Minnesota police arrest CNN reporter and camera crew as they report from protests in Minneapolis https://t.co/IY0H1Lc77E pic.twitter.com/s9XmwVfabP
— New Day (@NewDay) May 29, 2020
Hey .@BernieSanders here’s that revolution you were talking about. Where are you?
— No Justice - No Peace (@pinkladyfoxx) May 29, 2020
Imagine thinking Joe Biden is going to solve any of this.
— Jack Califano (@jackcalifano) May 29, 2020
Joe Biden has done only a tiny number of interviews since going into his bunker 2 months ago. In one of those he wildly insulted black people & in the other he audibly farted.
— Lee Camp [Redacted] (@LeeCamp) May 28, 2020
...This campaign is gonna go great.
Joe Biden might have just shit his pants on a livestream pic.twitter.com/iFmM4oqFH2
— Piney McKnuckle (@PineyMcknuckle) May 27, 2020
40M+ lost their jobs, and Joe Biden doesn't support monthly UBI payments.
— Jackson (@Jacksonlzz) May 28, 2020
100K+ dead, and Joe Biden doesn't support Medicare For All.
If Joe Biden isn't adopting these progressive policies during a national crisis, why do you think he'll adopt them once the crisis is over?
Young voters overwhelmingly support the Green New Deal, Medicare-for-all, student debt forgiveness, and an end to imperialism.
— Walker Bragman (@WalkerBragman) May 27, 2020
Biden thinks they can be won with a "young professionals finance council," featuring an online discussion moderated by Symone Sanders and Pete Buttigieg
What is the Democratic Party plan to address structural racism?
— Carl Nyberg (@CarlNyberg312) May 28, 2020
Trump Could Be “Reelected” Even If He Loses The Electoral College https://t.co/LWpTfjA77G
— Greg Palast (@Greg_Palast) May 27, 2020
As chief prosecutor, Klobuchar declined to bring charges against cop that killed George Floyd https://t.co/qDH3u9zXo8
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) May 27, 2020
BREAKING: Nevada @SenCortezMasto has decided to withdraw her name from consideration to be @JoeBiden's pick for vice president. 1/
— Steve Sebelius (@SteveSebelius) May 28, 2020
1/ The question of whether to wear a face mask has become a way to pick sides in what’s quickly becoming a coronavirus culture war.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) May 23, 2020
For some, forgoing masks in public during the pandemic has become a political statement. https://t.co/fKiYL9P9JQ
“There is no reason -- capital N, capital O -- no reason that anyone under 65 should be able to say I am afraid to go vote,” Patrick, a Republican, said in an interview with Fox News. “Have they been to a grocery store? Have they been to Walmart? Have they been to Lowe’s? Have they been to Home Depot? Have they been anywhere? Have they been afraid to go out of their house? This is a scam by the Democrats to steal the election.”
Roughly half of the Twitter accounts pushing to 'reopen America' are bots, researchers found https://t.co/hjTqh8N28W
— John Haltiwanger (@jchaltiwanger) May 22, 2020
Texas coronavirus testing: 6.4% were antibodies tests, new data shows. Deceptive misrepresentation of the actual infection rate. #Texas #abbot #covidlies #covid19 https://t.co/ZUArIF6I4Q
— Kristen Maxwell (@kmax2go) May 25, 2020
Employees say hundreds of Tyson Foods workers in Texas have tested positive for #COVIDー19 https://t.co/uCzyEWcAVZ #DFW
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) May 21, 2020
Our thoughts on the stunning photo of Colby Hutson, the nurse sharing his note about a dying COVID patient in Austin. (📷@statesman) pic.twitter.com/OZH9o41YLR
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) May 19, 2020
🚨 🚨 🚨
— Sema (@_SemaHernandez_) May 26, 2020
With Moratorium Lifted, Houston Becomes Largest U.S. City Where Evictions Can Resume
🚨 🚨 🚨
A rental assistance program there ran out of funding in just 90 minutes.https://t.co/Cu2xS1tvFx
Domestic violence calls spike in Texas cities while falling in rural areas https://t.co/Rl8d5SRN4w #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) May 19, 2020
Fifth Circuit stymies voting by mail in Texas. Again. https://t.co/wd0S4Rc0q9 #TXLege
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) May 20, 2020
The Senate on (May 19) confirmed a conservative Texas lawyer nominated by President Trump to the Federal Election Commission, restoring a voting quorum on the agency for the first time since August amid a mounting backlog of complaints and requests for guidance in an election year.
James E. “Trey” Trainor III, an Austin-based election law attorney, has pushed for less regulation of money in politics and opposed efforts to require politically active nonprofit organizations to disclose their donors. He previously advised the Republican National Committee and Trump during the 2016 election.
The party-line confirmation of Trainor ends the longest period in the agency’s history without a quorum, giving the panel the four votes necessary to regulate and enforce federal campaign finance laws.
With Trainor, the commission is again equally divided ideologically, which could resume the FEC’s practice of often deadlocking on alleged elections violations. Two vacancies remain on the panel, and it is unclear when the Senate will take action to fill them.
BREAKING: The U.S. Senate has confirmed John Ratcliffe as director of national intelligence. The Texas Republican congressman was opposed by most Democrats in a 49-44 vote. https://t.co/CSVMEZSIGZ
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 21, 2020
Sir, would you be okay with giving the head football coach job at @UTAustin to someone who’s never played or coached football? Barely watched a game? Why are you okay giving the stewardship of our massive national intelligence enterprise to someone with no qualifications? Sir? https://t.co/Pi74WXVPvj
— John Sipher (@john_sipher) May 22, 2020
(Ratcliffe's) eventual resignation will leave the CD4 seat vacant until at least January because Gov. Greg Abbott is not expected to order a special election. Ratcliffe is the Republican Party’s nominee for the general election ballot. An August 8 meeting of the CD4 Congressional District Executive Committee has been scheduled to select a replacement Republican nominee for the general election ballot, if they can.Jason Ross, Ratcliffe’s former district director, and Rockwall council member Trace Johannesen are actively seeking the seat. Former congressional candidates Floyd McLendon, who lost the CD32 primary to Genevieve Collins, and T.C. Manning, who unsuccessfully sought the party’s nomination to challenge U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Houston), are believed to be considering the “race.” Any replacement nominee is highly likely to serve in the next Congress. CD4 was 22 points redder than the state as a whole in 2018 and is trending redder.
Unless there is no replacement nominee, in which case Ratcliffe’s name must either remain on the ballot or, if he withdraws, no Republican would be on the ballot except as a write-in candidate, as happened in CD22 in 2006. If Ratcliffe won the general election, a special election would be needed to fill his vacant seat.
Section 145.036, Election Code provides that a political party may make a replacement nomination “only if” any of three circumstances apply.
Let's make sure we can hold this administration & DNI Ratcliffe accountable! Chip in $20.20 for us to get the message out to our district and #FlipTexasBlue in November. https://t.co/YKzPCy8KgC
— Russell Foster (@RussellFosterTX) May 22, 2020
Big update to this thread: The Congressional Black Caucus, Hispanic Caucus, and Progressive Caucus have all teamed up to demand the DCCC intervene on behalf of the progressive the way they have often done on behalf of centrists. Never seen this before: https://t.co/9yu5mWPfbN https://t.co/ZQ8ovdoL3n
— Ryan Grim (@ryangrim) May 21, 2020
In a stunning deathbed confession, the woman who made Roe v. Wade possible tried to erase years of anti-abortion activism. But the damage has already been done. https://t.co/ZJBStSO6WF
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 26, 2020
FULL SPEED AHEAD: TX GOP will go ahead with in-person convention in Houston in July expected to be nation's largest
— ChickenFriedPolitics (@ChkFriPolitics) May 21, 2020
--ChickenFriedPolitics.com is The Place for Southern Politics--https://t.co/eVjHjVuV4F
New: Commissioners Court appoints Christopher Hollins (@CGHollins) as interim Harris County clerk. He'll replace @dtrautman, who is resigning due to health concerns. Hollins a Houston attorney and Texas Democratic Party official. https://t.co/1UZ12ynIOA
— Zach Despart🖊️ (@zachdespart) May 20, 2020
Former DEM presidential candidate and San Antonio mayor @JulianCastro signs on as senior advisor to @votolatino
— ChickenFriedPolitics (@ChkFriPolitics) May 23, 2020
--ChickenFriedPolitics.com is The Place for Southern Politics--https://t.co/zA4hhe8HPn
NEW: The @txrrc has rolled back rules that once prohibited producers from storing oil and liquefied gas in geological formations. Watchdogs warn the rollback could lead to polluted water across the state.
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 20, 2020
By @collins_reports:https://t.co/IVQZAQAwfd
Union nurses in Texas are fired up✊🏾✊🏿✊🏼
— NationalNursesUnited (@NationalNurses) May 22, 2020
More than twenty NNU RNs held actions yesterday outside two Corpus Christi Medical Center facilities to demand #SafeStaffing.
When nurses are outside, something is wrong inside! pic.twitter.com/QFk3469y3r
The small Native American tribe fighting Trump's wall in South Texas https://t.co/bVkL1y8xCV #INDIGENOUS #TAIRP pic.twitter.com/s3vVGH5InE
— Indigenous (@AmericanIndian8) May 20, 2020
.@ConorDougherty's new book, "Golden Gates," is a stunning, deeply reported investigation into the housing crisis. Join Dougherty and @megankimble on May 26 for a virtual discussion of the book, hosted by @BookPeople.
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 24, 2020
Tickets here: https://t.co/ZtIoT6Vaxe
Julie and Bruce Webb opened Webb Gallery in historic downtown Waxahachie to showcase eclectic artwork and antiques.
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) May 23, 2020
But the playfulness of the gallery has moved into their upstairs abode. Fortunately, we have photos: https://t.co/hTvd9wax85
U.S. President William Mckinley greets people from the back of a train in Del Rio, 1901. Such details! The hats, parasols and ESPECIALLY the girl in the foreground who is dressed up to see the President in her hat and dress and ribbons in her hair but no shoes ... too great! pic.twitter.com/lRwOiWXfFH
— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) May 23, 2020
Biden Klobuchar ticket as a sandwich pic.twitter.com/HqoZPeukUL
— pokey pup (@Whatapityonyou) May 21, 2020
“I would vote for Joe Biden if he boiled babies and ate them” is an actual sentence published in @thenation in a disgusting hit piece against @ReadeAlexandra by @KathaPollitt https://t.co/s84taelC8J pic.twitter.com/Vot70PM8Lk
— Jenn Dize 👩🏻💻 (@JennElizabethJ) May 20, 2020
He’s all but announced her. https://t.co/uWCGp5gxJE
— Markos Moulitsas (@markos) May 20, 2020
When's the perfect time to backtrack on free universal health care in favor of the employer based ACA? In a pandemic when 16 million people just lost their fucking employer health insurance. https://t.co/dmgGaRTRpR
— It's only called class war when we fight back (@IIRONINTHEFIRE) May 21, 2020
Congratulations Democrats, you played yourselves. Joe Biden is the epitome of establishment attitudes towards ordinary Americans. You're not entitled to the vote, go out and earn it.#YouAintBlackBiden #DropOutBidenhttps://t.co/yMQGviOTy5
— Movement for a People’s Party (@4aPeoplesParty) May 23, 2020

Fuck. I might just win.
— Vermin Supreme (TM) (@VerminSupreme) May 16, 2020
Jo Jorgensen wins Libertarian Party presidential nomination https://t.co/kwepKOS03x
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) May 24, 2020
.@GloriaLaRiva got over 66,000 votes in California alone for President in 2016—the most of any socialist presidential candidate since the 70s.
— Mike Prysner (@MikePrysner) May 21, 2020
Officially on the ballot again for 2020, let’s goooo https://t.co/HtvH27Ynno
Tonight we will be hosting a call for the DSA rank-and-file and other #DemExiters to talk about our #LeftUnity campaign to provide an independent voice for the working-class.
— Howie Hawkins (@HowieHawkins) May 22, 2020
8:00 PM EST
Register for the call at https://t.co/Saig3Jv5oS pic.twitter.com/qXmbwRuXwR
Raise a glass to the class of 2020.https://t.co/zz6mZuOLHo— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 19, 2020
Scoop: A week after #HarrisCounty Clerk @dtrautman announced she would resign due to health concerns, Commissioners Court plans to debate whether to appoint an independent administrator to run elections instead. Most big TX counties already do this.https://t.co/XKYvJo2Xzy— Zach Despart🖊️ (@zachdespart) May 18, 2020
Harris County clerk Diane Trautman’s resignation earlier this week serves as a warning about the dangers of in-person voting during the pandemic.— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) May 15, 2020
Why does Ken Paxton insist we risk it? https://t.co/cNcYkiKkap
Screen shot from new @RoyceWestTX ad in #TXSen that accuses @JohnCornyn of "racist dogwhistle." https://t.co/41rqCz5XAb pic.twitter.com/VzGgBrPmfT— Todd J. Gillman (@toddgillman) May 19, 2020
While the rest of Houston’s legal community was adapting to COVID-19, DA Kim Ogg was determined to find who leaked an internal document—with devastating consequences.https://t.co/oXbJ1V2Euf— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) May 17, 2020
Texas is set to end a freeze on evictions and debt collections, even as almost 2 million of its residents have claimed unemployment over the past 2 months https://t.co/xex8bBQ6SM pic.twitter.com/DLFgd7k5Mh— Forbes (@Forbes) May 15, 2020
Just in from an advocate in Texas: A 61 y/o man caged in Smith County Jail died of COVID. Didn't tell his family when hospitalized. Didn't tell them when he died. Didn't tell them until they completed the autopsy. Called them at 5am this morning. No humanity. Only cruelty.— Scott Hechinger (@ScottHech) May 17, 2020
Mary Lou Ketchum, a substitute teacher in San Antonio, has been calling the Texas Workforce Commission for six weeks and still hasn’t been able to talk to a representative.
Ketchum, 59, filed a claim in early April and was denied, but she thought she’d be eligible for unemployment benefits under the federal coronavirus relief bill, which extends unemployment eligibility to part-time workers. After appealing the decision, she said she is still waiting to hear back.
She said the commission’s website is “primitive” and outdated. Pages load extremely slowly, and whenever she uses the backspace key, the system logs her out, she said.
“It definitely has put a strain on me,” Ketchum said. “I went to the food bank -- I never thought I’d ever have to do that.”
Thousands of people lined up in Dallas by 5:00 a.m. Thursday, 4 hours before food distribution lines started moving. Each family received dry goods, produce, milk and snacks. U.S. jobless claims rose by 2.6M last week, bringing the total during the pandemic to at least 36.5M. pic.twitter.com/8dTx5Lo8Sj— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) May 14, 2020
Kinder Morgan can't even figure out how to handle water runoff from the Permian Highway Pipeline but we should believe they will be able to handle an oil spill?#NoPHPhttps://t.co/cDV9unC3Ra— Indigenous Environmental Network (@IENearth) May 18, 2020
Deep in the Rio Grande Valley, the onion harvest is in full swing, even as the state fights COVID-19 with restrictions and lockdowns elsewhere. https://t.co/g3CA7H3IGf— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) May 14, 2020
.@kroger has ended its +$2/hour "hero pay."— Gus Bova (@gusbova) May 18, 2020
"Kroger is choosing to ignore this pandemic. This is not how we treat heroes in America," says @UFCW president. @HEB's "Texas proud pay" is set to end May 24. @WholeFoods: June 1. pic.twitter.com/uAKW21JHEb
About two-thirds of U.S. seafood consumption is done through a restaurant, whether around a table or forked out of a to-go container. So when Texas’ stay-at-home order went into effect, despite some exceptions, fishermen’s sales lines dried up. https://t.co/LaXg7T8fqP— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) May 16, 2020
Sportscaster and former Miss America Phyllis George passed away last Thursday. In our March 2007 issue, Evan Smith spoke with the Denton native about her road to pageantry and the competition's transformation in modern times:https://t.co/RZsfO7Nmoz— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) May 18, 2020
Yeah ... about that time that Waylon Jennings got fired for playing Little Richard... I wonder if Waylon and Little Richard are laughing about it in rock and roll heaven now.https://t.co/KlA1UeOaJf— Traces of Texas (@TracesofTexas) May 12, 2020
He credits Houston's robust R&B scene in the early 1950s as his starting point.
"We played on Lyons Avenue at a club called the Club Matinee," Richard said. "We had a quartet called the Tempo Toppers, and I was the lead singer."
Even in those early days, Little Richard's appearance was as much of a box-office draw as his music.
"Everybody would come to see me because I wore this wild hair, and my complexion was reddish. I think they thought I was an Indian or something. They would pack the club. Houston was really beautiful back then," he said. "I remember the Shamrock Hotel."
Under the branding-iron Texas sun, the corner of Lyons and Hill, Times Square of the Bloody Fifth (Ward), drowses and stirs and drowses again. But let the sun go down behind the Lewis Undertaking Parlor -- “You overtake him, honey; I’ll undertake him” -- and the corner comes alive. It becomes Pearl Harbor, heart of the city to the people who named this town Heavenly Houston.
Pearl Harbor, named that by a weary homicide detective who once had to investigate, in one night, 11 killings in a radius of one block from Lyons and Hill.
By eight bells, Pearl Harbor is a revolving stage, a spectacle that has to be seen to be believed. But you can’t go there at night. Or you can, but you won’t. You can hear it though. Each workday night at 8, Henry Atlas, owner of the Atlas Radio and Record Shop, corner Lyons and Hill, sits down at a broadcasting console in his store. Through a corner of plate glass he can watch the languid tumult of the dusty night unfold in at least three dimensions, while he produces a marvelous radio program called Jive Session.
There’s a piano waiting behind the console, in case live talent drops in. Among the vocalists and musicians who have appeared live on Jive Session are Duke Ellington, Ivory Joe Hunter, Earl Hines, Johnny Hodges, Buster Cartwright, the Ward Singers, the Soul Steerers, the Pilgrim Travelers, the Angelics, the Clouds of Joy and the Stars of Harmony.
“This is Henry Atlas speaking from the word-famous corner of Lyons and Hill. Dig me with a boogie beat and let the good times roll.”
Henry is a white man who loves the people of the Bloody Fifth. And they love him. He spins a biscuit on one of two turntables. Ray Charles singing “I Got a Woman All the Way Across Town.”
The music goes round and round. It comes out of a loudspeaker on the corner, over the cart of Oscar the peanut vendor, echoing against the walls of the Busy Bee Barbershop and a gumbo house. The Atlas Jive Session comes out of speakers all over town via Radio Morales, KLVL, 1480 kilocycles. And when the show begins the characters of the Ward drift down to the Harbor.