Interview with Rep. Sylvia Garcia

Rep. Sylvia Garcia

And here we are again with what I really do expect to be the last interview of the cycle. I’ll be back before we both know it with the District C special election and probably a couple of primary runoff elections, so the respite will be short. I did say that I had reached out to Rep. Sylvia Garcia‘s office for an interview, and as it sometimes happens that didn’t come together in the time I had initially allocated. And then as it also sometimes happens, I get a late response, and I’m happy to accommodate. Rep. Garcia has a long and distinguished resume, having served as Houston municipal court judge and City Controller, Harris County Commissioner, Texas State Senator, and since 2019 as the US Representative in CD29, succeeding Rep. Gene Green. I would have sworn I had interviewed her then, but 2018 was a busy year and I guess I decided to focus on flip opportunities. The most recent interview I did with her turns out to have been in 2013 when she was elected to SD06. Until now, of course, and you can listen to it right here:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair
Jarvis Johnson, CD29
Todd Ivey, CD09
Justin Early, CD31
Marcos Vélez, Lt. Governor

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. And look, while I should know better than to say “never”, this really should do it for this cycle. There will be more soon enough. I hope all these interviews were helpful to you.

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All of my primary interviews and judicial Q&As for the 2026 primary

All in one convenient location, sorted by what kind of race it is, including today’s bonus interview. Give a listen to the candidates of interest and pay attention to those judicial races.

Also, too, as an added bonus, my pal and erstwhile blogging colleague Greg Wythe kicked the tires on a couple of AI transcription services for nine of these interviews, and they turned out to be pretty decent. They all needed some editing – these things are generally bad with proper names and acronyms and things like that – but overall they were readable. I don’t know if we’ll try this again, but I have had requests for transcriptions in the past, and since I have a few now I’m including them here. Let me know what you think, and thanks very much to Greg for doing the work.

INTERVIEWS:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Todd Ivey, CD09 – Transcript

Christian Menefee, CD18 (from the special election)

Rep. Sylvia Garcia, CD29
Jarvis Johnson, CD29 – Transcript

Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38

Justin Early, CD31 – Transcript

Marcos Vélez, Lt. Governor – Transcript

Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131

Danny Norris – HD142 – Transcript

Annise Parker – Harris County Judge – Transcript
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge – Transcript
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge

Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney

Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair – Transcript
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair – Transcript

Here are some past interviews with other candidates who have contested primaries:

Laura Jones, CD08 (2022)
Marquette Greene-Scott, CD22 (2024)
Rhonda Hart, CD36 (2024; she was running for CD14 then)

Rep. Charlene Ward Johnson, HD139 (2024)
Rep. Mary Ann Perez, HD144 (2016)

I have interviews with Joe Jaworski and Rep. Hubert Vo but they’re each more than 15 years old, so I’m not listing them here. You can search the archives if you want to find them.

JUDICIAL Q&As

Judge Kristen Hawkins, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7

Sarah Beth Landau, Chief Justice of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
Michael Adams-Hurta, Justice, Fourteenth Court of Appeals, Place 7

Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court

Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Katie Wilson, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge Brian Warren, 209th Criminal District Court
Judge Josh Hill, 232nd Criminal District Court

Judge Leah Shapiro, 315th Juvenile District Court

Judge James Horwitz, Harris County Probate Court # 4

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7

James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14

Once again I say, check these out, I do them because I find them to help me figure out who to vote for.

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Judicial Q&A: Judge Brian Warren

(Note: As I have done in past elections, I am running a series of Q&As for judicial candidates in contested Democratic primaries. This is intended to help introduce the candidates and their experiences to those who plan to vote in March. I am running these responses in the order that I receive them from the candidates. Much more information about Democratic primary candidates, including links to the interviews and judicial Q&As, can be found on Erik Manning’s spreadsheet.

Judge Brian Warren

1. Who are you and in which court do you preside?

I am Judge Brian Warren, and I serve as the Presiding Judge of the 209th Criminal District Court in Harris County, Texas. I was first elected to this position in 2018 and am now seeking my third term.

Before taking the bench, I dedicated 17 years to criminal law practice—five years as an Assistant District Attorney prosecuting serious felonies in Harris County, where I never lost a case, and twelve years as a criminal defense attorney representing clients in cases ranging from DWI to capital murder. I tried approximately 75 cases as an attorney and have now presided over approximately 100 jury trials as a judge. This experience on both sides of the criminal justice system has profoundly shaped how I dispense justice today.

2. What kind of cases does this court hear?

The 209th Criminal District Court has exclusive jurisdiction over felony criminal cases in Harris County. We handle the most serious criminal matters, including:

  • Capital murder cases (with potential death penalty)
  • Murders and manslaughters
  • Sexual assaults and aggravated sexual assaults (including cases involving children)
  • Aggravated robberies and burglaries
  • Drug manufacturing and distribution cases
  • Organized criminal activity
  • Serious violent felonies
  • Complex white-collar crimes

These cases involve significant constitutional issues, complex evidentiary questions, and profound impacts on victims, defendants, families, and the community. Each case requires careful attention to both legal soundness and fair treatment for all involved. The 209th is one of 29 felony criminal district courts in Harris County, and we typically manage hundreds of active cases at any given time.

3. What have been your main accomplishments during your time on this bench?

My main accomplishments fall into four categories:

Legal Excellence:

  • Never reversed by an appellate court in seven years—proving every decision is legally sound and defensible
  • Presided over approximately 100 jury trials, including multiple capital murder cases, complex sexual assault prosecutions, and serious violent felonies
  • Consistently rated as the highest-rated criminal judge by the Houston Bar Association
  • Named Texas Judge of the Year 2022 by the Texas Gang Investigators Association
  • Always ranked in the top three judges in every bar poll over seven years

Unprecedented Efficiency:

  • Reduced the court’s docket from 1,700 pending cases (the highest in Harris County) to the 700s (the lowest in 15 years)—and accomplished this dramatic reduction twice: before COVID-19 and again after the pandemic caused backlogs to balloon to 2,400 cases
  • Became the first Harris County judge to implement a federal-style docket control order—comprehensive case management that has become a model for other courts
  • Eliminated unnecessary court settings that wasted time and resources, so defendants and attorneys only appear when there’s actual business to conduct

Technological Innovation:

  • Transformed the court from operating entirely on paper (no computers, no digital files) to a fully digital operation with electronic filing, electronic motion forms, and remote appearance capabilities
  • This digital transformation enabled seamless transition to remote operations during COVID-19 while other courts struggled
  • The 209th now serves as the training ground for all district court clerks in Harris County because our systems and innovations work

Fighting for Fairness:

  • Joined the O’Donnell v. Harris County lawsuit as a sitting judge, challenging the unconstitutional wealth-based bail system that jails poor people while wealthy defendants walk free
  • Ruled against Governor Abbott’s unconstitutional pandemic bail restrictions, protecting defendants’ constitutional rights despite political risk
  • Make bond decisions based on evidence-based risk assessment—evaluating criminal history, community ties, and danger to public safety rather than ability to pay
  • Changed a transgender defendant’s name in our court system to her preferred name, demonstrating that dignity and respect apply to everyone
  • Only appoint Spanish-speaking attorneys to Spanish-speaking defendants, ensuring effective communication and representation
  • Actively supported my court reporter in organizing the first court reporter union in Harris County and sponsored the successful proposal for fair pay

National Recognition:

  • Selected by the United States Secret Service, Department of Homeland Security, and National Judicial College as one of only 24 judges nationwide to receive elite training at the National Computer Forensics Institute
  • Nominated by the Governor to serve on the Sexual Assault Survivors’ Task Force, developing statewide judicial training curriculum for judges handling sexual assault cases

These accomplishments demonstrate that progressive values, operational excellence, and legal soundness go hand in hand. You don’t have to choose between fairness and efficiency, or between compassion and public safety—you can deliver all of them through experienced, thoughtful judicial leadership.

4. What do you hope to accomplish in your courtroom going forward?

Looking forward, I have several key goals:

Defend Judicial Independence: My top priority is continuing to make progressive, legally sound decisions that withstand both political pressure and appellate review. Governor Abbott is now targeting Harris County Democratic judges, threatening removal for bail decisions he disagrees with. I’ve already demonstrated my willingness to stand up to political pressure—I ruled against Governor Abbott’s unconstitutional pandemic bail restrictions and joined the lawsuit challenging wealth-based bail. Harris County needs judges who won’t be intimidated into abandoning fair practices, and my seven-year record of never being reversed on appeal provides the strongest defense against politically motivated attacks.

Continue and Expand Technology Innovation: I will continue expanding digital access by increasing the availability of electronic forms for attorneys, eliminating unnecessary mid-court delays and improving efficiency. I’ll also work toward greater data transparency by publishing quarterly statistics on bond decisions, case outcomes, and court operations to ensure accountability to the community.

Strengthen Community Relationships: I want to increase community outreach and education, particularly in underrepresented communities, by holding forums explaining court procedures, rights, and available resources. I’ll continue building relationships with community organizations and being accountable to the people we serve.

Model Progressive Criminal Justice: I want the 209th to continue serving as a model demonstrating that progressive approaches to criminal justice—fair bail, efficient case management, treating people with dignity, addressing root causes—work better than purely punitive approaches. When other jurisdictions consider reforms, they should be able to point to the 209th as proof that these approaches deliver results while maintaining public safety and legal soundness.

Expand Restorative Justice and Treatment Programs: I hope to support and expand diversion programs, restorative justice approaches for appropriate cases, and connections to treatment and services rather than just incarceration. Many defendants need help with addiction, mental health, or economic challenges—addressing these root causes serves justice better than warehousing people and expecting different results.

The bottom line: I will continue doing what I’ve done for seven years—delivering efficient, fair, progressive justice while maintaining the highest legal standards. But I’ll also expand innovative programs like the DWI sober court that can serve as models for other courts across Texas.

5. Why is this race important?

This race is critically important for several reasons:

Republican Attacks on Judicial Independence: Governor Abbott and Texas Republicans are systematically attacking judicial independence in Harris County. Through Proposition 12, Abbott now controls the State Commission on Judicial Conduct with the power to remove judges for bail decisions he disagrees with. He has been explicit about targeting “activist judges” who make fair bail decisions. New laws have expanded “official misconduct” to specifically include bail violations.

This is a direct attack on Harris County’s Democratic judges who refuse to return to wealth-based detention and mass incarceration. Harris County voters elected progressive judges to implement progressive reforms—and Republicans in Austin are trying to overturn the will of Harris County voters by threatening to remove judges who won’t do their bidding.

Experience Matters More Than Ever: In this environment, Harris County desperately needs experienced judges who can make legally defensible decisions that withstand appellate review and political pressure. Inexperienced judges will make reversible errors, giving Abbott grounds for removal. Judges without credibility cannot defend progressive reforms effectively.

The contrast in this race could not be starker. I have 24 years of legal experience, 175+ jury trials, seven years of never being reversed, and the highest bar association ratings. My opponents are either grossly unqualified or have proven records of failure.

The Stakes for Criminal Justice: Criminal cases are too important to learn on the job. The 209th handles capital murder cases with potential death penalties, sexual assault cases requiring trauma-informed approaches, and hundreds of cases affecting working families and public safety. Defendants deserve experienced judges who understand trial practice and constitutional rights. Victims deserve judges who can deliver efficient justice and closure. The community deserves judges who balance public safety with fairness.

Progressive Values Under Threat: The reforms we’ve achieved in Harris County—ending wealth-based bail, reducing unnecessary incarceration, treating everyone with dignity, efficient case management—are all under attack. If we elect unqualified judges or allow Abbott to remove experienced Democratic judges, we’ll return to the dark ages of criminal justice: mass incarceration, jails filled with poor people awaiting trial, no accountability for efficiency, and justice only for those who can afford it.

This Race Sets Precedent: How this race turns out will signal whether Harris County voters will accept Republican interference in our local judiciary or whether we’ll stand firm in supporting experienced, progressive judges. It will determine whether qualifications and results matter, or whether simply filing for office is enough. It will show whether we value judicial excellence or tolerate mediocrity and failure.

The bottom line: This race determines whether Harris County continues moving forward with progressive, efficient, fair criminal justice—or whether we go backward to the failed policies of mass incarceration and wealth-based detention that Republicans are trying to force on us against the will of Harris County voters.

6. Why should people vote for you in March?

People should vote for me because I combine three things Harris County needs in a judge: proven experience, demonstrated results, and the courage to stand up for progressive values even under political pressure.

Proven Experience: I have 24 years of legal experience devoted exclusively to criminal law—five years prosecuting serious felonies (never losing a case), twelve years defending people accused of crimes (trying 75 cases), and seven years as your judge (presiding over approximately 100 jury trials). I’m the only candidate who has handled death penalty cases from all three perspectives: prosecutor, defense attorney, and judge. This comprehensive experience provides insight into every aspect of criminal justice that my opponents simply do not possess.

In contrast, my opponents are either unqualified or failed judges:

  • Ysidra Kyles has handled only 11 criminal cases in Harris County in 14 years, works as a real estate agent, has never handled a murder, robbery, burglary, or drug case, and has never even been inside the 209th courtroom.
  • Robert Johnson was the second-lowest rated criminal judge when on the bench, had 78 different bailiffs demonstrating catastrophic management failure, and since leaving the bench has represented only 3 clients—with only 2 of his 29 former judicial colleagues willing to appoint him cases (and each only once).
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Interview with Marcos Vélez

Marcos Vélez

I promised you another interview this week. It turns out I’ll have two, so look for the other tomorrow, but for today I have a conversation with Marcos Vélez, one of the Democratic candidates for Lieutenant Governor. I met him at the December HCDP meeting, and he contacted me later about doing an interview. Vélez is a first-time candidate and labor leader with the United Steelworkers, where he has spent more than a decade bargaining with major corporations for safer conditions, fair pay, and stronger benefits. While he didn’t get the Chronicle endorsement in this race, he did get their respect, and he has received numerous other endorsements, from labor groups, the Houston LGBT Political Caucus, and more. Here’s what we talked about:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair
Jarvis Johnson, CD29
Todd Ivey, CD09
Justin Early, CD31

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. You may have noticed me mentioning “bonus” or “additional” interviews a lot lately, and I have one more to bring you tomorrow. I’ll leave a little mystery here, so tune in then to see who it is.

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Early voting for the 2026 primary starts tomorrow

Are you ready to vote?

March 3, 2026 – Primary Election

Early Vote Centers will be open from Tuesday, February 17 – Friday, February 27 (Mon-Sat: 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.; Sun: 12:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.)

Vote Centers will accept voters from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 3, Election Day

The deadline to apply for a mail ballot is February 20. Click here for the application. Please fill it out, print it, and mail it to our office before the deadline.

Visit our “What’s on my Ballot?” page and enter your name or address to see all the contests and candidates you are eligible to vote on! (You can bring handwritten notes or printed sample ballots to the voting booth; just be sure to take it with you when you leave.)

Early voting starts tomorrow and not today because today is Presidents Day, and we don’t vote on national holidays. This is almost always how it goes for the primaries.

Here’s a graphic of the relevant info you’ll need for voting:

Happy voting, check the Erik Manning spreadsheet for what you need to know about the candidates. I’ll give a list of all my interviews and Q&As tomorrow, including the extra special bonus interview that will run tomorrow. I’ll track the EV turnout levels as we go as well.

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HISD talking school closures again

Get ready, there’s no way this isn’t super messy.

Houston ISD’s state-appointed Superintendent Mike Miles recommended Thursday that the district close 12 schools next fall, as it comes to terms with a decade-long enrollment decline and aging facilities.

While Miles promised in 2023 he wouldn’t close schools in his first two years, he told the board and the HISD community that the district could no longer delay the issue.

He proposed 12 school closures or consolidations, largely affecting elementary schools in his New Education System. The state-appointed Board of Managers is expected to vote on the proposal at its Feb. 26 meeting.

“I understand this news is difficult. Schools are more than buildings. They are places filled with history, relationships, and pride,” Miles said in a letter to the HISD community. “This decision was not made lightly, and our focus remains on ensuring every student has access to a strong, supportive, and opportunity-rich learning environment.”

[…]

This school year, HISD has lost 7,900 students — including nearly 4,000 immigrant students — compared to the previous academic year, according to data obtained by the Chronicle. State data shows that the rate of enrollment declines in HISD has accelerated in the first two years of the state takeover, particularly in schools under the New Education System that follow Miles’ targeted reforms.

Several Houston-area districts, including AldineFort Bend and Spring ISDs, are considering — or have already approved — school closures or consolidations for the 2026-27 school year, as they deal with declining enrollment, lower birth rates, more competition from charters and other options and tight budgets.

At least three schools on Miles’ list have been previously slated for closure. Former HISD Superintendent Terry Grier proposed closing Port Houston and Nat Q. Henderson elementary schools and Fleming Middle in 2014. They were later removed from consideration due to community protest; the HISD board ultimately closed only one campus, Dodson Elementary.

In its November 2024 bond proposal, HISD proposed “co-locating” students at eight schools to seven existing campuses. But voters soundly rejected the $4.4 billion measure, which was largely seen as a referendum on Miles’ leadership.

In February 2025, Miles brought the issue back, saying school closures “must be considered” because HISD had lost 30,000 students in the past decade. But in November, HISD abruptly backed away from the idea, saying publicly that it would not close schools in the 2026-27 academic year, but that some future “consolidations” could be considered.

The district told school leaders in an internal email in November that it would “not bring a recommended consolidation list to the Board of Managers this academic year for closure in SY 26-27.”

On Thursday, Miles explained that his administration reversed course on closures due to structural issues, a “greater than expected” enrollment decrease, and a Facilities Condition Index ratio that changed dramatically over six months. FCI is a ratio used to evaluate a school’s need for repairs, maintenance, or replacement.

Miles said HISD “can’t fight time and facilities and aging and so what bothers me most now is that our schools that had the highest FCI, the poorest facilities are our underserved populations. That is fact … and that breaks my heart, because I think they should be community schools, but they’ve been losing enrollment for a long time, and the facility isn’t working.”

In Miles’ board presentation, HISD reported that 96 campuses have an FCI above 65% in 2026, which indicates “critical issues that would typically require a complete facility replacement.” He also reported that nearly 25% of campuses were operating below 50% of their total capacity this year.

That’s a lot to take in, and I’ll get back to it in a second. But first, if you’re thinking this is all happening quickly and without much public input, you’re not alone.

The timeline prompted some trustees to urge the district to slow down and collect community input before finalizing a list of closures.

HISD elected trustee Plácido Gómez said if the district needed to consolidate schools, it “should make the case to the community and ask for meaningful input before making final decisions.”

Gómez called the lack of community engagement by the appointed board “unacceptable.” His district includes several schools slated for closure or co-location, including Cage, Briscoe and Franklin elementary schools.

Trustee Dani Hernandez said she recognizes that enrollment has dropped and HISD needs to close schools to be fiscally responsible. But she said she does not think HISD is going about this in “the correct way.”

“The meetings that are happening are to give information, and all the decisions have already been made,” Hernandez said. “The decisions on which schools to close, and when, are not going to be changing.”

Trustee Savant Moore, who represents three schools slated for closure and another for co-location, said in a Friday statement that HISD should not “move forward without first exhausting every community-centered option.” He said HISD should present a bond so schools could remain open “instead of presenting closures as the primary solution.”

[…]

Currently, HISD is giving community members two weeks to attend meetings before the board vote.

Hernandez said there is research on how to best close schools, and she said the ideal timeline to meaningfully collect community input for closures would have been two years.

Even announcing the closures at the beginning of the 2025-26 school year would have been better, according to Trustee Patricia Allen.

Allen said the current two-week timeline was “disrespectful” to parents, even with HISD extending school choice applications by about a week to March 5 for families at affected schools. She said it did not leave a lot of time for families to weigh their options for next year.

This has been a topic for discussion for years, far predating the Mike Miles era, for a variety of reasons. Miles and his reforms have accelerated and worsened these conditions, but he didn’t create them. I’ve said before that having him take the political hit for actually going through this might be preferable, except that he’s burned so much trust that I’m not sure he can. The move to present a list first and then call for “public input” later, with a two-week timeframe before there’s a vote to make it happen, is typical Miles. Everything about this may be justifiable and supported by data, he just always finds the worst way to go about it. Whether there’s a school in your area that’s on the chopping block or not, you would be well served to let your Trustee know what you think about this.

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Weekend link dump for February 15

“You Don’t Need an Emergency Fund. You Need an Abortion Fund.”

The original ‘wine moms’ are in Ohio. They’re mobilizing to support Haitians in Springfield.

And along those lines, from Cup of Coffee News:

Springfield, only being a fraction of the size of the Twin Cities, will inevitably organize its resistance to Trump’s Gestapo in different ways than Minnesota did. To date, this is what I could find as far as groups and resources who are doing the organizing:

The folks behind these efforts have strongly suggested that people who wish to donate to the cause in Springfield focus on financial aid over material goods, as locals are better able to attend to material needs than outsiders are. Also: if you’re not from the area and you do find yourself in chats, forums, and other virtual gatherings related to Springfield, please try to do more listening than talking as there is always a risk of too much noise, as it were, that can interfere with operations. The people of Springfield need outside help, not outside leadership.

I will repeat what I said last time about Minnesota:

“The two major immigrant-run organizations who are resisting ICE are Unidos MN and Monarca. They are the true front lines. If folks are looking for specific places to donate to, Stand With Minnesota is a clearinghouse for ways to help.”

“In almost every instance, President Donald Trump’s administration blamed the injured and dead for the shooting within hours of the incident, raising questions about whether federal officials can fairly and objectively investigate their own. Legal experts and advocates for immigrants say this apparent lack of accountability demands that local authorities step up and exercise their power to investigate and prosecute federal agents who break state laws — from battery to murder.”

Here are your 2025 AI Darwin Award winners, in which the founders may have “accidentally stumbled upon the first working demonstration of human-AI alignment”.

“Let me explain and offer some advice about what needs to be done to address these threats and the role each of us can play in that effort.”

“But what’s being cut isn’t excess. It’s the space where thinking had enough time to matter—and that’s worth something.”

“If you are experimenting with OpenClaw, do not do it on a company device. Full stop. […] If you have already run OpenClaw on a work device, treat it as a potential incident and engage your security team immediately.”

“We’ve been banging our heads against the wall, trying to think of the new “it” thing our customers want. At one point, somebody suggested improving our product, but then we thought of something better—something totally groundbreaking, something absolutely huge. We should implement a terrible AI system.”

“This is the story of an extraordinary effort by the second Trump administration to shape our ideas about who and what men and women are—a campaign that began with the targeting of trans people but has vast implications for the rights of cisgender people as well.”

“In other words, pretty much every major advancement for women’s rights and freedom is a problem. And whether it’s eradicating “cheap and ubiquitous” access to contraception or appointing family court judges hostile to divorce, Heritage has the answer.”

“How many court actions does it take to stave off a Trump-led fiscal attack on a state he considers too blue? The answer may be unknowable. But in the case of an attempt to freeze billions of dollars in federal funds that help kids and their families, including those in California, it is at least two.”

Yes, there was an actual wedding during the Bad Bunny halftime show.

“Pete Hegseth, perhaps the most thuggish, toadying, all-around underqualified secretary of defense in the job’s nearly 80-year history, has now shown himself to be the most institutionally destructive as well.”

RIP, Greg Brown, founding guitarist for the band CAKE.

They don’t make Olympic medals like they used to, apparently.

“What you can see is that ICE and the whole dominationist infrastructure and political movement that backs it are working to create a totally stacked information terrain. You can’t know who the ICE agents are. But they can absolutely know who you are, even if you’re not a known person at all. It really is exactly the “secret police” framework most assume.”

“Director Paul Thomas Anderson and Jonny Greenwood, the Radiohead guitarist who wrote the score for Anderson’s film Phantom Thread, are demanding their music be removed from the new Melania documentary.”

“Mangled and bent, the Louvre heist’s surviving treasure is undergoing ‘complete restoration’”.

“President Trump has made access to Greenland’s vast reserves of critical minerals a focus of ongoing negotiations. But experts say the U.S. is underestimating the difficulties of mining in a rapidly changing Arctic region that is warming faster than anywhere else on Earth.”

RIP, Ron Teasley, one of the last two surviving Negro League players and a longtime Detroit public school teacher.

RIP, James Van Der Beek, actor best known for Dawson’s Creek.

RIP, Bud Cort, actor best known for Harold and Maude.

“we need to talk about that Ring Super Bowl ad“.

“And that’s the lesson of a cruise, I think: A dream home doesn’t need a spacious primary bath or walk-in pantry. What matters even more than a grand entryway or a two-car garage is space and time to gather with people we love, and people we haven’t met yet.”

“All Olympic curling stones come from this Scottish island. Here’s how they’re made”.

Good riddance.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | 1 Comment

ICE is buying up warehouses

In San Antonio.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed Wednesday that the agency has purchased land and a facility in San Antonio to expand its detention operations, though officials declined to disclose the location of the property in question.

In a statement to the San Antonio Report, an ICE spokesperson said the purchase is part of a broader national effort to increase detention space.

“ICE purchased land and a facility in San Antonio,” the spokesperson wrote. ”These will not be warehouses — they will be very well structured detention facilities meeting our regular detention standards.”

The agency said the expansion is being carried out under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and is aimed at increasing capacity as immigration enforcement activity continues to increase nationwide.

“Every day, DHS is conducting law enforcement activities across the country to keep Americans safe,” the statement read. “It should not come as news that ICE will be making arrests in states across the U.S. and is actively working to expand detention space.”

The agency cited new federal funding from the One Big Beautiful Bill that has enabled the expansion of detention spaces to “keep these criminals off American streets before they are removed for good from our communities.”

[…]

City officials have said they are not required to be notified of private real estate transactions involving the federal government, adding to the uncertainty surrounding the reports.

The speculation surrounding Oakmont 410 prompted swift and vocal reactions from local and state leaders, many of whom strongly opposed the possibility of a detention facility in the area.

Bexar County Commissioner Tommy Calvert, whose precinct includes the Eastside property, issued a sharply worded statement Wednesday afternoon condemning the expansion of ICE detention centers.

“I am firmly opposed to this facility and have been one of the only elected officials in the nation to successfully block the establishment of these horrific detention centers — one in Universal City and another in San Antonio,” Calvert said.

Calvert compared the spread of detention facilities to tactics used by authoritarian regimes, arguing the expansion was not about immigration enforcement.

“None of this is about immigration. It’s about creating illegal exceptions everywhere. It’s about turning ICE into a secret state police that is permitted to do anything,” he said.” We will fight it, we will dissect those who are financially benefiting, and we will boycott them and hold them accountable under the law.”

In El Paso.

The federal government has purchased industrial park warehouses in Far East El Paso County for nearly $123 million to be used as a massive ICE detention center, according to newly filed deeds. The purchase comes as hundreds of residents speak out against the project and city and county leaders question what authority, if any, they have to intervene.

A general warranty deed filed with the county this week shows the property transfer from El Paso Logistics II LLC in Delaware to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security was executed Jan. 17. Immigration and Customs Enforcement plans a 8,500-capacity mega detention facility on the property off Gateway Boulevard East near Clint. The property falls within the boundaries of the city of Socorro.

[…]

State Rep. Vincent Perez, D-El Paso, on Friday warned about potential fires at the planned mega center, citing the lack of water pressure and infrastructure as dangerous. He urged El Paso County Emergency Services District No. 2 that serves the area to deny a permit for the center. He noted the 2023 fire at a migrant detention center in Ciudad Juárez that killed 40 detainees and injured 27 others as an example of the potential dangers.

“It’s one thing to have these facilities as they currently exist as industrial warehouses for that purpose, but it’s a whole other ball game if you have intentions of housing thousands of detainees,” Perez said.

The city of San Antonio is not happy about this – per the story, “residents have urged city leaders not to provide utility connections to the site”. Their City Council has passed a resolution directing city staff to evaluate what actions the city can legally take in response. They may have to move very quickly. The good news is that some cities have successfully resisted ICE. But that’s no guarantee of anything anywhere else, even if Henry Cuellar is on board.

There are already multiple ICE detention locations – I saw a map of them the other day but forgot to make note of it and now can’t find it again – and I’ll bet there will be more in Texas. Here’s one overview of what’s happening:

ICE has now spent over half a BILLION dollars just on purchasing warehouses around the country to convert into detention camps.

If these mega-camps are utilized to the full capacity ICE intends, they'll be the largest prisons in the country, with little real oversight. www.ajc.com/politics/202…

[image or embed]

— Aaron Reichlin-Melnick (@reichlinmelnick.bsky.social) February 9, 2026 at 11:56 AM

Detention Reports, via this Substack, shows 237 of them already around the country; zooming in on the map it looks like around 20 in Texas, including two in the Houston area. Wired has some recent reporting if you haven’t exceeded their free article quota for the period. I don’t have any big point to make beyond highlighting all this. It’s bad on many levels, and given the state of ICE polling these days it deserves to be an issue in the 2026 campaigns. More here from Slate, and Thursday’s episode of What Next has more.

Posted in La Migra | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Evolve audit

Some interesting stuff here.

Frequent cancellations or missed rides. Long wait times. Limited days and hours of operation.

These were among the concerns raised in an internal review of a microtransit pilot program overseen by Metro and formerly operated by Evolve Houston, a nonprofit championed by Metro Chair Elizabeth Gonzalez Brock and Mayor John Whitmire.

The microtransit program offers short trips in some Houston neighborhoods, providing flexible transit options for passengers. Metro hired Ernst & Young last year to analyze the program, but didn’t publicly release specific details of the findings. Metro interim CEO and President Thomas Jasien referenced the Ernst & Young review during a December board meeting.

The firm’s report, obtained by the Houston Chronicle, reveals new details about the program’s persistent challenges under Evolve’s pilot structure. The findings illustrate what led to the board’s decision to change from Evolve to a Metro-led program in December.

The analysis found that 43% of rider requests went unfulfilled in the pilot program, raising questions about its reliability. The microtransit service lacked wheelchair-accessible vehicles and Metro-controlled driver background checks. It operated with limited fleet sizes and faced data, funding and integration constraints.

An interlocal agreement between Metro and the city also created complexities about who should be held accountable for the services, according to the report. Metro funded the microtransit service, the city of Houston served as the middleman and Evolve ran the daily operations.

“Service maturity is outpacing pilot parameters, and is ripe for integration into a conventional Metro structure for contracting and operation,” the report reads.

The result: Metro was ill-prepared to meet the high demand of large community events, such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

In December, Metro officials abruptly scrapped plans to spend $4.1 million to extend the program, known as the “Community Connector,” under Evolve’s oversight. Evolve was nearing the end of its service on Dec. 31. Before the deadline, Metro announced that a well-established Metro contractor would continue the Community Connector.

Metro officials didn’t mention Evolve by name when the decision was made. Meredith Johnson, executive vice president and chief communications officer for Metro, said she believed it was inappropriate to discuss another company’s internal details or future plans.

[…]

After initially supporting the funding increase for Evolve, the board reversed course in December and approved $2.3 million to extend the service through June 2026 under an existing contract with a different company, MV Transportation. The company is Metro’s current contractor for MetroLift and curb2curb.

Johnson said the decision to change courses was based on the report’s findings, which called for moving from a pilot to a full Metro service and expanding the program to address long wait times and high demand. By choosing MV Transportation, the contractor had the skills to continue providing the microtransit service through this year, she added.

“We are really proud of it, and we’re celebrating that we get to expand,” Johnson said.

Metro didn’t release the Ernst & Young report to the public. But the Chronicle received a copy through a request under the Texas Public Information Act.

While detailing the obstacles in the microtransit program, the report also highlighted Evolve’s success in making the service feasible.

It showed ridership rose sharply during the pilot period, though it trailed behind other Metro-led services. The service operates in the Third Ward, Second Ward, downtown, the Heights and near Northside. Metro officials touted the microtransit as a first- and last-mile solution connecting residents to community resources.

Ridership grew by 38% in some microtransit zones and riders reported high satisfaction. Downtown monthly ridership increased by 500% since the pilot program launched, and 46% of trips began or ended at a Metro stop, underscoring the service’s value as a transit connector.

“It’s an early phase of a big picture, and we’re really proud of it,” [Casey Brown, president and executive director of Evolve] said.

The report recommended that Metro consolidate the Community Connector into an existing Metro microtransit program.

That would put Metro fully in charge of the service, clarifying responsibility, operations and data oversight. The report said the shift would make it easier to improve accessibility and safety and to handle high demand during the World Cup.

See here and here for some recent updates on this program. While the ridership numbers may be up (*), it’s important to remember they’re still very small overall, and to an extent ridership isn’t the point of microtransit because above a certain level it begins to cannibalize the real service. A copy of the report is embedded in the story – it’s short, 15 pages, all executive-summary style – and I still can’t tell after reading it if any of this had any effect on Metro’s bus or light rail ridership. Sure, I assume some of the people who got off at a transit stop then went on to transfer to that service, but how did it affect the numbers on those routes? Was it even measurable? How many of those Evolve riders would have boarded that bus or light rail line anyway? I have no idea.

I don’t want to relitigate all my issues with this, you’re already familiar with them. I just continue to be frustrated with the smallness of Metro’s vision, and that’s even before we get into the absolutely infuriating refusal to accept the will of the people and implement the 2019 MetroNext referendum. The change in Evolve management won’t change any of that.

(*) Weirdly, I’ve begun seeing these shuttles around the neighborhood a lot more lately. I’d go weeks without ever seeing one in action, but in the last seven to ten days I’ve seen at least one most days. Probably a coincidence, but it still surprised me.

Posted in Planes, Trains, and Automobiles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

UH/Hobby poll: Menefee 52, Green 28

Very interesting.

Christian Menefee

U.S. Rep. Christian Menefee holds a commanding lead over U.S. Rep. Al Green in the Democratic primary for Texas’ 18th Congressional District, according to a new University of Houston Hobby School of Public Affairs poll.

The survey, released days before early voting begins Feb. 17 for the March 3 Democratic primary, offers one of the first detailed snapshots of the race under newly redrawn congressional boundaries that have significantly reshaped the Houston-area district.

The poll of 1,000 likely Democratic primary voters shows Menefee leading Green 52% to 28%, with former Houston City Council Member Amanda Edwards, who recently suspended her campaign, at 9% and Gretchen Brown at 1%. Ten percent of voters remain undecided. The survey was conducted Feb. 3–8.

The results point to the impact of the mid-decade redistricting carried out by the Texas Legislature last summer — changes that political analysts say are central to understanding the race’s trajectory.

Nearly two-thirds of likely Democratic primary voters in the redrawn 18th District previously lived in the old 9th Congressional District, which Green has represented for two decades. Another 28% lived in the old 18th District, which Menefee now represents after winning a special election earlier this month.

Among voters in the old 9th Congressional District, Menefee’s lead narrows to 43% to 36%. But among voters from the old 18th District, Menefee leads 70% to 13%.

Michael Adams, a political scientist at Texas Southern University, said the race is less about personality and more about geography.

“This race is really a story about how redistricting reshifts political competition in the Houston area,” Adams said. “The backdrop has to start with mid-decade redistricting.”

Adams said Menefee’s recent special election victory have also given him structural advantages.

“The special election sort of took him over the top,” Adams said.

While Green retains a base of support among voters from his former district, Adams said closing a 24-point gap would be difficult absent a major shift.

“Polls are only a snapshot,” Adams said. “But given this lead, it would take something significant to change the trajectory.”

The poll homepage is here, the media release is here, and the poll report is here. The usual caveats apply – this is one poll, polling primaries is hard, and so on. I do think Prof. Adams is correct that the visibility of the special election and runoff helps Menefee, but I’ll admit to being a little surprised by this result. My assumption is that this will be a close race and a tough fight, but who knows. For what it’s worth, the one poll result from the CD18 special election runoff had Menefee leading 43-30 (the poll was conducted by Lake Research Partners; the UH/Hobby Center did a poll in July for the November race but as far as I know didn’t poll the runoff), which as we know greatly undershot his level of support. So perhaps my close-race framing is inaccurate.

There were also polls done in two other contested Dem Congressional primaries. In CD29, Rep. Sylvia Garcia has a significant but perhaps not overwhelming 46-27 lead over Jarvis Johnson, with 2% for Robert Slater and 25% unsure. In CD09, the leader by far was “unsure”, with 61%. Leticia Gutierrez had a big lead among the actual candidates, with 24%; Terry Virts and Earnest Clayton each had 5% and no one else topped 2%. I’d call that a good but not definitive result for Rep. Garcia and I’d advise everyone in CD09 to spend some money and get their names out there.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

FEMA produces new draft flood map for Harris County

We’ve been waiting for this.

After years of delays, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has quietly posted a draft of Harris County’s new flood maps online, kickstarting a review process that could lead to the first major update to the county’s floodplain boundaries in nearly two decades.

Flood maps are supposed to show where flooding is most likely to happen during major storms. FEMA creates them with help from local governments, using rainfall data, terrain features and models that predict how water moves.

Harris County has not had a comprehensive map update since 2007. After Hurricane Harvey, the county partnered with the federal agency on a major map overhaul. The new maps were originally expected to be released in 2022, but have since encountered repeated delays.

The draft maps, now viewable on FEMA’s website, are intended for floodplain administrators and local elected officials. They show the new 100-year floodplain expanding significantly, roughly aligning with areas currently designated as the 500-year floodplain, according to Emily Woodell, a spokesperson for the Harris County Flood Control.

Based on the draft maps, many homeowners across the region could be affected.

Most homes newly placed in the 100-year floodplain will be required to carry flood insurance if they have a federally backed mortgage. The updated boundaries could also influence building codes and development decisions. Additionally, once the maps are finalized, homeowners will be required to disclose the updated designation when selling their properties.

Woodell said flood control officials are scheduled to discuss the policy implications of the new maps with elected officials during Thursday’s Commissioners Court meeting.

“People who were not previously in the 100-year floodplain are going to feel more restrictions,” said Jim Blackburn, a Rice University professor who specializes in environmental law and sustainable design. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s a red flag about living in this area.”

Sam Brody, an environmental science professor at Texas A&M University, said the expanded floodplains will ultimately have a positive impact on the region. By pulling more people into regulated flood zones, he said, the new maps could prompt them to pay closer attention to flood risk and take steps to reduce it at their own homes.

“It’s going to broaden the population that receives more information about risk,” Brody said. “I see it more as an opportunity than a constraint.”

There’s a map in that Chron story (gift link) that you can plug your address into, to see what changes if any have been made around your home. Whatever did happen, it’s better to know than not to know. This map is a draft, and as the story notes it will be a couple of years before the finalized version is released, possibly with further changes. Good luck and stay dry. KHOU has more.

Posted in Elsewhere in Houston | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Colony Ridge developers settle with the state

This more or less wraps up the story.

The owners of Colony Ridge, a Houston-area developer accused of running a predatory lending scheme that deceived Latinos, agreed to a sweeping legal settlement that will require them to invest in law enforcement and infrastructure on their properties and tighten selling practices to address a range of accusations from Texas GOP leaders and conservative media.

Chief among the allegations was that Colony Ridge developers sold land to undocumented people, giving rise to a crime-ridden complex of subdivisions about 30 miles outside Houston allegedly being run by Mexican drug cartels.

The developers denied that their communities were unsafe, a contention backed by testimony from local officials when the Legislature held special hearings in 2023 in response to outrage and accounts from residents in the developments. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the developers soon after, accusing them of deceptive sales, marketing and lending practices in a suit that echoed claims lodged by the federal government in a separate case.

Under the settlement released Tuesday, Colony Ridge’s owners agreed to clamp down on the documentation it requires from buyers. Would-be purchasers will now have to present a Texas ID or driver’s license — which undocumented immigrants cannot obtain in Texas — or a passport or visa. The agreement did not specify that the passport has to be an American one.

The agreement resolves the state and federal lawsuits, which alleged the owners of Colony Ridge lured would-be Spanish-speaking homebuyers into seller-financed mortgages with high interests that they could not afford. By federal authorities’ estimate, roughly one in four Colony Ridge loans resulted in foreclosure. The company would then flip those properties to new unsuspecting customers eager to become homeowners, court filings allege.

The federal case, filed by the Biden administration’s Justice Department in late 2023, also accused Colony Ridge of misrepresenting facts such as guarantees of water, electricity and sewer hook-ups and whether properties had previously flooded.

See here for the previous update. Everyone involved in this suit is a bad actor – the story later quotes professional cockroach Michael Quinn Sullivan about how this was a political win for Ken Paxton because the settlement will stick it to “the illegals” – so it’s hard for me to say what if anything positive may have come out of it. I’d feel differently if I thought someone on the plaintiff’s end was actually representing the residents and past customers of Colony Ridge, but I don’t have any expectation that they were really considered. Sorry to be a bummer, but that’s where we are these days.

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Flag football advancing in the NCAA

This is a big step forward.

The University of Nebraska announced plans to add women’s flag football [recently], making it the first athletic department in a Power 4 conference to introduce the sport.

The announcement coincided with the NCAA’s approval to label flag football as an emerging sport for women at the intercollegiate level.

Nebraska will play its inaugural season in the spring of 2028, with a schedule that runs from January through May. It plans to hire a head coach by this summer and recruit a roster of approximately 15 athletes for the fall 2026 semester.

The 2028 launch comes before the Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, which will feature flag football for the first time.

“In a time of uncertainty and change in college athletics, creating new participation opportunities continues Nebraska’s rich history of elevating women’s athletics,” Nebraska athletic director Troy Dannen said in a statement announcing the sport’s addition.

NCAA data showed as many as 60 schools with plans to participate in the sport this spring. The NCAA does not currently sponsor a championship for flag football, but its categorization as an emerging sport is a key step in the process.

If legislatively proposed and adopted, a championship can take two years or longer to develop.

NFL franchises recently voted to support the financial development of a pro women’s league. Flag football is offered at the high school level in 38 states.

See here for more on the NFL’s flag football venture, which is still in the development stage. It seems impossible at this stage for an NCAA championship in flag football to be available by the time the 2028 Olympics happen, but I won’t be surprised if there’s a roadmap and a timeline for it by then. I’d also expect that the exposure that the Olympics, and possible the fledgling NFL creation, will bring to the sport will spur a lot more interest in it. And that all sounds good to me. Bring it on, I say.

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Interview with Justin Early

Justin Early

I have one last Congressional interview for you, this one from outside Houston. CD31 became an unexpected battleground in 2018, as MJ Hegar turned a district that hadn’t been on anyone’s radar into a close fight against Rep. John Carter, who is now the oldest member of Congress from Texas. Justin Early is aiming for a repeat of that scenario this year. Early is an Army veteran who worked as a network admin for the Defense Intelligence Agency. He is currently a cybersecurity architect at Dell Technologies, and has been a Democratic precinct chair and 2008 Presidential delegate. I’m always happy to talk to a fellow cybersecurity nerd, I enjoyed this conversation, and you can hear all about it here:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair
Jarvis Johnson, CD29
Todd Ivey, CD09

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. We’re almost at the end of the line, which is to say almost at the start of early voting. I will have one more interview for you on Monday. Let me know what you think.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Texas Medical Board provides useless training on how not to get arrested for performing an abortion

They keep missing the point.

For the first time since Texas criminalized abortion, the state’s medical regulator is instructing doctors on when they can legally terminate a pregnancy to protect the life of the patient — guidance physicians have long sought as women died and doctors feared imprisonment for intervening.

The new training from the Texas Medical Board comes nearly five years after the state passed its strict abortion ban in 2021, threatening doctors with severe penalties. ProPublica’s reporting has shown that pregnancy became far more dangerous in the state after the law took effect: Sepsis rates spiked for women suffering a pregnancy loss, as did emergency room visits in which miscarrying patients needed a blood transfusion; at least four women in the state died after they didn’t receive timely reproductive care. More than a hundred OB-GYNs said the state’s abortion ban was to blame.

In response, the Texas Legislature passed the Life of the Mother Act last year. The law updated the abortion ban’s medical exceptions, added to the legal burden needed for prosecutors to criminally charge a doctor and required the medical board to create guidance for doctors by Jan. 1, something no other state with an abortion ban has done.

The new medical training, which ProPublica obtained under a public records request, assures doctors they can now legally provide abortions, even when a patient’s life isn’t imminently in danger, and goes over nine example scenarios, including a patient’s water breaking before term and complications from an incomplete abortion.

Some of the scenarios make clear how doctors can intervene in circumstances similar to cases ProPublica has investigated. For example, in 2021, Josseli Barnica was diagnosed with an “inevitable” miscarriage, leaving her at high risk of dangerous infection, and she died after doctors would not empty her uterus while there was still a fetal heartbeat. The new training includes an example that indicates an abortion would be legal in similar cases.

But medical and legal experts who reviewed the training for ProPublica said the case studies represent only the most straightforward situations doctors encounter. The complications that women face in pregnancy are varied, complex and impossible to capture in a brief presentation, many cautioned. One attorney called the training “the bare minimum.”

“I could probably list 100 different situations that would cause people to pause and say, ‘Wow, does that fit into the law?’” said Dr. Tony Ogburn, an OB-GYN practicing in Texas. “They’re taking years and years of medical training and experience on how to manage these cases and summarizing it in 43 slides.”

Notably absent from the training is guidance on how doctors should care for patients with chronic conditions, a gray area that has come up again and again in ProPublica’s reporting. Last year, ProPublica investigated the death of Tierra Walker, a San Antonio woman with diabetes and high blood pressure who endured repeated hospitalizations and escalating symptoms before she died. Doctors dismissed her requests for an abortion to protect her health, her family said. Doctors and hospitals involved in Walker’s care did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment.

And no amount of training can solve what many doctors see as the main problem: the law’s steep criminal penalties. If found guilty of performing an illegal abortion, doctors face up to 99 years in prison, $100,000 in fines and the loss of their medical license. Even the possibility of a lengthy and public court battle can be a powerful deterrent, many physicians told ProPublica.

The Texas Medical Board writes in its training that “the legal risk of prosecution is extremely low” if doctors practice “evidence-based medicine,” follow “standard emergency protocols” and document cases appropriately. The training also emphasizes multiple times that the burden now falls on the state to prove that “no reasonable doctor” would have performed the abortion. Before the Life of the Mother Act, prosecutors could accuse a physician of performing an illegal abortion with little evidence.

That assurance rings hollow to some doctors, who point to the actions of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton since the state’s abortion ban took effect.

[…]

Multiple doctors told ProPublica decisions about abortion care are also shaped by hospital lawyers. The Life of the Mother Act required the State Bar of Texas to create its own training for attorneys, which ProPublica reviewed. That presentation also explains that prosecutors looking to file a criminal charge now need to demonstrate that no other doctor would provide an abortion if faced with the same scenario.

Blake Rocap, a longtime reproductive rights attorney, said the state guidance should give doctors and hospitals more protections to help patients access care. “It will save lives,” he said.

See here for some background. I have a ton of respect for Blake Rocap, who has forgotten far more than I’ll ever know on this subject, but I can’t say I share his optimism. I hope he’s right, but I’ll need to see real data that shows it first.

The problem here remains the combination of the law’s vagueness, even with the new laws that provide some clarifications, along with its harshness. In the absence of sworn and videotaped testimony from Ken Paxton and all of the crazy people running in the Republican primary to replace him that they will not swoop in to persecute doctors and hospitals and everybody else associated with an abortion under these specific and understandable circumstances, you should not have any faith that you are covered. And this is not a bug but a feature, because the forced birth crowd doesn’t give a shit about the women or the doctors. They’ll trade a whole lot more death and suffering by pregnant people in return for no hospital, clinic, or medical practice ever performing an abortion again under any circumstance. They don’t believe in “life of the mother” exceptions, anyway. No PowerPoint slide pack can compensate for that.

Texas’ anti-abortion laws have to be repealed, the Dobbs decision has to be overturned either by another Supreme Court or by federal law, and all the tools for harassment that the zealots have need to be taken away. We’ve seen what it’s like in this alternate reality. It only gets worse otherwise.

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A few words about CD18 turnout

I feel I need to say something about this, which ran just before the CD18 runoff.

Early-voting turnout in the runoff election for Texas’ 18th Congressional District is under 4% so far, highlighting the challenges in voter participation as the district prepares to elect a representative after more than a year of instability.

According to unofficial figures from the Harris County Clerk’s Office, 13,675 voters cast ballots during the early voting period, including in-person and mail ballots. The district is home to more than 700,000 residents, according to the 2020 census, with about 381,000 registered voters for the 2025 special election. Votes from Wednesday and Thursday hadn’t been counted yet.

Renee Cross, senior executive director and a researcher at the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston, said the low turnout reflects a joining of structural and political factors rather than voter apathy.

“I knew that this would be a low-turnout election,” Cross said, “but I was surprised at how low it has been.”

Cross pointed to the unusual nature of the election itself: a special runoff held in late January on a Saturday for a partial term with another election for a full term scheduled just weeks later in March.

“This one is only going to be for the rest of the year, so I don’t know if that calculation is involved in whether people are deciding whether to vote or not,” Cross said.

University of Houston political scientist Brandon Rottinghaus echoed that assessment, saying the depressed turnout reflects structural challenges unique to the race.

“This is an off-cycle election, and a runoff to boot,” Rottinghaus said. “It hasn’t been subject to aggressive campaigning in the way a highly competitive race would be, and there’s also confusion about what exactly this election is.”

Redistricting – a lot of people who could have voted in this election will not be voting in CD18 going forward, myself included – and the political similarities between the candidates were also cited as factors. All of which is sensible, and I appreciate that no one wagged a finger at the voters. But as is my wont, when I see a quantitative assessment made of something, my first question is always “compared to what?” And with that in mind, I wanted to see what I could come up with.

There haven’t been many special elections to fill vacant Congressional seats in recent years. Since 2006, which is a galaxy or two away in terms of what political universe we now inhabit, the CD18 election is the fourth to occur. There was the CD34 election in 2022, the CD06 election in 2021, and the CD27 election in 2018. Only the CD06 race included a runoff, which is the real point of interest for us. Turnout for CD34 in 2022, which was in June for a term that would expire six months later and would be for a seat that was going to be completely different in November thanks to decennial redistricting, was 7.36%, with 29,069 total votes cast. There are no turnout figures for CD27 in 2018, but there were 36,291 and that election was also in June for a six-month term; at least in that race, the winner was able to continue serving in the same district afterwards.

So the real comparison is with CD06 in 2021, which occurred in April following the death of then-Rep. Ron Wright, who passed on February 8. And yes, the election to succeed him took place three months later, in May, because Greg Abbott actually cared about filling a Republican vacancy. The subsequent runoff was in August. Here’s how the numbers stack up:


Election       Votes  Turnout
=============================
CD06 special  78,471   16.05%
CD18 special  76,189   18.07%

CD06 runoff   39,166    7.94%
CD18 runoff   27,080    6.41%

I wanted to wait until the provisional ballots were included in the live results before reporting on this. Turns out I was on the nose in guessing there would be about 3500 of those, which brought the early-plus-mail total to about 17K, and I way overestimated how many people would show up on Runoff Day; there were about 10K, when I thought the Saturday turnout would be about the same as the early turnout. Womp womp.

Obviously, 6.41% turnout isn’t great, especially compared to the 15.41% turnout in the SD09 runoff, where there was even worse weather to deal with. What might be the reason for the difference? I don’t think there’s a definitive answer. As Renee Cross and Brandon Rottinghaus noted, the candidates in CD18 were very similar – I’m sure Amanda Edwards’ supporters are disappointed, but I can’t imagine too many of them are mad that Christian Menefee will be their member of Congress instead of her – and as such the stakes were a lot lower than in SD09, even though Taylor Rehmet will likely only ever be in session if he wins again in November. I may, in my copious spare time, look at a bunch of special election runoffs to see where 6.41% and 15.41% fit in the spectrum, both as standalone figures and as a share of the main election turnout. That might at least give some context.

And that’s really my point here. A number by itself can only mean so much. Where it stands in comparison to other numbers of its kind, that might tell me something. All I ask is that we keep that in mind.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Interview with Todd Ivey

Todd Ivey

I’ve said before that I almost always end up doing more interviews for a given cycle than I originally planned for, for a variety of reasons. As such, today I am circling back to CD09 to give you this conversation with candidate Todd Ivey. Ivey is an OB/GYN in Houston, so he’s properly called Dr. Todd Ivey. Originally a nurse, he later went to medical school, and after completing his residency at UT-Health Science Center here in town, he now practices as an OB/GYN focusing on prenatal care for women who have complicated pregnancies. I’m sure you can imagine what kind of questions I started off with, but you don’t have to imagine it, you can just listen to the interview right here:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair
Jarvis Johnson, CD29

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. One more Congressional candidate tomorrow, and one more interview on Monday. Let me know what you think.

Posted in Election 2026 | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Judicial Q&A Michael Adams-Hurta

(Note: As I have done in past elections, I am running a series of Q&As for judicial candidates in contested Democratic primaries. This is intended to help introduce the candidates and their experiences to those who plan to vote in March. I am running these responses in the order that I receive them from the candidates. Much more information about Democratic primary candidates, including links to the interviews and judicial Q&As, can be found on Erik Manning’s spreadsheet.

Michael Adams-Hurta

1. Who are you and what are you running for?

My name is Michael Adams-Hurta. I’m a lifelong Democrat, native Houstonian, and experienced appellate attorney running for Justice on the Fourteenth Court of Appeals – Place 7.

2. What kind of cases does this court hear?

This Court hears appeals from all sorts of trial-court decisions throughout ten counties in the Houston area. It primarily hears civil cases but also hears criminal, family, juvenile, and probate appeals.

3. Why are you running for this particular bench?

As our democracy is under threat, we all need to do our part to protect it. I happen to be a full-time appellate lawyer, so the role that makes the most sense for me is to defend our rights every day from our local appellate court.

I’ve been a Democrat all my life. (Sure, I was president of my University Democrats club in
college, I regularly volunteer with voter protection efforts, and I’ve even represented local
Democratic officials on appeal against Ken Paxton… But I was first referenced on this blog over 20 years ago!). I volunteered on my first campaign when my former teacher Jim Henley ran for Congress and gave his students a “final lesson plan.” I learned then that I need to stand up for my community, especially when something is wrong. Well, in 2024, the Republican Party took control of a supermajority in each of Houston’s courts of appeals. On the 14th Court, there is no longer a single Democrat. With the president and others attempting to politicize the courts, we need more jurists ready to hold our local benches accountable.

4. What are your qualifications for this job?

I’m the only full-time appellate advocate running for this seat. In fact, I’m the only candidate in this race who is a board-certified appellate attorney — I’m Board Certified in Civil Appellate Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. That credential comes with years of experience litigating in the 14th Court and other appellate courts across the country. I’ve written all or part of over 100 appellate briefs and presented oral arguments in Texas appellate courts all over the state, from El Paso to Houston to Tyler. I’ve also attended numerous trials as appellate counsel, assisting the trial teams with legal objections and helping the judge draft instructions about the law for the jury.

I have worked on all sorts of cases — including civil, criminal, and family-law lawsuits — so I have the breadth of experience necessary for the wide variety of cases this Court hears. And I’ve represented all sorts of clients, too, ranging from Texas businesses to civil-rights organizations and wrongfully terminated employees to criminal defendants.

5. Why is this race important?

Our democracy is under threat, and we need people defending our democracy in every part of Government, including the judiciary. The courts of appeals author the vast majority of precedent that guides our trial courts every day. And while most lawsuits are apolitical, you never know when a politically charged case will end up in front of a panel of judges. On the 14th Court, therefore, we need the balance of a progressive voice that the court currently lacks.

6. Why should people vote for you in March?

I’m the most qualified candidate and the best candidate to unseat the Republican incumbent in November. I also happen to be the youngest candidate — in fact younger than any appellate judge in Texas — so I’ll bring an energetic, modern, and progressive perspective to the Court. I look forward to blockwalking and phonebanking for the entire ticket once nominated. If elected, I will follow the law where it compels me, and I’ll make it my mission to hold the Court to account for its most basic job: interpreting and applying the law as it was intended, by and for the People.

PREVIOUSLY:

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge James Horwitz, Harris County Probate Court # 4
Sarah Beth Landau, Chief Justice of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
Judge Leah Shapiro, 315th Juvenile District Court
Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Josh Hill, 232nd Criminal District Court
Judge Kristen Hawkins, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Katie Wilson, 183rd Criminal District Court

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District C lineup set

Meant to get to this sooner, but there’s been so much else going on, so.

DISTRICT C CANDIDATE CONTACT INFORMATION
Listed below in ballot position order
Page last updated Tuesday, February 3, 2026 1:26 PM

The filing deadline for the District C special election on April 4 was February 2. Most of the names up there are ones we have already met – indeed, four of them were already raising money before the new year began. What you see above is the ballot order for the race. A brief intro, via some cursory Google searching:

Angelica Luna Kaufman is the Chief of Staff for Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, and was the Communications Director for the Sheila Jackson Lee for Mayor Campaign.

Sophia Campos is a teacher with a background in labor organizing.

Audrey Nath is a neurologist who was a candidate for HISD Trustee last November.

Laura Gallier is a retired CPA.

Patrick Outhout served for four years in the Army after the January 6 insurrection and now works for an AI company.

Joe Panzarella is a neighborhood organizer (he was a co-organizer of No Higher No Wider I-10) who works for a renewable energy company.

Nick Hellyar is a realtor who has run for Council twice before.

I’m just glad everyone has a website so we can see how they’re presenting themselves. There’s a good long Houston Public Media story in which all seven candidates get to talk about themselves and the issues that motivate them. Of interest is that there are no Republicans in this race. Five of the seven identified as “progressive” in that story, so you can already get a feel for what the campaign is likely to look like.

As noted before, I intend to do interviews with the candidates, and I’m going to have to get started soon since I believe early voting will run from March 25-31 or thereabouts. Welcome to Houston, where there’s always an election coming up. Don’t get too relaxed after the primary, you voters in District C, it’ll be time to get out there again soon enough.

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Endorsement watch: Menefee and more

Here’s another batch of Chron endorsements to run down.

Don’t just vote for him because he’s young. Christian Menefee wins more fights than Al Green.

Normally, newly elected members of Congress get sworn in as part of a cohort, a freshman class who learn the ropes together. When former Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee got to Washington, D.C., that didn’t happen.

“I came in in a special election so none of that existed,” he told the editorial board.

“My orientation was 15 minutes and then I’m told, ‘You know you’re giving a speech on the floor tonight?’”

Occasionally on the House floor he has flashbacks from his childhood as the kid of two military members whose frequent moves meant he often had to start at a new school from scratch midway through the year.

“I’m good at making friends,” he said.

[…]

His primary challenger, Rep. Al Green, 78, knows people will be familiar with him, too. The longtime incumbent of the 9th was drawn out of his district and has been campaigning to show his new constituents that he still has the fight and vigor to continue being the outspoken advocate who was the first to present articles of impeachment against Donald Trump during his first term — a move that alienated some fellow Democrats at the time but that shows his willingness to be bold.

In the past, we endorsed Green several times, citing his reliable Democratic representation that brought back millions to his district for important infrastructure projects. This time, he didn’t meet with us, offering this statement instead:

“I am not the Houston Chronicle’s Congressman, I’m the People’s Congressman. I see no reason to legitimize a sham, pre-determined endorsement process wherein the Houston Chronicle has already made its selection.”

Though we clarified for him — and should for readers, too — that yes, columnist Joy Sewing had already voiced her feelings that Green should step aside in this race, she is not part of the editorial board and doesn’t make the endorsement decision.

Green is nothing if not a fighter — he once left the emergency room to cast a vote while still in his hospital gown against the Republican-led impeachment of Biden’s secretary of homeland security. And he’s fighting hard for this seat. At the same time, all of that fighting seems to have the same effect of burning rubber: Lots of smoke and noise, but not too much movement. For all of his passion and legislative seniority, Green’s record has increasingly become more about symbolic fights than real action.

Seems kind of petty of Rep. Green, but whatever. I do think the Chron was always going to endorse Menefee in this race. Especially now with Amanda Edwards suspending her campaign, he’d have my vote if I were still in CD18.

Imagine a Texas governor focused on kitchen-table issues. Gina Hinojosa is Democrats’ best hope.

As he’s ridden the big red wave over the past decade or so, occasionally paddling out front to take the lead nationally, it’s hard to imagine that the man who aspires to be the governor of Texas in perpetuity was once a fair-minded justice of the Texas Supreme Court and later a relatively moderate attorney general.

That’s not the Greg Abbott we Texans know today. The longest-serving incumbent governor in the nation has gone full MAGA, which may be why his approval rating hovers in the 40s or lower. Those mediocre numbers, plus the anti-Trump zeitgeist that seems to be taking hold as we head into the midterms, offers hope to beleaguered Texas Democrats that their fellow Texans are ready for a change. (Abbott, sitting on a campaign cache of an astounding $100 million, also faces 10 challengers in the Republican Primary, all of them unknowns.)

We imagine plenty of Texans love to see a change, as well, in large part because an FDR-length tenure in office is long enough for any elected official. Abbott’s three terms as governor should be a signal to voters, regardless of party, that it’s time for spring cleaning. It’s time for sweeping out old habits, stale ideas, encrusted notions, depleted energy.

Although it’s long past time for shaking loose sclerotic one-party rule, we’re not yet persuaded that Texas Democrats, footsore, weary and frustrated after three decades of wandering in the political wilderness, are up to the opportunity that lies before them in 2026. Their gubernatorial choices have not yet generated excitement that their counterparts running for U.S. Senate have.

Among the nine Democratic primary candidates, the three candidates we found most compelling are Bobby Cole, an East Texas poultry farmer who, at age 57, has never run for public office; Chris Bell, a Houston-area attorney who’s run for too many; and Gina Hinojosa, an earnest, approachable state representative from Austin who’s staking her campaign on voter dissatisfaction in general with Abbott and, more specifically, with the GOP’s neglect and mistreatment of our public schools.

Our endorsement goes to Hinojosa, the only one with robust campaigning and fundraising to show she is taking the task seriously.

Not sure that a clear reading of Abbott’s actual history as an elected official supports such a gauzy interpretation of his record, but again I say “whatever”. The hope here very much is that with Abbott’s approval levels down and with Trump’s hopefully continuing to plumb new depths, an active and more dynamic gubernatorial candidate can take advantage of some hoped-for coattails from the Senate race to be in a similar position to win, unlike how it was in 2018. The obstacles are obvious and the Chron mostly dings Hinojosa for not being particularly charismatic, but they clearly see her as a good Governor if given the opportunity.

Like them, I like the idea of Bobby Cole and I hope he runs for something else in the future – there ought to be a Congressional or legislative seat in his wheelhouse – but in the absence of fundraising chops it’s hard to see the case for him.

In the race for lieutenant governor, Democrats could use a Goodwin

In Texas, the lieutenant governor derives his mighty power from being boss of the Texas Senate — which is to say, by doing wonky things like setting agendas and making committee assignments. Basically, in the snakepit that is Senate politics, the lieutenant governor is head of the reptile house. The lite guv decides what the Senate snakes do all day and how much they’re each fed.

In the unlikely event that Democrats win that power spot this year, even-keeled Vikki Goodwin, 58, would be ready to wrangle the snakes.

Since 2019, the Austin-area Realtor has represented District 47 in the Texas House, which covers broad swaths of Austin and Travis County. As a member of the subcommittee that oversees education funding, she has fought against vouchers in public schools. Instead, she wants to increase funding for our state’s public schools — as well as improve housing affordability, water infrastructure and access to health care.

In Austin, Goodwin is known for her discipline, hard work and command of the facts. Rice University political scientist Mark Jones ranks her among the House’s most liberal members, but she’s anything but a wild-eyed radical. After studying government as a University of Texas undergrad, she earned a master’s from UT’s LBJ School of Public Affairs. She radiates level-headed earnestness.

At first, in our screening meeting, we wondered: Does Goodwin have the steel the job will require? Not to mention the moxie that the general election will take? After all, the primary winner will face one of this year’s most formidable Republican incumbents: Dan Patrick, a loud-and-proud general in Texas’ culture wars.

But first, in the primary, Goodwin faces two opponents: The unserious-looking Courtney Head, whose campaign website lists an October event as her last public appearance; and the more serious Marcos Vélez, 40.

Vélez, a charismatic Houston-area organizer and labor contract negotiator for the United Steelworkers union, has never held public office. Despite being a newcomer, he has picked up important endorsements from labor groups and Houston’s LGBTQ+ Caucus, and has received money from Texas Majority PAC. His policy plans are far less developed than Goodwin’s, but their positions on issues are broadly similar.

It’s their styles that are wildly different.

They go on to relate a story from the endorsement interview that highlighted Vélez’s relative lack of knowledge about the Legislature, which was a key reason why they endorsed Goodwin. I have an interview with Vélez that will run shortly – he had reached out to me and we set it up – so you’ll be able to hear what he has to say for yourself.

The Chron also made a few legislative endorsements – you can see the full list of their endorsements to date here. Amusingly, their advice to Republicans in their Senate primary mirrored what they told Dems in ours, which is vote for Cornyn if you want to win. I feel like the kind of primary-voting Republican who still reads the Chronicle is likely to already be a Cornyn voter, but I suppose anything is possible. They still have endorsements to make on the Dem side for AG and Comptroller.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of February 9

The Texas Progressive Alliance stands with the people of Minnesota as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Off the Kuff interviewed three candidates for HD131 – Erik Wilson, Staci Childs, and Lawrence Allen – plus Danny Norris for HD142.

SocraticGadfly talked about the difference in coverage — including in the “progressive” world, and including right here in Texas, so no need to look outside the state between anti-ICE protestors and pro-Palestinian protestors.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project reported on ongoing discussion at Houston City Council regarding proposals to lessen HPD interaction with ICE. There was not much progress, but we very much retain the ability to organize ourselves outside conventional political structures.

=========================

And here are some posts of interest from other Texas blogs.

Bayou City Sludge would like you to start focusing on the primaries now.

Alison Cook is deeply offended by the betrayal of hospitality ICE agents showed in Minnesota.

Texas Monthly and Mike Madrid read into Taylor Rehmet’s SD09 victory.

The TSTA Blog warns us to be ready for the unleashing of the voucher monster.

David DeMatthews wishes the state would focus on helping children learn how to read rather than dictating to them what they must or must not read.

Egberto Willies catches Marjorie Taylor Greene telling the truth.

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Interview with Jarvis Johnson

Jarvis Johnson

I’ve said before that the Republican-pushed mid-decade redistricting was partly about getting more Republican seats in Congress, but also partly about reducing Democratic power, especially for communities of color. You can see that in the destruction of CD09. That also had the effect of moving a lot of Black voters into CD29, which presented a challenge to incumbent Rep. Sylvia Garcia and an opportunity for a candidate who wanted to maintain having two Black members of Congress from the Houston area. That candidate is Jarvis Johnson, who served three terms in Houston City Council for District B, and four terms in the Lege in HD139. I’ve interviewed him several times before, most recently in 2024 when he ran for SD15, losing a close race in the primary runoff to Sen. Molly Cook. I reached out to Rep. Garcia’s office to set up an interview with her as well – I have also interviewed her more than once in the past, most recently in 2013 when she won a special election in SD06 to succeed the late Mario Gallegos – but we were not able to make it happen. Here’s my interview with Jarvis Johnson for this election:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair
Traci Gibson, HCDP Chair

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. Two more Congressional candidates this week, and one more interview on Monday. Let me know what you think.

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Judicial Q&A: Katie Wilson

(Note: As I have done in past elections, I am running a series of Q&As for judicial candidates in contested Democratic primaries. This is intended to help introduce the candidates and their experiences to those who plan to vote in March. I am running these responses in the order that I receive them from the candidates. Much more information about Democratic primary candidates, including links to the interviews and judicial Q&As, can be found on Erik Manning’s spreadsheet.

Katie Wilson

1. Who are you and what are you running for?

I am Katie Wilson. I am a 4th generation, native Houstonian. I am a career-long criminal lawyer and public servant, running to be your Democratic candidate for Judge of the 183rd District Court in Harris County. I have been practicing criminal law for more than 16 years, working as a prosecutor for nearly a decade and defense ever since. I currently work as a Senior Litigator in the Mental Health Division of the Harris County Public Defender’s Office. Outside of work I enjoy time with my husband and two children, reading, traveling, and doing DIY home projects.

2. What kind of cases does this court hear?

The 183rd District Court is a felony-level criminal court and presides over cases in which a person is accused of a crime punishable from 6 months in state jail, up to and including life in prison or the death penalty. Charges range from low level drug possession and theft to crimes against children and homicide.

3. Why are you running for this particular bench?

I have always been a zealous advocate for our Constitution and feel it is important we have judges on the bench who defend and uphold our Constitution as well as community safety. I plan to live-stream all court proceedings and use my diverse experience in both prosecution and defense to bring balance, fairness, transparency, and efficiency to the court.

4. What are your qualifications for this job?

I have been a dedicated public servant in the criminal justice system since I first clerked for a felony judge in 2008. I spent nearly a decade as a prosecutor, trying everything from marijuana possession to double homicide, and working alongside law enforcement through every step of an active investigation. As a defense attorney in private practice I focused roughly 90% of my practice on representing indigent clients facing felony charges, and successfully overturned a client’s wrongful conviction and 99-year sentence in a post-conviction writ. As a public defender I have worked as an Assistant Chief in the Bail Division at the Harris County Jail, and for the past two years as a Senior Litigator in the Mental Health Division. I have completed more than 70 criminal trials across my career, including Capital Murder. This breadth and depth of experience well qualifies me to manage the docket of the 183rd District Court with equity and efficiency.

5. Why is this race important?

While most people of Harris County are fortunate to never interact with our criminal justice system, the work that happens in the 183rd District Court is incredibly important for those who find themselves there. Both victims and the accused should be able to count on the elected judge being a seasoned criminal practitioner who is fair, balanced, and objective.

6. Why should people vote for you in March?

The people of Harris County should vote for me because I am a dedicated, career-long criminal lawyer, not a politician. I am the only candidate who is currently practicing criminal law, has worked as a prosecutor, and been vetted and approved to represent indigent clients facing a charge of Capital Murder. My recent work in both bail and mental health have given me a deep familiarity with our county jail and mental health resources, the importance of which is only going to increase for our criminal courts in the coming years. I care deeply about transparency and integrity in our criminal justice system and would be honored to serve as your Democratic candidate for Judge of the 183rd District Court.

PREVIOUSLY:

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge James Horwitz, Harris County Probate Court # 4
Sarah Beth Landau, Chief Justice of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
Judge Leah Shapiro, 315th Juvenile District Court
Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Josh Hill, 232nd Criminal District Court
Judge Kristen Hawkins, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7

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UH/Hobby primary poll: Crockett and Paxton lead

Make of it what you will.

Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Democratic U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett are leading their respective Senate primary races, according to new public polling released Monday, just over a week before the start of early voting on Feb. 17.

In a statewide sample of 550 likely Republican primary voters conducted between Jan. 20 and Jan. 31, Paxton led incumbent U.S. Sen. John Cornyn by 7 percentage points. Across the aisle, a similar poll of 550 likely Democratic primary voters shows Crockett running ahead of state Rep. James Talarico by 8 percentage points. The survey findings are a change from recent polls that found both races to be neck-and-neck.

In both primaries, 12% of respondents said that they were still undecided.

And in hypothetical matchups for the general election, there is “little difference” between the expected performance of a Republican and a Democrat regardless of the candidates, according to the survey conducted by the University of Houston’s Hobby School of Public Affairs. While it indicates that Paxton and Cornyn could beat Crockett by 2 percentage points, Paxton could do slightly better than Cornyn if facing Talarico. Between 7% and 8% of likely voters said they were still unsure on how to vote in these cases.

The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.18 percentage points.

For Republicans, the poll shows Paxton pulling ahead with 38% of the likely primary voters who were surveyed compared to Cornyn’s 31%, after recent polling showed them in a tight competition. U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt of Houston was in a distant third with 17%.

Paxton would also have a big advantage over both his opponents if the primary race goes to a run-off, according to the survey. In addition, it shows Paxton ahead of Cornyn on all key demographic groups for the Republican primary — except for Latino voters, where the incumbent led by 7 percentage points.

Meanwhile, the survey shows 47% of likely Democratic primary voters intend to support Crockett compared to 39% for Talarico — a marked difference from a recent poll that indicates that they were in dead heat.

See here for more on that other “recent poll” that had Crockett up by one on Talarico. As noted then, we had one poll with Crockett leading, one with Talarico leading, and one that was basically a tie. Now we have two with Crockett leading, and I’m sure we’ll hear from more pollsters soon. The poll’s data is here and its landing page is here.

To summarize the head-to-head matchups:

Paxton 45, Crockett 43
Paxton 46, Talarico 44

Cornyn 45, Crockett 43
Cornyn 44, Talarico 43

Hunt 46, Crockett 43
Hunt 46, Talarico 42

Couple things to note in comparison to the previous UH/Hobby poll. One is that the Republican margins over the Democratic candidates remains essentially the same. That’s despite the fact that the do-over Trump/Harris margin is slightly more favorable to Trump this time – he leads the rematch for 2026 51-43, where it was 49-45 before. The Senate candidates were in the 48-49 range for Republicans and 45-47 for Dems (which then were Talarico and Allred, as that was before Crockett’s entry and Allred’s departure), so the drop in their numbers is a bit weird, but polls are like that sometimes.

The other thing to note is that they also did some favorability numbers: Trump 50-49, Abbott 51-47, JD Vance 50-46, and Ted Cruz 48-50. That’s from a “likely voter” sample, where the others we have seen have been from either adults or registered voters, so they can’t be compared directly. This is a suggestion that less likely voters are dragging Trump and Abbott down, but it’s one data point so don’t lean too hard on it. They have a second result coming shortly that will include more primary and general election matchups, so we’ll see what else there is. The Chron has more.

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Fifth lawsuit filed against Camp Mystic

This one goes a little farther.

The family of an 8-year-old girl who remains missing after being swept away by Hill Country flooding that struck Camp Mystic last summer is suing its owners and demanding a judge prevent its reopening.

The 100-page lawsuit, filed by Catherine and Will Steward, the parents of Cecilia “Cile” Steward, is the fifth from the family members of 25 campers and two counselors at Camp Mystic who died during the catastrophic July 4 flooding. The girls, called “Heaven’s 27,” were among the more than 130 people killed during the flood. The Stewards’ suit and the four others, which were filed in November, all seek more than $1 million in damages each.

The five suits list Camp Mystic as well as the Eastland family, who owns and operates the camp, as plaintiffs. Richard “Dick” Eastland, the camp operator at the time of the flooding, also died during the disaster. The Stewards’ suit condemns the camp repeatedly, claiming the Christian summer girl’s camp’s display of faith “masked a reckless disregard for the lives of the children entrusted to their care.”

The suit also alleged the camp’s emergency instructions at the time were not up to Texas administrative code and were negligently made, did not include an evacuation plan and required campers to stay in their cabins. In the wake of the flood’s disaster, state lawmakers passed several laws designed to bolster camp safety requirements for those in floodplains.

“Cile was taken from us 7 months ago and while we recognize this lawsuit will not bring her back, we feel compelled to ensure the truth of Camp Mystic’s failures are exposed,” the Stewards said in a statement.

The Stewards are also seeking a temporary restraining order to prevent the camp from reopening until the suit is closed. Camp Mystic announced two months after the flood that it planned to reopen one of its camp sites, which the families of the girls who died condemned. The Stewards’ suit called the Eastlands’ decision to reopen the camp “tone deaf” and claimed it constituted intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Although Cile is still officially considered a missing person, the suit said the 8-year-old is “presumed to be deceased.”

The Stewards’ suit also draws comparison between the July 4 flood and previous floods in Camp Mystic history, particularly one in 1932. The lawsuit alleges that the 2025 disaster “was essentially a repeat” of previous flooding that should have warned the camp to take more precautions.

See here, here, and here for more on the lawsuits against Camp Mystic, which the camp is trying to get moved out of Kerr County. The camp announced its intention to reopen for this summer in December. I, a person who has no connection to Camp Mystic and didn’t know it existed before last summer, side with the Stewards on this; as the story in that last link makes clear, quite a few people who do have connections to the camp disagree. I believe the Stewards were the last family of the girls who died at the camp in the flood to file or join a lawsuit. None of the others included a demand that the camp be prevented from opening. I figure there has to be a ruling on that before this summer, so we’ll see what happens. Texas Public Radio has more.

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Interview with Traci Gibson

Traci Gibson

You have to go all the way to the bottom of the ballot in a primary year to get to the race for Party Chair. It’s been a non-issue most cycles recently – I think the last real challenge to a sitting Party Chair was while Lane Lewis was Chair – but we have a competitive race this time around. Traci Gibson is an attorney who has volunteered for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and served as President of the Houston Lawyers Association. She is a precinct chair an Executive Board Member of the Houston Black American Democrats. I didn’t know her before she became a candidate for Chair, but then I didn’t know Mike Doyle before he became a candidate for Chair in 2023, so there you have it. This interview was also conducted in December, so as before if you’re wondering why I didn’t ask her about That Thing That Happened, it’s almost certainly because it hadn’t happened yet. Here’s what we talked about:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142
Mike Doyle, HCDP Chair

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. Next up will be three more Congressional candidates this week, and one more interview on Monday. Let me know what you think.

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Judicial Q&A: Judge Kristen Hawkins

(Note: As I have done in past elections, I am running a series of Q&As for judicial candidates in contested Democratic primaries. This is intended to help introduce the candidates and their experiences to those who plan to vote in March. I am running these responses in the order that I receive them from the candidates. Much more information about Democratic primary candidates, including links to the interviews and judicial Q&As, can be found on Erik Manning’s spreadsheet.

Judge Kristen Hawkins

1. Who are you and what are you running for?

Judge Kristen Hawkins
Texas Supreme Court, Place 7

2. What kind of cases does this court hear?

The Texas Supreme Court is the highest court in Texas that hears and decides civil cases.

3. Why are you running for this particular bench?

I am running for the Supreme Court because Texas courts are a coequal and independent branch of government. I believe that maintaining judicial independence is necessary to sustain our democracy.

4. What are your qualifications for this job?

I am board-certified in civil trial law and personal injury law. In 2021, Tex-ABOTA recognized me as Judge of the Year. I have more than two decades of experience as a district court judge, special master, and practicing lawyer.

As a trial-court judge, I have presided over more than 200 trials, including very small cases in which the parties cannot afford counsel, and very large cases involving enormous damages. On the bench, I make rulings applying Supreme Court decisions, and in this role, I see how the opinions affect everyday Texans and their ability to access the courts.

I regularly present at continuing legal education seminars for attorneys and other judges. I have held leadership positions in the local bar and within the judiciary in Houston. I graduated magna cum laude from South Texas College of Law and was a member of the Law Review.

5. Why is this race important?

The Texas Supreme Court chooses the cases it takes. This race is important because the Texas Supreme Court has the ability to take cases that are important to all Texans, not just those who are well-resourced. By taking cases important to all Texans, the Supreme Court can ensure that everyone has access to justice. The Supreme Court should also choose and review cases mindful of the constitutionally embedded right to a trial by jury and that juries and their verdicts should be respected.

6. Why should people vote for you in March?

The Constitution requires that every party who appears before the Court be treated equally under the law. It also guarantees a right to a trial by jury. My judicial philosophy is to apply the law equally to everyone who appears before me, and to ensure that juries and their verdicts are respected. When judges apply these principles, the law is applied consistently and predictably to all who appear in court, which is what every Texan should expect from our judicial system.

PREVIOUSLY:

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge James Horwitz, Harris County Probate Court # 4
Sarah Beth Landau, Chief Justice of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
Judge Leah Shapiro, 315th Juvenile District Court
Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Josh Hill, 232nd Criminal District Court

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Amanda Edwards suspends her campaign

Not a surprise.

Amanda Edwards

Former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards is suspending her full-term campaign for Texas’ 18th Congressional District, a week after suffering a decisive loss in the special runoff election for the remainder of the term.

Because of filing deadlines, her name will still appear on the ballot during the March 3 Democratic primaries.

Edwards told the Chronicle she is planning to relaunch her “Do Something Houston” voter registration initiative, an effort she started in 2024 that focuses on registering voters through churches, restaurants and community spaces.

She said the goal is to encourage civic participation during what she described as a critical election cycle, pointing to issues including health care, economic opportunity, education and the future of democracy.

Amanda Edwards had some tough luck in her extended campaign for CD18. She would have won the precinct chair vote had it not been for the late entry of Sylvester Turner – she almost won it anyway – she would have been the early favorite in the 2024 primary for CD18 if Sheila Jackson Lee hadn’t jumped back into the race after the 2023 Houston mayoral runoff, and she was considered the favorite this time around in CD18 until Christian Menefee jumped in. Life is like that sometimes. While it wouldn’t have been unusual for her to take another shot in this year’s primary after losing the special election, the magnitude of that defeat surely made it seem unlikely to her that success was in the cards. I like Amanda Edwards, I wish her well, and you know, she’s only 44, there’s no reason she couldn’t run for something else in the future.

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Endorsement watch: A whole lot of judicial races

The Chron has been busy with endorsements in contested Democratic judicial primaries. (The Republicans have basically none of these in Harris County; maybe in the statewide races, I haven’t checked. But the action for March is almost entirely on the Dem side.) I’m going to briefly summarize them, with the proviso that there are more to go, which I’ll return to later.

Preserve bail reform. Wright and Hu for Harris County misdemeanor courts.

Harris County’s Criminal Courts at Law handle all Class A and Class B misdemeanor criminal cases, ranging from DWI to theft. Since 2019, the courts have been under a federally supervised consent decree governing bail practices. These reforms keep people from languishing in jail simply because they can’t afford bail, saving county taxpayers millions of dollars. And research shows that fewer defendants accused of low-level crimes are reoffending. Yet too many partisans continue to use this misdemeanor bail reform to sow fear and confusion about crime and public safety in Houston. In May of last year, four Republican misdemeanor court judges in Harris County formally claimed that their oath of office was violated by the consent decree that enacted the reform. In November, a federal judge granted Attorney General Ken Paxton’s motion to intervene to try to vacate the consent decree.

Harris County’s misdemeanor bail reform has been hailed as a national model, and there is still much work to be done to continue to improve the system. Fortunately, all the candidates in the two contested Democratic primaries support the consent decree. We recommend the most qualified ones.

Harris County Court at Law No. 7: Andrew Wright

[…]

Harris County Court at Law No. 14: James Hu

The incumbent on this bench, Jessica Padilla, was one of the four judges who claimed the bail reforms violated their oath.

Padilla’s position on bail reform sets up a striking contrast with her two potential general election opponents this year, Democrats Yahaira Quezada and James Hu. Both candidates staunchly defend the reforms, and in fact would rather see the state of Texas hold all defendants based on their risk to public safety rather than access to cash.

“Cash bail just needs to go and monetizing detention is not the right way to do things. All it does is create more instability,” Hu told us.

Judge Padilla is a Republican; that was one of the benches Republicans claimed in 2022. Time to take it back. I have judicial Q&A responses from four of the five Democrats running:

Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14

Democrats should stick by incumbent judges in county courts at law

For County Civil Court at Law, No. 2: Jim F. Kovach

Jim Kovach didn’t always imagine himself taking the bench. By 2017, he had spent two decades running a lucrative legal practice and collections business. But what he saw inside some JP courts struck him.

“I didn’t like how the courts were treating people,” he told us. In one case, he said, a judge used his bailiff to intimidate a tenant into silence. In another, a judge singled out a Black female attorney for looking “really angry” because her arms were folded.

Kovach, a graduate of the University of Houston Law Center, found himself apologizing for these judges — until his partner, he said, helped him realize he could be the better judge. Kovach was elected in 2018, becoming the first openly gay judge to preside over a Harris County civil court at law.

Now in his second term, Kovach, 60, has distinguished himself through his even temperament and effective caseload management. In the latest Houston Bar Association judicial evaluations, attorneys gave Kovach the highest marks of any county civil court at law judge, with 83% rating him as “excellent” or “very good” across the board.

[…]

For County Civil Court at Law, No. 3: LaShawn A. Williams

In Harris County, judicial races often feel like a war of egos and backroom politics. Worse still is the “Black Robe Syndrome” — that unfortunate transformation where a judge’s sense of self grows beyond the size of their authority, leaving litigants feeling small and unheard.

That is why the race for County Civil Court at Law No. 3 is such a breath of fresh air.

The contest between incumbent Judge LaShawn A. Williams and challenger Miroslava “Miro” Mendiola has been defined by a rare congeniality. In our screening with them, Williams called Mendiola sharp and an honor to run against, while Mendiola candidly admitted she isn’t running because Williams is doing a poor job, but to offer a different perspective.

While both women are impressive, Williams remains the best choice for this seat.

I only got responses from the first two candidates:

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2

A slate of conscientious jurists for Harris County felony courts. Wilson, Warren, Hill, Abner in the Democratic primary

Criminal District Judge, 183rd Judicial District: Katie Wilson

For four years, Katie Wilson, 44, has worked as a Harris County public defender. She started out on the overnight shift at the Joint Processing Center as a supervisor for the bail division, interviewing criminal defendants after they were arrested and representing them at their bail hearing. Now she’s a senior litigator with the mental health division, helping other attorneys manage clients, most of whom are homeless and suffering from mental illness.

Advocating for clients in crisis requires a unique level of patience and empathy. While she also has a decade of experience as a prosecutor in Colorado, Wilson cherishes the perspective that she’s gained working in Houston.

“Having the opportunity to be one-on-one with an individual who I might just walk past on the sidewalk, and getting to know them and see them as human beings … just being able to break down those assumptions and barriers through experience and exposure has been invaluable to me,” Wilson told us.

[…]

Criminal District Judge, 209th Judicial District: Brian Warren

It’s unusual for a well-liked Democratic incumbent to have a primary challenge in a blue county. It’s even more unusual for one of the challengers to be a former judicial colleague.

Judge Brian Warren is widely respected for his legal acumen, temperament and work ethic. He is consistently one of the highest-rated judges in surveys conducted by the Houston legal community and was even named Texas Criminal Court Judge of the year in 2022.

A former felony prosecutor and defense attorney, Warren, 50, ran for the bench in 2018, taking over one of the largest dockets in the criminal court system. Eight years later, he has reduced his backlog substantially, owing in part to docket orders he put in place in his first term to hold prosecutors and defense attorneys accountable for moving cases towards trial or dismissal. He’s got the heart of a reformer — he was one of the only felony court judges to join the lawsuit ending cash bail for misdemeanor offenses in Harris County – yet you won’t see him highlighted on Fox News for giving multiple bonds to accused murderers.

“Having that cash bond on low-level offenders is a problem,” Warren told us. “But when they do mess up, as a district court judge, I’m the one holding them in jail.”

So why is Warren being challenged? One of his opponents, Robert Johnson, could barely offer a coherent argument against him.

[…]

Criminal District Judge, 232nd Judicial District: Josh Hill

Few Harris County district court judges attract more scrutiny than Judge Josh Hill.

Conservative media outlets and crime victim advocates have put him under the microscope since he was elected in 2018 for bond decisions in which criminal defendants in his courtroom were charged with murder after they were granted bail.

Of course, context is crucial. For one thing, oftentimes those problematic bail decisions highlighted on Fox 26’s “Breaking Bond” series, Hill had nothing to do with. Prior to a state law change that went into effect last year, magistrates often set the initial bail in criminal cases before defendants appeared before the district court judge. Hill, 46, is also a stickler for following the letter of the law. During our screening, he cited a Court of Criminal Appeals opinion that states if bail is set so high that a defendant has no reasonable way to pay it, that is effectively the same as holding a defendant without bail, which is unconstitutional in most criminal cases.

“I think there are some judges that just set bail however they set it, and unless a lawyer appeals it or files a writ, it doesn’t get overturned,” Hill told us. “So if I wanted to arbitrarily set a $5 trillion bail, that’s unconstitutional. It absolutely can’t be made. I’m using it for the sole purpose of setting no bail when I couldn’t otherwise do it.”

[…]

Criminal District Judge, 496th Judicial District — Michael Abner

A new criminal courtroom in Harris County deserves a fresh face to lead it, not a retread who disqualified herself with poor performance.

Ramona Franklin is living proof that experience alone is not a virtue for a felony court bench. Her record as the judge for the 338th District Court was poor and her reputation even worse. She barred defense attorneys and journalists from her courtroom. She didn’t preside over a single trial for more than a year during the COVID-19 pandemic, even though most of her colleagues held virtual proceedings. She frequently held defendants in jail simply because they couldn’t afford bail. At times, she was accused of not following the law. She was infamously rebuked by an appellate court for abusing her discretion for revoking a bond and raising a bail on a defendant for no apparent reason. Franklin did not meet with the editorial board.

Fortunately, Harris County Democratic voters have a quality alternative for the 496th District Court in Michael Abner to take on incumbent Republican Judge Dan Simons, who was appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott to preside over the new court.

Wow, one of the local TV loudmouths says stuff about crime that isn’t true? Knock me over with a bandit sign. Here are the relevant Q&As I have:

Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge Josh Hill, 232nd Criminal District Court

I have responses from Katie Hill as well, which will run tomorrow. Again, note that the 183rd and 496th are currently Republican-held.

Garrison, Brown and Weems for Harris County civil courts

Civil District Judge, 157th Judicial District: Tanya Garrison

Incumbent Tanya Garrison, 51, was first elected to the 157th Civil District Court in 2018 and since then she has proved to be an able jurist who deserves reelection. In her time on the bench, Garrison has accepted new challenges and earned strong marks for her performance from the legal profession, including high ratings on the Houston Bar Association’s judicial survey. Already board certified in Civil Appellate Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization, Garrison also became one of only 19 Texas judges to earn a new certification in judicial administration.

During her tenure, the University of Houston Law Center graduate expanded her docket to include civil forfeiture cases. These matters involve property connected to alleged criminal activity and seized by the government. To reclaim a motorcycle, power boat or even cash, an owner must prove that the property wasn’t involved in wrongdoing. If you’ve recently seen a pleading filed in Harris County styled State of Texas v. 2012 Buick Enclave, it was almost certainly handled in Garrison’s courtroom.

On the day of our screening, we greeted the down-to-earth jurist in the lobby and found her trading soup recipes with a fellow Chronicle visitor in anticipation of the coming winter storm. Later Garrison gave another nod toward the kitchen when she used a culinary metaphor to describe her role as a trial judge. She views herself as a short order cook, making omelets and slinging pancakes, and leaving the complex matters — the Eggs Benedict with hollandaise — to the appellate courts.

[…]

Civil District Judge, 270th Judicial District: Jimmie L. Brown

While we usually lean toward incumbent judges as a way to safeguard the public dollar and maintain continuity, the 270th Civil Court is an exception. Jimmie L. Brown, Jr., 68, who is running against incumbent Dedra Davis, deserves the public’s support in the Democratic primary.

Brown, a Navy veteran with 22 years of combined active duty and reserve service, has had decades of trial experience and has also served in quasi-judicial roles in the military and as an administrative law judge for the Texas Railroad Commission — giving us reason to believe that he would don the black robe with a minimal learning curve. In addition, during our screening, the Thurgood Marshall School of Law graduate demonstrated the analytical approach, fact-based communication style and unflappable demeanor that marks a good judge.

Beyond Brown being a strong candidate, the 270th needs change. The attorneys completing the Houston Bar Association evaluation ranked Davis — who has presided over the court since 2018 — as needing improvement in every area. The poll covers essential judicial qualities such as working hard, following the law, demonstrating impartiality, managing the docket efficiently and maintaining appropriate courtroom demeanor.

Granted, the HBA judicial preference pool can be flawed or biased. But Davis’ poll numbers are among the worst of any judge — 73% of respondents gave her the lowest rating for overall performance. That amounts to a call for help from participating practitioners and the civil lawyers we reached underscored this assessment. One described her as vengeful.

[…]

Civil District Judge, 281st Judicial District: Christine Weems

It’s not often that a sitting jurist admits that she might enjoy arguing cases even more than presiding over them. But during her endorsement meeting, incumbent Christine Weems, 50, told us that she dearly misses taking part in trials. Luckily, she is able to stay involved in litigation by directing the mock trial program at the University of Houston Law Center, using her experience on the bench to train up the next generation of lawyers. From her vantage point as a judge, she observes both exemplary and ineffective advocacy in real time and uses anonymized examples as teaching tools for her students. That’s the sort of civic engagement that voters should reward with reelection.

Weems has presided over the 281st Civil District Court since 2018, earning high approval ratings from responding attorneys according to polls conducted by the Houston Bar Association. In addition to her work at UH, she also directs a separate mock trial program for lawyers with five years or less practicing experience to help them hone their advocacy skills.

All of us benefit from a member of the judiciary who puts her heart and soul in her profession, and Weems’ enthusiasm for the law even extends into her hobbies. This lifelong Girl Scout runs a nonprofit theatre group that puts on an annual jurisprudentially themed performance — think “Inherit the Wind” or “Witness for the Prosecution” — and recruits members of the legal profession to serve as cast.

Here are the relevant Q&As:

Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court

Judge Garrison is a friend of mine, and I know Judge Weems as well. Both are among the most dedicated campaigners, which a lot of us really appreciate.

Maggie Ellis and Kristen Hawkins for Texas Supreme Court in Democratic primary

Chief Justice, Supreme Court: Maggie Ellis

She grew up transient and homeless, attending eight different elementary schools in three states by age 10. Then she was pulled out of school entirely for a year. Living out of a car in New Mexico, young Maggie Ellis asked her mother to put her back in school. Instead, she was driven to Texas and left two miles from her father’s house.

The journey from that moment of abandonment to her election in 2024 as a justice on the Third Court of Appeals in Austin was rocky. She attended the University of Texas as a single mom. It took 12 years for her to graduate. She taught at a public school before attending law school and then worked as a prosecutor. Board certified in juvenile law, she has advocated for children who endure the kind of circumstances she once did.

Yet, the compelling life story of Ellis, 57, is not the chief reason we recommend Democratic voters pick her as their candidate for chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court. Rather, it’s the breadth of her administrative experience.

Nathan L. Hecht served as chief justice for over a decade and was a model of judicial integrity, as we wrote when he retired in January 2025. A Republican, he advocated for increasing access to justice for Texas’ poorest residents. During the COVID pandemic, he not only led Texas courts through the upheaval, he did so nationally as president of the national Conference of Chief Justices. When rental assistance funds were drying up, he co-authored an op-ed in the New York Times calling for eviction diversion programs.

That’s a tough act to follow but we believe Ellis is the right Democrat to take on Jimmy Blacklock, the man Gov. Greg Abbott appointed to the role.

Justice, Supreme Court, Place 7: Kristen Hawkins

She never needed a billboard. Didn’t have to build name recognition with silly puns. A state panel of judges knew exactly who to call to handle the thorniest, most headline-grabbing and sprawling legal messes before the Harris County civil courts. They assigned the multidistrict litigation following a major industrial explosion, Hurricane Beryl and the Astroworld tragedy to Kristen Hawkins.

Elected to the 11th District Court in 2016, Hawkins quickly developed a sterling reputation. In 2020, during the early days of the pandemic, she chaired the jury committee that figured out a way to open the courts while keeping everyone safe. The next year, she was named jurist of the year by the Texas chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates.

Though it was a tough year for Democrats, Hawkins, 51, handily won reelection to the local district court in 2024. We recommended her then, and are once again for the Democratic primary for Texas Supreme Court, Place 7.

Here are the relevant Q&A responses:

Judge Kristen Hawkins, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7

There are still a couple of appellate court races, one Probate Court race, and a handful of JP races, if they wade into those, for the Chron to tackle. I don’t believe they’ve endorsed for District Clerk yet, either. So look for more to come. There are a lot of judicial races on the ballot – I know, I know – but not as many contested races as in recent years. There are some clear choices here, let’s do our job as enlightened voters.

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Interview with Mike Doyle

Mike Doyle

As of today, it’s one week and one day until early voting starts in the 2026 primaries. Kind of snuck up on us, hasn’t it? I’ve got a full week of interviews for you, in part because I’ve done some later ones that weren’t originally on the schedule. First up will be the two candidates for HCDP Chair, beginning with the incumbent, Mike Doyle. Doyle is a trial attorney and partner in his own firm. He took over as HCDP Chair after Odus Evbagharu stepped down and had what I thought was an appropriately ambitious plan for the 2024 election that obviously didn’t quite work out the way we would have liked. He was elected by the precinct chairs then, he was unopposed in 2024, so this is the first time he’s faced the primary electorate. This interview took place in December, as I did my best to load up during the holidays when I have the time, so if you’re wondering why I didn’t ask about thus-and-such recent events, it’s probably because it hadn’t happened yet. Here’s the conversation:

PREVIOUSLY:

Terry Virts – CD09
Leticia Gutierrez – CD09
Melissa McDonough – CD38
Theresa Courts – CD38
Marvalette Hunter – CD38
Annise Parker – Harris County Judge
Letitia Plummer – Harris County Judge
Matt Salazar – Harris County Judge
Audrie Lawton Evans – Harris County Attorney
Abbie Kamin – Harris County Attorney
Erik Wilson – HD131
Staci Childs – HD131
Lawrence Allen – HD131
Danny Norris – HD142

You can find links to all my interviews and Q&As at the world famous Erik Manning spreadsheet, which has other information about candidates and races. I’ve got the two HCDP Chair candidates plus three more Congressional candidates this week, and I’ll have one more interview on Monday. Let me know what you think.

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Judicial Q&A: Judge Josh Hill

(Note: As I have done in past elections, I am running a series of Q&As for judicial candidates in contested Democratic primaries. This is intended to help introduce the candidates and their experiences to those who plan to vote in March. I am running these responses in the order that I receive them from the candidates. Much more information about Democratic primary candidates, including links to the interviews and judicial Q&As, can be found on Erik Manning’s spreadsheet.

Judge Josh Hill

1. Who are you and in which court do you preside?

I am Josh Hill, current 2-term incumbent judge of the 232nd District Court.

2. What kind of cases does this court hear?

This court exclusively hears felony criminal cases, ranging from drug possession all the way to capital murder.

3. What have been your main accomplishments during your time on this bench?

I have worked incredibly hard to make important changes to the Harris County criminal justice system as judge of the 232nd District Court over the last 7 years. My proudest accomplishment is the judicial independence, the culture, and environment I have created in the 232nd District Court, which is one of equal and fair access to justice, and an opportunity for every voice to be heard in a meaningful way. These changes that I continue to make to the criminal justice system are reflected in my consistently high rankings on every Judicial Preference Poll, Houston Bar Association Poll, and Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association Poll since becoming a judge. The results of 7 years’ worth of multiple non-partisan polls serve as confirmation that I remain headed in the right direction as a judge. I treat the work of the 232nd District Court with the serious attention it deserves, while giving serious consideration to the impacts of my decisions, which have all been based on the facts presented to me and the applicable law, and are not based on outside pressures or influences.

4. What do you hope to accomplish in your courtroom going forward?

If re-elected for a third term, I will continue making the improvements I began in my first two terms. I will also continue to expand my knowledge in all areas of criminal law. Each time the Houston Bar Association has rated judges during my tenure, my rating has been near the top of all criminal judges. If re-elected, I will continue asking for and listening to feedback of lawyers for both sides, court staff, and others to maintain this distinction and to improve my policies and rulings.

In addition, in light of the abundance of misinformation being presented as fact, (for example, bail laws and how they are applied, including how much discretion a judge actually has), I plan on taking a more active role in providing educational material and discussions about the criminal justice system so that the public can maintain their confidence in the judiciary and better understand the powers and limitations of each participant involved in criminal litigation.

Another important priority of mine will to be to continue the trend I began in 2025 of aggressively reducing the backlog of cases in the 232nd District Court. My initial improvements of the 232nd District Court upon being elected in 2018 were somewhat of an over-correction to problems of the past, but I have now adjusted my policies in order to better manage case flow. I initially believed, and I still do believe, that justice only happens consistently when both sides are prepared and are willing to fight hard and fight fair. My philosophy at the time was not to get in the way of any agreements that opposing sides arrived at, which included requests for resets and continuances. While the ultimate disposition of cases resulted in justice, this “hands off’ approach allowed cases to drag on for longer than was necessary. In 2025, I adjusted the scheduling of the court, and I became more personally involved in helping to resolve discovery and other issues that were holding up the resolution of cases. My changes in 2025 cut the docket in half over the course of a year without sacrificing the philosophy that I initially brought to the bench in 2019. I have resolved thousands of cases, and in 2025, the clearance rate of the 232nd was consistently above the average of all criminal district courts. The changes that I have implemented and the work that I will continue to engage in should eliminate the backlog well before the end of 2026.

5. Why is this race important?

This race is incredibly important because the consequences of everything that happens in the criminal justice system are extreme and permanent. Victims of crime must have their voices heard and their concerns addressed. Those accused of crimes must have their Constitutional rights protected. The decisions made by a criminal District Court judge can result in loss of liberty, lifetime confinement in prison, victims feeling immeasurable fear, or someone being given a second chance to succeed at life. The public should expect a criminal District Court judge to be an expert in criminal law: the judge must have thorough knowledge and understanding of the laws that apply to criminal litigation, and should not begin learning after being elected. As a Harris County prosecutor, I spoke with countless victims of violent crime and served as their advocate before a judge or jury. This experience gave me an immeasurable amount of empathy for the needs, fears, and experiences of those who are re-victimized as they are dragged into the criminal justice system as unwilling participants, forced to re-live their worst moments. As a criminal defense lawyer, I protected the constitutional rights of my clients and fought hard within the bounds of the law and ethics so that they could have the best possible chance at the appropriate outcome. This experience helped me understand the difference between the person and their actions and taught me that there are often shades of gray in our criminal justice system.

6. Why should people vote for you in March?

I currently have a primary opponent, and if I am successful in the Democratic primary, I will face a Republican opponent in the November general election. I am confident in my reputation and my work record. I firmly believe, and I would invite anyone to test this belief, that if you were to contact any lawyer who practices criminal law in Harris County (for either side, the State or the defense) that every one of them would tell you that I am the best candidate in this race, and that I deserve to be re-elected as judge of the 232nd criminal District Court. My consistent non-partisan rankings at the top of the heap of all criminal judges in Harris County in the Houston Bar Association bar polls, the judicial preference polls, and the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association polls consistently since my first election in 2018 are a testament to what I have accomplished as judge of the 232nd District Court over the last seven years.

I have dedicated my entire professional legal career of over 20 years specifically to criminal law, almost exclusively in Harris County, Texas. I have worked in this field from every angle and side. I have been a prosecutor at the trial and appellate levels, finding great success in even the most serious cases, including capital murders. I have also been a criminal defense attorney who accepted both retained and court appointed cases, both at the trial and appellate levels. In this capacity, I have also had success in all types of cases, also including capital murders. I am the only candidate that has ever practiced criminal law in Harris County, and I am the only candidate who has any experience as both a prosecutor and as a criminal defense lawyer. Most importantly, since a judge should be an expert on the law, I am the only candidate that can ethically claim (according to Texas State Bar rules) to be an expert in criminal law, since I am the only one who is board certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization in criminal law, a distinction I have held for over a decade, and a distinction that only 771 lawyers in the entire state of Texas can claim. The criminal justice system is not a game to be played or a steppingstone for other political aspirations. The very permanent consequences of every decision made by a judge are often irreversible, and can harm not only those accused of crimes, but also the victims of those crimes and the community generally. It is important that a judge show a true dedication to a thorough understanding of the law, and a true passion for fair and equal access to Justice. I am the only candidate in this race whose record, work history, and reputation demonstrate a commitment to this field and these ideals.

PREVIOUSLY:

Judge Jim Kovach, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Jimmie L. J. Brown, Jr, 270th Civil District Court
Ebony Williams, Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 2
Julia Maldonado, 183rd Criminal District Court
Judge James Horwitz, Harris County Probate Court # 4
Sarah Beth Landau, Chief Justice of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals
Judge Leah Shapiro, 315th Juvenile District Court
Judge Tanya Garrison, 157th Civil District Court
James Hu, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #14
Jorge Garcia Diaz, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Judge Andrew Wright, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7
Gordon Goodman, Supreme Court Justice, Place 7
Rustin Foroutan, Harris County Criminal Court at Law #7

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Fort Worth ISD loses its appeal

The takeover is now official.

Fort Worth ISD trustees lost their legal fight to stop the state takeover of the district Thursday, clearing the way for Texas’ education commissioner to install new leadership over the city’s largest school system.

A state administrative court ruled in favor of the Texas Education Agency, concluding no factual disputes would justify overturning Commissioner Mike Morath’s decision.

The ruling upholds Morath’s decision to take control of the nearly 70,000-student district after trustees sought to block the intervention in November. The outcome brings months of uncertainty to an end.

The administrative law judges’ order can’t be appealed. The final decision explaining the order is expected within 30 days.

District leaders pushed back on the ruling, calling the loss “deeply disappointing.”

Board president Roxanne Martinez argued the judges disregarded the meaningful progress taking place throughout FWISD and the voices of families and voters who believe in local leadership.

All due respect to FWISD, I’m convinced that the appeal process is strictly pro forma. Unless Mike Morath decides to get frisky, none of these appeals are going to have a chance. It’s worth the shot, but keep your expectations low. Next up is Morath appointing a Superintendent and a Board of Managers, and we ought to learn something about how he perceives the HISD experience by how he proceeds here. There are lessons to be learned, if he wants to learn them. Good luck, FWISD.

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Paxton turns his harassment to CAIR

At the urging of Greg Abbott.

Still a crook any way you look

Attorney General Ken Paxton on Thursday sued the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights group, and the Muslim Brotherhood, an international Sunni Muslim group, alleging they are working in concert as a “radical terrorist organization that exists to usurp governmental power and establish dominion through Sharia law.”

In the lawsuit, filed in state court in Collin County, Paxton asks a judge to declare that CAIR is a foreign terrorist organization and transnational criminal organization, and prohibit them from operating in the state, including cutting off their fundraising.

This is the latest in a flurry of probes and lawsuits into CAIR and other Muslim groups by Republican elected officials, in Texas and nationally, amid a surge in Islamophobia.

CAIR asserts that they are being targeted for their opposition to Israel over the war in Gaza, and said in a statement that the group would continue to operate in Texas despite these lawsuits and investigations.

“We have also defeated Greg Abbott’s attacks on the Constitution three different times in a row,” a spokesperson said in a statement. “We look forward to doing so again.”

[…]

CAIR denies any wrongdoing. The group says they follow all laws, and exist solely to enhance understanding of Islam, protect civil rights, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.

Paxton’s latest lawsuit, they say, is “late, noting that they have already sued in federal court to block Abbott’s proclamation declaring the group to be a terrorist organization. That lawsuit has yet to be decided.

“Just as Mr. Paxton’s attempt to shut down a Latino voting rights group failed last week, his latest attempt to target our civil rights group is also doomed to fail,” a spokesperson said. “The people of Texas elected Mr. Paxton to serve them, not to silence Texans who dared to oppose Israel’s genocide in Gaza.”

I’m late to this story, as I didn’t blog about Abbott’s freakout over CAIR, which led to him triple-dog-daring Paxton to go after them, but here we are now. Nice burn by CAIR on the JOLT outcome; I suspect that Paxton took some of his filings from that case, changed some names and added words like “jihadist” for flavor, and went from there. Between this and Dan Patrick’s latest fixation on “Sharia law”, it’s no wonder that some Texas Muslim Republicans are beginning to question their life choices.

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Weekend link dump for February 8

From an old friend in Minnesota:

“The two major immigrant-run organizations who are resisting ICE are Unidos MN and Monarca. They are the true front lines. If folks are looking for specific places to donate to, Stand With Minnesota is a clearinghouse for ways to help.”

“Although industry groups claim that each new data center creates “dozens to hundreds” of “high-wage, high-skill jobs,” some researchers say data centers generate far fewer jobs than other industries, such as manufacturing and warehousing. Greg LeRoy, the founder of the research and advocacy group Good Jobs First, said that in his first major study of data center jobs nine years ago, he found that developers pocketed well over a million dollars in state subsidies for every permanent job they created.”

Look, the “University of Austin” is a joke. Maybe someday it will amount to something more than that, but I wouldn’t count on it.

“Trump regrets not calling up troops after the 2020 election. What stops him in 2026?”

Things I Did Not Know: The US used to have a Board of Tea Experts, “a cohort of tea industry professionals who were summoned once a year by the United States Food and Drug Administration to meet in New York and choose the teas that would serve as standards by which all other imported tea would be judged.” Bring it back, I say, and I’m not even a tea drinker.

“As the Winter Olympics Stares Down a Warming Future, Organizers Must Adapt, Scientists Say”.

Man, this just gutted me.

“They love their neighbors, and that’s why they hate ICE. We can learn a lot from them.”

“We’re proposing something quieter and less cinematic than a protest that will run all day on cable TV, but much more disturbing to the Trump administration. A one-day slowdown is irritating. A one-month slump is terrifying.”

“In Hollywood, there’s a term for what happens when a movie you’ve spent $75 million on opens with $7 million in box office: It’s a flop.”

“But reviews are rolling in just the same, and below are samples of some of the (almost entirely scathing) critiques.”

“Steven Spielberg has become one of the rare few to achieve the elusive EGOT.”

“The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a sharp warning that rocket launches could “significantly reduce safety” for airplanes, urging pilots to prepare for the possibility that “catastrophic failures” could create dangerous debris fields.”

“Though the pleas have gone unanswered, they immediately raise the issue of who, exactly, owns “Stephen Colbert”—and whether Colbert could freely take that creation with him if he wanted to.”

Bugs Bunny is back, at TCM.

“When Fox News starts giving a group of women a nickname, it’s rarely flattering — but it is revealing.”

“Have you been waiting with bated breath to find out who would perform at Turning Point USA’s halftime show? Lo, these long months where we were promised that this alternative halftime show would be epic, but the lineup was a mystery until Monday, when we learned about this absolutely killer lineup: Kid Rock, Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brice, and Gabby Barrett.”

“In Minnesota, caregiving is a form of resistance”.

RIP, Chuck Negron, founding member and lead vocalist for Three Dog Night.

Lock him up.

“Filming federal agents in public is legal, but avoiding a dangerous—even deadly—confrontation isn’t guaranteed. Here’s how to record ICE and CBP agents as safely as possible and have an impact.”

RIP, Mickey Lolich, former MLB lefthander mostly for the Detroit Tigers, who was the 1968 World Series MVP after winning three games including Game 7 as the starting pitcher.

“There Is A Minions-Related Crisis At The Winter Olympics”.

RIP, J. David Bamberger, co-founder of Church’s Fried Chicken who became a pioneer and visionary in conservation and ecological restoration.

“When you cut your sports section, it’s because you actually don’t want the paper to exist anymore.”

RIP, Lamonte McLemore, founding member of The 5th Dimension and longtime celebrity and sports photographer.

RIP, Terrance Gore, former MLB outfielder for multiple teams including the 2015 World Series champion Kansas City Royals.

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