Inbox: @GovAbbott heads to Houston on Monday for a presser to “discuss legislative efforts to ensure election integrity in Texas,” per his office. @TeamBettencourt and new House Elections chair @BriscoeCain will join Abbott. #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) March 13, 2021
They talked specifically about SB7. Here's more about the press conference this morning, the hastily-arranged protest, and the legislation.
WIPING NAMES OFF TEXAS VOTER ROLLS and tightening mail-in ballot rules are two of the things that would happen if a new bill filed by @SenBryanHughes passes in Austin. #txlege pic.twitter.com/qDEnXzjlYo
— Jason Whitely (@JasonWhitely) March 14, 2021
While the Texas governor's reported intention is to stop election fraud, he is being met with protest and accused of voter suppression. https://t.co/Brjp7n7IDN
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) March 15, 2021
Just another of his Grand Diversions, one that caters to the "Stop the Steal" Caucus in the TXGOP, which he'll need next year to fend off a challenge from Sid Miller ... or Dan Patrick.
.@rossramsey: An unusual appearance by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick at a Senate hearing raised speculation about political tension between him and Gov. Greg Abbott. #TXlege https://t.co/aoxayFb2eD
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 15, 2021
After the freeze, Patrick said the head of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas should go, along with Abbott’s three appointees at the PUC. All but (Arthur) D’Andrea are now gone, evidence that the lieutenant governor has taken some control of the situation.
That’s a political move, whether that was his aim or not. Patrick is exerting his powers at the expense of the governor, a member of the same party — albeit of a different wing of the GOP — who has been both an ally and an adversary since the two men were elected to their current posts in 2014.
I had discounted Patrick as a gubernatorial contender as recently as last Friday. But you just can't blow off Dan shoveling sand underneath Greg's wheels. I still think Patrick knows he really does have the best job in Austin, bar none, and also wouldn't mind having some greenhorn like Miller or Allen West in the Governor's Mansion to groom as opposed to the wily and wealthy Abbott.
Yes, it's that bad here in Deep-In-The Hearta. Somebody like that could win. I'll have more on Abbott's presser this afternoon. Update:
Abbott used the event to again blast former Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins for wanting to mail unsolicited absentee ballots to all residents so they wouldn’t risk getting COVID by voting in person pic.twitter.com/z78EX8p5lW
— Jeremy Wallace (@JeremySWallace) March 15, 2021
Texas is either at the top of the wave or the bottom of the trough as it relates to COVID:
My 5 "perfect storm" worries for Texas:
— Prof Peter Hotez MD PhD (@PeterHotez) March 9, 2021
1. "No vaccines" we still haven't picked up the pace post Ice Harvey, ranking near bottom for vaccinations.
2. No masks
3. Rising B..1.1.7 variant based on new Houston Health wastewater data.
4. Slight rise in positivity
5. Spring Break pic.twitter.com/1SKn2dzJXu
9.6% of people in Texas are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, which exceeds the percent of people who have tested positive for the virus. https://t.co/VFR9bIiX1p pic.twitter.com/c5LV53vKB9
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 14, 2021
Experts say a perfect storm is brewing as Texas reopens businesses to 100%, with no masks and with five COVID-19 variants spreading. https://t.co/A4CSpSyTo9
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) March 11, 2021
Starting Monday, March 15th the Texas Department of State Health Services will expand COVID-19 vaccinations to include Phase 1C, meaning Texans 50 years and older will now be eligible. https://t.co/rZQTzoCyiv
— FOX26Houston (@FOX26Houston) March 15, 2021
Where we go from here -- down or back up -- will be determined by our collective personal actions, and not by anything the state government says or does.
An arrest warrant was issued for a woman who refused to wear a mask at a Texas bank, saying to a police officer: "What are you going to do, arrest me?" https://t.co/DBO4bFgh6n
— CBS Austin (@cbsaustin) March 15, 2021
This was #Texas' first weekend without #Covid_19 limits. Here's how it went for business owners: https://t.co/UcEMJAyZwW @Noodletreetx @RielHouston @picosrestaurant
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 15, 2021
And Houstonia Magazine looked back on the year in COVID.
I have a ton of criminal justice news. Here's just a smattering; more tomorrow.
Acevedo's now a big public figure bc of his grandstanding on CNN n such. Ppl were even speculating about a run for TX governor, which I always found strange considering his current and former departments have been mired in scandals https://t.co/P6UWcnKFQwhttps://t.co/rWB0FrJwWo https://t.co/Oq4szzYaHo
— Michael Barajas (@michaelsbarajas) March 15, 2021
Absolutely spot on by Barajas here. When Acevedo came to Houston from Austin, he carried the heavy baggage associated with how three APD undercover detectives infiltrated the capital city's OWS protesters, who in late 2011 staged a protest at the Port of Houston and were arrested for 'felony possession of a criminal instrument', which were "dragon sleeves" that the cops made for them. That's called entrapment. Acevedo is fairly masterful at gaslighting; he marched with BLM protesters this past year in downtown H-Town, then disappeared just as his SWAT team moved in. Art Acevedo is a bad cop pulling off a long con as a good cop. He's been doing it for at least a decade. I sure hope he doesn't run for political office in Florida as a Republican. He'll be swept in.
It's no wonder, though, that he's getting out just as Sly Turner is winding down his time as mayor. Acevedo and Turner are two bedbugs in a rug when it comes to law and order.
@SylvesterTurner criminalizes poverty and then gives more of our stimulus money to HPD to murder, harass and arrest the “criminals” he creates. Is there 1 CCM who will fight for their district? 1 who cares about us? #TurnOnTurner https://t.co/SzdDpsnUQc
— Well Read Black Girl (@WellReadBlkGrl) March 13, 2021
Just 9 months ago:
— ✨#LandBack ✨ #JusticeForBreonnaTaylor ✨ (@_SemaHernandez_) March 13, 2021
Houston City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to approve a 2021 budget that includes a $20 million increase for the Houston Police Department.#DefundThePolice
Link: https://t.co/qmFZrgbxoW https://t.co/TqcUk6VQvb pic.twitter.com/kiPSL3rzUq
It's been 5 months since Houston mayor took CARES funding gave it to cops instead of tenants, even though he already raised police budget to $964 million. Now, he is threatening to use *new* stimulus money to enrich cops and ignore schools/housing/health. This is Houston police: https://t.co/MhwkBDQMIT
— Alec Karakatsanis (@equalityAlec) March 14, 2021
Keeps the Abbott/Adler heat off Turner, I suppose.
Think police rarely use hypnosis? Think no one's been affected?
— Lauren McGaughy 🌟 (@lmcgaughy) March 12, 2021
Well, we found 50+ Texas convictions based at least in part on evidence from hypnotically "refreshed" memories.
Five were overturned. Four are on death row; 11 were executed.https://t.co/zfX6nMOjC3 #txlege
A standoff between the City of Austin and a Black revolutionary group is now over, after about three and a half weeks of the group occupying a park in East Austin in protest of a recent police shooting. https://t.co/7cJqFBCY6v
— Spectrum News 1 Texas (@SpectrumNews1TX) March 13, 2021
Tribune of the People also covered this story. And Grits for Breakfast mentions "bootlicking public officials as a barrier to police reform". Whooda thunk?
I have still more 'cops behaving badly' for tomorrow; for now we'll move along to the humanitarian crisis at the southern border.
Unaccompanied immigrant children at a Border Patrol tent facility in Donna, Texas said they're being held for as many as eight days in crowded areas without showers or the ability to call their families. https://t.co/WY3PO1KjKz
— Adolfo Flores (@aflores) March 15, 2021
El Paso Matters reports that an ICE facility there has frequently violated rules for handling sick detainees, according to legal activists. All of these wretched things have motivated some Congressional Democrats to demand the Biden administration make some changes, but so far there's only been a few milquetoast words from Homeland Security Dirctor Mayorkas. I wonder if this calamity will eventually put a dent in Biden's popularity ratings.
I'll hold other Lege news for later. Here's the environmental update.
Climate change threatens the exact kinds of problems Texas experienced during last month’s winter freeze. Texas should support solutions like energy efficiency, demand response, transmission, storage and clean energy. #txlege #txclimate https://t.co/XyLah5K8F4
— Changing TX Climate (@TX_Climate) March 12, 2021
#txlege must direct @txrrc and @TCEQ to take real action to stop flaring and venting. Methane is out of control! https://t.co/yp23JO6CQO
— The Future is Bright (@timtgibson) March 12, 2021
CNBC says that the flaring message is getting through.
For many oil producers in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, the shutdown put upstream and downstream operations in a squeeze. Downstream, multiple refining operations flared during shutdowns, releasing air pollutants from processing units. Upstream, as oil drilling came back online, there was risk of needing to flare or halt oil production in the field until the broader energy market, including refining and utility generation, stabilized. Indeed, satellite imagery showed increased flaring at oil and gas production sites in the Permian Basin did take place, according to the Environmental Defense Fund.
But at Occidental, a choice was made to shut down some operations.
“There were a couple of plants that had difficulty coming back online,” Occidental’s CEO Vicki Hollub said during a recent CNBC Evolve event focused on energy innovation. “We could have put our production back online and just flared the gas. We chose not to do that. We left the production shut down because we didn’t want to flare.”
And the Texas Living Waters Project warned that the state's aging water infrastructure is another vulnerability highlighted by Winter Storm Uri.
Texas twisters🌪
— Christopher Nunley, Ph.D. (@chrisnunley) March 14, 2021
Take a look at this video from Happy, Texas today! #Tornado #TXwx #Tornadoes
📸: KHOU pic.twitter.com/7zAtOicNhS
I got some hoops.
There was a time when men's college basketball in the Lone Star State wasn't such a big deal. But that was before Guy V. Lewis and Billy Tubbs and Pat Foster (and a few others, like Don Haskins). Nowadays it's all about Kelvin Sampson and Shaka Smart and Scott Drew and Chris Beard (and a few others).
Texas will be well represented in NCAA Tournament:
— Joseph Duarte (@Joseph_Duarte) March 14, 2021
Houston (AAC)
Baylor (Big 12)
Texas (Big 12)
Texas Tech (Big 12)
North Texas (C-USA)
Texas Southern (SWAC)
Abilene Christian (Southland)
This is the week, the best time of the year, to take the afternoon off and day-drink, eat crawfish (or Irish stew), watch the March Madness or spring training baseball. I plan on doing some of all of that.
Just make sure you observe the holiday properly.
And to close out:
.@JulianOnderdonk died at the peak of his success in 1922 at only 40 years old. However, “the father of Texas painting" and his beautiful depictions of bluebonnets are getting a second life on Twitter. https://t.co/peUVcKG0e8
— Texas Highways Magazine (@TexasHighways) March 11, 2021
One of my all-time favorite Texas photos. The Three Stooges in Dallas for the Texas Centennial, 1936. Nyuck nyuck nyuck! pic.twitter.com/fZIsyojgjU
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) March 15, 2021
More tomorrow, hopefully not this long.