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— Joel Montfort 🌊 (@jmontforttx) June 5, 2021
When a batch of rainbow cookies led to a canceled order, people opened their wallets to support the East Texas bakery.https://t.co/K57jm5cdnY
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) June 9, 2021
Texans went into more detail than most rebel states to explain their reasons for seceding from the United States. It was to keep their slaves.
— Jon Spaihts (@jonspaihts) June 7, 2021
If you want Texas to be the best state in the nation, you need to have the courage to look honestly at your history. pic.twitter.com/n5LltTHE6E
The version of Texas history taught in school is often anglicized and sanitized. In this three-part series, we examine how one textbook falls short.https://t.co/8j7jwUtawO
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) June 8, 2021
Harris County Democratic Party precinct chair resigns after racist email https://t.co/coyB0u9y5c #HouNews #HTX
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) June 9, 2021
Paul Fell, Artizans Syndicate pic.twitter.com/1fUiHkdlMb
— Editorial & Political Cartoons (@EandPCartoons) June 6, 2021
Perhaps the most thoughtful review of #ForgettheAlamo yet? Thank you @MaggieGalehouse! https://t.co/6HXDUEXRS2 @BryanBurrough @JasStanford @penguinpress
— ChrisTomlinson (@cltomlinson) June 4, 2021
As cities and counties across the state try to take down their Confederate memorials, the Texas Historical Commission keeps making their job harder. https://t.co/3T6GoXtzt0
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) June 9, 2021
In Texas, a struggle to memorialize a brutal lynching as resistance grows to teaching historical racism https://t.co/7G5td8Vulo
— RWLatstetter (@latstetter) June 3, 2021
The 80th Anniversary of the Murder of Bob White And Racial Justice In Polk County https://t.co/HI4Z69tit3
— Shell_Seas (@LivingBlueTX) June 3, 2021
Woolworth Building, site of San Antonio sit-ins, celebrates 100 years https://t.co/naYJMq8JoA
— Laredo Morning Times (@lmtnews) June 2, 2021
Galveston, birthplace of Juneteenth, to honor day as official city holiday 156 years later > #hounewshttps://t.co/3epWeg2ug9
— KPRC 2 Houston (@KPRC2) June 7, 2021
"I cannot give up this platform to promote complacency and peace when there is a war on my body and a war on my rights," she told her class. https://t.co/Ho95rhrnO3
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) June 3, 2021
#1 recommendation to help address maternal mortality was 12 months continuous coverage for Medicaid moms.
— Bill Kelly (@billkellytexas) June 8, 2021
It was cut in half for costs.
But we have $100m laying around for this?!
No metrics. No public hearings. No testimony. Just $100m and go sit down. #txlege https://t.co/RvNgNSRiAV
New blog post from Cover Texas Now: progress on health coverage, the #txlege failure on #MedicaidExpansion, and how you can fight for Medicaid expansion by the June 28th deadline. https://t.co/PaQa81YdlJ
— CTD (@TxDisabilities) June 7, 2021
CW: VIOLENCE
— Reveal (@reveal) June 9, 2021
The @BexarCoSheriff's deputy was told the asylum-seeking boy spoke Spanish. The boy didn’t resist arrest or touch anyone.
The deputy tased him for 35 seconds.
(This video was produced by @adrianaheldiz.) pic.twitter.com/kNOhwf432n
“The lawsuit alleges that … their superiors used this as an opportunity to exploit these women, like telling them how to dress and then saying, 'Oh, well, this is all undercover, but you have to let me kiss you and grope you.'" https://t.co/lFNekzltFR
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) June 1, 2021
A Texas woman was sentenced to 40 months in prison for making false 911 calls that her neighbors were drug dealers, sparking a drug raid that killed 2 people.
— AJ+ (@ajplus) June 9, 2021
2 officers face murder charges, 1 of whom allegedly bought heroin to frame the couple and then lied to obtain a warrant. pic.twitter.com/ncQbQDmu4f
28 months ago, narcotics officers stormed into a home in south Houston and killed Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas. Today, the woman whose false 911 calls led police to their door was sentenced to 40 months in prison.https://t.co/8unAxaXd5t
— St. John Barned-Smith ⚔️ (@stjbs) June 8, 2021
Former Houston police officer to plead guilty today for role in botched drug raid https://t.co/VByIfRq3CF #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) June 1, 2021
Spoiler from the quiz but can’t be said enough: “Places that increased their police budgets were just about as likely to see a rise in murder as places that decreased them.” #txlege https://t.co/Da57bqgftC
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) June 2, 2021
New research looking at data from millions of stops made by police in Texas in 2020 found that officers search Latino people more than any other racial or ethnic group. | via @keranews https://t.co/atPRV2SS8E
— KUT Austin (@KUT) June 3, 2021
NEW LAW: #Texas governor @GregAbbott_TX signs bills to ‘back the blue,’ increase criminal penalties for protesters. It also restricts cities’ abilities to reduce police budgets. https://t.co/dwNaba47ou #TXlege pic.twitter.com/MNedHalU5L
— Lane Luckie (@LaneLuckie) June 2, 2021
MUST READ book from @Grits4Breakfast for why a new Travis County women's jail is a bad idea 👇
— TFDP (@FairDefense) June 9, 2021
1/ "We don't need it. The jail is less than half full. New construction is not needed & is fiscally irresponsible. Nobody builds jails when they don't need to!" https://t.co/rpWrCm4Ycg
Using dubious evidence, Texas condemned Clinton Young to death. The prosecutor in the case served simultaneously as his accuser as well as a clerk for the judge who condemned him. Not kidding. https://t.co/CLZCtdoWid
— David Menschel (@davidminpdx) June 8, 2021
Threatening Texas with legal action: Biden administration to pursue court action if Texas @GovAbbott doesn’t rescind order shutting down federally funded shelters housing migrant kids who cross U.S.-Mexico #border without their parents. #txlege #migrants https://t.co/0XM0aAVW5X
— John Gravois (@Grav1) June 8, 2021
Texas’s prison system from the end of the Civil War to the 1980s used perhaps one of the clearest continuances of slavery, the prison plantation system. https://t.co/QaWdUTsfVd
— The Real News (@TheRealNews) June 3, 2021
A year ago today, the Dallas Police Department and Texas State Troopers kettled, ambushed, tear-gassed, detained and traumatized some 700 Dallas police brutality protesters on the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge. https://t.co/oR5H7Y93HE pic.twitter.com/Xv3NVBjVBd
— Central Track (@Central_Track) June 1, 2021
New for @TexasObserver: Palestinian activists in Texas mobilized huge crowds last month at protests. But when it comes to convincing lawmakers to support the cause, it might be an uphill battle.
— Amal Ahmed (@amalahmed214) June 4, 2021
https://t.co/ZQrW5aVndg
The Slocum Massacre in Anderson County in 1910, predated the Tulsa Wall Street massacre by over a decade. It resulted in at least 8 African American deaths & the loss of property by those families, Pretty sure we don’t teach that in Texas history #txlege https://t.co/pfLLZvHMvD
— Retro Snacking (@Retrosnacking) June 2, 2021
Few publications covered Black trans communities like @TransGriot.
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 31, 2021
Following the death of award-winning trans activist Monica Roberts, @capaciousmood writes about how the people she empowered grieve and begin to chart a new era. https://t.co/W25vpqUyN8
.@dallasnews: The baseball calendar in June is populated annually by game promotions to celebrate pride month and welcome the LGBTQ portion of an MLB team’s fan base. The Rangers are the only team that doesn’t have a pride game promotion of any kind. https://t.co/0ZBgqD2icD
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) June 1, 2021
In celebration of Pride Month, here's a throwback to our story on the Texas Gay Rodeo Association. The nonprofit organization was founded in 1985 and has donated nearly $3 million to charity, mostly to nonprofits that support people with HIV/AIDS.https://t.co/quDImEhaVG
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) June 2, 2021
Good background here via @erinmdouglas23, @MitchellFerman on #SB2 & #SB3: https://t.co/WypkSKmsMG #txlege
— Cassi Pollock (@cassi_pollock) June 7, 2021
As time ran out in the legislative session, the Texas House and Senate made last-minute changes to the bills. State lawmakers responded to February’s deadly winter storm with a few key changes to the state’s power grid that would address some issues exposed by the storm -- such as requiring power plants to upgrade for more extreme weather -- but did not make the sweeping structural changes to Texas’ electricity market that some experts have called for in the aftermath of the power crisis.
[...]
The House's version of Senate Bill 3 had an amendment to create a grant program for projects that improve the resiliency of water, electric and health care infrastructure, including hospitals, nursing homes, and dialysis centers. But the amendment was taken out during the two chamber's negotiations. [...] Most Texans will have higher charges on their power bills for years to come to cover gas utilities', electric cooperatives' and electric companies' financial losses from the storm and prevent customers from having to pay huge bills in a short time, under plans approved by both the Texas House and Senate.
Lawmakers approved bills that would allow companies to seek billions of dollars in state-approved bonds backed by charges on customers’ bills to stabilize the state’s distressed energy market.
[...]
The Senate, which has pushed hard for a financial remedy to the infamous 32-hour period during the week of the storm when regulators kept wholesale power prices at the $9,000 cap after more electric generation came online, passed HB 4492 Sunday night (May 30) about five minutes before the midnight deadline. Multiple senators complained that the House removed provisions to provide direct credits to consumers and left little time to negotiate.
"The Texas Senate made it very clear that we wanted to have some direct relief to ratepayers, and that was stripped out by the House of Representatives," said Roland Gutierrez, D-San Antonio. "Last night we were told to accept what they had sent us — or else."
After a bipartisan group of lawmakers made changes to Senate Bill 2 behind closed doors, the legislation unveiled late Saturday (May 29) would shrink the number of seats on ERCOT's board of directors from 16 to 11, and the state's top politicians would have strong influence over the board. Both chambers approved the bill Sunday evening (May 30).
A selection committee would appoint eight of the 11 board members. The selection committee would be made up of three people -- one appointed by the governor, one appointed by the lieutenant governor and one by the speaker of the House. The committee would use an "outside consulting firm" to select the eight members.
Nine of the 11 ERCOT board seats under SB 2 would be voting members, handing politicians significant power over the ERCOT board. Already, the governor appoints the board members of the Public Utility Commission, which oversees ERCOT.
Politicians previously have not had such involvement in choosing the ERCOT board, whose members are currently selected in a variety of ways; some are chosen by ERCOT’s own nominating committee while others are appointed by companies and consumers participating in the electricity market, with members representing various power sources.
"I am pretty upset by this massive change," Cyrus Reed, president of the Lone Star chapter of the Sierra Club, tweeted early Sunday. "This should be debated in public not snuck in a bill in the dead of night!"
The changes to ERCOT's governance captures the essence of what lawmakers have tried to do in recent weeks: Replace experts on the ERCOT board with political appointees — a change energy experts said would do little to improve the power grid.
Activist firm Engine No. 1 won at least two board seats at Exxon following a historic battle over the oil giant’s board of directors, signaling investors’ support for greater disclosure from the company as the world shifts away from fossil fuels. https://t.co/QBizs1lHxM
— Defend Our Future | #TimeToAct 🌎✊🏿✊ (@DefendOurFuture) May 26, 2021
Bad Day for Big Oil: Landmark decisions in courtroom and boardroom hit Exxon, Chevron, and Shell Oil; Fossil fuel industry PR has shifted from outright denying climate change to blaming consumers, new study shows... in our latest @GreenNewsReport LISTEN: https://t.co/QZ5Q3FOLXl pic.twitter.com/OZ60pjs0Tv
— Brad Friedman (@TheBradBlog) June 2, 2021
Big #Oil & gas companies are selling off their most-polluting operations to small private firms. Five of the top ten #methane emitters are small companies that are escaping scrutiny. Great reporting @HirokoTabuchi @nytclimate @sejorg @jswatz #ClimateAction https://t.co/wA0k3fdAqj
— Susan Hassol, Climate Communication (@ClimateComms) June 2, 2021
Hilcorp is owned by former @utsystem Regent Jeffery Hildebrand. Maybe this explains their reluctance to seriously tackle the major methane pollution coming from their oil fields. #txenergy https://t.co/ELReD4xOle
— Luke Metzger (@lukemetzger) June 3, 2021
wow. this is big. Corporate subsidy quietly dies in Texas — topping off bad week for Big Oil https://t.co/37QvDUXvHy by @AlleenBrown
— Antonia Juhasz (@AntoniaJuhasz) June 3, 2021
The case for nationalizing #oilandgas.
— TXsharon (@TXsharon) June 7, 2021
Failing, heavily subsidized private oil companies enjoy the profits of oil extraction while the rest of us pay in tax dollars, #HumanRights abuses, and an unlivable #climate. https://t.co/oFwz8bfZeg
At the start of the #TXLege session, @ErinForYall said she was "optimistic that the body [would] openly take up climate change." Has that been the case? "Not at all. In fact, that's a huge disappointment for me this session."https://t.co/bqsSsIOhuw
— One Breath Partnership (@OneBreathHOU) June 3, 2021
"As the most powerful member of the Texas House, @DadePhelan not only failed to take that action this session, he effectively torpedoed the most consequential piece of legislation aimed at doing so," writes John Beard in the @beaumontenterprise. #txlege https://t.co/w5Tn6eRTsZ
— Public Citizen Texas (@PublicCitizenTX) June 7, 2021
It doesn't have to be like this in Texas. Months after explosions at TPC Group's Port Neches plant injured workers and illegally leaked cancer-causing 1,3-butadiene into the air, @DadePhelan said the #txlege must act.
— One Breath Partnership (@OneBreathHOU) June 7, 2021
But he didn't.https://t.co/xG96g9W5M6
TIRN recently stood in solidarity with @unreasonabledw to urge USACE to rescind its permit for Max Midstream, a new oil company, to dredge a channel in Matagorda and Lavaca Bays, Texas. #StopTheDredging #StopOilExports pic.twitter.com/uP0w7YDLSg
— TIRN (@SeaTurtles_org) May 20, 2021
Because Port Isabel, TX is mostly poor, and mostly Brown, he said, “they think they can get away with more here than in other parts of the country.” - Jared Hockema, City Manager of Port Isabel https://t.co/31R0HjmgLZ
— Bekah Hinojosa (@beksbot) June 7, 2021
Today is the 1st day of hurricane season. If you're in #Houston, remember:
— Zach Despart (@zachdespart) June 1, 2021
- Almost 75% of 🏘️ Harvey flooded here were outside the 100yr floodplain
- Our floodplain maps are being re-drawn & are currently outdated
Check out @HoustonChron's flood risk map⬇️https://t.co/qT7hBsWJxA
Hurricanes can also be major pollution events, as plants shut down, break down and start up again, @PublicCitizenTX's @michaelcoleman writes: "Imagine being advised to shelter in place when the refinery next door starts flaring."https://t.co/XkiRJNQTU1 https://t.co/LNHjMwjthb
— One Breath Partnership (@OneBreathHOU) June 2, 2021
OTD 20 years ago, Tropical Storm Allison formed off the upper-Texas coast. It would make landfall shortly there after and become the only tropical storm on record to be retired after devastating Houston with flooding--that would pale in comparison to Harvey 16 yrs later. #KHOU11 pic.twitter.com/9iD1nkkUdC
— Houston Weather (@KHOUweather) June 4, 2021
From @TracesofTexas, an image of Galveston raising their elevation after the deadly 1900 hurricane.https://t.co/ihbFNI0PW2
— Texas Highways Magazine (@TexasHighways) June 4, 2021
There’s a ticking #climate time bomb in West Texas https://t.co/5h5uD70YTY #Permian
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) June 1, 2021
A month-long airborne study by @NASAJPL, @uarizona, and @ASU found that fixing the most persistent leaks in the Permian Basin oilfield’s infrastructure could cut methane emissions by 55 tons an hour. Read the full story below: https://t.co/1BSIWSt2Px
— NASA Climate (@NASAClimate) June 2, 2021
Cleaning up methane pollution from the #Permian's super emitters is "low-hanging fruit" that the @TxRRC still won't touch https://t.co/7nzDe9phOF #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) June 4, 2021
https://t.co/Q87OePkOKz
— DelilahForTexas💚☮🌻🌎 (@DelilahforTexas) June 7, 2021
"A system is corrupt when it is strictly profit-driven, not driven to serve the best interests of its people."
-Suzy Kassem, Rise Up and Salute the Sun
In an ecosystem that needs fire to flourish, the actions of the tribe could decide the future of the longleaf pine. https://t.co/8qvCxpMo70
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) June 4, 2021
Fort Worth mayoral runoff, Tarrant County early vote:
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 6, 2021
Mattie Parker 53
Deborah Peoples 47 pic.twitter.com/ewslQADN03
The city of McAllen has a new mayor.https://t.co/3GnqB10OAM
— CBS 4 News (@cbs4rgv) June 6, 2021
A GOP county chair just won a race for mayor of McAllen, Texas, a city that’s 85% Latino. Hillary won the county by 40 points.
— Sawyer Hackett (@SawyerHackett) June 6, 2021
If the Democratic Party doesn’t get serious about Latino outreach, we’re in big trouble.
It's official: San Antonio City Council will have four new members after Saturday's runoff elections. https://t.co/Fq5Iwi1rzc
— San Antonio Report (@SAReport) June 6, 2021
District 2 challenger Jalen McKee-Rodriguez and District 5 candidate Teri Castillo won their runoff races Saturday, adding two young, progressive voices to the San Antonio City Council on Saturday ...
McKee-Rodriguez, a 26-year-old teacher, defeated the woman he used to work for, Councilwoman Jada Andrews-Sullivan, who was seeking a second term. He will be the first openly gay man to serve on City Council ...
District 2 City Council frontrunner Jalen Mckee-Rodriguez hugs his husband Nathan at his runoff election watch party. He still has 62% of the vote as Election Day returns trickle in. @TPRNews pic.twitter.com/sb0aO6ToQe
— Joey Palacios 😷 (@Joeycules) June 6, 2021
Castillo, a 29-year-old urban historian and substitute teacher, outpaced retiree Rudy Lopez in early vote results and held her lead through the rest of Saturday night. She and McKee-Rodriguez both ran on progressive platforms and were endorsed by the Texas Organizing Project (TOP), the Stonewall Democrats of San Antonio, and the San Antonio chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America.
Castillo will find another colleague who prioritizes environmental issues in newcomer Mario Bravo, an Environmental Defense Fund project manager who defeated (three-term incumbent Roberto) Treviño.
Another local win for Texas progressives: they’ve been talking about Junior Ezeonu, a 22-year old black WFP-backed candidates who ran for a council seat in Grand Prairie vs an incumbent. Ezeonu just won.
— Taniel (@Taniel) June 6, 2021
He breaks the mold of local politics here: https://t.co/0ETdS9VJph
Dallas
— Texas Election Source (@TXElects) June 6, 2021
18% of vote centers reporting
P2: Moreno 57%, Syed 43%
P4: Arnold 57%, Johnson 43%
P7: Bazaldua 62%, Felder 38%
P11: Schultz 54%, Wernick 46%
P13: Willis 53%, Burk 47%
P14: Ridley 61%, Blewett 39%
Sid Miller: "I will be announcing probably in the next few weeks that I am running for office" (doesn't specify which one)
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) May 31, 2021
"I'm convinced that our current governor cannot get reelected in the general election" https://t.co/RLZE1SF3WR
Texas GOP Chair Allen West announced his resignation Friday morning and said he is considering running for another office, potentially one that is statewide. https://t.co/TSZZmFTTYG
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) June 6, 2021
In the upcoming round of redistricting, there is nothing that will prevent Rs from dismantling districts in the suburbs of places like Atlanta, Houston, and Dallas, where, in recent years, people of color have won or are increasingly competing for power. 6/
— Michael Li 李之樸 (@mcpli) June 6, 2021
Looks like @BetoORourke going on statewide tour to talk voting rights, with 22 stops scheduled so far #SB7 #txlege pic.twitter.com/uq0u0b7hOs
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 1, 2021
.@BetoORourke tells me he'll consider '22 options only after a Texas GOP elections bill is defeated or federal elections legislation is passed.
— John Engel (@EngelsAngle) June 3, 2021
“If we can get this done... I’ll think about what other role I can play in public service" https://t.co/cV7bFYVaPq @KXAN_News #txlege
Luttrell officially launched this morning:
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 3, 2021
- Release: https://t.co/OKvRitJ1vR
- Video: https://t.co/POOTxv2p2y
- also spoke w/ @MichaelBerrySho #TX08https://t.co/oeZ9lRx2Me
Story on all this from earlier today: https://t.co/nN6DotAGa8
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 4, 2021
After @lillieschechter’s announcement that she’s stepping down as Harris County Dem Party chair, Evbagharu (@Jon_RosenthalTX’s chief of staff) says he’s running to succeed her: https://t.co/2Y6Y22mU6u
— Jasper Scherer (@jaspscherer) June 4, 2021
White men thanking the speaker for working in their interest this session. #txlege pic.twitter.com/6HLqnTIOKk
— ✨Kristi Fogle✨ (@KristiFogle) May 31, 2021
.@DadePhelan: "The Senate was in charge of drafting the [#SB7] conference bill. We got that bill back early Saturday morning. It had flaws all throughout. We found over 12 points of order.” https://t.co/L1mdhfLf5S #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 3, 2021
Democrats pressed @SenBryanHughes about the 1 p.m. start time MULTIPLE times on Saturday.
— Alexa Ura (@alexazura) June 1, 2021
In one exchange w/ @SenRoyceWest who brought up "souls to the polls," Hughes said, "Those election workers want to go to church, too." #txlege https://t.co/FmOFVj7dBC
How GOP stalling helped Democrats defeat the Texas voting bill https://t.co/cPHt4HUMAd #hounews
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) June 1, 2021
As Gov @GregAbbott_TX lashes out at Democrats for the failure of #SB7, the elections bill crumbled largely because it took the GOP *months* to settle on the details. Talked about that and more with Mike Warren on @fox7austin https://t.co/KWY7ENO6uD #TxLege
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) June 2, 2021
Just like Paxton blamed Antifa for the Jan. 6 insurrection he encouraged; just like the Senate blamed “a typo” in SB7 for their limiting Sunday voting, here Mr. Bush blames HUD for the GLO’s firm decision to deny Houston flood aid. “I know nothing!” https://t.co/A8Fvj8TH5U
— Joe Jaworski (@JaworskiForTX) June 2, 2021
"No matter what Texas state Sen. Bryan Hughes or former President Donald Trump say, there is zero evidence of widespread voter fraud in modern American elections. Like, none," CNN's @ChrisCillizza writes. | Analysis https://t.co/Y22hFoHh5T
— CNN (@CNN) June 2, 2021
The #TXLege's #votersuppression bill (#SB7) designed to support Trump's #BigLie will eventually pass. Blame the #SCOTUS for gutting the #VRA. https://t.co/OcL6evYBl2
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) June 2, 2021
How the Supreme Court tilted election law to favor the GOP — The court has freed Texas and other Southern GOP states to add voting restrictions, and has given the GOP an edge in the battle to control Congress https://t.co/uL86q1UN35
— Alfons López Tena (@alfonslopeztena) June 4, 2021
(5) New piece from @JuddLegum via Popular Information: How voter suppression legislation was defeated in Texas — and what happens nexthttps://t.co/6enLCBG9kz
— IndependentLeft.news (@IndLeftNews) June 1, 2021
.@GregAbbott_TX tells @ChadHastyRadio there will be 2 special sessions. There'll be one in Sept. or Oct. on redistricting and federal COVID-19 relief funds. "Before that 2nd special session, we will have a 1st special session" on #SB7 and bail bill, plus other TBA issues. #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) June 3, 2021
In May, Texas became the latest state to pass a six-week abortion ban.
— 19thnews (@19thnews) June 6, 2021
In total, 13 states have passed these bans: Idaho, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Iowa, Missouri, Louisiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, South Carolina and Georgia. https://t.co/Wg6HwKBCOl
As 5 Million Texans Lack Health Insurance, Lege Still Says No to Medicaid Expansion #txlege https://t.co/M9NBjQhneA
— Children's Defense Fund-Texas (@CDFTexas) June 7, 2021
Suggestions to encourage power plants to have emergency backup fuel were rarely discussed.
— KUT Austin (@KUT) June 6, 2021
A proposal to back up the Texas grid by connecting it to other parts of the country was also not addressed. https://t.co/TtwIE33pb5
“Students, parents and faculty members spent their summers studying and debating how to combat generations of systemic racism...
— Progress Texas (@ProgressTX) June 4, 2021
Yet, now, Republican legislators have passed a bill that could change it back.” #txlegehttps://t.co/Ja6EHP6pRo
Texas Republican leaders promised action on gun safety after the El Paso shooting. Instead, they passed permitless carry. https://t.co/sbRwrm0u2J
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) June 7, 2021
A Houston mother riding bikes with her 5-year-old tried to shoot a puppy running into the street but unintentionally shot her child instead.
— Shannon Watts (@shannonrwatts) June 2, 2021
Last week, Texas lawmakers voted to remove background check and training requirements for concealed carry. #txlege https://t.co/magVvDiX0i
Texas Lawmakers Had Two Crises to Address. They Ignored Them in Favor of Sideshows. https://t.co/duFeBk1Oyq
— rgratcliffe (@rgratcliffe) June 1, 2021
Today in 1966, @Astros Joe Morgan & Sonny Jackson appear on Sports Illustrated's cover, the 1st time a Houston team had ever done so. @SInow pic.twitter.com/CRsf2yBHpm
— Houstorian (@Houstorian) June 6, 2021
The solstice festival will include an encampment of tents and permanent structures that form a "living Viking village." The entertainment is NOT billed as family friendly.https://t.co/ct1evVEZdX
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) June 2, 2021