Friday, January 21, 2022

The Weekend Wrangle from Far Left Texas


I've been focusing on Democrats and Republicans as the March primary elections draw closer, so this Wrangle will go as easy as I can on the duopoly.  A few unfortunate souls made news.


I shouldn't leave Governor Helen Wheels out.


His signature issue -- the one featured in all those teevee ads -- is going to damage him.  That's why he is suddenly shifting gears to education.


So much incompetence, outdone only by the corruption.


That was as gentle as I could be.  Hey, they bring it on themselves.  I'll take that last as my segue to the climate news.


Yes, it's too late for the Ike Dike.


A few social justice posts.


And the calm-me-downs.

A new media shooter coming out


Unlike Chuckles, I don't necessarily see this as good news.


Let's see the scorecard for the players:

A search committee will look for an editor-in-chief and CEO. That committee will include the following people: Ann Stern, president and CEO, Houston Endowment; Dr. Anne Chao, manager of the Houston Asian American Archive; Rice University's Armando Perez, executive vice president H-E-N Houston, chairman, United Way Greater Houston; Jeff Cohen, executive vice president, Arnold Ventures; Reginald DesRosches, Howard R. Hughes provost and president-elect, Rice University; and Rich Kinder, chairman, Kinder Foundation and executive chairman, Kinder Morgan Inc.

John Arnold (together with his wife Linda) is the local billionaire who made his first fortune with Enron, getting out early before the implosion.  He's a Libertarian.  Houston Endowment sold the Chronicle to Hearst in 1986; they were started by Jesse JonesThe Knight Foundation was born out of a once-formidable newspaper outfit, and the American Journalism Project has its own list of benefactors, with quite a bit of overlap with the above.  Two names stood out to me: John Thornton, the venture capitalist who birthed the Texas Tribune with Evan Smith; and Cohen, the former editor of the Chronicle.  I'll let Amal Ahmed finish.


And my favorite journalist at the Chron weighed in.


I subscribe to the Axios newsletter for Dallas; it's barely tolerable.  I had to stop the Austin newsletter, as it was not.  The TexTrib has a few problems, but paying their staff and reporting on the Texas political duopoly isn't among them.  The Chronic catches a lot of flak from the conservatives in town for 'librul bias', so I would guess those folks are applauding this announcement.

AJP has already funded many similar efforts, including El Paso MattersPoynter spoke to Thornton and co-founder Elizabeth Green two years ago about their mission.

Several observations:

-- This really is an exciting time in online media in Texas.  Reform Austin is doing a bang-up job with Nick Anderson at the helm.  The Texas Signal has vastly improved with Fernando Ramirez's reporting, and for blue partisans Michelle Davis' Living Blue in Texas is a great resource.

-- Kuffner likes it because he thinks there'll be more local politics covered  ... that he can then cut and paste into his blog posts.  Amusing, because without a Chronicle subscription, about 75% of his blog doesn't exist.  Hell, I just hope they offer him a job that pays well enough that he can quit the oil company.  He can keep ignoring the corruption of local Democrats as long as they balance him by hiring some Republican who isn't a right wing freak.  Probably rules out Big Jolly, but the Houston Watch person might have a shot if he/she can diversify his/her anti-Kim Ogg content a bit.  (Not that Madam District Attorney hasn't earned it.)

-- Poor old Gadfly, the expert on everything, needs a better job than that POS newspaper in Sulphur Springs, but he hates Houston and all people and his life in general.

-- Cohen will probably find a place for some of the furloughed Chron folks like Evan Mintz and Laura Goldberg (the once-business editor and wife to my old former friend Neil Aquino).  In fact there are lots of good well-paying jobs suddenly available in Texas journalism.  That's a very good thing.

-- I have no interest.  None.  I'm retired.

-- Expect oil and gas money to flow like polluted fracking water into this venture.

It'll be a year before it gets off the ground, but today it smells like Michael Bloomberg's attempt to buy the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 2020 by hiring every single Texas political rube off the street.  Here's a few of my suggestions for names:

-- The Big Greasy Times
-- The Bayou City Bugle
-- The Space City Star

What's your take?

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Hump Day Wrangle


Texas Republicans' bad week is stretching into a month.


Buc-ee Aplin is a big buddy of Dan Patrick.  The $65 million question is: does any of this matter to the TXGQP primary voter?  I am inclined to say 'no'.


After all, there are things happening that this subset of humanity is very likely applauding.


The largest corporations in Texas and the nation are complicit.

A pair of watchdog groups called out companies and trade groups that continued to financially support the 147 congressional Republicans who voted last year to overturn the 2020 presidential election results even after the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. [...] General Dynamics ($233,500), and Valero Energy ($207,500) are (among) the top corporate donors to those who objected to the election and their party committees,” the report says.

More:

Irving-based ExxonMobil and San Antonio-based Valero Energy joined other Fortune 500 corporations and trade groups in 2021 in spending $8.1 million to financially back these members. [...] The recipients include House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and nine Texas lawmakers: Reps. Brian Babin, Jodey Arrington, Randy Weber, John Carter, August Pfluger, Beth Van Duyne, Troy Nehls, Ronny Jackson, and Michael Cloud.

More:

Pharmaceutical company Merck signed a pro-voting rights statement that was published as an advertisement in the New York Times on April 14. [...] After signing the ad, Merck donated $1,000 in October to Texas Republican state Senator Lois Kolkhorst, the primary sponsor of one of the state’s two new voter suppression laws and a cosponsor of the other one. [...] JPMorgan Chase also donated to a cosponsor of SB 1, giving $1,000 from its PAC to Sen. Dawn Buckingham in September.

Then there's the rich country folk who aren't all that fascist-freaky but still send Greg Abbott millions of dollars like it was loose change in their pocket.


Unlike Michelle, I see no path to anything for Texas Democrats but "a few small wins in targeted races", which I've been hearing since Boyd Richie was chairman.

Still, the young and the brave soldier on.


Best of luck to those good guys and gals.  I won't be holding my breath that the TexTrib is suddenly going to realize there's more than two political parties, however.


Here's a few more Tweets that point to the challenges we're all facing.


Need to jump that Bloomberg paywall?  Here you go.

In climate developments: what's good for Texas is often bad for the planet.


A few criminal and social justice updates which add to the litany of grim news in this post.


So we should find a laugh where we can.




At Wednesday’s meeting of the Dallas City Council, the people of Dallas were greeted with perhaps the most perplexing public comment yet: a man dressed in blue surgical scrubs, shouting a pro-vaccination song.

Alex Stein, a YouTube comedian, hit the podium and performed a rap to the tune of Eminem’s “The Real Slim Shady,” with lyrics including “vaccinate me in my thong” and “Dr. Fauci, give me that ouchie.” His audience: some two dozen council members in a largely empty and silent conference room.