Tomorrow is the day many of us will get this election started.
Mail -- aka absentee -- ballots have been flowing in, as you know. I received my application for one between rounds of the ongoing boxing match between Harris County Clerk
Chris Hollins and Governor
Greg Abbott, but will avail myself of the in-person option once more, even though my disability enables a postal voting qualification.
There's lots of election news here, and my suggestions for your vote are down-post.
The two others are El Paso and Dallas. According to
the story, only one candidate who is not an incumbent is slated to appear with the presumptive First Lady: TX-24's
Candace Valenzuela, in metro DFW. Polling in the district
is stale but shows the Democrat has the strength to flip it; the race is considered
a coin toss. Here's a
good profile.
Donks don't want to leave anything on the Lone Star table, and good on 'em for that. 'E' for effort.

The line at the Bexar County Elections Department Monday (October 5th) afternoon, hours before the close of voter registration for the 2020 elections. (Courthouse News photo / Erik De La Garza)
(Today) Texas Democrats will receive an assist from some of the biggest stars in the Democratic Party. Oprah Winfrey, Willie Nelson, Senator Bernie Sanders and (Julian) Castro are set to join (Beto) O’Rourke and his political action committee, Powered By People, to help run a massive phone bank operation being touted as the “largest single-day voter contact effort in Texas history.”
They understand there are
even more hurdles to getting your democracy on than usual.
The stakes are exceptionally high, and Texas voters know it. It's not just about
Trump, or
Cornyn, or even Congress. It's also about the excessive over-reach by Abbott and his minions in the Lege.
Even the freakiest of the freak right get it, though for entirely different reasons.
It's enough to drive a person to drink. And if you want to drink in a Texas bar, you might have to drive a little bit outside of town to do so.
Bud Kennedy at the
Startlegram has some
good advice for early birds, first-timers, and "occasional" *cough low-info cough* ballot-casters. The
Texas Civil Rights Project reported about how Fort Bend ISD helped get its 18-year-old students registered to vote before the deadline. And
Vote 411 has the answers to all your voting questions.
So with all of this in mind, and with regular Brains readers
acutely aware of my position on
Joe Biden and
MJ Hegar, here's the P Slate for all Texas voters.
That's it. That's the whole thing.
I can't vote for all of 'em and neither can you, but vote Green where you can, including the all-important
Railroad Commissioner's race.
Any Green is better than any Democrat in this contest, beyond the fact that the Donks tried to knock
kat gruene off the ballot, that
Chrysta Castaneda doesn't support a fracking ban as well as a host of other green (as in environmentally correct) initiatives, including, natch, the Green New Deal. Essentially Castaneda is a "I'm not as bad as the Republican, let's enforce the existing laws, maybe consider a few very mild penalties for flaring, but emphasize incentives for oil companies to do better" kind of politician. Maybe that's comforting for the few frackers waking up to reality, but it's a hard pass from me.
For the second consecutive cycle, I ain't voting for
Lizzie Fletcher. Just like two years ago, it does not look like she needs my vote.
Kuffner is
fanboi-ing hard again. That interview was a little too sticky for me.
Likewise for those of you in TX-21, where
Wendy Davis has a puncher's chance to upend
Chip "on Ted Cruz's shoulder"
Roy.
Now I realize some of you would just like to see Texas turn blue. Let's overlook the fact that too many of these Blue Dogs have mange, fleas, and ticks.
Yes it is, so let's ignore Joe's obsession with prepubescent girls, let's cancel
Tara Reade, let's disregard Biden's palling around with racists and bigots all of his Senate career, his bragging about locking up every black person he possibly could, and yes, let's forget about his dementia. At least he isn't Trump, the lowest possible bar imaginable.
Of these, I'd vote for
Hank Gilbert (TX-1), and
Sima (TX-2), and
Lulu (TX-3), and
Russell Foster (TX-4) if I lived in their district. They're not the most progressive Dems, but I could make an exception. The best Dems here are
Mike Siegel (TX-10),
Adrienne Bell (TX-14),
Julie Oliver (TX-25),
Donna Imam (TX-31), and
Lloyd Doggett (TX-35).
Follow
Royce West's lead, or better yet, vote for
David Collins.
And take Bernie's advice if you live in Travis County.
A forum for Austin city council candidates
is tonight.

Want better endorsements than the daily papers give you?
Equality Texas has the
five statehouse races for LGBTQ advocates to watch (or do something more for). Gus Bova at the
Texas Observer recommends the
Austin Chronicle's
endorsements.
Okay, this has gone on long enough. I've plenty more for later, including the previously-promised environmental stories, criminal justice news, and some odds and ends. Here's a few of the human interest tales to wrap this Wrangle.
More with less emphasis on politics coming.