







In which @gromerjeffers looks at #tx2022 while the #txlege is on a temporary hiatus (sorry abt the reminder that it's not really over).
— Jim Henson (@jamesrhenson) September 3, 2021
After summer of legislative warfare, Texas Republicans, Democrats prepare for 2022 election season https://t.co/4KsO6tebdz
In a week in which Republicans are running the table the state's political system, @davidsiders channels Beckett in a piece for @politico on the Waiting for Beto dynamic in Texas https://t.co/gA34DO3wlP #tx2022
— Jim Henson (@jamesrhenson) September 1, 2021
"Until torch-bearing Texans — by whom we mean perpetually stunned Democrats, independents, traditional Republicans and newcomers from more progressive states — rise up, the monster among us will continue to rampage," The Editorial Board writes. https://t.co/JmWicv8EIm
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) September 6, 2021
I swear I’ve been a Democrat all my life and at one time I was the ED of the Texas Democratic Party but if I have to go another 48 hours without a credible candidate for Governor announcing I’ll lose my shit. I’m about to be WAY off the reservation.
— Harold Cook (@HCookAustin) September 5, 2021
Ahhh. The generation of Democratic consultants whose message was so lost that only brute strength demographics can overcome their lack of a message. Love those guys.
— Should Of Known Better (@JasonHGTruitt) September 2, 2021
Similarly one has to wonder at what point "are you mad about how grossly and obviously inept our party is? Well you better give money to one of our candidates" stops working on people. https://t.co/yrw7tfVVju
— Anti-Heathenry Aktion (@WestTXLibsoc) September 7, 2021
Real opportunity for literally any Texas Democrat to run for governor https://t.co/z4AhRDvn0r
— Evan (@evan7257) September 4, 2021
Abbott raised $2.27M during the first special session. His largest contributors for the period were Houston foundation president Nancy Kinder ($250K), Midland investor Douglas Scharbauer ($100K) and San Antonio alcoholic beverage distributor Alan Dreeben ($75K).
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, Speaker Dade Phelan, Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton, Comptroller Glenn Hegar, Land Comm. George P. Bush (running for AG against Paxton), Agriculture Comm. Sid Miller and Railroad Comm. Wayne Christian -- all also on the GOP primary ballot in 2022 -- raised $450K combined during the same period.
Former Republican Party of Texas chair Allen West raised $404K during the period, including $160K from Lake Forest, Ill. shipping supply company owner Richard Uihlein. Texans supplied 42% of West’s contribution total. In addition to Uihlein, West raised $73K from out-of-state donors.
The Texas Special Session Financial Report is out. We killed it.
— Lee Merritt (@MerrittForTexas) September 8, 2021
We out raised every Republican candidate in the race one grassroots donor at a time.
We raised 285K (7/7/21-8/6/21)
Paxton raised 39K
Bush raised 157K
Justice Guzman 193Khttps://t.co/HsYPgxsR36 pic.twitter.com/Hp4auO739G
This week @edespinoza writes about three factors impacting the Texas Democratic race for Governor - and offers a list of potential candidates. #txlege https://t.co/UF3yIXSKnh
— Progress Texas (@ProgressTX) August 29, 2021
I want to see the names of every person running against each of the Tx Democrats that got cold-feet and returned, allowing all this insidious legislation to move through #txlegehttps://t.co/4R85tl3UCZ
— Do No Harm & Take No Shit (@ItsAllAbsurd) September 10, 2021
People rightfully bitch about Eddie Lucio on this bird app but don't sleep on @RyanGuillen voting with the GOP on the abortion bill. He's been in office for almost 20 yrs & like many RGV Dems, has gotten way too comfy in his seat. The Valley needs more women in office. #txlege https://t.co/YJIU7BBYEn
— Denise ABORTION IS LEGAL Flores (@TheDeniseFlores) September 7, 2021
When #txlege OK'd @GregAbbott_TX’s plan to hugely boost border security $, only 6% of House Democrats went along. But 38% of Senate Democrats did, incl'g @TxChuy, whose home county nixed Abbott nudge to declare a disaster. Here, Hinojosa explains his votehttps://t.co/NKh17f1aQH
— Bob Garrett (@RobertTGarrett) September 3, 2021
“You must vote for Democrats so if a Supreme Court justice dies they can appoint another to grow old in there and hopefully die with a Democrat as president” doesn’t seem to me a winning strategy.
— Jack'sHouseOfPancakes (@RegimeChangeInc) September 5, 2021
Why would someone who is a constant gardner not want to consider green party? I'm a native Texan, healthcare worker.. yes I help care for patients with covid! A mother, artist and activist. Please know that the democratic establishment has encouraged the party to move right. pic.twitter.com/8QQ2uEmL6U
— DelilahForTexas💚☮🌻🌎 (@DelilahforTexas) September 4, 2021
A third party cannot win as long as you continue to not vote for them.
— The_Pale_H0rse☭ 👻🎃💀 (@The_Pale_H0rse) August 29, 2021
That's it. That is what's stopping it.
Stop buying the, "but we'll lose" bull and stand for something you want and be counted for it. If you forgo your principles for the sake of winning you already lost.
JUST IN: Gov. Abbott calls third special session. Some items on the agenda: Redistricting, transgender sports, and local governments' vaccine mandates https://t.co/Hqj8qojjQa
— CBS Austin (@cbsaustin) September 7, 2021
The real threat. #GregAbbott #Abbott #texas #TexasWarOnWomen #WomensHealth #WomensRights #RoevWade #AbortionBan #abortionrights @MaggieJordanACN @1mimi4ever @AprilDRyan @laloalcaraz @ElayneBoosler @co_rapunzel4 pic.twitter.com/MMIzyZAAGG
— Ed Hall (@halltoons) September 8, 2021
Gov. Greg Abbott said Texans have ‘at least’ six weeks to get an abortion. It’s more like 10 days. https://t.co/byes3x8xeK
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) September 8, 2021
Why companies with #Texas ties have been relatively quiet on state's #abortion ban, in contrast to public objection to controversial election law@washingtonpost
— ChickenFriedPolitics (@ChkFriPolitics) September 5, 2021
-Southern politics are on the menu at ChickenFriedPolitics.com-https://t.co/2hqa3xrtw5
A 13-year-old learned she was pregnant after being raped by her grandfather. She can no longer get an abortion in Texas. @jblackmanChron @taygoldenstein @_yichinlee @egconley https://t.co/6Uo3NprGrM
— Gabrielle Banks (@GabMoBanks) September 5, 2021
50% supported and 44% opposed a ban on abortion “once a fetal heartbeat is detected.” But when the pollster then said it happens “around six weeks into pregnancy and before most women know they are pregnant,” the numbers flip: 56% oppose and 38% support. https://t.co/d0ECIt3ERn
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) September 7, 2021
FWIW, in 2019, there were about 14,700 *reported* rapes in Texas, according to state police stats.
— Jolie McCullough (@jsmccullou) September 7, 2021
Recent DOJ surveys have found 2/3 to 4/5 of rapes go unreported. https://t.co/A7GxibK7LS
It is beyond parody that the company now hosting the Texas anti-abortion bounty site, run by a guy literally named Rob Monster, is a last stop of resort for Neo-Nazi content pic.twitter.com/864AJusma8
— steven monacelli (@stevanzetti) September 4, 2021
Only rapists who are arrested, tried, & convicted in the 6 week window when abortion is legal are unable to sue the victim. The rest CAN SUE FOR $10,000 bounty. #txlege #AbbottFailedTexasAgain #TexasAbortionLaw #TexasHatesWomen https://t.co/KTd3wbucrl
— C. Denby Swanson (@cdenbyswanson) September 9, 2021
Greg Abbott is not ignorant — he's a liar: Why the difference matters for the future of democracy https://t.co/yL5wrtjsl1
— Salon (@Salon) September 8, 2021
Texans only give the #txlege 28% approval rating as special session wraps up https://t.co/b3HzB7TQYE via @maggie_glynn1
— Jim Henson (@jamesrhenson) September 5, 2021
Doctors with the @cmteetoprotect says Texas leaders failed to stop COVID-19 from spreading. | via @TPRNews https://t.co/9HHkca7a5C pic.twitter.com/CT27O5VdBU
— KUT Austin (@KUT) September 4, 2021
The lawsuit is for "gross negligence and wrongful death"https://t.co/HxP0RvAiRd
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) September 8, 2021
.@rossramsey writes: Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed legislation designed to protect dogs earlier this year.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) September 8, 2021
Now he's asking the Legislature to fix it — before next year’s elections. #TXlege #TX2022 https://t.co/PHWdMNc18j
The Texas legislature has moved to block a company’s plan to ship highly radioactive nuclear waste to West Texas, but federal regulators could still allow the plan to move forward as early as this month. #txlege
— Marfa Public Radio (@MarfaRadio) September 9, 2021
via @travisbubenik https://t.co/DYjoF8wjv7
Elon Musk's plans to dig a tunnel through the RGV's sensitive, diverse coastal habitat is absolutely horrible and destructive! https://t.co/kIePEEgyDY
— Bekah Hinojosa (@beksbot) August 23, 2021
ICYMI: “The legacy of racist zoning perpetuates unless you fundamentally redraw the map through these land use plans" https://t.co/dZsVBxop6o
— InclusiveCommunities (@ICPDallas) August 23, 2021
If you're looking for a pretty accessible, easy to read primer on environmental justice / environmental history in Texas (San Antonio specifically!) I would def recommend West Side Rising, which I reviewed here for @TexasObserver: https://t.co/GNUJsuh70c
— Amal Ahmed (@amalahmed214) September 8, 2021
The U.S. Supreme Court halted Wednesday’s scheduled execution of Texas death row inmate John Ramirez. It’s the third time in recent years that justices delayed an execution over the state prison system’s rules for religious advisers in the death chamber. https://t.co/eNHvDAVBFm
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) September 9, 2021
A complaint to the federal Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights argues UT-Austin is creating a "hostile environment" for Black students by continuing to play the “The Eyes of Texas,” which was likely first performed at minstrel shows. https://t.co/Zeh83vX7ax
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) September 9, 2021
In Reality Check, a limited series produced in partnership w/ @HoustonPubMedia, we look at what being asset limited, income constrained, employed means, the true number of families struggling in our area & explore how we can help break the cycle. More at: https://t.co/a6p6Nal8xh. pic.twitter.com/c74bWF1wsg
— UnitedWayHouston (@HouUnitedWay) September 9, 2021
At least 53 Texas workers have died of heat in the last decade, an investigation by @columbiajourn Investigation and The Texas Newsroom shows that’s nearly twice as many deaths as in the 2000s. Many of the dead were workers of color.https://t.co/Kl1FfxRnrz
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) September 7, 2021
Surveillance footage reveals police assaulting an unarmed man on his own property. While the video is shocking on its own, what’s even more shocking is the fact that the state of Texas is currently threatening the victim with 10 years in prison. https://t.co/MkxFyYx460
— The Real News (@TheRealNews) September 5, 2021
NEW:
— Jason Whitely (@JasonWhitely) September 7, 2021
The CEO of @TexasCentral says the bipartisan #Infrastructurebill is key to building the bullet train between Dallas and Houston.
Carlos Aguilar revealed a lot more in the @Yallitics episode that just dropped.https://t.co/cl6FTqPWqd
Elon Musk is about to become a Texas power broker—literally.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) August 30, 2021
The entrepreneur has established a new subsidiary of Tesla that filed in mid-August with the Public Utility Commission of Texas to sell electricity on the retail market. https://t.co/uZIdFWwNx3
The Certified Lover Boy himself showing love to the city 🤘🏾💜
— HTX Hip-Hop Museum (@HTXHipHopMuseum) September 3, 2021
• Drake shows appreciation to OG Ron C, Texas Southern University and Swishahouse in his new song “TSU”
• Drake samples “Get Throwed” by Bun B in the first half of “In 2 Deep” pic.twitter.com/RX9M5CrHIa
Traces of Texas reader Terrance Devlin was born in Texas & raised here until he was 14, when he moved to Arkansas. He went to college at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville and just sent me these photos of old Texas-Arkansas programs, saying "Let the Hate Flow!!!" Indeed. pic.twitter.com/P6CCv1vKJv
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) September 8, 2021
Gov @GregAbbott_TX signing SB1, the elections bill, in East Texas underscores the fact that the rural vote is the firewall for Texas Republicans in statewide races #txlege https://t.co/jCuWjVcm77
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) September 6, 2021
This is the first piece I’ve read that’s enthusiastic (to any degree) about #SB8’s “unusual enforcement mechanism”—have any of y’all seen any others? #txlege https://t.co/93TKVncXLt
— EricaGrieder (@EricaGrieder) September 6, 2021
During a tele townhall w/ supporters, which is about to wrap, @DanPatrick said his priorities for a 3rd session in “a couple of weeks,” if @GovAbbott adds them to the call, are transgender sports, putting state surplus toward buying down prop. taxes & allowing 2020 audits #txlege
— Jasper Scherer (@jaspscherer) September 7, 2021
New from me: 66% of college-educated workers say they would not take a job in a state that prohibits abortions after 6 weeks of pregnancy, as Texas now does. Half of respondents said they would consider moving out of a state that passed such restrictions. https://t.co/YYwfCjpAH4
— Maggie McGrath (@mcgrathmag) September 2, 2021
Hey @GregAbbott_TX - are you beginning to understand yet? pic.twitter.com/fwjDiVc2am
— Patti Summerville (@PattiSummervil2) September 6, 2021
On Sept 4, 2011, warm, dry air from Tropical Storm Lee which sat over Louisiana, and an advancing front moving in from the west converged over Central Tx producing a very-high potential for extreme fire behavior. That Sunday, at 2:30 PM, the historic Bastrop Complex Fire started. pic.twitter.com/2CWrCscMvV
— Texas A&M Forest Service (@TXForestService) September 4, 2021
If Hurricane #Ida had veered west and hit Galveston, its 15-foot storm surge could have devastated the city and plowed up the Houston Ship Channel, smashing into residential communities and industrial facilities. https://t.co/25wYbRzRaA
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) September 6, 2021
We're all going to pay for the climate crisis, one way or another. https://t.co/Z4I5APl9g1
— ChrisTomlinson (@cltomlinson) September 1, 2021
Our investigation found 84% of #oilandgas flaring in Texas is unpermitted by @txrrc.
— Earthworks (@Earthworks) September 6, 2021
Rushing to defend govt? @TXOGA. Their defense? Misdirection and mistruth. @txsharon has it right... https://t.co/GMbjcOXe3r
Any lingering thoughts I had about slight environmental "harm reduction" from #Biden are gone. What a disaster!#ClimateCrisis
— Andrew Meindl 🐬 (@andrewmeindl) September 1, 2021
https://t.co/ddjBVKf8VZ
Patrick Chappatte, @PatChappatte pic.twitter.com/ovGIT0iii7
— Editorial & Political Cartoons (@EandPCartoons) August 30, 2021
One hundred years ago this month, a natural disaster devastated the city's poorest neighborhoods—and then transformed its politics.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) September 3, 2021
A new book illuminates lessons learned that are still relevant today. https://t.co/ZTbsn8hbi2
In the middle of the night, the 5th Circuit denied John Ramirez's request for a stay.
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) September 6, 2021
He's scheduled for execution Wednesday in Texas, but has been fighting for the right to have his spiritual adviser lay hands on him and pray out loud as he dies. pic.twitter.com/1G0VjXRxoR
“Some of us were physically told by the mayor’s office two weeks ago that the reason why they didn’t want us serving out here anymore is because they didn’t want the homeless and the people, the public to collide,” advocate Shere Dore said.https://t.co/KoSFIqfw0V
— Joel🇵🇷🇭🇳 (@jr_umanzor) September 2, 2021
Out of more than 25,000 eviction cases in Harris County from September to July, the moratorium helped tenants in fewer than 3,300, according to an analysis by January Advisors, a Houston-based data firm. Of those, about 2,400 still could face eviction. https://t.co/YlGoQWwQ86
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) September 2, 2021
Texas prisons coud've saved >$5 million if they just bought cotton instead of forcing prisoners to harvest it.
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) September 2, 2021
And it's not just Texas. As it turns out, aside from being legalized slavery, unpaid prison labor is often not even cost effective. My latest:https://t.co/F4JiLombEI
Controversial I-45 project still alive as TxDOT, feds given 90 days to settle differences https://t.co/gpSOpbDKDl via @houstonchron
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) August 31, 2021
1/ TxDOT has released an analysis of impacts from proposed widening of I-35 through (8 mi) in the heart of Austin. Reader, it's not looking good. TxDOT is considering a once-in-multiple-generations investment without learning any of the lessons of history. Let's take a look. pic.twitter.com/5UCSmiQt3X
— Kevin DeGood (@kevin_degood) August 27, 2021
This mural is on on the side of the The LINE Austin @thelinehotel at 111 E Cesar Chavez St, Austin, TX 78701 at the Congress Ave, Bridge. Another shot looking toward the Texas Capitol. #Austin #Texas #txlege #AustinTX #AustinTexas pic.twitter.com/yEfdIAdRX4
— Christopher V. Sherman (@cvsherman) September 3, 2021
Hermit crab house swap. The real estate market is hot! 🔥 #MustangIsland #TXStateParks pic.twitter.com/pYPWT4cqrI
— Texas State Parks (@TPWDparks) September 3, 2021
word has it @TexasObserver went online in 1997, at which point we called our website the “Down Home Page” and offered such sections as Corporate Watch, Legislative Watch, & Radical Right Watch, writes @Tahtone https://t.co/BAdITOnV55
— Megan Kimble (@megankimble) August 30, 2021
AUSTIN — All over America this weekend, people will be celebrating the achievements and advancements in society made by the labor movement. While some whose politics fall on the right side of the spectrum may only choose to use it an excuse to grill meats and drink beers, the truth is that Labor Day is all about celebrating unions and things like paid vacations, a forty-hour work week, and the minimum wage, all secured by the efforts of the labor movement.
In the Lone Star State however, a new executive order signed by Gov. Greg Abbott (Q-Gilead) means that Texans will be celebrating something else this weekend.
“With the stroke of this pen, I hereby designate this weekend as Forced Labor Day Weekend,” Abbott said as he signed the order. “We will gather together and honor the teenage rape victims who are forced by law to carry their stepdaddy’s baby to full term. We will celebrate the fact that here in Texas, we value every single life. Until it’s born, and then literally fuck off.”
Parades will be held in various cities and locales, Abbott announced.
Celebrating Labor Day early this year by telling my boss to suck my ass I’m not working this holiday weekend
— 🌽🌽 Erica, The White Trash Socialist 🌽🌽™️ (@herosnvrdie69) September 3, 2021
Forty years ago, President Ronald Regan crushed a strike by the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, fired over 11,000 federal workers, and declared “open season” on the labor movement. https://t.co/5K8RSjkSGY
— The Real News (@TheRealNews) September 3, 2021
It's Labor Day weekend. Think about the union workers, the essential workers, the nurses, teachers, laborers, farmers, and 1st responders.Think about who saved your ass and continue to save your ass during the pandemic and climate crisis. pic.twitter.com/vtrYlHxhqp
— 🛑StopTheEvictions🛑 (@bohemiantoo) September 3, 2021
A hard look at the "dirty work" nobody wants to celebrate this Labor Day https://t.co/MbSGokMcHR
— Salon (@Salon) September 6, 2021
In his new book, Dirty Work: Essential Jobs and the Hidden Toll of Inequality in America, New Yorker writer Eyal Press profiles the workers we won't see politicians sidling up to for photo ops this Labor Day. He writes about drone operators, prison guards, poultry plant workers, and oil riggers. They do our dirty work and, as Press shows, they pay a price for it.
Flor Martinez, a Texas poultry plant worker, devours painkillers at the end of her grueling shifts. Stephen Stone's dangerous job on the ill-fated Deepwater Horizon drilling rig puts him in the way of a massive explosion that almost cost him his life. But Press is most interested in documenting a kind of hazard that is not typically accounted for in government safety reports: what he calls "moral injury." He borrows the term from military psychologists. It describes the impact of having to carry out tasks that violate a person's core sense of self.
Those psychic injuries can take a physical toll. Harriet Krzykowski, a mental health counselor, is so traumatized by the moral compromises her harrowing prison job entails that her hair begins to fall out in clumps. An analyst with the military's drone program suffers headaches, night chills and joint pain. Press' project is to ensure that a complacent public — those of us who consider ourselves at a remove from the jobs he describes — takes responsibility for our part in creating the conditions that allow "dirty work" to occur.
#Exxon rejects three proposals to end @exxonmobilbmt refinery lockout https://t.co/EJDZEsDOTI #EndTheLockout of @Steelworkers NOW, @ExxonMobil #SETX
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) September 2, 2021
I haven’t seen much news coverage about the #NabiscoStrike. So here are some highlights/stories I heard today at the picket line in Richmond, VA.
— Karishma Mehta उपनिवेशवाद विरोधी (@karishma4va) September 6, 2021
1/ pic.twitter.com/nKj24tQFFN
No justice for @nabisco workers means no Oreos. Boycott NABSICO products until they settle a fair contract with @BCTGM workers. pic.twitter.com/kSKdntGJ3x
— Anthony Joel Quezada 🌹 (@AnthonyJQuezada) September 4, 2021
Turns out when you move your supply chain overseas to more freely abuse labor there are consequences. Sadly, the American working class feels the consequences instead of the decision makers. #Hypercapitalismhttps://t.co/zz1A5Fs0WN
— Andrew Meindl 🐬 (@andrewmeindl) September 4, 2021
The Danville facility was one of many throughout the country which massively voted down a new concessions-laden contract put before them by the United Auto Workers union. https://t.co/13iyTkBenB
— World Socialist Web Site (@WSWS_Updates) September 6, 2021
Over 1,100 union coal miners in Brookwood, Alabama, have been on an unfair labor practices strike against Warrior Met Coal for over five months. And for five months, the mainstream media has barely made a peep about the strike.#Blair100 https://t.co/xax53VHant
— The Real News (@TheRealNews) September 5, 2021
The UNITE HERE union forced workers to remain on the job for the Dodgers-Giants game the day after the vote, despite their own admission that the team’s handling of the pandemic is “completely inadequate, and dangerously irresponsible.” https://t.co/xHfJHypl4E
— World Socialist Web Site (@WSWS_Updates) September 6, 2021
BIG WIN: @UFCW announces 1st national #PaidLeave for American meatpacking workers in historic deal with @TysonFoods on #VaccineMandate.
— UFCW (@UFCW) September 3, 2021
Every company must guarantee paid leave so all #EssentialWorkers can get vaccinated without fear of losing a paycheck. https://t.co/z5nfhp298N
Texas Coalition of Black Democrats Attorney General Debate, Sep 6, 2021 7:00 pm https://t.co/8toCbeht3X #LaborDayWeekend @JaworskiForTX @MerrittForTexas #TX2022
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) September 2, 2021
The US and the world needs a series of general strikes to get the oligarchs to stop oppressing the hell out of us and killing us for profit. #GeneralStrikeRevolution
— ⭑ ☭ ⭑ Justice for the Damned ⭑ ☭ ⭑ (@tekstone) September 3, 2021
October 15th will be the first one…
https://t.co/Dfh1TAXHVL