From David Brown, Texas Standard <[email protected]>
Subject The Final Countdown: It's the Talk of Texas! 🤘
Date January 29, 2020 3:55 PM
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There&rsquo;s only a handful of days left before voters begin to commit to their presidential candidates of choice. (We're looking at you, Iowa.) You might say it&rsquo;s getting real, y'all. How real? Try this one on for size: Texas has added almost 2 million more voters to its rolls since the last presidential race. Texas now has a record-setting 16 million people registered to vote. The real question is whether these numbers will make a difference in electoral outcomes, as many have predicted. For years, it's been a given that Texas is the "reddest of red states," but as our own commentator W.F. Strong has noted, sometimes Texas' most closely held "truisms" prove surprisingly off-the-mark. Adding to the uncertainty in this election season: a certain drama in the U.S. Senate, unsettled
as of this writing. It all comes together in this week's selection of stories, hand-picked by our editors. We hope you enjoy them, and until next Wednesday - we'll see you on the radio.
- David Brown

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Voter Registration In Texas Reaches A Record 16 Million

"We&rsquo;re almost about 2 million more voters than we had four years ago during the presidential race."

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Read More




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Bolton Revelations Add Uncertainty To Senate Impeachment Trial

Senators must decide whether the former national security advisor&rsquo;s claims of a Ukraine quid pro quo mean he should testify.

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Read More




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Personalized Grocery Shopping Is Here To Stay As H-E-B Pushes Pickup

While contractor-based services like Instacart are all over Texas grocery stores, San Antonio-based H-E-B operates its popular curbside pickup and delivery services in-house.

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Three Texas Myths That Will Not Die

Sometimes the stories we tell ourselves aren&rsquo;t exactly true.

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Read More




-
How Volunteers Are Counting The Number Of Homeless Texans (
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The Texas Tribune )
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Austin Unveils Mural To Mark 'Hi, How Are You?' Day For Mental Health Awareness (
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KUT )
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At Muleshoe Refuge, Sandhill Cranes Are the Sound of a Prairie Sanctuary (
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Marfa Public Radio )
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New Exhibits Capture Advances In Army Medicine Since WWII (
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Texas Public Radio )

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It was closing in on midnight on Nov. 5, when I was refreshing my computer, waiting for the results of Midland&rsquo;s fall elections. The tally should have been posted hours ago, and my gut was telling me something was off. There were a lot of important races on this ballot. Two city council seats were up for grabs, and a competitive mayoral race was underway. Plus, the local school district was asking for a $569 million bond to build two new schools &ndash; a proposal which had divided the community. Finally, the results came in and I, along with so many other local journalists, began reporting. At that point, none of us knew how
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hundreds of ballots had gone missing or that local officials announced the wrong results for the half a billion-dollar bond initiative. Only now, almost three months later, do
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we know the true results of Midland ISD&rsquo;s bond election and that every vote was counted in Midland&rsquo;s fall elections. It&rsquo;s the kind of weird and complex story reporters face in West Texas all the time &ndash; stories that could stay under the radar if it weren&rsquo;t for the reporters out here. To see more of my reporting from the Permian Basin, head to the
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Marfa Public Radio website.
- Mitch Borden

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@BordenMitch

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