Sunday, December 19, 2021
Thursday, December 16, 2021
As the Filing Dust Settles Wrangle
ICYMI: Here's our recap of the #tx2022 primary filings for the #txlege and statewide races. Bookmark this for the future. #txgov #txag #txed https://t.co/Y9N1VrUvSV
— RA News (@RANewsTX) December 15, 2021
Really am enjoying everything Nick Anderson and his gang are doing.
Beto's wave is building.
Midland’s Beto Meet & Greet was a great success. pic.twitter.com/UZAWfXMr6t
— Cathy Broadrick (@CathyBroadrick) December 15, 2021
My latest column for @thenation . Don't sleep on Texas and @BetoORourke. Not only is the race winnable, but just as is happening in Georgia, Beto's candidacy can accelerate flipping Texas, which will reorder US politics overall. https://t.co/PBmoOofAaH
— Steve Phillips (@StevePtweets) December 15, 2021
Candidly I've seen this before. First in 2006 when David Van Os went to every single county courthouse in the state in his bid against Abbott for attorney general. And nobody in my estimation had more momentum to defeat Governor Fish Lips than Wendy Davis in 2014, when she delivered a filibuster that shook the Capitol. Literally, some will recall.
A lot of things have changed in the Lone Star State since then, not the least of which is that it's gotten redder and more extreme. And now, of course, there's fresh gerrymandering and voter suppression to contend with. So you'll have to forgive me if I don't deem this early enthusiasm all that contagious.
2/ Our @dallasnews analysis shows that counting prisoners in their cells during redistricting inflates the political power of Republican districts and drains population from Democratic strongholds.https://t.co/Zebn1IEgKQ #txlege pic.twitter.com/dAt4SBsLav
— Lauren McGaughy 🌟 (@lmcgaughy) December 15, 2021
The marquee race remains, IMO, the state's attorney general contest, in both the GOP and Democratic primaries. Just yesterday K-Pax was rebuked by the appeals court for overstepping his authority in prosecuting alleged voter fraud charges.
An election code provision granting the Office of Attorney General the ability to prosecute criminal election fraud cases is unconstitutional, the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled in an 8-1 decision. The case arises from an alleged campaign finance violation by the Jefferson County sheriff, a case the county district attorney declined to prosecute.
Section 273.021 (of the Texas) Election Code provides that the “attorney general may prosecute a criminal offense prescribed by the election laws of this state.” The Court ruled that power properly resides with county and district attorneys, who are part of the judicial branch, and not the attorney general, which is part of the executive branch.
“Absent the consent and deputization order of a local prosecutor or the request of a district or county attorney for assistance, the Attorney General has no authority to independently prosecute criminal cases in trial courts,” wrote Judge Jesse McClure for the majority (PDF). “Any attempt to overlap the Attorney General’s constitutional duties with county and district attorneys’ constitutional duties in the sense of a Venn diagram of sorts is unconstitutional.”
The CCA is all Republicans. And none of them are moderates. They're death penalty freaks like Sharon Keller. (Sidebar: Regarding the death penalty, there's good news on that front.) So let's hope the TXGOP primary voter can scrounge around and find enough logic to follow their lead and rebuke Paxton themselves in March.
'During the winter storm, @KenPaxtonTX was off in a luxury resort in UT while the rest of us were freezing,' @georgepbush tells @KarinaKling.
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 14, 2021
But he's sitting on emails, texts, Bush said, referring to this exclusive by @lmcgaughy, @MorrisReports: https://t.co/JKi154XWvz 1/2
Eight Republicans run to replace George P. Bush as Texas land commissioner https://t.co/gVClDAbbkd via @HoustonChron #tx2022 #txlege
— Joshua M. Blank (@JoshuaMBlank) December 15, 2021
Without straight-ticket voting it might be easier than in the past to dislodge some of these squatters from office in November, but that's too far away to be concerned with just yet. Focus on spring turnout, Ds. Media will make hay if your numbers are lower than the Pachys'.
Stace reviews his favorites for the statewide Donkey races and also Harris County, linking to the Erik Manning spreadsheet. The San Antonio Report profiles the race for Bexar County judge, sure to be as spirited as the one in Harris.
I have some catch-all items.
Negative Partisanship in Texas Stifles Potential Crossover Voting in #Tx2022, w/ @JoshuaMBlank via @TxPolProject https://t.co/lWLfeab88M #txlege pic.twitter.com/8t6GDeFdI9
— Jim Henson (@jamesrhenson) December 13, 2021
Wow don’t see this every day in Texas — a joint statement from conservative @TPPF and liberal @EveryTxn slamming TX state comptroller’s proposal “to radically reduce the #transparency” of a multi billion dollar tax incentive (critics say ‘giveaway’) program. #txlege
— Jay Root (@byjayroot) December 10, 2021
Texas is close to becoming the job-quitting capital of the country https://t.co/mawQLPotu9 via @wfaa #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 15, 2021
Gerrymandering? Or should new Texas maps be called “Jerrymandering” for Jerry Garcia because of the psychedelic shapes some districts have. @toddgillman takes you on a redistricting trip. #txlege #redistricting #gerrymander #txcong #Congress #2022Elections https://t.co/3N64sS5c1j
— John Gravois (@Grav1) December 15, 2021
Thanks for interviewing me for this column @cltomlinson. The changes proposed are massive & there are few details w/ even less analysis. The @PUCTX needs to consider customer impacts more fully & listen to the general public before adding billions to bills
— Doug Lewin (@douglewinenergy) December 15, 2021
#energytwitter #txlege https://t.co/bUZvGCnYRi
A couple of environmental headlines:
In West Texas, an abandoned well is creating the "Dead Sea" — and no one thinks it is their job to fix it.https://t.co/L48PNLI4tT
— Russell Gold (@russellgold) December 8, 2021
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is revisiting the idea of building a massive tunnel to alleviate Houston's flooding https://t.co/O45VRepgFG via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 15, 2021
An expansive collation of border and immigration developments.
Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez was nominated to head ICE in April, and approved by a Senate committee in August.
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) December 14, 2021
But if he's not approved in the the full Senate by the end of December, it's back to square one.https://t.co/6B0mA19dXv
“I thought he was going to kill me”: Migrants say return of Trump-era border policy will put asylum seekers in danger.
— darlacameron (@darlacameron) December 15, 2021
Stunning, devastating story from @ujohnnyg about one woman who was sent to Ciudad Juárez after seeking asylum in El Paso:https://t.co/f3zocwtTiO
"There were just staggering levels of misconduct...that just indicate top-to-bottom issues with the mission."https://t.co/npQ5kyVDyz
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) December 13, 2021
3rd of 4 new videos of Texas National Guard trespassing on our private property--a nature center open 7 days/wk to visitors. They have likely come off the levee at our place, where they have no authority to be either, b/c the IBWC has a tightly-prescribed nonpossessory easement. pic.twitter.com/kZLuQ2zOsZ
— National Butterfly (@NatButterflies) December 13, 2021
More than 100 civil rights groups ask feds to slash Texas funding over migrant trespassing arrests, @jsmccullou reports https://t.co/dd6K5fVUfT via @TexasTribune
— James Barragán 🌟 (@James_Barragan) December 15, 2021
And the criminal and social justice news.
Aguirre, a licensed private investigator at the time, was hired to investigate fraud claims and paid about $266,400 by the Liberty Center for God and Country around the time of the incident. https://t.co/9yhMiMzgKr
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 14, 2021
Both men belonged to a militia group called the "Patriot Boys of North Texas," and appeared to use Facebook in the days leading up to the Jan. 6 attack to plan their role in the riots. https://t.co/4FFaGnzuyy
— KENS 5 (@KENS5) December 15, 2021
#BREAKING: Williamson County settles Javier Ambler wrongful death lawsuit for $5 million https://t.co/8owVhZeUps pic.twitter.com/7f2WaHli23
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) December 14, 2021
Two items regarding critical race theory.
Sen. Ted Cruz has released an eBook outlining how to "fight" against so-called critical race theory from being taught in K-12 education.https://t.co/hutliBOOx3
— Ariana Garcia 🇵🇷 (@Ariana_noGrande) December 15, 2021
“What's happening in Fort Worth ISD is a reflection of a greater narrative that's going around nationally."
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 16, 2021
The parts of school board meetings devoted to public comment used to center on improving student success, but they've become venting sessions. https://t.co/5ju0MEKpUq
And today's soothers.
Our first female publisher: Nancy Meyer, Miami Herald president, named publisher of the Houston Chronicle https://t.co/czkVFgUBhW via @houstonchron
— Alison Cook (@alisoncook) December 15, 2021
Texas, and Austin in particular, played a key role in the birth of Gilbert Shelton's canonical comic 'The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers,' which is now an animated TV show. https://t.co/l12NkQ1tmd
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 9, 2021
DEVELOPING: Feral hogs take over Southeast Texas neighborhood and cause all sorts of problems in a short period of time.https://t.co/zlO1prpQmo pic.twitter.com/hdHRG5TlLr
— KFDM News (@kfdmnews) December 14, 2021
Members of the Cigar Makers Union Local No. 128, American Federation of Labor, in El Paso, September, 1909. This image is fantastic! El Paso was once the center of a thriving cigar industry, which provided work to hundreds of people in the early 20th century. Courtesy UTSA. pic.twitter.com/lUP297BU1g
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 14, 2021
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Filling the Filings Wrangle (with updates)
Candidate filing for the 2022 primary in Texas closed Monday evening, and there were more than a few late developments in what is set to be a busy election cycle.#TXlege #TX2022 https://t.co/cLdjtU19Eh
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 14, 2021
I'm so old I remember when Warren G. Harding (not the former president) got elected state treasurer, and Gene Kelly (not the deceased dancer, as Barbara Radnofsky will attest) almost -- well, not quite -- got elected US Senator.
Will the candidacy of a little-known Lockheed Martin desktop engineer prove confusing to some voters?
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 13, 2021
‘Rick Perry’ is running for Texas governor against Greg Abbott but it’s not the Rick Perry you know.#TxGov #2022Elections #txlege https://t.co/xBZy8Ngdas
Anything that pisses Dave Carney off is worth a few laughs. Update: Such as the Bum Steer of the Year award.
With the February freeze, the Capitol invasion, and the ongoing pandemic, 2021 was the year that turned to 2020 and said, “Hold my beer.” Suffice it to say, we had a lot to work with when deciding the 2022 Bum Steer of the Year. https://t.co/LbWkgH9Tfn pic.twitter.com/X9jsGMx7bZ
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 14, 2021
The downside is that serious candidates will again be forced to beg for attention from the state's political reporters while they chase the 'not that Rick Perry' story. As long as you can accept that we live in an oligarchy on the days when it isn't a plutocracy, you won't be too disillusioned. More blunt: Just stop with the 'democracy' shit already.
The Dems' three-candidate field includes a TSU professor, a north Texas lawmaker, and a 2018 challenger who came within five percentage points of beating Dan Patrick. https://t.co/WyouGra70y
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) December 14, 2021
Not fond of but not surprised by Collier's overuse of the royal 'we' in his statement here. He really ought to be called a 'perennial' -- or 'frequent' -- candidate in that dismissive tone that some use.
The progressive movement in South Texas is strong! From left to right:
— Dani Marrero Hi (@danimarr94) December 13, 2021
✅ @MichelleVforTX
✅ @JCisnerosTX
✅ @RochelleMGarza
Let's goooooo!! 👏👏 pic.twitter.com/WrzTai1gtJ
We'll wait and see re: "progressive". Far too much co-opting of the word by Democrats, certainly Texas Democrats. I question whether Latinas in South Texas not named Jessica Cisneros are breaking the mold, but I'll keep an open mind.
Not a surprise for anyone paying attention #txlege Democrats worry their grip on Hispanic vote is loosening https://t.co/Cl8QTFzmgc
— harvey kronberg (@HKronberg) December 13, 2021
If elected, he'd take office 40 years after the end of his most recent term in the Texas House... which was before some current members were born. #txlege https://t.co/D27synBGUe pic.twitter.com/cDpJsUXw0J
— Jasper Scherer (@jaspscherer) December 14, 2021
An update to TX-07:
Well, that didn't last long. A few hours after Javed told me he wasn't about to pull out of the race, he did exactly that amid a lot of political pressure for him to back out.
— Jeremy Wallace (@JeremySWallace) December 15, 2021
Fletcher now has clear path to Democratic nomination. https://t.co/mI8TunPs4c
On Tuesday, Javed acknowledged he was being asked to get out of the race but said he was determined to stay in it. Several hours later, Javed declared he had pulled out, too, with no further explanation.
And one additional morning-after reaction.
With 31 lawmakers moving on, Texas Legislature has room to get redder https://t.co/9I9USLoGtB via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 14, 2021
Really hoping the Democrats in John Whitmire's Senate district see fit to send him off to his previously-announced '23 H-Town mayoral campaign.
One of the most active people against the @TxDOTHouston plan for I-45 is aiming for state senate gig. if she wins, she'd definitely get to speak at @TxDOTCommission meetings earlier. https://t.co/nBNjxlekaH
— Dug Begley (@DugBegley) December 13, 2021
The Dean is going to have to put a lot of lipstick on his pig if he loses his last run for re-election to Austin. And I will be here for it.
Truth to tell, however, there are bigger wads holding office that need to be ejected next year. Let's consider the professional evaluations of Beto's latest tactic.
What do you know? @BetoORourke's now arguing that @GregAbbott_TX didn't trust law enforcement when pushing the bill to let people carry handguns with no paperwork:
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) December 14, 2021
"This governor really does not trust law enforcement" #TxLege https://t.co/UhFOOmCUcu
Seems like it might be effective.
Abbott also keeps taking money away from police. Every budget that he has been in office, I believe, he has cut funding from state police.https://t.co/05VVPS7fAR
— Julie Gilberg | Vote, vote, vote 🗳️🗳️🗳️‼️ (@joolytron) December 14, 2021
Someone might fact-check Ms. Gilberg's claim, but regardless, enough evidence stands up to point out the governor's hypocrisy on defunding the police, especially in Austin. Watch to see if this gains traction among LEOs.
Not sure @LivingBlueTX made the point she thought she was with this headline (but a good article anyway, Michelle!) https://t.co/AoT0oJujgX #TXLege #TXGov #TX2022
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 13, 2021
I teased Michelle good-naturedly about her header and she took it in stride. Her blog is outstanding from a civil rights perspective. A little too heavy on the blue shilling for me, but that's because I'm Green now. Delilah Barrios gets my support, money and vote for Texas governor.
Most likely scenario for the Nov. #TX2022 gubernatorial ballot.@GregAbbott_TX (@TexasGOP)@BetoORourke (@texasdemocrats)@Mark4Gov (@LPTexas )@DelilahforTexas (@TXGreens)
— Mark P. Jones (@MarkPJonesTX) December 14, 2021
Abbott & Beto still have to win primary
Tippetts & Barrios still have to be nominated by convention#txlege
One last filing update, intersecting with the criminal and social justice news (which follows).
Apparently Damien Jones has filed to run for #txlege #HD147 in the Republican Primary now. #Election2022 #Texas
— Holly Hansen (@hollyshansen) December 13, 2021
Three Local Democrats Indicted For Election Fraud In Texas House Races https://t.co/8maFew3XTU
... Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced grand jury indictments of three local Democrats -- Richard Bonton, Natasha Demming and Damien Jones -- connected to two election fraud schemes tied to local Texas House of Representatives races in House Districts 142 and 132.
You can read on at the link.
.@LinaHidalgoTX, @SylvesterTurner face possible felony corruption charges https://t.co/RZ0hpzzPuR #HouNews #HTX
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 14, 2021
Nothing particularly new here; an aggregate of stories that have been ignored by the Blue crew for reasons that are patently obvious.
Updates from Texas Monthly's Mike Snyder and the Chron's Matt Schwartz.
The leader of the Harris County government seemed to have weathered a controversy over a contract for vaccine outreach, but in mid-November the district attorney issued subpoenas concerning the bidding process. https://t.co/N397203KRd
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 8, 2021
12 potential Hidalgo challengers among dozens who file for Harris County races https://t.co/PfGjC7bDB2 via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 14, 2021
Lawyers say they can’t find ex-HPD chief Art Acevedo ahead of trial in sergeant’s death https://t.co/ZIRQKEXkci
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 12, 2021
Just plain weird. Update:
Look where @ArtAcevedo turned up #HouNews https://t.co/KwwKHn5vZX
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 15, 2021
The law says state agencies must meet regularly to develop strategies that improve lending to low-income communities, but it's been four years since they last met. https://t.co/mg1DdOLKdK
— WFAA (@wfaa) December 13, 2021
Katy ISD's school board is under fire again for continuing to block websites that provide resources like counseling and suicide hotlines for LGBTQ+ students. https://t.co/De9eHiSz4A
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) December 14, 2021
The San Antonio Current is on top of one Alamo City school district's willingness to pull library books off the shelf.
The 14,000 Kroger workers around Houston with UFCW Local 455 who almost struck on Thanksgiving appear to be right back on the edge of a massive strike. If negotiations don’t go well on Wednesday, be ready for action, the union says. pic.twitter.com/kKA4cKGtpX
— Jonah Furman (@JonahFurman) December 14, 2021
The latest in climate.
“We live in a world of warmer, more violent weather. Stronger storms, longer droughts, heavier floods, larger fires,” notes the editorial board. “The planet is sending an SOS.” https://t.co/JECiJ4QMrd pic.twitter.com/OVJGika7SD
— New York Times Opinion (@nytopinion) December 13, 2021
"We're currently witnessing a great deception, where the companies most responsible for catastrophically heating the planet are spending millions on advertising campaigns about how their business plans are focused on sustainability," @ClientEarth https://t.co/2AP1orbOlp
— Paul Dawson (@PaulEDawson) December 13, 2021
W/out black start: “It would be the equivalent of going back to the Stone Age, it really would,” said Pat Wood, the former chair of the PUCT. “That was just a shock to me.... If those plants are not secure, then our system’s not secure.” #txlege #txenergyhttps://t.co/kqGEf3rs0F
— Doug Lewin (@douglewinenergy) December 14, 2021
Tomlinson: Exxon, Aramco CEOs show Big Oil's arrogance toward climate crisis https://t.co/J8NUOc9yVl via @houstonchron #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) December 8, 2021
Thousands of facilities that are considered large sources of toxic air pollution submit yearly reports on chemical emissions.
— ProPublica (@propublica) December 14, 2021
But the EPA has never released this data in a way that allows the public to understand the risks.
So we did. https://t.co/dROx6MWsxf
This one is giving me flashbacks to TPC, but not because its big or destructive. The same private environmental firm that TPC hired is monitoring air for Nederland Tank Wash, and the city has been publishing reports with permission from the company.https://t.co/XPdVbXNcYb
— Jacob Dick (@jd_journalism) December 14, 2021
Bloomberg Quint reported on two mysterious plumes of methane appearing on satellite above some East Texas oil and gas fields. Update: ExxonMobil says it will use satellites to monitor the Permian Basin for methane leaks. On the bright side, Environment Texas has a list of the top ten wins for the state's ecology this year, and the AP recounts the many coal-fired plants closing after the implementation of new federal wastewater guidelines.
Power producers that say they will shutter coal-fired units as a result of the new rule include Atlanta-based Southern Co. and Houston-based NRG. Southern, which operates electric utilities in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi, said it will shutter two-thirds of its coal fleet, including units at the nation’s two largest coal-fired power plants, Scherer and Bowen, both in Georgia. NRG said it plans to stop burning coal at its domestic plants outside Texas, and install new pollution controls at its two Texas plants.
Texas is losing groundwater at nearly twice the maximum sustained rate — and that rate is likely to increase unless the state changes course. Read more: https://t.co/9MBCpWdkLH @EDFtx @MeadowsC4Water #txlege
— EDF Growing Returns (@GrowingReturns) December 13, 2021
That's enough for today. Closing with one soother.
Meanwhile, in Texas. . .
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 13, 2021
Two escaped sheep led San Antonio Animal Care Services officers on a thirty-minute foot chase alongside a highway before police blocked off traffic so that the animals could be herded safely back home.
More Texana news: https://t.co/eNO1x9OcFC
Monday, December 13, 2021
The Filing Deadline Wrangle
Filing for partisan nomination or an independent candidacy for the 2022 general election concludes at 6 p.m. local time (today).
As far as we can tell, all incumbent statewide officials, legislators and members of Congress who announced plans to run for re-election (or at least didn’t announce plans to the contrary) have filed except for Reps. Claudia Ordaz Perez (D-El Paso), Ana-Maria Ramos (D-Dallas) and Ron Reynolds (D-Missouri City). Ordaz Perez is paired with Rep. Art Fierro (D-El Paso), who has filed for re-election.
It generally takes a couple of weeks for all the filing activity to shake out completely. County and state party chairs are not required to submit candidate information to the Secretary of State until December 21. The Secretary of State has an additional day to post certified candidate lists on its website. In rare cases for which extended deadlines are triggered, these deadlines shift a few days later. It can take longer to obtain information on independent candidates, who must file declarations of intent by tomorrow (Monday), but their actual application is not due until June 23. Write-in candidates cannot begin submitting their applications until July 23.
Thanks, Dr. @MarkPJonesTX for this call to arms. Both @DelilahforTexas and @timelordcrow have gathered the necessary filing fees! #TXLege #TX2022 #TXGov @TXRRC #GreenTwitter https://t.co/QYG8U5NkVp
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 10, 2021
Deirdre Gilbert, a Missouri City woman who previously announced she was running for governor as a Democrat, just announced she's shifting to run as an independent instead. pic.twitter.com/hlvBmwIlmr
— Jeremy Wallace (@JeremySWallace) December 8, 2021
So excited to see my close friend, hemp advocate, and fellow @JanesDueProcess lawyer file to run for Ag Commissioner. Rural Texas needs a fighter like Susan Hays, not a corrupt politician like Sid Miller. https://t.co/D6WPysrBOO pic.twitter.com/KBlLeDkq1M
— Rochelle Garza (@RochelleMGarza) December 9, 2021
(2/2) he cannot appear on a general-election ballot due Election Code Sec. 162.015. That says someone can't be a party's nominee for an office if they were also a candidate for another party's nomination for the same office.
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) December 8, 2021
Another filing update tomorrow. Local school board election results from Saturday:
Conservative trustees take 2 seats from Houston ISD incumbents https://t.co/e4ENbA0U2G via @houstonchron
— Jasper Scherer (@jaspscherer) December 12, 2021
Didn't see any whining about delayed returns posted by Harris Votes, but didn't look very hard, either (had much better plans for my Saturday night). Relative to the outcomes: it must have been those two non-votes from my household that turned the the tide red. Wait; nope. Don't live in those jurisdictions. Blame other Green Party members, or maybe Susan Sarandon.
For those who have offspring who will be educated in the state's public school systems, better get out there and hustle up your preferred electorate in the next election. Because the fundies certainly are.
Back to the future (2022).
The most consequential fact about Gov. Abbott in this @nytimes dispatch from Texas: “He frequently blocks out his daily schedule for eight hours of fund-raising calls.” https://t.co/hjAEl6vTOI
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) December 13, 2021
Fifty-five million dollars and more every day in the coffers and Governor Helen Wheels still grinds on the telephone like an extended warranty salesman. Are you impressed by his determination? Is this the type of person you want re-elected?
IMHO it's the result of a political system long gone rancid.
Another example: the ridiculousness of the latest goobernatorial poll underscoring the lack of value of this so-called science. Braddock again with the hammer on the head of the nail.
Never read too much into one poll. But one way to read this one would be that in a world where the Texas electricity grid is not a factor, Abbott beats O'Rourke in a landslide. That could prove true if Beto goes all in on the grid then everything turns out fine #TxLege https://t.co/GvFUeR9wbq
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) December 8, 2021
Gambling on another Uri that does not come to pass probably ruins Texas Dems -- or at least their consultants -- for another generation, which is to say forever (when the climate fries us all). Yes, I have blogged recently that the grid issue is paramount for Team Blue. But they need to fight on multi-fronts, and on some bipartisan topics that Abbott won't risk touching, like cannabis legalization and civil asset reform (or better yet, abolishment). Maybe even damage to the state's economy.
BIG: The nation’s largest teachers union is cancelling its 2022 convention in Dallas \ over new Texas restrictions on voting, abortion and what teachers can teach about racial history. Exclusive via @The74 https://t.co/kJ46AIN07j pic.twitter.com/lS7QpaaWKU
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) December 7, 2021
Meanwhile ...
Diaz says she decided to run for governor because she was raised on the principle of service.
— Madlin Mekelburg (@madlinbmek) December 8, 2021
“The current governor of Texas has forgotten what that word means...The play he is writing is called, ‘I want to be president.’ That’s not service.” #txlege pic.twitter.com/Xpa6lJSgbQ
I would imagine Diaz gets very favorable treatment from the state's political media. How that translates into electoral success is to be determined. This seems like a vanity play. The TexDem Latin@ base vote might push her into a runoff with Beto. Won't that look great for everybody.
Prescient from the TexTrib's James Barragan and Cassi Pollock. Or was it Brett Kavanaugh?
“Every constitutional right is now at risk": Legal experts warn Supreme Court action on Texas abortion law could lead to copycats on other issues, story w/ @cassi_pollock https://t.co/4J0z99hU8h via @TexasTribune
— James Barragán 🌟 (@James_Barragan) December 10, 2021
California governor wants Texas-like law to ban assault guns > https://t.co/FZr8VFxqtO
— KPRC 2 Houston (@KPRC2) December 12, 2021
What happened in Oxford Township, Michigan, is a reminder that guns brought into the home to protect our children are actually killing them, as if Texans — after Santa Fe, El Paso and Sutherland Springs — needed a reminder, writes the Editorial Board. https://t.co/E2Y6NGSlfx
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) December 12, 2021
Since I got a few days behind again ...
Unlawful delegation of state power, state District Judge David Peeples rules.
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) December 9, 2021
On the new Texas abortion law's enforcement mechanism that invites people to sue anyone who helps a woman get an abortion after about 6 weeks.
Via @MorrisReports. #txlege #SB8https://t.co/54SCGsWpUj
#SCOTUS lets Texas abortion law continue but says providers can sue https://t.co/Yg65ZdFu1N #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) December 10, 2021
"Staying open is not sustainable if this ban stays in effect much longer," said Amy Hagstrom Miller, president and CEO of Whole Woman’s Health, which operates four clinics in Texas and is the chief plaintiff in the case before the Supreme Court. https://t.co/DB8AsvvbOQ
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) December 10, 2021
Kuff also reviewed the state and federal rulings on SB8.
TX SOS announces it's requesting documents from Dallas, Collin, Tarrant & Harris Co. as part of "Phase 2" of 2020 election audit.
— Blake Hanson (@BlakeFox4News) December 10, 2021
There's no widespread evidence of fraud. State launched investigation after fmr. President Trump demanded audit. Trump won Texas in 2020. pic.twitter.com/96Stany9DD
SocraticGadfly also blogged about the latest suit against the Texas election law, the minor parties over filing fees (trust me on this: SG hates everybody). Jessica Huseman at VoteBeat.org reported on the insanity of the Potter County Republican Party and its plans for an all-analog primary.
Nearly 12,000 registered voters have received letters demanding proof of citizenship as part of Texas's newest effort at "voter list maintenance." https://t.co/YCCbZWlLWM
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) December 12, 2021
One environmental update ...
Big Oil started out singing "It's a Small World" at the World Petroleum Congress and ended with a menacing threat. https://t.co/NrkRaR5h0M @HoustonChron #ClimateCrisis #txlege
— ChrisTomlinson (@cltomlinson) December 10, 2021
... and one social justice update today.
Defense attorneys also slammed the county judge for picking what a regional judge guessed are his friends over the state-assigned judges.
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) December 10, 2021
The county judge didn’t respond to questions, but read more here on how this came to be:
https://t.co/LoJCBijlTB #txlege #immigration
More tomorrow. Ending with the calm-me-downs.
With over 100 restaurants featured in 'Lost Restaurants of Galveston’s African American Community,' the breadth of the list speaks volumes about the contributions of Black citizens to the culture and history of the island. https://t.co/zusYXfqkrx
— Texas Highways Magazine (@TexasHighways) December 10, 2021
San Antonio was at the center of the Mexican American civil rights movement.
— Texas Public Radio (@TPRNews) December 11, 2021
Now, 15 sites on the city’s historic West Side are featured in a new interactive, self-guided walking and driving tour called Mapping the Movimiento.https://t.co/VXBaLw5Zir
The Austin Chronicle has a South by Southwest update.
BREAKING: Mexican singer and icon of the Mexican music industry Vicente Fernandez, "Don Chente", has died at the age of 81. https://t.co/stcPaxhfn1
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) December 12, 2021
Waco native Dave Campbell, a major figure in Texas sports journalism for seven decades, died Friday after a recent hospital stay with pneumonia. https://t.co/UxKZlNEuWM
— Waco Tribune-Herald (@wacotrib) December 11, 2021
I have viewed as many Texas history photos, probably, as anybody. This is one over the very best I've seen. Great story, too. It blew me away.https://t.co/ou9wwUiLPk@TexasHighways
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) December 7, 2021






