bucks in Spanish-language media, and Aaron Peña will be sent back out on the road again.
-- Not to be outdone, Congresscritters Pete Sessions and Joe Barton stepped up and tried to take the heat off Abbott with malaprops of their own.
Sessions:
Barton:
No UI, no SS. Just go live under a bridge and starve while we find more tax cuts for oil companies, so that they can eventually create some jobs for you poor slobs in steerage class. And if you get sick, then die quickly and reduce the surplus population.
If I hadn't linked it, you'd think I was making it up. You would say to yourself: 'nobody could possibly be this cold-blooded'.
-- Finally, comprehensive immigration reform is dead in the US House until after the election.
Wayne has more on the fecklessness of the GOP, and the spinelessness of the Democrats to effectively run on the issue. Latino voters: it's all on you to change this if you don't like it. As Howard Dean said not so long ago: you have the power. Get your block, your neighborhood, your church, and your community registered to vote in November. And make sure you have proper ID.
Update: Almost forgot to mention that the True the Vote pasty gangsters are once again vindicated; there is indeed voter fraud in Texas. Unfortunately it's Harris County Republicans doing the defrauding.
You just can't make this stuff up.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) will not be at Christie's events in Dallas and Fort Worth. A spokesman for Perry told the Dallas Morning News Perry was "pleased" Christie would be visiting Texas.
"Governors come to our state regularly for a variety of reasons and we’re pleased to have them here," the spokesman said.
Greg Abbott, the likely Republican nominee in Texas' gubernatorial race this year also will not be at Christie's event. A spokesman for Abbott told the Dallas Morning News he would be in Houston for an appearance on immigration.
There was a third Republican who wasn't going to be able to meet Christie also, but nobody can remember who it is. Oops.
-- Abbott does have his plate full, to be sure. In a remarkable gaffe earlier this week, he revealed that South Texas is like a whole other country... a third-world one. From my inbox:
Speaking from Dallas on Tuesday, February 4, Abbott also singled out the elected leadership and people of the Texas border region and neighboring Mexico, which is the largest trading partner with Texas, as being dishonest.
“This creeping corruption resembles third-world county practices that erode the social fabric of our communities,” Abbott said.
State Rep. Terry Canales of Edinburg took exception.
“What kind of Texas leader tells the whole world that the most important state in America has “Third-World” conditions, which sends the extremely damaging message that Texans are uneducated, unskilled, controlled by drug lords and other thugs, and served by incompetent local and county governments?” Canales asked. “It shows how much contempt that Greg Abbott has for millions of his fellow citizens. With so-called friends like Greg Abbott, who needs enemies?”
I don't think even Abbott's Latina wife is going to be able to help him out with this. That mistake is going to cost him another couple of million bucks in Spanish-language media, and Aaron Peña will be sent back out on the road again.
-- Not to be outdone, Congresscritters Pete Sessions and Joe Barton stepped up and tried to take the heat off Abbott with malaprops of their own.
Sessions:
Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Dallas, called long-term unemployment insurance “immoral” on Tuesday.
“I believe it is immoral for this country to have, as a policy, extending long-term unemployment [insurance] to people rather than us working on the creation of jobs,” he said on the House floor. “[People must] be able to have a job, to learn to take care of themselves, to be able to meet their needs, to be able to become engaged in their community and have self-respect enough to know that jobs are important.”
Sessions’ statements were first reported by the Huffington Post on Tuesday. As Rules Committee chairman, he wields significant influence in crafting the House’s agenda. In January, the Senate failed to pass a Democratic-sponsored bill that would extend federal benefits for more than 1.3 million Americans who have been out of work for more than 26 weeks.
Barton:
At a question-and-answer session with reporters, Representative Joe Barton said Republicans should push for deficit reduction in exchange for a debt-limit increase.
Barton, a Texas Republican who has been in Congress since 1985, said his party should push for curbs in spending on entitlement programs such as Social Security.
"A clean debt ceiling, I think, is capitulation," Barton said at "Conversation with Conservatives," a monthly forum moderated by the Heritage Foundation.
No UI, no SS. Just go live under a bridge and starve while we find more tax cuts for oil companies, so that they can eventually create some jobs for you poor slobs in steerage class. And if you get sick, then die quickly and reduce the surplus population.
If I hadn't linked it, you'd think I was making it up. You would say to yourself: 'nobody could possibly be this cold-blooded'.
-- Finally, comprehensive immigration reform is dead in the US House until after the election.
Conservative Republicans on Wednesday ruled out any immigration legislation in the House this year, insisting that the GOP should wait until next year when the party might also control the Senate.
[...]
But several of the conservatives were adamant that the House should do nothing on the issue this year, a midterm election year when the GOP is angling to gain six seats in the Senate and seize majority control. Democrats currently have a 55-45 advantage but are defending more seats, including ones in Republican-leaning states.
"I think it's a mistake for us to have an internal battle in the Republican Party this year about immigration reform," Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, told reporters at a gathering of conservatives. "I think when we take back the Senate in 2014 one of the first things we should do next year after we do certain economic issues, I think we should address the immigration issue."
Labrador's comments were noteworthy as he was one of eight House members working on bipartisan immigration legislation last year. He later abandoned the negotiations.
Update: Almost forgot to mention that the True the Vote pasty gangsters are once again vindicated; there is indeed voter fraud in Texas. Unfortunately it's Harris County Republicans doing the defrauding.
Four political campaign workers have been indicted by a Harris County Grand Jury in the wake of allegations of election fraud in a Harris County Justice of the Peace race, first reported by Local 2 News in January.
The suspects -- two men and two women -- were paid to gather signatures to place Republican candidate Leonila Olivares Salazar's name on the ballot in the Justice of the Peace, Precinct 2, Place 2 race.
Salazar is fighting to stay on the ballot. She says the four workers were hired by her campaign consultant, Collonnade Marketing, owned by long-time politico Fred Blanton.
[...]
The indictments, handed down Monday, come about two weeks after Salazar’s Democratic opponent, incumbent Judge George Risner, sued to have her name withdrawn from the ballot.
As first reported by Local 2, Risner obtained signed statements from three of the suspects admitting they did not actually obtain the signatures listed on the petitions.
Risner said his investigation shows that 380 of 447 signatures submitted to put Salazar's name on the ballot were forged.
The indictments name campaign workers 57-year-old Ralph Basil Garcia, 53-year-old Annette Irigoyen, 28-year-old Iris Irgoyen and 55-year-old David Basurto. All face felony charges of engaging in organized criminal activity and tampering with a governmental record.
You just can't make this stuff up.