Good morning,
Here is today's Texas Minute.
– Michael Quinn Sullivan
Thursday, January 14, 2021
Modify your email preferences [[link removed]].
Texas GOP chairman Allen West issued a blistering statement against the Democrats’ impeachment of President Trump. Joshua Hendrickson has the details [[link removed]].
“The second attempt to impeach President Trump shows that Democrats would rather play vindictive politics instead of engaging in the business of the American people. Vilifying their opponents as neo-Nazis, white nationalists, and Uncle Toms will only deepen mistrust and division in this country.” – Lt. Col. Allen West On the first full day of the legislative session [[link removed]] yesterday, the Texas House did not address executive overreach during the pandemic, out-of-control property taxes, or the budget shortfall. Instead, the House voted unanimously to create a new honorary position in their chamber.
Previously, the longest-serving member of the House – regardless of gender – was designated as the “dean” of the chamber. Now, they will have two deans: the longest-serving male and the longest-serving female.
Is this a harbinger of the virtue-signaling we can expect from the 87th Session? House members did vote against a proposal paving the way for an increase in office budgets for legislators. They instead voted [[link removed]] to maintain the office allocation adopted in the last legislative session.
State Rep. Matt Schaefer [[link removed]] (R–Tyler)—a vocal proponent of increasing office budgets to pay Capitol staffers more—presented an amendment to the House Rules that would force the chamber to readdress the issue by April 21. To be clear, though, Mr. Schaefer’s amendment itself did not raise office budgets, and he stressed lawmakers could theoretically vote to keep them the same or lower them later.
The measure was voted down [[link removed]] 103 to 43. Meanwhile, the Texas Senate voted yesterday to reduce their office budgets.
The Senate also set in place [[link removed]] what is now called the “Five-Ninths Rule” – meaning, the number of senators who must agree to bring legislation to the chamber’s floor for debate. That number has moved from two-thirds to three-fifths to now five-ninths, reflecting the change in the GOP majority to ensure Democrats cannot kill Republican legislation.
“Texans reaffirmed in the 2020 election that they support conservative candidates and conservative policies.” – Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick [[link removed]] When the Texas House gavels into session later this morning, they will take up new operating rules for the legislative session.
Among other things, as Brandon Waltens reports [[link removed]], the proposed rules could result in far fewer record votes being placed into public record, obscuring lawmakers’ actions in office, and thus shielding them from accountability by their constituents.
“These people are terrified of accountability.” – Don Huffines [[link removed]] In this week's Liberty Cafe podcast [[link removed]], policy analyst Bill Peacock discusses the odds of Texas cutting spending and reducing the size of government. Texas Democrats lost another attempt to undermine state voting laws.
Erin Anderson reports [[link removed]] the U.S. Supreme Court denied a petition filed by the Texas Democrat Party asking the justices to review the party’s lawsuit seeking to force the state to allow everyone to vote by mail – a process more vulnerable to fraud and abuse than in-person voting.
Meanwhile, a Bexar County political operative who boasted on hidden camera about her mail-ballot harvesting prowess has been arrested and charged with multiple voting fraud felonies [[link removed]].
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced the arrest [[link removed]] of Rachel Rodriguez, self-described “ballot chaser” who was first exposed in October by undercover journalists at Project Veritas. (FWIW: some reports have identified her as “Raquel” Rodriguez; we went with the A.G. office’s spelling.)
“This is a victory for election integrity and a strong signal that anyone who attempts to defraud the people of Texas, deprive them of their vote, or undermine the integrity of elections will be brought to justice.” – Attorney General Ken Paxton [[link removed]] A new commentary by Joel Starnes [[link removed]] looks at the most under-reported pro-life victory of recent years: the U.S. Supreme Court protecting the life of Tarrant County’s Baby Tinslee Lewis.
“This is a blow to the Texas Medical Association, a liberal lobby group that consistently supports the culture of death in the legislature. This is a blow to a fake pro-life group that fights against abortion but thinks doctors should be able to override patients’ and families’ end-of-life wishes. It’s a blow against the Texas Directive Act (10-day rule), which is especially good going into the 87th Texas Legislative Session.” – Joel Starnes [[link removed]] Number of the Day
52
Number of years State Rep. Tom Craddick (R-Midland) – the longest serving member – has served in the Texas House.
[Source: Ballotpedia [[link removed]]]
Quote-Unquote
“If you are an elected Republican who supports impeachment, you support ripping the GOP apart while dramatically increasing the likelihood that Donald Trump forms a third party - something his supporters would overwhelmingly welcome.”
– Ben Domenech,
writing in The Transom [[link removed]]
Today in History
On January 14, 1784, the Treaty of Paris was ratified by the Continental Congress, officially bringing the War of Independence to an end.
The Texas Directory
Find your legislators [[link removed]], get contact information, check their ratings with civic groups, learn about their campaign finances, and see what has been reported about them.
Manage / Update Your Email Preferences [[link removed]] Request A Speaker [[link removed]] Contribute [[link removed]] A product of Texas Scorecard
www.TexasScorecard.com
(888) 410-1836
PO Box 248, Leander, TX 78646
PO Box 700981, Dallas, TX 75370
PO Box 12862, Odessa TX 79768 Produced by Michael Quinn Sullivan and Brandon Waltens, the Texas Minute is a quick look at the news and info of the day we find interesting, and hope you do as well. It is delivered weekday mornings (though we'll take the occasional break for holidays and whatnot).
This message was originally sent to:
John xxxxxx |
If you ever stop receiving our emails, it might be because someone unintentionally removed you from the list. No worries; it is easy enough to reactivate your subscription immediately on our website.
[link removed]
Before you click the link below... If someone forwarded this email to you, clicking the link will end the subscription of
[email protected]. Unsubscribe [link removed]