Sunday, April 26, 2020
Friday, April 24, 2020
Race for the White House Update: Governor Body says he isn't running as a Green *updates
Jesse Ventura dispels rumors about 2020 Green Party presidential bid https://t.co/2TWaOZWPTX via @I_P_R— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 23, 2020
Elaborating, Ventura stated the Green Party aligns with his views more than other parties and that it has “earned his vote.” He expresses concerns about climate change.
Ventura, who was elected governor as a member of the Minnesota affiliate of the Reform Party in 1998 and encouraged Donald Trump’s 2000 run for the Reform Party presidential nomination, holds a general disdain for political parties overall ...
Voting for Ventura on any line would be -- personally -- a hard no. Since primaries are well under way, Jesse has some ground to make up if he's being coy here (and I don't think he is). File this under "non-sensical", along with stories you may have previously read about presumptive Green nominee Howie Hawkins handing the emerald standard to Bernie Sanders. That's not his to give even if/when he accrues enough delegates; and whether the GP -- at their
Bernie Sanders is an establishment Democrat. Pretty much always has been, no matter what anybody has ever said about him. (Judge people by their actions and all that.)
*Update:
2020 @GreenPartyUS national convention to take place in cyberspace https://t.co/kar3y6StAK via @I_P_R— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 24, 2020
-- Libertarian front-runner Jacob Hornberger has trashed Congressman Justin Amash several times of late. Amash, as reported in the last WH Update, may get in the scrum for the Lib nom. And could likely win it.
The Kentucky Libertarian Party held a debate for presidential candidates Hornberger, Jim Gray, Jo Jorgensen,
Update*:
Comedian Mark Whitney withdrew yesterday from the 2020 Libertarian Party presidential race, via Facebook, and endorsed the ticket of Judge Jim Gray for president and Larry Sharpe for vice president. This comes after Whitney finished in fifth place in a straw poll after Wednesday’s Libertarian presidential debate in Kentucky.
This is the second time Whitney, a convicted felon and podcaster, has suspended his campaign. He withdrew briefly in January after claiming to have received death threats following a Libertarian presidential debate. According to IPR commenter Jim, Whitney “made an ass of himself” during the debate.
In addition, Whitney says he will start an exploratory committee to prepare for a run for U.S. Senate in California in 2022.
Whitney’s withdrawal leaves Gray, Future of Freedom Foundation president Jacob Hornberger, 1996 vice presidential nominee Jo Jorgensen, antiwar activist Adam Kokesh, former Libertarian National Committee vice chair Arvin Vohra, performance artist Vermin Supreme, software engineer Dan Behrman, former Coast Guard officer Ken Armstrong, and former Grady County (Georgia) NAACP president John Monds as the remaining candidates. Independent Congressman Justin Amash is reportedly close to announcing a run.
A quick word about my interest in the Libs: I've applied for a media credential to their convention. I find them endlessly entertaining. They need some encouragement as an opposition party to the Republicans, and an easier path to defeating people like Trump, Cornyn, Mitch McConnell, etc., is to enable -- in whatever fashion you choose -- the Libertarians to peel away disenchanted conservative votes. To that end, you'll read some here about their eventual nominee as well as people like Brad Barron in KY and Texas Lib Senate candidates Wes Benedict and Kerry McKinnon.
Remember that the Libs are convening in Austin in less than a month, and given the recent protests among the Spit Cloud Caucus of the GOP, probably won't show great concern for doing so in person. Although they're taking it day by day.
-- So the last time I did an Electoral College map was when it looked like Bernie Sanders was going to run away with the Dem nom. My, how things change. Let's get a little goofy with this one.
I put New York into the "Tossup" category. Between Sanders leading the last poll taken in February, the chance that the state commission removes him from the ballot on Monday, that Cuomo and de Blasio have been at loggerheads over the coronavirus response, that only people outside of New York who watch MSNBC think the governor is doing a good job, and that there are a lot of sick and dead people in the Big Apple, the base of Democratic support in the Empire State ... maybe there's a chance Howie Hawkins, who's been on the NY ballot a few times in recent years, breaks through and denies Biden the electors.
If he doesn't, then Joementia is still one EC vote short, and needs to win PA (or FL or NC or urban NE) to be the 46th POTUS. After all, it's possible that the pandemic keeps the Greens and the Libs from qualifying for the ballot in some important states.
Update: Trump and Biden are deadlocked in six key 2020 election states, CNBC/Change Research poll finds (the states are Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.)
-- Tara Reade's allegations are finally beginning to see daylight in the corporate media.
The #MeToo movement is facing a new challenge: how to grapple with the allegations against Joe Biden without tearing itself apart https://t.co/sGHjLZ7nNC— POLITICO (@politico) April 23, 2020
This case represents the worst double standard by Democratic activists and their media sycophants that I can ever recall witnessing.
Update:
Well, that escalated quickly.
New evidence supporting credibility of Tara Reade’s allegation against Joe Biden emerges https://t.co/AY12RrXyTs by @ryangrim— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 24, 2020
When the @nytimes created their story on Tara Reade, they 'corrected' a line about Biden's pattern of sexual misconduct in just a few hours at the behest of the Biden campaign.— mugrimm (@mugrimm) April 24, 2020
NPR discovered that Biden WAS named in the police incident report 4 days ago.
No correction yet. pic.twitter.com/qvSQcqZBYs
-- Is it possible that Donald Trump can tell his voters to drink bleach, gather together at rallies, and do everything that doctors and scientists say don't do at this time, and still have enough support -- living or otherwise -- to be re-elected in November?
Apparently so. Thanks Obama!
Update: New shooter coming out.
Kingwood resident Jade Simmons has carved out a career as a pianist -- with performances at Chicago’s Symphony Hall, the Detroit Institute of Arts and the White House -- and a motivational speaker for companies, such as Royal Bank of Canada, Pfizer and Nationwide.
But now she has her sights on an even loftier goal: Simmons kicked off a campaign to run for president on Feb. 28. She will run as an independent, a theme that is central to her campaign.
-- And the very centrist Alliance Party held its national convention online on April 25 and nominated Rocky de la Fuente. The party is ballot-qualified in two states and a third is pending.
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
TexProgBlog Wrangle, Tuesday Edition
With many updates and developments since yesterday.
The Fifth Circuit blocking women's right to choose was not shocking.
The future price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil falling to a negative value was.
After the story broke that Houston and Harris County officials pooh-poohed concerns about the coronavirus in February, allowing RodeoHouston to go on ...
... both County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Mayor Sylvester Turner announced their czars for restarting the local economy. State Representative Armando Walle was selected by the judge:
While the mayor picked ... wait for it ...
Turner and Hidalgo are under tremendous pressure to reopen Houston for business.
And the Texas Railroad Commission -- the state's oil and gas regulatory body -- is scheduled to convene again after yesterday's steep drop in the commodity's future price contracts.
Lots of Texans still need lots of help as the COVID-19 fallout ripples outward.
There are some very easy steps that could be taken, but we're not waiting solely on Texas Republicans to lead ...
Lone Star Blue Dogs are sitting around at home with little to do and not doing it as well.
With accurate stats still lacking, we know that minority communities are being impacted greatly, mostly due to poverty. San Antonio is working to increase awareness.
But Governor Abbott still doesn't get it.
There's always time for another conspiracy theory, though.
A number of anniversaries this week:
The Austin Police Department still has tremendous issues, but some of the local reporting has been a whitewash.
And this Wrangle can wrap up with some softer news.
Pam LeBlanc at Texas Monthly has some great ideas about getting your social distancing on outdoors. Darian Mendez at the San Antonio Current links to The Alamo's livestreaming event this afternoon, marking San Jacinto Day. Bob Ruggerio for the Houston Press reviews a book detailing the long-awaited justice for the US Army's First Battalion, 25th Infantry, aka the Black Battalion stationed at Brownsville in 1906.
And Major League Baseball is discussing a plan to start their season where teams would be stationed in one of three hubs, with Texas being one.
The Fifth Circuit blocking women's right to choose was not shocking.
New: Reversing course, a federal appeals court said access to pill-induced abortions can be restricted in Texas while the state fights the coronavirus pandemic. https://t.co/Dyhym29DDe— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) April 20, 2020
The future price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil falling to a negative value was.
Oil drops below $0. Yes, $0. https://t.co/rRrK3xQILU— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
After the story broke that Houston and Harris County officials pooh-poohed concerns about the coronavirus in February, allowing RodeoHouston to go on ...
Officials knew coronavirus could spread at the Houston Rodeo and proceeded with the event anyway https://t.co/iUB86jtZuq via @Progrexas #HouNews— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
... both County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Mayor Sylvester Turner announced their czars for restarting the local economy. State Representative Armando Walle was selected by the judge:
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo names COVID-19 Recovery Czar.https://t.co/zJ0lt490uZ— Houston Press (@HoustonPress) April 20, 2020
While the mayor picked ... wait for it ...
Of course a former fossil fuel CEO will help us recover from #COVID19. https://t.co/JfHu0eXEZI— Sema (@_SemaHernandez_) April 20, 2020
Turner and Hidalgo are under tremendous pressure to reopen Houston for business.
New: 350 businesses are urging @LinaHidalgoTX and @SylvesterTurner on May 1 to ease stay-at-home restrictions meant to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, warning many firms cannot survive additional weeks of forced closures. w/@jaspscherer -->https://t.co/NPYppGmFKh— Zach Despart🖊️ (@zachdespart) April 17, 2020
And the Texas Railroad Commission -- the state's oil and gas regulatory body -- is scheduled to convene again after yesterday's steep drop in the commodity's future price contracts.
#Coronavirus in #Texas: @TXRRC set to meet this morning after historic price plunge https://t.co/9bUzS62E36 via @Progrexas #TXLege #HouNews— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 21, 2020
Lots of Texans still need lots of help as the COVID-19 fallout ripples outward.
Hey @JohnCornyn, @tedcruz, @JacksonLeeTX18, Funds for small businesses that employ millions in Texas have already dried up yet many who applied got nothing. Yet national chains got money. This is not fair to Texans. More needs to be done to help Texas’s small businesses. https://t.co/o3cRGCnGSS— David Leftwich (@DavidLeftwich68) April 17, 2020
#CancelRentUSA Austin Texas food bank line.— AJ McStacy. #ReleaseTaraFiles (@IndependentMo14) April 16, 2020
We are in a disaster. Cancel rent. pic.twitter.com/cPn9UIaz8M
A little negotiation might go a long way toward staving off homelessness.https://t.co/ATHfHKFEDm— Dallas Observer (@Dallas_Observer) April 17, 2020
There are some very easy steps that could be taken, but we're not waiting solely on Texas Republicans to lead ...
Public health experts warn that jails are petri dishes for COVID-19.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 17, 2020
Governor Greg Abbott is hobbling local efforts to release defendants—highlighting conservative opposition to the growing movement to end wealth-based detention in Texas. https://t.co/Y9pAEK0zge
PRESS RELEASE: "Sadly, TX remains the only state that does not automatically provide workers' compensation to employees. Front line workers should not be forced to prove that COVID-19 was the result of a workplace contact to get benefits." https://t.co/VvAKyvU4gG— Texas AFL-CIO (@TexasAFLCIO) April 20, 2020
Lone Star Blue Dogs are sitting around at home with little to do and not doing it as well.
I wonder how long it will it take for Houston activists and non-profits to push Rep. @JacksonLeeTX18, @RepFletcher, @RepSylviaGarcia, and @RepAlGreen to support the proposed stimulus bill that Rep. @Ilhan and other Congressional Progressives have brought forth.— Stevens Orozco (@_StevensOrozco) April 20, 2020
With accurate stats still lacking, we know that minority communities are being impacted greatly, mostly due to poverty. San Antonio is working to increase awareness.
Local leaders gathered for a live-streamed panel on Monday evening to discuss how the coronavirus has affected the black community. https://t.co/pUtu6fuUWg— Rivard Report (@RivardReport) April 21, 2020
But Governor Abbott still doesn't get it.
Not one black or brown person named to the Governor’s business task force for reopening Texas.— Odus Evbagharu (@iamodus_) April 17, 2020
NOT ONE. #COVID19 #txlege
There's always time for another conspiracy theory, though.
A bizarre conspiracy fantasy creeps into Texas politics: Candidates promoting ‘Q’ https://t.co/1GoCPWJctc #TXLege— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 18, 2020
A number of anniversaries this week:
Ten years after the Deepwater Horizon blowout that killed 11 people and sprayed 210 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico, here is how to ensure another accident never happens again. https://t.co/qncOAhFLiG #txlege @HoustonChron— ChrisTomlinson (@cltomlinson) April 20, 2020
Ken Hoffman looks back on the biggest media shutter in Houston history https://t.co/1wBJ06zhGN— CultureMap Houston (@culturemap) April 20, 2020
Hard to believe it’s been 25 years since we raided the marketing department storage room before being escorted from the building by security. At least I got a dozen t-shirts. And I work in the same building again. pic.twitter.com/5RFxvw9zTL— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) April 18, 2020
The Austin Police Department still has tremendous issues, but some of the local reporting has been a whitewash.
After reading this report and @Grits4Breakfast's thorough breakdown of its findings, I'm even more confused by the local media framing that seems to largely absolve Austin police officials of wrongdoing— Michael Barajas (@michaelsbarajas) April 20, 2020
Some bg on what triggered this investigation of APD https://t.co/O5nI4AJcIX https://t.co/wLw1AIU1l5
And this Wrangle can wrap up with some softer news.
Pam LeBlanc at Texas Monthly has some great ideas about getting your social distancing on outdoors. Darian Mendez at the San Antonio Current links to The Alamo's livestreaming event this afternoon, marking San Jacinto Day. Bob Ruggerio for the Houston Press reviews a book detailing the long-awaited justice for the US Army's First Battalion, 25th Infantry, aka the Black Battalion stationed at Brownsville in 1906.
And Major League Baseball is discussing a plan to start their season where teams would be stationed in one of three hubs, with Texas being one.
On Monday, multiple league sources informed CBS Sports about a different idea that has been discussed in recent days. In this arrangement, the league would have teams stationed in one of three hubs: Florida, Arizona or Texas. The clubs would then make use of the local major- and minor-league (or spring training) facilities.
One source even expressed guarded optimism about the idea's chances of coming to fruition.
Ballparks in St. Petersburg (Florida), Phoenix (Arizona), and Arlington (Texas) each have roofs, retractable or otherwise, that would safeguard against rainouts and other extreme weather, allowing for multiple games to be hosted at those sites per day. Theoretically, MLB could also ask teams stationed in Florida and Texas to drive three-plus hours to other MLB parks (Houston's Minute Maid Park and Miami's Marlins Park).
It's unclear if MLB would assign 10 teams to each metropolitan area, or if it would opt for an unbalanced approach that would see 12 teams in one area and eight in another.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has tweeted about his attempts to get professional sports back in the state amid the pandemic, including NASCAR.
Monday, April 20, 2020
The Weekly "It's Safe to Go Back in the Water" Wrangle
With the best of the left from around and about Deep-In-The-Hearta from the past week, the Texas Progressive Alliance isn't so sure that Mayor Vaughn is correct about there being no more sharks at Amity Beach.
Meanwhile, in Reality:
Nevertheless, the capitalists persist.
That's how it plays out here. Greg Abbott's juggling act, with safety and science battling Dan Patrick and the pastors, has him spinning. RG Ratcliffe at Texas Monthly was also unimpressed with Abbott's press conference about restarting the state's economy.
In times of personal crisis, Abbott always turns toGawd his donors.
And demonstrates his inner Trump.
Shutting down government transparency has become a coronavirus symptom.
With the latest on voting-by-mail ...
Kuff also looked at the initial ruling in the TDP's lawsuit to expand vote-by-mail access. And via Rick Hasen at Election Law Blog, Chad Flanders and Kristen Spina write in Slate that the Texas courts should use the “democracy canon” to interpret excuse restrictions in absentee ballot laws.
The Texas Green Party held their state convention over the weekend, and Howie Hawkins won the majority of presidential delegates.
Some environmental developments include ...
The next Census -- whenever it takes place -- could well determine a future for Port Arthur as maintaining semblance of a city ... or not.
Trump's EPA rollbacks are punishing Port Arthur's residents as well.
And like air pollution from fossil fuel producers, gun nuts aren't taking any time off, either.
Food concerns are moving to the forefront; Texas Standard reports that a statehouse committee chairman thinks that the meat packers are manipulating the price of beef.
SocraticGadfly looked at restaurants by type and class, and wonders which will do better, which worse on surviving coronavirus. The Lunch Tray noted a somewhat favorable ruling in a lawsuit over USDA school nutrition rollbacks.
And an Austin landmark loses its life to the coronavirus.
With all of this grim news, finding a bright spot somewhere can be difficult. The Bloggess shares how she is coping.
— Rob Sheridan, but from a safe distance (@rob_sheridan) April 13, 2020
Meanwhile, in Reality:
“If we stopped sheltering in place, it would turn exponentially. There's no question in my mind.”— Dick Lavine (@dlavine) April 20, 2020
https://t.co/qKRkhK6kUR #txlege #COVID19 #StayHome
Nevertheless, the capitalists persist.
'Poverty kills. Depression kills.' Led by conspiracy-theory promoting website Infowars and its host Alex Jones, hundreds march on Texas Capitol demanding the state ‘open now,' @James_Barragan reports. #COVID19 #txlege https://t.co/fY6ttYR4Wv— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) April 18, 2020
This is a state with a GOP governor but for some reason they are angry at Dr Fauci. Why? Bc these are just pro-Trump rallies masquerading as something else: Trump Supporters Chant 'Fire Fauci!' at Coronavirus Lockdown Protest in Texas https://t.co/rHuagCnkjt— (((DeanObeidallah))) (@DeanObeidallah) April 18, 2020
The displays are tapping into Trump’s main message on the coronavirus pandemic: governors are to blame for the crisis, not him. As the president ratchets up his re-election efforts, his argument is an effort to simultaneously put the brunt of responsibility for the coronavirus catastrophe on the shoulders of his political opponents while also maintaining that he holds “total authority” over the pandemic and the states facing it.
It’s an argument that resonates best in rural, redder parts of the country, which have not been hit as hard by the pandemic as blue, urban areas. Trump himself has said, “We’ll be opening some states much sooner than others,” despite pushback from legislators and business leaders alike about the current lack of mass testing.
And it’s a message of division, designed to pit Republican-voting areas of states against their Democratic-voting neighbors, even rural Republicans against urban Republicans. All this to activate white rural voters who supported Trump in 2016 and whom he’ll need again in 2020.
That's how it plays out here. Greg Abbott's juggling act, with safety and science battling Dan Patrick and the pastors, has him spinning. RG Ratcliffe at Texas Monthly was also unimpressed with Abbott's press conference about restarting the state's economy.
Abbott wants to open TX back up.— Dallas Gal (@DFW_Dee) April 14, 2020
TX has:
the 2nd lowest testing rate per million;
no Medicaid expansion coverage;
only social distancing as protection until a cure &/or vaccine is developed & administered en masse.
Abbott's gonna kill a lot of Texans.https://t.co/ZWllqJR58r
In times of personal crisis, Abbott always turns to
Greg Abbott’s “Strike Force to Open Texas” is a who’s who of Texas elite: The governor named 39 people to the task force’s special advisory council, many of them white men who are millionaires and billionaires and political patrons of the governor. #txlege https://t.co/jVBqjvQHFe— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 20, 2020
And demonstrates his inner Trump.
Gov. Abbott again restricts press access for major COVID-19 announcement https://t.co/AjDsJhctFG #txlege #COVID19 #PeopleOverProfits— earlpat (@earlpat) April 18, 2020
Shutting down government transparency has become a coronavirus symptom.
Some government officials in Texas appear to be using the pandemic to hide public business from the public. #txlege https://t.co/slLHZ3rhJI— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 19, 2020
“My faith in their ability to fix this mess is lower than the water levels in West Texas creek beds in August.” Preach it, @mimiswartz #txlege https://t.co/jT3cAlXTOr— Jennifer Waisath Harris🧂 (@jwharris) April 17, 2020
With the latest on voting-by-mail ...
Why this is even a controversy boggles the mind. Texas judge's ruling expands vote-by-mail amid pandemic https://t.co/pKN4Uwewib— Lisa Falkenberg (@ChronFalkenberg) April 17, 2020
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, vowed to appeal the ruling, arguing that mail voting could lead to fraud. Many states rely heavily on mail-in ballots and have had no significant issues with voter fraud. Five states already plan to run all-mail elections this year, and 28 other states allow voters to request a mail ballot for any reason. The Brennan Center for Justice found that the threat of voter fraud is “infinitesimally small.”
"Anthony Gutierrez, the head of the watchdog group Common Cause, added that Paxton's threat to bring charges against voting rights groups put voters at risk." - via @Salon #txlege #COVID19 https://t.co/Haxtik24Ni— Common Cause Texas (@CCauseTexas) April 17, 2020
Kuff also looked at the initial ruling in the TDP's lawsuit to expand vote-by-mail access. And via Rick Hasen at Election Law Blog, Chad Flanders and Kristen Spina write in Slate that the Texas courts should use the “democracy canon” to interpret excuse restrictions in absentee ballot laws.
As the ACLU stated it in its motion in the case, though, it’s arguable that everyone now has a “physical condition” that increases the “likelihood” that going to the polls might “injure[] the voter’s health.” (New Hampshire has interpreted its analogous “physical disability” provision in precisely this way) Paxton’s construction of the statute, meanwhile, also might mean that someone who actually tests positive for COVID-19 but is asymptomatic may not qualify for an absentee ballot, which seems absurd. As Vox’s Ian Millhiser wrote: “Either one of these interpretations of the Texas law is plausible, and a judge could reach either conclusion using methods of statutory interpretation that are widely accepted as legitimate.”
This is where Texas’ judges should turn to the so-called “democracy canon,” a method of interpreting statutes that is tailor-made for cases like this one. In his 2009 Stanford Law Review article about the method, University of California, Irvine law professor Richard Hasen offered a case citation that perfectly captures the heart of the democracy canon: “[a]ll statutes tending to limit the citizen in his exercise of [the right of suffrage] should be liberally construed in his favor.” In other words, when there is a “tie” in how to interpret the statute, the tie goes to the voter.
The case Hasen cited -- Owens v. State ex rel. Jennett -- was, in fact, a Texas Supreme Court case. Indeed, Texas historically adopted a fairly strong version of what Hasen called the democracy canon. In one appeals court case from the 1950s on the very subject of absentee ballots, Sanchez v. Bravo, a Texas court established a “clear statement” rule regarding restrictions on the right to vote. If a state is going to prevent someone from voting, the court ruled, they have to say so in “clear and unmistakable terms.” Otherwise, courts must read the law in a way that promotes “the right of the citizen to cast his ballot and thus participate in the selection of those who control his government.”
The Texas Green Party held their state convention over the weekend, and Howie Hawkins won the majority of presidential delegates.
The convention affirmed statewide candidates kat gruene for Railroad Commission, Charles Waterbury for Supreme Court Position 1, and (David B. Collins) for US Senate. None of us three paid the new filing fees to run, so under current law we will not appear on the general election ballot. As we have noted previously, a pending lawsuit may yet overturn the filing fee provision of HB 2504.
[...]
Based on the polling at countywide precinct conventions, GPTX will have 20 delegates for Howie Hawkins, 3 for Dario Hunter, 2 for Kent Mesplay, and 1 for Susan Buchser-Lochocki.
We are excited to announce a huge victory in the Texas Primary! The GPTX uses approval voting and our rating was 80%, more than double the second place candidate, which means that Howie comes away with 20 of Texas' 26 delegates to the Green Party US convention.— Howie Hawkins (@HowieHawkins) April 19, 2020
Thank you Texas! pic.twitter.com/6yLtCDY14H
Some environmental developments include ...
"Every year, oil producers burn off millions of tons of natural gas into the air - a practice both wasteful and harmful to the environment,” writes @NaveenaSivam.— Emma Pabst (@PabstBlasts) April 17, 2020
As @txrrc discusses production cuts, it must tackle flagrant waste and pollution https://t.co/EiI9oDboWo #txlege
The next Census -- whenever it takes place -- could well determine a future for Port Arthur as maintaining semblance of a city ... or not.
If a city’s population drops below 50,000, it’s no longer considered an urban area. This different designation means it could lose some of the federal dollars directed toward larger metropolitan areas, including school funding and transportation projects. https://t.co/ycT3DAUnFc— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) April 17, 2020
Trump's EPA rollbacks are punishing Port Arthur's residents as well.
Danielle Nelson’s best monitor for the emissions billowing out of the oil refineries and chemical plants surrounding her home: The heaving chest of her 9-year-old asthmatic son.
On some nights, the boy’s chest shudders as he fights for breath in his sleep. Nelson suspects the towering plants and refineries are to blame, rising like a lit-up city at night around her squat brick apartment building in the rugged Texas Gulf Coast city of Port Arthur.
Ask Nelson what protection the federal government and plant operators provide her African American community, and her answer is blunt. “They’re basically killing us,” says the 37-year-old, who herself has been diagnosed with respiratory problems since moving to the community after 2017′s Hurricane Harvey.
“We don’t even know what we’re breathing,” she says.
Many of the Black communities ravaged by #COVID19 are “front-line communities” — where residents live adjacent to heavily polluting industries. If you’re Black or Latinx — & especially if you’re poor — it is difficult not to live in a front-line community.https://t.co/iTZ493e1rJ— Anna Núñez (@nunez_anna) April 18, 2020
And like air pollution from fossil fuel producers, gun nuts aren't taking any time off, either.
Gun violence is not taking a hiatus in the pandemic. Another senseless shooting and people terrorized just riding the bus. @MomsDemand #txlege https://t.co/lXNeCm4ray— Christina Leonard (@NurseWriter34) April 19, 2020
Food concerns are moving to the forefront; Texas Standard reports that a statehouse committee chairman thinks that the meat packers are manipulating the price of beef.
State Rep. Drew Springer, chair of the House Agriculture and Livestock committee, has called for an investigation into the pricing practices of meat packers. Just four companies control 85% of the U.S beef market.
SocraticGadfly looked at restaurants by type and class, and wonders which will do better, which worse on surviving coronavirus. The Lunch Tray noted a somewhat favorable ruling in a lawsuit over USDA school nutrition rollbacks.
Over 4,000 vehicles full of Houstonians showed up at NRG Park Saturday afternoon where 90,000 pounds of food were distributed by Houston ISD with the Houston Food Bank. It was a site I would not have imagined just one month ago. Full story @nkhensley: https://t.co/QSOltStQkX pic.twitter.com/AtHLRTNpxY— Mark Mulligan (@mrkmully) April 19, 2020
#HISD and @HoustonFoodBank food distribution continues at 25 sites next week with updated procedures and safety measures to minimize contact. More info: https://t.co/3r3FVUchl0 @HISDNutri pic.twitter.com/oKX97XnRQg— Houston ISD (@HoustonISD) April 19, 2020
Texas restaurant group takes reopening plan to task force https://t.co/bTGNoZnUHp #TXLege— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
And an Austin landmark loses its life to the coronavirus.
87-year-old Austin restaurant and live music Threadgill’s is closed forever https://t.co/HQymd68sYv pic.twitter.com/JI4TxgczAT
— Eater Austin (@EaterAustin) April 20, 2020
With all of this grim news, finding a bright spot somewhere can be difficult. The Bloggess shares how she is coping.
Willie Nelson is celebrating 4/20 with a live stream variety show called 'Come and Toke It' https://t.co/q4ZWUv0hy2 via @houstonchron— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) April 20, 2020
Sunday, April 19, 2020
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Race for the White House Update: All Aboard
-- Bernie went first ...
And following our refusals to get in line behind him, began the early recriminations.
That might appear to be more directed specifically at those who would be planning on not voting, as opposed to those of us who will be voting for someone other than Biden or Trump.
I'm rolling with the old Bernie anyway.
He built a movement for a political revolution and then, when it was sabotaged again by the establishment, trudged back to rejoin them. That is, after all, what he said he would do, repeatedly; support the nominee. A lot of people felt surprised, disappointed, let down by that (not me).
-- Obama came out second, with the best gaslighting ever.
Not that. This.
What refreshingcandor bullshit. I can't wait for the "I exerted no influence on the candidates who all quit their campaigns simultaneously just prior to Super Tuesday" tell-all interview/book.
-- And in a small plot twist, Elizabeth Warren -- coming in from her sabbatical -- makes it a three-for-three for Rapey Joe.
Was this orchestrated also by Maestro Obama? Does it presage Liz as VP? That's going to enrage the K-Hive if so. And perhaps miff Stacey Abrams, who's taking her campaign for the job public.
-- So ... keep revolting inside or outside?
Personally I have gotten the most satisfaction from doing both, strategically and each at the proper time. So for the moment, voting for Bernie in remaining primaries will give him delegates to go to the convention and influence DNC rules in the future (as in the past; restricting the votes of superdelegates to the second round, for example).
But after that, it's time to #DemExit.
Here are some of your options at the top of your November ballot.
Don't write Bernie's name in, please.
This is exactly what happens in Harris County; I've seen it. It may be what happens in every Texas county. Some states do allow write-ins, like California (I am told); you should check with your state's elections administrator and find out.
I'll post more later about other minor leftist parties that don't have a presidential candidate this cycle -- building the movement in-between presidential cycles is critical -- and how to address accusations of "privilege" from duopolists.
-- The Libertarians lost Lincoln Chafee last week, so Michigan Congressman Justin Amash is considering leaping in, and Jim Gray (former CA Superior Court judge and the party's 2012 vice-presidential nominee) has already taken the plunge, adding a little excitement to that primary.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden for president, pledging to help him defeat President Donald Trump in the general election as the two agreed to launch a series of task forces to work jointly on policy matters.
"We need you in the White House. I will do all that I can to see that that happens, Joe," Sanders said to Biden during a livestream broadcast by Biden's campaign on his website and on social media.
I’m not going to listen to Bernie tell me to vote for Biden because he’s not even a real democrat 🤣— Julie Smith 🌹 (@JulieSmithM) April 15, 2020
And following our refusals to get in line behind him, began the early recriminations.
Bernie Sanders said Tuesday that it would be “irresponsible” for his loyalists not to support Joe Biden, warning that progressives who “sit on their hands” in the months ahead would simply enable President Donald Trump’s reelection.
That might appear to be more directed specifically at those who would be planning on not voting, as opposed to those of us who will be voting for someone other than Biden or Trump.
I'm rolling with the old Bernie anyway.
"We are not a movement where I can snap my fingers and say to you or to anybody else what you should do, because you won't listen to me. You shouldn't. You'll make these decisions yourself." pic.twitter.com/4pkGmQIr5L— Mattie Washburn (@MattieWashburn) April 13, 2020
He built a movement for a political revolution and then, when it was sabotaged again by the establishment, trudged back to rejoin them. That is, after all, what he said he would do, repeatedly; support the nominee. A lot of people felt surprised, disappointed, let down by that (not me).
This is my favorite Bernie cartoon and seeing it is the straw that broke the camel's back and brought me to tears today. :(#ThankYouBernie pic.twitter.com/xcK63yD5UE— Colleen Feels the Bern 🌹 (@CYRFeelstheBern) April 8, 2020
Look, I love Bernie, but it's clear that we need a new leader of the movement. One who is not friends with some or anyone in the establishment and is more than willing to take all of them on, not just some or most.— De'Narde English🌹 (@DeNarde4MDDel) April 14, 2020
Bernie's done great work, but we'll take it from here.
-- Obama came out second, with the best gaslighting ever.
"The Democratic Party will have to be bold," he added, arguing that Biden has the "most progressive platform" of any Democratic nominee, even though many progressives who supported Sanders remain skeptical of Biden.
Not that. This.
It becomes more adorable with each passing day to reminisce about how we spent a year following the twists and turns and what-ifs of a Democratic presidential primary between 20-some candidates. After all the noise, Joe Biden just had to hold on to South Carolina to get Democratic voters to effectively nominate him by acclamation. Cool. So much of that time, too, was spent debating whether Democrats needed a return to the halcyon days of the Obama administration or a bolder agenda of structural overhaul. Did Barack Obama go far enough? was a fundamental question of the primary. It was mostly unspoken, as answering with the negative risked taking the most popular Democrat’s name in vain.
And then, the day after the last remaining competitor drops out and endorses the presumptive nominee, Obama himself comes out with the answer: Hell, I certainly wouldn’t run on the Obama platform.
“You know, I could not be prouder of the incredible progress that we made together during my presidency,” Obama said in a video released Tuesday morning, in which he endorsed Joe Biden. “But if I were running today, I wouldn’t run the same race or have the same platform as I did in 2008.”
What refreshing
While you were making hundreds of calls, knocking on hundreds of doors, and donating hundreds of dollars you didn't have, @BarackObama was waiting until just the right moment to cancel all of your work with a few choice calls of his own.— Kurt Hackbarth 🌹 (@KurtHackbarth) April 14, 2020
And you're expected to go along with it.
So, a collection of Moderate shitheads ran with no intention of winning, just to siphon delegates in key states, then collectively dropped out to consolidate support behind Biden, all to stop Sanders, now want us to believe they genuinely care about Sanders' policies & supporters pic.twitter.com/0gxlMyhigK— The Other Beth, who hates all of you (@BethLynch2020) April 14, 2020
Never forget who fought relentlessly behind the scenes to convince Beto O’Rourke, Amy Klobuchar, Pete Buttigieg and others to drop out /support Biden at once after it looked like Bernie would win.— Amir (@AmirAminiMD) April 12, 2020
Never forget whom to thank for another four years of Trump.
Thanks, @BarackObama.
-- And in a small plot twist, Elizabeth Warren -- coming in from her sabbatical -- makes it a three-for-three for Rapey Joe.
Was this orchestrated also by Maestro Obama? Does it presage Liz as VP? That's going to enrage the K-Hive if so. And perhaps miff Stacey Abrams, who's taking her campaign for the job public.
-- So ... keep revolting inside or outside?
Personally I have gotten the most satisfaction from doing both, strategically and each at the proper time. So for the moment, voting for Bernie in remaining primaries will give him delegates to go to the convention and influence DNC rules in the future (as in the past; restricting the votes of superdelegates to the second round, for example).
But after that, it's time to #DemExit.
"You MUST show them that you're capable of NOT voting for them.— Trisha (@Trisha_Tahmasbi) April 10, 2020
If you don't show them that you're capable of NOT voting for them, they DON'T have to listen to you. I promise you that."
- Lawrence O'Donnell
⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬇️pic.twitter.com/K8qeCEQDa0
To anyone being told that Green is a "wasted vote," I'd just point out that if Berners hadn't wasted their votes on loser Hillary in 2016 and instead got the Greens to 20% in the general, the DNC would never have crossed us by f*cking Bernie again like they did this time.— 🌹 Goody Weaver Cavorting With The Green Party 🌹 (@goodyweaver) April 12, 2020
Here are some of your options at the top of your November ballot.
Sanders is carrying out the final stage of his integration into the political system as events are demonstrating to millions the bankruptcy of capitalism and the need for real revolutionary change. https://t.co/zlockWsIrk— Joseph Kishore for President 2020 #socialism2020 (@jkishore) April 14, 2020
My vote is going to Green Party for President. pic.twitter.com/zi3tWV81BS— Wright for Congress (@WrightDistrict3) April 12, 2020
Berners, you know you don’t want Joe Biden. Join a truly progressive campaign, fighting for economic, environmental & racial justice. Med. for all, UBI, the Green Path Fwd, ending US imperialism, no rent no mortgage no evictions during COVID-19. For system change - #Hunter2020 pic.twitter.com/ppFIdVt6xn— Dario Hunter (@dario4america) April 13, 2020
Great open letter to Bernie supporters from the Socialist Party USA! I am honored to be their nominee, especially in 2020, 100 years since Debs' great run as the Socialist Party nominee. Let's repeat Debs' success and get a #MillionfVotesForSocialism !https://t.co/GqgdGDyD2y pic.twitter.com/He1ed5Jf81— Howie Hawkins (@HowieHawkins) April 14, 2020
Thanks Sema. Your link you shared above was incomplete (missed the first H in http). Here is the full link:https://t.co/bxOwMmCMn3— Mark Charles (@wirelesshogan) April 15, 2020
Don't write Bernie's name in, please.
Most write-in votes don't count.— Stephanie 🌻 Voltolin (@SAVoltolin) April 11, 2020
They don't even record it, just toss it.
It literally is the same as not voting.
Vote Green. Those will be viewed as protest votes by the Democrats, because they won't take us seriously at first.
It shows them we voted, but not for them. ✊
This is exactly what happens in Harris County; I've seen it. It may be what happens in every Texas county. Some states do allow write-ins, like California (I am told); you should check with your state's elections administrator and find out.
Bernie is still fighting for the progressive agenda, so I am still calling myself a Berner. However, I have no intention of voting for #StatusQuoJoe Biden in a state he cannot possibly win: Missouri. I am going to vote for the progressive @GreenPartyUS candidate instead.— PoliticalAnt🐜(a.k.a. @JazzLuvnAnt🎷)🔥 (@PoliticalAnt) April 14, 2020
I voted for Obama in 2008 but not 2012. In 2012 I voted Green Party cause I knew obama wouldn’t win Texas and I felt no loyalty to a party that had shown no loyalty to young people. I’ll vote Green Party for president in Texas again this year.— Hillcrest Card Company (@HillcrestCardCo) April 14, 2020
I'll post more later about other minor leftist parties that don't have a presidential candidate this cycle -- building the movement in-between presidential cycles is critical -- and how to address accusations of "privilege" from duopolists.
-- The Libertarians lost Lincoln Chafee last week, so Michigan Congressman Justin Amash is considering leaping in, and Jim Gray (former CA Superior Court judge and the party's 2012 vice-presidential nominee) has already taken the plunge, adding a little excitement to that primary.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
The TexProgBlog Wrangle, Part 2
Part 1 is here.
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
The COVID-19 pathogen will likely put off the US Census.
U.S. House Oversight Committee says Trump admin will move to extend #2020Census counting to October & ask Congress to delay delivery of redistricting data from 3/31/21 to 7/31/21 — which would require a #txlege special session (!!) https://t.co/S2nmh9BZAD— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) April 13, 2020
TXElects parses the meaning of the delay for us.
The Trump Administration may be seeking to delay key Census deadlines as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Commerce Secretary Wilber Ross said in a call with several members of Congress that Census field operations would be suspended until June 1, according to a statement issued by U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), chair of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.
Maloney said Ross would seek federal legislation to delay the deadline to deliver apportionment counts to April 30, 2021, from December 31, 2020, and to deliver redistricting data to the states to July 31, 2021, from March 31, 2021. Those deadlines are set by federal law and would require congressional approval.
[...]
During the last redistricting cycle, the U.S. Census Bureau delivered its 2010 state population totals for apportionment on December 21, 2010, and the block level population data on February 17, 2011. In the prior redistricting cycle, the totals for apportionment were released on December 28, 2000, and the actual Census 2000 enumeration data was sent to the states on March 6, 2001. Only the first of those two events would occur during the 2021 regular session under the Administration’s proposed timeline.
If the total state population for apportionment is sufficient to trigger “publication” of the census, then the Legislature could take up redistricting in the regular session. If “publication” is triggered by the block-level detail, then the next regular session would be 2023.
Update: Scott Braddock at Quorum Report has some thoughts about this. My best guess is that a special session to tackle redistricting in 2021, or waiting to do so until 2023, depends on whether the state's Republicans feel their opportunities to control the outcome are better sooner ... or later. Expect litigation aplenty either way.
With respect to legal action ...
BREAKING: Gov. Abbott’s attempt to ban safe, legal abortion during the COVID-19 pandemic has experienced another significant defeat. #AbortionIsEssential https://t.co/iT5FrhDtbX— Planned Parenthood (@PPGreaterTX) April 14, 2020
The Lone Star State is indeed a loner in one regard, according to an April 11 filing by Planned Parenthood in the US Supreme Court.
Texas, like other states, has declared an emergency due to the coronavirus crisis, halting nonessential activities. But it’s gone further than any other locale in limiting family planning services, leaving women with no choice but to remain pregnant or travel out of state instead of sheltering in place, even to seek nonsurgical abortions that simply involve swallowing “two pills.”
Over the weekend, the healthcare providers turned to the highest court in the land for help, saying that “Texas has exploited the Covid-19 crisis as a pretext to target abortion.”
Again, the only thing we can be sure of is more lawyers filing more lawsuits.
In spite of the shattered state (and national and global) economy, there are doubts as to whether restarting it now is the right idea.
Many question whether @GovAbbott's plan to reopen Texas is a good idea just a few weeks after announcing his #StayAtHome order. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlegehttps://t.co/fJMTynHmgf— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
Coronavirus grifters are gonna grift.
The @TXAG’s office has received more than 5,529 complaints from Texans over exploitative pricing on items like disinfectant wipes, toilet paper and hand sanitizer. #COVID19 #coronavirus #txlege https://t.co/n475QGGPhY— Reform Austin (@ReformAustin) April 14, 2020
The cost of hand sanitizers and masks on Amazon have risen at least 50 percent higher than the 90-day average. https://t.co/AWdxXn89Lr— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) April 7, 2020
Update: A Texas Railroad Commission hearing yesterday was, in Trump's words, 'a ratings hit', but once again Texas Republican elected officials chose to do nothing. Quorum Report:
Texas energy sector appears to reject the idea of state intervention in production
All-day RRC hearing draws 20,000 viewers online; it became clear a Texas-only decision could lead the nation but without a national strategy the needle would only be moved marginally
Two of the state’s energy producers have proposed a return to a limitation on oil production in Texas for the first time in almost 50 years as a way to stem the economic hemorrhaging of the oil & gas industry.
The idea got a lot of attention.
Today’s virtual hearing of the Texas Railroad Commission – with only proration on the agenda – drew more than 20,000 viewers. Statistics were so startling that AdminTexas.com posted that the hearing -- still going (late last) evening -- had significant viewership from Korea, Canada and Russia.
The proposal, in short, would be to cut Texas energy production, by possibly as much as 20 percent, to push up the sagging price of oil. Pioneer Natural Resources and Parsley Energy want it. Marathon Oil Corp. and many others pressed against it even with the promise that the cuts on production would be limited to top pumpers.
“This crisis can be viewed as an opportunity to begin a responsible and managed decline of fossil fuel use,” says Public Citizen Texas office Director Adrian Shelley in testimony to @txrrc on cutting oil/gas production in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. #txenergy #txlege pic.twitter.com/YrdcJlmHX3— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) April 14, 2020
tl;dr (but you should read it) - the regulators didn't really signal how they'd vote. Could take the issue up at their meeting next week. For @CourthouseNews: https://t.co/2eJPH3T8LR— Travis Bubenik (@travisbubenik) April 15, 2020
Kuff has an update to that weird "ghost candidate" story from the HD142 primary.
Nearly the entire Harris County Democratic legislative delegation is requesting a criminal investigation into the candidacy of a Texas House candidate whose existence was called into question after the March primary. #txlege https://t.co/HjOQy39ceY— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) April 14, 2020
Housing news had several Texas bloggers' attention.
Right now, statewide protections against eviction are set to expire at the end of the month. They don't go as far in Texas as in many states. https://t.co/esGabA8Nhk— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 11, 2020
"A massive wave of evictions is coming":
(The COVID-19) crisis has struck the United States at a moment when millions of people were already living perilously close to eviction. Because of stagnant wages and rising rents, one out of four renters spent over half of their income on housing. Among rent burdened households -- defined as those that spend more than one-third of their income on housing -- half have less than $10 in savings.
Nearly a third of the American workforce -- some 41.7 million people -- earns less than $12 per hour and has limited access to health care, paid sick days and paid family and medical leave. The mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced closing of business will force much of this population, even with the help of unemployment insurance, to choose between paying rent or buying groceries.
Some landlords have delayed eviction and even canceled rent for their tenants. Others, however, have been less sympathetic. The Daily Beast recently reported on the case of a Las Vegas nurse who was evicted because her landlord worried she might potentially spread covid-19.
The problem is simply too consequential to be left up to landlord discretion. And if evictions are merely delayed, not permanently stopped, that could lead to a resurgence of the virus, after stay-at-home measures "bend the curve" of infection. Evicted families end up in homeless shelters, where people eat and sleep next to each other -- the opposite of social distancing.
People experiencing homelessness are particularly vulnerable to upper respiratory illness including to covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Well before the pandemic, sprawling tent encampments had experienced outbreaks of medieval diseases like typhus and trench fever.
San Antonio’s West Side is in the embryonic stages of gentrification.— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) April 13, 2020
The Alazán-Apache Courts—the city's oldest and largest public housing development—are arguably the best defense against speculators.
The project could be demolished within two years.https://t.co/nuP2dVJpqm
Last year, the Current and the San Antonio Heron collaborated on a lengthy analysis of gentrification's sweep across the West Side, including the scheduled demolition of the Alazán-Apache Courts.
In a couple of follow-ups to postings from last week's Wrangle, Rice University's ventilator is all ready to go ...
The plans for Rice University’s ApolloBVM, an open-source emergency ventilator design that could help patients in treatment for COVID-19, are now online and freely available to everyone in the world: https://t.co/bf7tUXH55g pic.twitter.com/KknG9lXtvU— Rice University (@RiceUniversity) April 10, 2020
... and Half Price Books is about to go out.
Half Price Books furloughs or lays off 78 percent of employees https://t.co/9yBHAoSb6C— San Antonio Express-News (@ExpressNews) April 6, 2020
In the wake of furloughs ordered by parent company Gannett, and with print media facing a troubled future, the Austin American Statesman turns to ... radio.
.@statesman is bringing a familiar voice back to the city’s radio landscape with the Statesman News Network https://t.co/tBRYlpbeE7— Austin 360 (@austin360) April 6, 2020
And to conclude another week of the best of the left of Texas, here's few lighter-side pieces.
Released in 1978, “The Whole Shootin’ Match,” was directed by Eagle Pennell. It was the first film to gain national attention for the Austin film scene. https://t.co/toix5iBx9Q— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) April 9, 2020
Save Buffalo Bayou is enjoying tending their garden during this self-imposed spring exile.
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