From Michael Quinn Sullivan <[email protected]>
Subject Texas Minute: 6/1/2021
Date June 1, 2021 11:14 AM
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Good morning,

With apologies to T.S. Elliot…

This is the way the session ends

This is the way the session ends

This is the way the session ends

Not with a bang but a whimper.

Here is today's Texas Minute.

– Michael Quinn Sullivan

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

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Remember the temper tantrum thrown by State Rep. Jeff Leach [[link removed]] (R-Allen) a couple weeks back? When he was standing up for Democrats’ legislative priorities, and shut down House business for three days? Not only did Leach’s stunt single-handedly kill hopes for a bill [[link removed]] protecting children from sex-change surgeries, but – as the side-effects rippled – his action then gave the Democrats time to kill election integrity measures over the weekend.

Brandon Waltens explains [[link removed]] how Democrats took advantage of the legislative clock Republicans gave them to kill high-priority election integrity reform. In response to the election integrity reform being killed by the Democrats’ walk-out, Gov. Greg Abbott announced [[link removed]] he would “veto Article 10 of the budget” – which is the funding for the legislative branch. “No pay for those who abandon their responsibilities.”

I hope the irony [[link removed]] is not lost: this is the same governor who last year shut down businesses and imposed jail sanctions on small business owners, but still collected his full government salary, slept in his fancy government housing, protected by his government security detail – yet never took responsibility for those actions. A couple weeks ago, lawmakers were hailing the 87th Session of the Texas legislature as the most conservative session ever.

As it turns out, it might be the least productive for conservatives in a long time. For example, only two and a quarter of the nine priorities of the Republican Party of Texas passed.

Lawmakers did pass a new round of legislation protecting religious freedom. House Bill 1927 isn’t exactly “constitutional carry,” but it is close enough to count. Meanwhile, the party’s “abolish abortion” priority was only (barely?) partially fulfilled by the “Heartbeat Bill.” For those who want a visual of the Republican Party of Texas’ 2021 legislative priorities:

🚫 Election Integrity

✅ Protect Religious Freedom

🚫 Ban Gender Modification on Children

🚫 Abolition of Abortion

✅ Constitutional Carry

🚫 Monument Protection

🚫 School Choice for All

🚫 Ban Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying

🚫 Stop Executive Overreach

Capitol Correspondent Jeramy Kitchen has a quick recap [[link removed]] of what did – and did not – get accomplished in the legislative session. The Senate passed a series of reforms to rein in the abusive executive overreach Texans suffered under during the last year. The Texas House refused to hear those bills… but instead passed legislation codifying the pandemic power grab made by Gov. Abbott and local officials around the state.

The Senate passed a ban on taxpayer-funded lobbying. The Texas House turned it into a bill that allowing – even encouraging – taxpayer-funded lobbying.

Might there be a pattern…?

In an ironic twist, lawmakers tried to extend the life of an onerous corporate welfare program known as Chapter 313, but their legislation didn’t make it across the finishing line. So, in an accidental win for taxpayers, Chapter 313 might actually be dead… for a little while anyway. It could be resuscitated in a special session, or even in 2023, given Greg Abbott’s support for corporate welfare programs.

Meanwhile, nothing was done by state lawmakers to reduce Texans’ property taxes. Their apologists will say legislators should be praised for not stopping the previously adopted efforts to slow the future growth of the property tax burdens… Seriously. There will be some who say the legislature just “ran out of time” to get priorities accomplished. Some might even use the failure as an excuse to say lawmakers should meet more often. That would be a mistake.

As Jeramy Kitchen tweeted [[link removed]], the Texas House convened for 76 days of the total 140 days allotted by the state constitution.

Lawmakers had time; they chose to squander it. It is not a question of calendars, but of convictions. A subtext of the now-concluded legislative session has been the cold war between the Republican Party of Texas and the politicians who run as “Republicans” to get elected. Specifically, Gov. Greg Abbott [[link removed]] sees a political threat from the rumored possibility of GOP Chairman Allen West joining the 2022 primary fray to unseat the incumbent. (Abbott already has two announced GOP opponents: humorist Chad Prather and former State Sen. Don Huffines.)

This came to a head on Sunday night, when Texas House Freedom Caucus member Cody Vasut [[link removed]] (R-Angleton) pushed a last-minute election-law change [[link removed]] that would have forced the chairmanship and executive committee of the Republican party to be selected on the primary ballot rather than the biannual convention. The effort failed [[link removed]], but was widely seen as a jab from Team Abbott at Lt. Col. West and the party’s conservative leadership.

Interestingly, Vasut’s rule would not have applied to the Democrats. Right now, you might be wondering about the prospects for a special session to correct the wrongs of the last 140 days.

A special session will be called late in the fall to address legislative redistricting, but there has been no indication that other items might be added. Further, Gov. Abbott said last week [[link removed]] that if there were to be one or more specials, they would be only to address his own pet projects and priorities – not necessarily the priorities of grassroots activists or the Republican Party.

So far, the governor has only mentioned special session issues related to redistricting, election integrity, and… bail reform? Yep. Texas Scorecard exists thanks only to the generous support of friends from around the Lone Star State. Your contribution [[link removed]] keeps us focused on serving the grassroots. 🔒 Donate to Texas Scorecard 🔒 [[link removed]] Quote-Unquote

“A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both.”

– Dwight D. Eisenhower​

Number of the Day

523

Number of days until the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022.

[Source: calendar]

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PO Box 248, Leander, TX 78646 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).

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