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November 10, 2024
NEWS DIGEST
by Brandon Waltens
Good morning,
With the General Election in the rearview mirror, the next election on lawmakers’ minds in the Texas Capitol is for the next speaker of the House.
The official vote for speaker of the House will occur on the first day of the legislative session, January 14. But the decision may be made long before that as part of the Republican Caucus’ nominating process.
The process for Republican legislators to nominate a unified speaker candidate ahead of the official vote at the start of the session in January was adopted in 2017 in an attempt to prevent Republican speaker candidates, like then-Speaker Joe Straus, from courting Democrat support for the position.
In the years since, however, both former Speaker Dennis Bonnen and the current Speaker Dade Phelan have released lists containing Democrat supporters ahead of the caucus vote, making the exercise a formality.
This year has shaped up differently, however. Multiple candidates announced plans to challenge Phelan, largely based on disagreement with his policy of placing Democrats in leadership positions and, more broadly, allowing Democrats to have outsized influence over the Republican legislature.
In September, a group of reform-minded current and incoming Republican members of the Texas House met to consolidate their support around a single challenger. State Rep. David Cook (R–Mansfield) received the endorsement of 48 Republicans—a majority of the Republican caucus, which will have 88 Republicans when they are sworn in.
The caucus vote will take place on December 7 ahead of the session. To clinch the caucus’ nomination, several rounds of voting can take place during a secret ballot. The winner must receive 2/3 support during the first two rounds of voting. If that does not occur, the threshold then drops to 3/5.
If Cook is able to clinch the Republican caucus nomination, the path will be uphill for Speaker Phelan to hold onto his position, as he will need the votes of at least 15 Republicans to defy the caucus, along with Democrats for support. The speaker candidacy of Democrat Ana Maria Ramos, who is expected to get at least a few Democrat votes, makes the math even more difficult for him
Featured Trump Wins Big with Hispanics, Flipping South Texas Counties [[link removed]]
By Valerie Muñoz
Hispanic Americans cast their vote in historic numbers for Republican President-elect Donald Trump, flipping historically blue counties red.
According to a national exit poll, 54 percent of Hispanic/Latino men went for Trump.
In Maverick County, a border region including Eagle Pass, 59 percent of the vote went to Trump while 40 percent went to Kamala Harris—a 19-point victory for the Republican. In 2020, the county vote went to Biden by 9.5 percentage points.
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State Texas A&M Board of Regents End ‘LGBTQ Minor,’ Other ‘Low Performing’ Programs [[link removed]]
Regents push back against “shared governance” with woke faculty. Texas Democrat Party Chair to Resign After Major Electoral Losses [[link removed]]
Democrats have failed to secure a statewide victory in 30 years. Analysis: School Choice Continues Winning Streak [[link removed]]
Will Gov. Abbott and House Republicans keep playing games?
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Local Dallas City Council Members Use Taxpayer Money on Japan Visit [[link removed]]
The trip is reportedly to learn about high-speed rail systems with the hope of bringing them to Dallas. Texas Voters Split on School Bonds, Tax Increases [[link removed]]
Texas school districts currently owe $120 billion in property tax-supported bond debt. Dallas Voters Approve Two of the Citizen-led HERO Amendments [[link removed]]
Two of the three HERO amendments proposed have passed.
Read more in Local news... [[link removed]]
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