Weekend link dump for December 7

“Protecting children from the sometimes fatal advice of chatbots has felt like going after “Big Tobacco” in the 1990s; accusing Republicans of giving “Big Tech” whatever it wanted is the sort of anti-billionaire populism that’s second nature to most Democrats.”

“Across the West, porcupines are vanishing. Wildlife scientists are racing to find where porcupines are still living, and why they’re disappearing.”

“Each time I serve pumpkin pie, I get to share a little known slice of American history. Although meant to unify people, the 19th-century campaign to make Thanksgiving a permanent holiday was seen by prominent Southerners as a culture war. They considered it a Northern holiday intended to force New England values on the rest of the country. To them, pumpkin pie, a Yankee food, was a deviously sweet symbol of anti-slavery sentiment.”

RIP, Tom Stoppard, playwright and screenwriter, best known for Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.

“The Duffer Brothers Made a Very Sweet Casting Choice for ‘Stranger Things’ 5″.

“Even as feminists’ warnings have materialized into a horrific reality, we remain dismissed as hysterical—by the same anti-abortion leaders who are quite literally killing us! Now we’re “hysterical” for warning that Republicans want to impose a national abortion ban and that they’re targeting birth control.”

“A 115-page report compiled from interviews with dozens of current and former FBI agents found that FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino have turned the agency into a ‘circus,’ with agents describing the two men as clowns more obsessed with their personal image and posting to social media than they are with running the law enforcement agency.” And again I wonder, when will pop culture – specifically, crime fiction in both books and TV shows – begin to depict this reality.

“Rosa Parks’ story didn’t end in Montgomery. These students are proof of that.”

“How a bald coach solved volleyball’s ponytail predicament“. If that’s not a headline to make you want to read the story, I don’t know what would be.

“What Really Happens When You Win A Car On The Price Is Right, According To Past Winners”.

“Netflix has removed support for casting from its mobile apps to most TVs, including Chromecast with Google TV and Google TV Streamer devices.” I guess it’s a good thing we can access it directly from our TV now.

“After three days of voting in which more than 30,000 people had their say, we have chosen rage bait as our official Oxford Word of the Year for 2025.”

“A president killing boaters on specious claims of “narcoterrorism” while pardoning major drug traffickers should be a major scandal.”

“But when I read the news of the return of Rush Hour, I also figured there must be more to the story. Why this franchise? Why these action stars? I remember enjoying the first movie as a 10-year-old boy (arguably its target audience), but I confess I mostly forgot there had been a second installment, let alone a third. Why was Trump so keen to return to this world? I decided to find out by doing the only thing that seemed right: mainlining all three Rush Hour movies in 24 hours.”

“A new study out last week in JAMA Network Open found that cutting down on social media use even for a week can significantly reduce mental health symptoms in young adults.”

“But we needn’t get so deep in the theological weeds here. Basic Mister Rogers stuff remains a good starting point. These insecure, anxious, persecuted hegemons driven by their fears of anticipatory humiliation need, somehow, to learn what they should have learned from Fred Rogers when they were kids: 1. You are special and immeasurably worthy and good, and 2. So is everybody else.”

“Several businesses and nonprofits have launched AI-powered tools to help patients get their insurance claims paid and navigate byzantine medical bills, creating a robotic tug-of-war over who gets care and who foots the bill for it.”

“Franklin the Turtle is a beloved Canadian icon who has inspired generations of children and stands for kindness, empathy, and inclusivity. We strongly condemn any denigrating, violent, or unauthorized use of Franklin’s name or image, which directly contradicts these values.”

“The United States, which has military forces deployed around the globe, cannot build a safer world for its own servicemembers by discarding basic laws of war. History shows that when America blatantly abandons humane norms and the law of war, it ultimately endangers its own people.”

this video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda.”

“ALL OF WHICH RAISES A QUESTION: Why has there been no similar accountability for another of Epstein’s pen pals—Steve Bannon? Trump’s consigliere, strategist, propagandist, and former senior counselor at the White House was on very friendly terms with Jeffrey Epstein. He exchanged hundreds of emails with the convicted felon and conspired to whitewash his public image.”

As Josh Marshall notes, that Bannon-Epstein stuff has actually been known for awhile, thanks to Michael Wolff.

“Dear Troops: Please Don’t Go to Jail for Pete Hegseth”.

RIP, Frank Gehry, legendary architect who designed the Guggenheim Museum in Spain and the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, among many others.

“A federal grand jury in Norfolk, Virginia, refused to indict New York Attorney General Letitia James for alleged mortgage fraud on Thursday”.

“Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD), the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, filed a complaint to the newly appointed CBS News ombudsman on Wednesday over the way that 60 Minutes edited its recent interview with Donald Trump.”

“Now, the World Cup is just another vehicle to curry favor with President Donald Trump by celebrating Donald Trump, and it’s so gross.”

RIP, Roy Kramer, former Southeast Conference commissioner who led its initial rise to the top of the heap.

Why Sohla El-Waylly was not in the NYT’s Cookie Week this week.

The record for most rushing yards in a single season for Texas high school football, which had been set in 1953, was broken on Friday.

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A brief thought about the Jeffrey Epstein situation

This is from Brian Beutler’s Off Message Substack, and it’s actually about Ghislaine Maxwell, but I think you’ll take my point.

Look at this week’s warning about Trump and the files from the New York Times editorial board. They rightly caution that Trump has manipulated the public at every step of the process, and that his manipulations will continue. You shouldn’t trust any information Trump clears for release, according to the Times, given:

  • Trump’s long friendship with Epstein and his jokey statements about Epstein’s perversions
  • The creepy cartoon birthday card Trump drew for his pal
  • Trump’s use of Epstein file conspiracy theories for campaign advantage, only to pretend the whole thing was a hoax once he was responsible for disclosure
  • Pam Bondi’s gleeful displays of fake transparency to MAGA podcasters, followed by her ham-fisted stonewalling after informing Trump that he’s in the files
  • And finally, Trumps machinations, intimidation and threats to (unsuccessfully) block a Congressional vote, and, thus, to keep the files secret

All of that, but not a single word about Ghislaine Maxwell. How is this possible?

Trump’s treatment of Maxwell—a convicted sex trafficker— is by far the most glaring, brazen, and openly corrupt part of the current moment involving the president. It should be a show-stopper. It should be sending reporters into the faces of every Trump ally and causing them to fall over each other with incredulity at every Oval Office press availability. But in the warped reality surrounding Trump, it’s being taken, by all of us, as some strange, lower-priority, given.

When the politics of the Epstein fiasco began to tighten on Trump over the summer, he dispatched the Deputy Attorney General to Florida to privately interview Maxwell. We now know, thanks to Epstein’s emails, that Maxwell lied about how much Trump knew about Epstein’s and her own abuse. DAG Todd Blanche, formerly Trump’s personal attorney, left the receipts from the Epstein estate out of the chat.

Whether by intention or error, he failed to get the truth out of Maxwell.

(“Mr. President, when will you order Todd Blanche to re-interview Maxwell given the evidence contained in Jeffrey Epstein’s emails, and why haven’t your ordered it already? Don’t you want to know the truth?”)

Immediately after her jailhouse interview, someone in the Trump Administration moved Maxwell from a high-security federal prison in Florida to a much more comfortable one in Texas. Maxwell is a sex offender and under Bureau of Prison rules not eligible for minimum security incarceration. But she’s also getting special meals, private access to the gym, visit time with a dog, and other privileges like unlimited toilet paper, according to a whistleblower. According to experts, the only people authorized to issue the special waiver allowing Maxwell to be treated unlike virtually any other sex offender are the BOP director and the Deputy Attorney General.

(“Mr. President, you claim you didn’t know about Maxwell’s transfer. But now that you know, why haven’t your ordered the Bureau of Prisons to return her to maximum security?”)

(“If you won’t order her return, why not? Why should she stay in a prison the rules say isn’t fit for a sex offender?”)

(“Maxwell was your friend for many years. Sir, why is your Administration giving her special treatment?”)

In July, 2020, Maxwell was arrested and charged with six felony counts including conspiracy, perjury, and sex trafficking minors as young as 14. In the face of these alleged abominations, Donald Trump, the President of the United States, would only say of Maxwell, “I wish her well.”

(“Mr. President, in 2020 you said repeatedly that you wish Ghislaine Maxwell well. Why would you wish someone charged with trafficking 14-year-old girls well?”)

(“Sir, Maxwell said in her jailhouse interview that she likes you and admires your achievements. And you’ve said you wish her well. Why are you and a child sex trafficker saying such friendly things to each other through intermediaries?”)

I would just like to point out that every one of these questions could be addressed to Greg Abbott, because Ghislaine Maxwell is as noted here in Texas, in that nice cushy federal pen that she was moved to in order to curry favor – and hopefully a pardon – from Donald Trump, and also because Trump is Greg Abbott’s daddy. All of these words are equally true for Dan Patrick and Ken Paxton, and pretty much every Texas Republican on the ballot. But we’ll focus here on the big three for simplicity’s sake.

Because these guys don’t bother talking to the mainstream media, the questions will need to be brought to them in a different way. What I envision is all of the current Democratic candidates for Senate, Governor, Lite Guv, and AG calling a press conference about this and taking turns lambasting Abbott, Patrick, Paxton, and Cornyn for acquiescing to all this happening in our state and demanding that they do something about it. That would take a lot of coordination and stagecraft and would require figuring out who gets to speak and so on, but I think we would all agree it would get a lot of attention. Hype it up beforehand, livestream it everywhere, and make some noise. The media, as Beutler notes, doesn’t know how to handle this situation. But they would know what to do with an event like this. I know this is all blue-sky stuff, but why not try?

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Of course that DPRIT lawsuit filed by crackpots was done incorrectly

It’s more fun this way.

If an Austin court hearing this week is an early indication of how a lawsuit blocking Texas’ $3 billion dementia research fund will fare, state leaders who championed it and the voters who overwhelmingly approved it by more than a 2-1 margin may have little worry.

On Tuesday, it took 21 minutes of back-and-forth between state District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble and one of plaintiffs — a self-proclaimed Texas voter representing herself without an attorney — for the judge to politely but firmly point out she had missed a critical step to move forward with any lawsuit: properly notify the people she is suing.

“You’re not going to have a temporary injunction hearing today,” the judge told Shannon Huggins that she and fellow plaintiffs Lars Kuslich and Jose Silvester had missed properly serving Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock with their Nov. 13 lawsuit.

The trio’s case is still in play — and the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute, one of 17 constitutional amendments voters passed on Nov. 4, is still blocked from going into effect — but this first shaky court appearance offered a look at what Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick considered a pressing problem: “frivolous” challenges to constitutional amendments.

Challenges to constitutional amendments have become such a growing concern and problem that this year the Texas Legislature passed a comprehensive judicial bill that included a provision to prevent lawsuits from halting constitutional amendments like DPRIT’s Proposition 14, which 2 million Texas voters approved.

However, that law, House Bill 16, didn’t go into effect until Thursday, much too late to have blocked last month’s lawsuit from halting DPRIT.

[…]

In the most recent lawsuit challenging DPRIT, it’s not clear whether the plaintiffs’ flub as shown during Tuesday’s hearing will result in the same outcome as the 2023 cases. Abbott’s office offered no comment on the matter, saying only that the governor had advised Texans to vote for all the constitutional amendments. The Texas Attorney General’s office has not returned requests for comment on the DPRIT lawsuit or the next legal steps to be taken.

The fear for DPRIT supporters is that it could meet the same fate as a 2021 constitutional amendment. Filed by Sen. Robert Nichols, R-Jacksonville, that amendment — which would have allowed counties to issue more bonds — hasn’t gone into effect because the lawsuit against it is still caught up in court.

“So the court can kill the constitutional amendment and override two thirds of each [legislative] body and the will of the people,” Nichols said. “That’s insane to me.”

[…]

Nichol’s 2021 measure would have provided counties the ability to create special taxing authorities to allow the issuance of bonds to improve roads; 63% of voters approved the measure.

In that case, plaintiffs challenged the amendment language as being vague and won a ruling in their favor. However, it remains in limbo because the state has not answered whether it will appeal, according to plaintiffs’ lawyer Tony McDonald and Nichols.

“They killed it by district court,” Nichols said. “They should not be able to sit on it forever.”

See here for some background on this lawsuit, with links from there about the 2023 lawsuits and how similar clownishness led to them being mooted. I was not aware of the 2021 case, but I have to ask how it is that the state hasn’t decided to appeal that verdict. Isn’t that the job of the Attorney General? Has anyone asked Ken Paxton about this? I find that more stunning than anything about this lawsuit. Anyway, my guess is that one way or another this little piece of ridiculousness will wither away, it’s just a matter of how long it can hold on before its inevitable demise.

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Why Kerr County turned down state flood grant money

Very interesting.

Three weeks after flash floods in Texas’ Hill Country killed more than 100 people, state lawmakers chastised Kerr County leaders for rejecting money a year earlier to create a warning system that could have alerted residents to rapidly rising water.

Several lashed out as a Kerr official representing the local river authority tried to explain why it declined money from a $1.4 billion state fund to help guard against destructive flooding.

One state senator on the special legislative committee tasked with investigating the deadly floods called the decision “pathetic.” Another said it was “disturbing.” State Rep. Drew Darby, a Republican from San Angelo, said the river authority simply lacked the will to pay for the project.

But Kerr leaders were not the only ones who rejected the state’s offer, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found. In the five years since the fund’s launch, at least 90 local governments turned down tens of millions of dollars in state grants and loans.

Leaders from about 30 local governments that the news organizations spoke with said the state grants paid for so little of the total project costs that they simply could not move forward, even with the program’s offer to cover the rest through interest-free loans. Many hoped the state program would provide grants that paid the bulk of the costs, such as the ones from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which typically supply at least 75%. They believed that they could raise the rest.

Instead, many were offered far less. In some cases, the state offered grants that paid for less than 10% of the funding needed.

In Kerr’s case, the state awarded a $50,000 grant for a $1 million flood warning system, or roughly 5%. It said the river authority could borrow the rest and repay it over the next three decades, but local officials were not sure they would be able to pay back the $950,000 — and failure to do so could carry state sanctions.

City officials in Robinson, located between Dallas and Austin, sought about $2.4 million in funding to buy and tear down homes directly in the floodway. The state offered $236,000 and required that the city conduct an engineering study that would have eaten up more than half of those grant funds, the city manager told the news organizations.

The state also proposed giving the East Texas city of Kilgore a fraction of what Public Works Director Clay Evers had anticipated for a drainage study aimed at minimizing flooding. The city needed the money, Evers said, but the state’s offer required a far larger match than the council members had planned to set aside based on the federal grant system as a guide. The state also required the city to go through a second application process to secure the grant, which Evers said would further strain resources.

So, Evers dropped out.

Four years after he turned down the state funding, Evers watched in shock as lawmakers lambasted Kerr leaders. It could have just as easily been him trying to defend a choice he never wanted to make in the first place.

“I don’t have this unlimited pot of money,” Evers said. “That is an incredibly difficult decision, and when the impossible, improbable, traumatic happens, how do you defend the decision you just made?”

Several Texas leaders who created and oversaw the fund defended the program as a significant investment and said that local communities must also be willing to invest in flood warning and mitigation projects.

Local officials, particularly those in smaller, rural communities, said a limited tax base, along with continued state restrictions on their ability to raise new taxes, have made it difficult to fund necessary projects.

After learning of the newsroom’s findings, two lawmakers and a former state employee who helped launch the fund expressed concerns over the high number of communities that turned down the money. Though state Rep. Joe Moody, a Democrat from El Paso, and Darby said that the state can’t pay for the entirety of every project, they acknowledged lawmakers created a flawed system.

“I absolutely know that what we’re doing now is not adequate for the people that we represent,” Moody said. “It’s OK for us to admit that the system isn’t good enough. We shouldn’t be afraid of saying that. The question then is, what are we going to do about it?”

Moody and Darby said the state program merits a thorough review by lawmakers during the next legislative session in 2027.

“It is a frustrating prospect that we have this program that’s designed to be important to help people’s lives, and the Legislature determined it to be a priority, and we put money in, and to find it still in the bank accounts, and not being deployed,” Darby said. “We need to fix it.”

I know I had critical things to say about Kerr County and the Upper Guadalupe River Authority, though I’m not able to find the posts now. I appreciate the clarification, and of course it makes sense that the state would take the cheap way to do this. I hope they follow through and address this in the next session. The state can afford it, that’s for sure.

(There were of course other reasons to criticize Kerr County officials following those deadly floods.)

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CM Kamin files for County Attorney

Not exactly a surprise.

CM Abbie Kamin

Houston City Council Member Abbie Kamin filed to run for Harris County attorney Friday, confirming rumors that the District C council member was seeking to replace Christian Menefee as the county’s top civil litigator.

Her filing triggered Texas’ resign-to-run law, which mandates elected officials tender their resignation upon announcing a campaign for another office. While Kamin’s resignation technically takes effect immediately, she will remain in her position as a holdover until a special election is held to replace her.

Kamin told the Houston Chronicle in an exclusive interview Friday that, while she valued her time representing District C, she felt she could do more to help residents as county attorney.

“I couldn’t take it anymore, seeing what Donald Trump is doing, what Greg Abbott is doing and the entire MAGA machine — they are coming after our families, our neighbors, our local governments,” Kamin said. “When the county attorney’s position came open, I really started considering whether I should be diving into the fight and making a bigger difference than what I’m capable of through my service on city council.”

[…]

“I’ve seen time and time again bad actors — whether it’s a bar creating a dangerous environment in the surrounding neighborhood, or just like yesterday, the tragedy of the apartment complex fire and negligent slum lords preying on innocent Houstonians,” Kamin said. “It is critical that there is that proactive role in protecting the people of Harris County, but it’s also imperative that the business operations of the county run as smoothly as possible. That means every contract that comes through is moved out effectively and efficiently, while also making sure that it’s done properly and accurately.”

See here for some background. I’ve heard CM Kamin’s name mentioned as a possible Harris County Attorney candidate for some time, though obviously with the resign-to-run provision any chatter about it had been in the background. Kamin is opposed in the primary now by Audrie Lawton Evans, who has been serving as the presiding judge of Harris County Civil Court at Law No. 1, a position she too will have to resign. I look forward to interviewing them for the primary, and I hope the fight continues to be over standing up to the depredations of the Trump administration and its local enablers.

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Both Tarrant County redistricting lawsuits have been dismissed

Not a surprise.

Both lawsuits accusing Tarrant County of racial gerrymandering are now over.

A group of Tarrant County residents who sued over the new commissioners court precinct map withdrew their lawsuit Monday without a clear explanation.

A second lawsuit, brought by local branches of the League of Women Voters and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), had been listed as pending as of Monday, but updated filings show it was dismissed Nov. 28.

Republican County Judge Tim O’Hare, who led the redistricting effort, announced the second case’s dismissal in a Facebook post.

[…]

In the League of Women Voters and LULAC case, the county contended the court had no jurisdiction in the case, and that redistricting had partisan motives, not racial ones.

“As such, the diminished ability to elect a Democrat is not an injury,” county attorneys wrote in a September filing.

Judge Megan Fahey agreed with the county and dismissed the case.

Attorneys with the Texas Civil Rights Project represented the local League of Women Voters and LULAC branches in the lawsuit. The county misread the law, TCRP said in a press release.

“Even as Defendant County Judge O’Hare and the Commissioners Court try to avoid accountability for their undemocratic and discriminatory map, we will never stop working to amplify the voices of Tarrant County residents and communities of color,” TCRP attorney Nina Oishi said.

See here, here, and here for some background. The withdrawn lawsuit was the federal one, the dismissed one is the state one. That could be appealed, though I doubt it would have a chance of success. All this sucks but none of it is unexpected at this point. The Tarrant County GOP took out insurance against losing their majority on Commissioners Court in the event that Tim O’Hare loses next November, and it has paid off for them, at least so far. Getting a Democratic majority will be harder now. I wish there were an easier way, but until there’s a working and enforceable Voting Rights Act again, there won’t be.

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Uber robotaxi service debuts in Dallas

Now in two Texas cities.

Beginning Wednesday, when you call an Uber, you may be matched with an autonomous robotaxi, thanks to the rideshare platform’s partnership with Avride.

To get a ride from the robots, you just call an Uber as normal. The fleet of autonomous Hyundai Ioniq 5s are integrated into the service’s person-driven fleet, and you will be notified if one is assigned to your ride.

In the Uber app, riders have the ability to decline an autonomous ride when offered or, for the adventurous, increase their odds of getting one in settings. You also use the app to open the door of the vehicle and start the ride.

[…]

Uber announced its Dallas partnership with Avride in October 2024, and it already yielded the little four-wheeled food delivery robots seen scurrying around downtown and Deep Ellum.

“Building on the success of our autonomous delivery partnership, we’re now expanding our collaboration with Uber and bringing our core technology to passenger mobility, laying the groundwork for scalable autonomous transportation,” said Avride CEO Dmitry Polishchuk.

“Robotaxis are what we’ve been building from day one, and we’re excited to begin introducing them in Dallas, with our partners at Uber.”

Currently, Avride manages its own fleet — which includes cleaning, maintenance, inspections, charging and depot management — but Uber plans to take over down the line.

In May, Uber announced a partnership offering autonomous rides in Arlington through May Mobility, and Lyft announced plans to bring robotaxis to Dallas in February.

Local Waymos, meanwhile, will part with their safety monitors any day now. Last month the company announced the final phase of testing — driverless rides for employees — would begin in “the coming weeks,” and rides would be public early next year.

Uber currently offers autonomous vehicles in Abu Dhabi, Atlanta, Austin, Phoenix and Riyadh. In addition to Dallas and Arlington, the rideshare company is working on robotaxis in Dubai, London, Los Angeles, Munich and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The cars currently have a safety driver in them, which will be removed at some not yet specified point in the future. The service is available in a limited area now, again with plans for expansion soonish. Uber is already doing the robotaxi thing in Arlington, with a different provider, May Mobility. Waymo as noted is testing in Dallas and will begin service in a few weeks. You may not be able to take a flying taxi to a World Cup games but you will be able to take one of these. Uber’s press release is here, the DMN’s editorial page welcomes them to town, and TechCrunch has more.

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SCOTUS upholds the new Congressional map

Shocked, shocked I am.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday upheld Texas Republicans’ new GOP-heavy congressional map, handing the party a key victory as it heads into what is predicted to be a bruising midterm cycle.

In a 6-3 ruling, the court reversed a lower court’s finding that the map was designed to weaken the voting power of racial minorities. All three liberal justices dissented. While not the final decision in the case, it solidifies the map through at least the November midterms.

In a short, unsigned order, the conservative majority said the lower court had failed to presume legislative good faith and had instead relied on “ambiguous direct and circumstantial evidence.” They also argued that it was too close to an election to abandon the new map. The candidate filing period in Texas is set to end on Monday.

“The District Court improperly inserted itself into an active primary campaign, causing much confusion and upsetting the delicate federal-state balance in elections,” the majority wrote.

[…]

The court’s three dissenting justices defended the lower court’s rationale, writing that plaintiffs had shown that Texas “largely divided its citizens along racial lines to create its new pro-Republican House map.” They also slammed their colleagues’ assertion that it was too close to an election to strike down the map, saying that if that were true, any state wanting to pass a “blatantly unconstitutional” map could simply pass it months before the election, as Texas did.

“Today’s order disserves the millions of Texans whom the District Court found were assigned to their new districts based on their race,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote in a dissent joined by Justices Kentanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor.

I was out last night and I’m up late writing this, and I just don’t have the energy at this point to work up a froth over something we all could have anticipated. You’re telling me that the SCOTUS majority acted like partisan hacks and did Donald Trump and the Republican Party a solid? Who could have ever imagined that? I will just note again that this map is based on some very frothy assumptions about the electorate and Latino voters in particular that are not looking very solid right now. The best short term revenge would be hold most of the targeted seats, maybe even flip CD15, and make the whole cursed exercise one of utter futility. Your job is to channel that anger into action. Not much else to say. The Lone Star Project and Democracy Docket have more.

Posted in Election 2026, Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Camp Mystic’s reopening

I dunno, man.

The owners of an all-girls summer camp in the Texas Hill Country, where 25 campers and two teenage counselors died in catastrophic July 4 flooding, announced plans on Tuesday for new safety upgrades that will be in place when a portion of the camp opens next summer.

Camp Mystic owners said in a letter to parents that they plan to exceed new camp safety laws that were passed by the Legislature and signed by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott following the devastating floods that killed at least 136 people and washed away homes and vehicles.

“We are preparing for next summer at Camp Mystic Cypress Lake and we know that safety is of the utmost concern to all of you, as it is for us,” the Eastland family wrote in the letter to parents of Camp Mystic campers. “We thank the Heaven’s 27 families and our state leaders for passing legislation to help make camps safer, and it is our goal not only to be in compliance with the new camp safety laws, but to exceed their requirements.”

The children and counselors who died have become known as “Heaven’s 27.” Camp Mystic’s owners include the wife and other family members of Dick Eastland, who also died in the flooding.

The enhanced safety measures at the camp include four flood warning river monitors designed to provide early detection of high-water events, two-way radios in every cabin enabled with national weather alerts and high-capacity generators to maintain power in critical areas of the camp, including its office and dining hall.

“We recognize that returning to Camp Mystic carries both hope and heartache,” the Eastland family said in the letter. “For many of your daughters, this return is not simple, but it is a courageous step in their healing journey.”

The Eastland family announced in September that it planned to build a memorial for the girls who died in the flooding and to reopen Camp Mystic Cypress Lake, a separate property that is not adjacent to the Guadalupe River and that sustained no damage in the July 4 floods. That plan drew fierce criticism from some of the victims’ families, who said they were never consulted about Camp Mystic’s plans.

“To promote reopening less than three months after the tragedy — while one camper remains missing — is unthinkable,” CiCi and Will Steward, whose 8-year-old daughter Cile Steward died in the floods and whose body still has not been recovered, wrote to Camp Mystic officials when their reopening plan was first announced.

I didn’t know Camp Mystic existed before July 4, so I have no dog in this fight. I’d be really interested to learn more about the families who show up for their pre-opening tours and who send their kids there this year. I hope someone interviews the parents and kids and learns more about who they are and what they’re thinking, and I say that with curiosity and no judgment.

As for all of the enhanced, more-than-the-law-requires safety features, that’s great. I’m glad to hear it. But I also hope that everyone connected with Camp Mystic, from the parents to the Eastland family, asks themselves every day, why wasn’t at least some of that stuff being done before now? That’s another thing I hope someone asks when the next batch of potential and actual campers shows up.

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Paxton “investigating” Shein

Sure, why not. He’s got nothing else going on at the moment.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced Monday his office is investigating the fast fashion retailer Shein for potential violations related to unethical labor practices and unsafe products.

The Chinese-founded corporation operates primarily online and sells everything from clothing, accessories, home decor products and more.

It generated more than $30 billion in global revenue in 2023.

Paxton alleges there have been numerous reports that raised concerns of Shein’s reliance on forced labor, the use of unsafe product materials, and deceptive marketing practices.

He referenced the Make America Healthy Again movement in the news release, stressing the role of safe, non-toxic materials and products.

“Texans deserve to know that the companies they buy from are ethical, safe, transparent, and not exploiting workers or selling harmful products,” Paxton said in a press release.

The investigation will determine whether the company’s supply chain and manufacturing practices violate Texas law by using toxic or hazardous materials and whether it misleads consumers about ethical sourcing.

It will also examine the company’s data collection and privacy practices.

A Shein spokesperson said in a statement that it is aware of the investigation and welcomed “constructive engagement” with Paxton.

My first reaction this was that Paxton’s well-oiled publicity stunt machine continues to operate at high efficiency. I’m almost ready to create some kind of AI account so I can track all of these peacock lawsuits, most of which I’m assuming will never see the inside of a courtroom. The headline was the point, so why waste one’s energy beyond that?

My second reaction was “under what jurisdiction is he doing this?” After some reflection, I think he’s using the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, which he has used to go after TikTok, Powered by People, and that guy trying to take over Loving County. When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. If you’re Ken Paxton.

The idea that Ken Paxton cares about exploited workers or unsafe products is ludicrous, but a headline’s a headline, and he gets to bash China along the way. You miss all the shots you don’t take.

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The SOS still can’t figure out citizenship

Same song, different verse.

Still the only voter ID anyone should need

County election officials investigating the eligibility of 2,724 Texas voters flagged as potential noncitizens have so far found that hundreds of the voters registered through the state Department of Public Safety, which requires proof of citizenship from anyone registering to vote while obtaining a driver’s license or state ID.

DPS keeps copies of the proof of citizenship that registrants provide, such as birth certificates or passports. The agency also keeps copies of proof of lawful presence in the U.S., such as green cards, provided by immigrants.

But the Texas Secretary of State’s Office told Votebeat and The Texas Tribune it did not check the voters flagged as potential noncitizens against DPS’ records before sending the list to county election officials to verify citizenship.

And at least one county election official has asked Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson and DPS for help checking DPS’ records but has yet to obtain access to them, according to documents obtained by Votebeat through a public records request and an interview.

When Celia Israel, who oversees voter registration for Travis County, asked the state for help determining voters’ citizenship, Nelson’s office directed her to DPS, according to a letter Israel sent Nelson’s office last month. But that agency said it couldn’t help her directly, citing state law, records show.

Israel then wrote to Nelson and DPS officials, asking for help obtaining the records. Nelson responded to Israel Nov. 21 saying her office would “continue collaborating” with DPS.

Nelson’s office did not respond to a request for comment from Votebeat Monday asking whether it would seek to obtain DPS’ proof-of-citizenship records. But on Monday, DPS responded to a request for comment from Votebeat and said it had “recently received” a request from Nelson’s office for information on 97 people — also the number of potential noncitizens the state had asked Travis County to investigate. The agency didn’t confirm whether the request concerned those voters.

In an interview with Votebeat on Monday, Israel said she believes officials have a responsibility to check that data before placing a burden on voters. “These are tools that are at our disposal to ensure accuracy, and I think it’s our responsibility to use those tools before we ask a voter to demonstrate citizenship,” she said.

[…]

Every year, millions of Texans register to vote or update their voter registration information while obtaining a driver’s license or ID at DPS. In 2024, 3 million people registered to vote through the agency.

DPS began requiring proof of citizenship and lawful presence to obtain a driver’s license or state ID beginning in 2008. In 2011, Texas legislators made the requirement state law.

Israel and other election officials have raised concerns about the accuracy of the list of potential noncitizens forwarded by the Texas Secretary of State, citing issues in the wake of the state’s past attempts to flag noncitizens on the voter rolls.

Last year, months before the November 2024 election, Gov. Greg Abbott announced that 6,500 noncitizens had been removed from Texas voter rolls. A joint investigation by Votebeat, The Texas Tribune, and ProPublica later found Abbott’s numbers were inflated and, in some instances, wrong.

In 2019, the Secretary of State’s Office announced that it had identified 95,000 registered voters as potential noncitizens and said that more than half of them had previously cast ballots. But many of the voters in question turned out to be naturalized citizens flagged due to outdated data, and the state ultimately settled a related lawsuit by agreeing to new procedures.

Those new procedures, which were codified into law in 2021 through the sweeping Senate Bill 1, require that DPS share data monthly with the Texas Secretary of State’s Office in connection with individuals who provided proof that they were not U.S. citizens — such as a green card or work visa — when obtaining a driver’s license or state ID.

The article cites numerous examples from various counties in which some number of voters flagged by the SOS were people who had registered through the DPS and thus already had to show proof of citizenship. I don’t know if this is stubbornness, the SOS’ interpretation of the law in terms of what they are required to do, political gamesmanship, or some combination. At a high level, it’s just basic common sense that the SOS should check for who registered via the DPS before sending these requests to county officials. If there was ever any seriousness about “government efficiency”, this is the lowest hanging fruit there is. But somehow, we always have to do this the hard way.

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Scooter curfew update

That was quick.

Houston’s new ordinance prohibiting the nighttime rental and use of electric scooters, electric skateboards and similarly powered devices has already reduced late-night riding downtown, officials told the City Council’s Quality of Life Committee on Monday.

The ban on the use of micromobility devices between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m. was adopted on Nov. 19 after Mayor John Whitmire described late-night scooter activity as one of Houston’s top security threats, citing chaotic riding, large crowds and frequent injuries downtown.

“We literally saw almost overnight a decrease in activity,” said Maria Irshad, deputy director of the city’s Administration & Regulatory Affairs Department. “We think the ordinance has made some good progress on efforts to clear the public right of way.”

City officials said they pursued the curfew in part because of rising safety and cost data: 536 EMS calls for scooter incidents downtown since January 2021, 78% of them between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m., and a projected $1 million in combined EMS and HPD scooter-response costs this year.

Since the curfew took effect, Houston Fire Department medics have responded to five scooter-related calls citywide, all outside the curfew window and only one in downtown, Irshad said. During the same period last year, EMS responded to 11 such incidents, 10 of them downtown.

A Houston Police Department representative described downtown as a “ghost town” after 8 p.m.

[…]

Some council members said the problems described by HPD — large groups of riders, sidewalk speeding, late-night injuries — were concentrated downtown and did not justify a curfew stretching across neighborhoods that have not seen similar issues.

Irshad said that limiting the policy to downtown would likely push scooter activity into surrounding areas, creating the same problem elsewhere. The city, she said, wanted to avoid “spillover” and give HPD a clearer enforcement framework.

District I Council Member Joaquin Martinez, who represents parts of downtown, defended the city’s approach, noting that other cities, including Austin, Dallas and Atlanta, also regulate or restrict nighttime scooter use. Austin limits operating hours for scooter rentals; Dallas uses a permit-based system that requires operators to share real-time GPS data, enforce geofencing and maintain defined parking zones; and Atlanta has an e-scooter curfew between 2 a.m. to 4 a.m.

“This is not anti-micromobility,” Martinez said, saying the goal is to stop dangerous late-night riding, not prevent residents from commuting. He added that the curfew is a first step and that the city intends to build a more sophisticated, long-term program that includes geofencing, speed governors, age verification and designated riding areas.

See here for the background. First, I’m old enough to remember when downtown at night being described as “a ghost town” was considered a bad thing, both in terms of Houston as a city where there are things to do at night and also in terms of crime, which was quite prevalent in those days. Second, what those other cities are doing sounds to me like they’re taking a more nuanced approach to the issue than we are. Combined with the promise that this more broad-based ordinance we passed was just a first cut and that the real solutions are being devised, I’m thinking maybe this could have waited a bit longer and given more of a chance to be fully cooked first.

And finally, one week’s worth of data should be viewed with some skepticism. I’m with Campos here: Get back to me in six months, then we’ll see how this is going.

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Camp rule changes coming

Noted for the record.

In their latest effort to boost camp oversight in the wake of the deadly July 4 floods, Texas officials have proposed hiking annual licensing fees for operators by thousands of dollars and slashing the number of camp representatives on a statewide committee that advises on industry regulations.

On Tuesday, the Texas Department of State Health Services, which regulates camps, posted a slate of new rules to the Texas Register that would go into effect next year, and among them are proposals that would increase camp licensing fees based on size and type of camps.

Currently, the start-up licensing fee is $250 for any day camp and $750 for any residential camp, such as an overnight summer camp. The yearly renewal fee currently ranges from $52 to $155 for day camps and $103 to $464 for residential camps.

The initial licensing fee for a day youth camp with 99 or fewer campers per year is expected to climb to $950 and can reach $3,500 for those with 5,000 or more. The initial licensing fee is even steeper for residential youth camps, increasing to $2,150 for camps with 99 or fewer campers and to $21,000 for those with 10,000 or more campers.

Annual renewal fees would range from $750 to $19,500, depending on the size and type of camp.

Dan Neal, a representative of Camping Association of Mutual Progress, a camp lobbying firm, and owner of Georgetown-based Camp Doublecreek told The Texas Tribune on Wednesday that the increase in fees will be a shock to the system. However, most camp owners recognize that the increase is necessary to allow DSHS to hire additional inspectors and rebuild the youth camp program, he said.

“We are hopeful that once the program is fully reestablished and operating smoothly for several years, the fee levels can be reassessed and appropriately reduced,” he said.

Last month, the Department of State Health Services teased the dramatic change during a meeting to discuss the rollout of a pair of camp safety bills that the Legislature passed in response to the July 4 Hill Country floods that killed at least 137 people, including 27 campers and counselors at Camp Mystic.

At that meeting and in a survey the state conducted in the fall, several camp operators said such licensing fees and other new requirements could put many in the industry out of business because most camps are small nonprofits.

“This causes an undue burden for smaller or more remote camps,” according to a survey response from Livingston-based Boxwoods camp obtained by The Texas Tribune. “All the costs that are a result of this legislation should not be passed on to camps.”

Also proposed Tuesday is an overhaul of the little-known Youth Camp Advisory Committee, which meets semiannually to request rule changes to the state health agency and to lawmakers when they are in session. The Texas Tribune found that the makeup of this committee for many years has been mostly camp leadership and that while members can’t make rules, they can influence how much rules impact the industry. Camp Mystic’s Britt Eastland is a current member.

All of this sounds reasonable to me. Given that these are administrative changes and not legislative ones, one may reasonably ask why they hadn’t been suggested before now. To be fair, in the absence of the summer tragedy, it’s hard to imagine a camp lobbying group accepting those license fee hikes as easily otherwise. Be that as it may, these changes should improve oversight, and in turn that should improve safety for campers. That much, at least, is good.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of December 1

The Texas Progressive Alliance hopes everyone has recovered from their Thanksgiving food comas as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Off the Kuff observes how Ken Paxton is filing lawsuits in small counties, in search of favorable judges.

SocraticGadfly looks at the decline and possible fall of Southwest Airlines.

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

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

Evil MoPac quantified the best and worst things about Thanksgiving.

G. Elliott Morris demonstrates that the more people know about what Trump and the Republicans are doing, the better Dems do in the polls.

Bay Area Houston celebrates the end of DOGE.

Kit O’Connell describes their experience as a trans journalist living in Texas.

The Texas Signal examines what it means when Texas counties partner with ICE.

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Is Jasmine Crockett running for Senate?

Maybe. Possibly even probably. She’ll let us know on Monday.

Rep. Jasmine Crockett

U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas, appears to be inching closer to a U.S. Senate bid, scheduling a “special announcement” for Monday.

Crockett, a second-term representative with a large national social media following, has teased a Senate run for weeks, saying publicly that she was exploring the possibility via polling and that she believed she could do what no Texas Democrat has done in over 30 years — win statewide — by expanding the electorate.

“I am closer to yes than I am no,” she said in an interview with MS NOW, formerly MSNBC, on Sunday.

In one of the clearest signs that she’s leaning toward yes, Crockett told The Dallas Morning News she called both of her prospective primary opponents, former Rep. Colin Allred and state Rep. James Talarico, to discuss the results of polling she had commissioned. The Talarico campaign said he called Crockett over the weekend, but that no polling data was shared; the Crockett campaign said the congresswoman offered to share internal polling but that Talarico didn’t request to see it.

The Crockett campaign has not shared her internal polling publicly or with The Texas Tribune.

Crockett’s entry into the race would scramble what had been a two-man primary to this point, increasing the likelihood that the March 3 primary goes to a runoff. Many Democrats were hoping that their primary could be wrapped up by early March, given that the Republican primary between Sen. John Cornyn, Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt is likely going to a runoff. Such a scenario would have given the winning Democrat time to raise and spend money in a general election scenario while Republicans continued to fight each other.

Democrats had been trying to both avoid a glut of candidates running for the same office and attempting to organize a slate — Allred, Talarico, Rep. Joaquin Castro and 2018 candidate Beto O’Rourke held a Zoom meeting over the summer, to discuss dividing up the marquee statewide offices between them. But with all interested in U.S. Senate, an attractive race given there is a competitive Republican primary, no agreement was ever reached, and Allred launched his campaign shortly after.

With little time left until the Dec. 8 filing deadline, Crockett also said on MS NOW she wanted to organize a slate of Democrats with different electoral strengths.

“We also need to make sure we have, what I consider to be, a strong slate — people that can also raise money, people that also have different groups of people that are attracted to them,” Crockett said, adding that she is the leading candidate among Black and brown voters.

“Instead of relying on one person to kind of carry the load, what type of ticket [can we run?]” she said on MS NOW. “So I’ve actually been talking to other candidates, potential candidates, as well, trying to recruit them.”

Democratic state legislators are already running for the other statewide positions, and getting candidates to shift gears before Monday’s filing deadline would be challenging.

Matt Angle, a Democratic operative and founder of the Lone Star Project, said the upside for Democrats is that the candidate that emerges from the primary will have been well-tested. But he lamented that they were not able to work out a slate where the strongest Democrats could run together instead of against each other.

“Assuming that Congresswoman Crockett gets in, it means next fall, two of our best communicators are going to be on the sidelines, not seeking office,” Angle said. “That’s frustrating.

“This is a year in which I think there’s more opportunities, Republicans are more vulnerable in Texas than they’ve been in a while,” Angle continued. “And so you hate that we’ve got our best candidates running against each other.”

To add onto what Matt Angle says, Rep. Crockett is a proven fundraiser, and would start out with a significant amount of cash on hand. I don’t know if having her in the Senate primary along with Talarico and Allred would have the effect of diverting cash from other candidates and races into that contest – I don’t know if such an effect exists, I’m just speculating. It could have the opposite effect, or it could be meaningless, who knows. I’m a likely Talarico voter at this point, and I can’t say that her entry would change my mind, so my reaction to this is less of excitement and more of caution. I also can’t say that I represent even a plurality of Dem primary voters, so take that for what it’s worth.

What I want more than anything is a candidate who has the best shot at winning. Right now I think that’s Talarico, but I don’t know anything more than anyone else as far as that goes. I share Matt Angle’s worry about concentrating so much top talent in one race – remember, I originally wanted Talarico to run for Governor – but here we are, maybe. We could have women running for all three top offices if she runs, so there’s that. I’m going to spend the rest of the filing period trying not to think too much about it. Lone Star Left, which has its own concerns, has more.

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Class action lawsuit filed over the Ten Commandments law

About time.

After receiving two favorable rulings from judges, a coalition of advocacy groups filed their third lawsuit Tuesday challenging a new state law that requires the Ten Commandments to be displayed in every public school classroom in Texas.

The new case was brought against 16 Texas school districts, adding Katy, Clear Creek, Deer Park, Pearland and Magnolia ISDs to the litigation. Courts have already barred the displays in Conroe, Houston, Fort Bend and Cypress-Fairbanks ISDs.

The latest filing comes in an ongoing effort from groups such as the ACLU, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and the Freedom From Religion Foundation. They represent families across the state who say placing posters of the Ten Commandments violates their First Amendment protections. All three cases have been filed in San Antonio federal court in the Western District of Texas.

Tuesday’s filing is the first class-action lawsuit the groups have brought in the Ten Commandments litigation. The goal in the new case is to bar any public school districts not already involved in litigation from displaying the text, since the previous rulings have only applied to the districts being sued.

[…]

Among the plaintiffs in the new lawsuit are Helen and Madison Hanks, who are atheists with a child enrolled at Clear Creek ISD. The Hanks want their child, who is referred to as O.H. in the filing, to have the “space and autonomy to develop their own beliefs and views about religion,” the document reads.

“The displays send a message that Christianity is superior to other religions and that the government prioritizes Christian beliefs,” the complaint said. “This sends O.H. the message that O.H.’s opinions and beliefs are less valued than the beliefs of their Christian peers.”

See here for all previous Ten Commandments blogging. The name of this lawsuit is Ashby v. Schertz-Cibolo-Universal ISD, with the defendant being a school district in the suburbs of San Antonio. I presume there were – and still may be – some legal hurdles to clear to get this certified as a class action. I also presume it was either this or round up plaintiffs in all seven thousand or so school districts and spam the federal courts with an unending series of smaller suits. The Fifth Circuit will provide some clarity, for better or worse, in the next year or so. In the meantime, I hope we get a statewide injunction soon. The ACLU’s press release, which includes a copy of the complaint, is here, and the Current has more.

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Yep, more measles

It’s having its best year in a long time.

The surging number of measles cases around the world is a stark warning sign that outbreaks of other vaccine-preventable diseases could be next, the World Health Organization warned Friday.

“It’s crucial to understand why measles matters,” said Dr. Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals. “Its high transmissibility means that even small drops in vaccine coverage can trigger outbreaks, like a fire alarm going off when smoke is detected first.”

That is, measles is often the first disease to pop up when vaccination rates overall drop.

“When we see measles cases, it signals that gaps are almost certainly likely for other vaccine-preventable diseases like diphtheria or whooping cough or polio, even though they may not be setting off the fire alarm just yet,” O’Brien said at a media briefing Monday, ahead of the release of the WHO’s Progress Toward Measles Elimination report, published Friday in its Weekly Epidemiological Record.

Indeed, whooping cough cases are also rising in the United States and are on track to be the most in a decade. More than 20,000 whooping cough cases have been reported so far in 2025, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In 2024, there were an estimated 11 million measles infections worldwide, according to the report, nearly 800,000 more than were recorded in 2019.

Last year, 59 countries reported large measles outbreaks. In 2025, the United States joined the list of countries.

[…]

The key determining factor for a country to lose its measles elimination status is the ongoing spread of the same strain of the virus for a full year.

Canada met that threshold this month. The United States could be next if scientists can trace current cases to a Texas outbreak that began in January.

Nearly all of the samples analyzed from those early cases were identified as a genotype of measles called D8, according to a CDC report published in April.

The D8 genotype was recently detected in a South Carolina outbreak.

Preliminary results from specimens sent from South Carolina to CDC labs “are the same type, D8, that is seen in other settings in the United States,” Dr. Linda Bell, state epidemiologist for the South Carolina Department of Public Health, said at a news briefing Tuesday.

Additional genetic sequencing is needed to make a definitive link between the Texas outbreak and the one in South Carolina, as well as outbreaks in Utah and Arizona. A South Carolina Department of Public Health spokesman said the agency “expects those results in the next few weeks.”

Bell said that as of Tuesday, 58 cases had been reported in South Carolina, mostly in Spartanburg County in the northwest part of the state.

An outbreak along the border of Arizona and Utah continues to grow. The Arizona Department of Health Services reported 153 cases this week, nearly all in Mohave County.

Cases in Utah have reached 102, according to the state Department of Health and Human Services. While the bulk of those cases are linked to the cluster at the Utah-Arizona border, case numbers are also rising near Salt Lake City. NBC affiliate KSL reported that eight students at a high school in Wasatch County had been diagnosed.

See here for the previous update, and here for more on the whooping cough resurgence. At that time, less than two months ago, there were 27 cases in Utah and 43 in Arizona. The South Carolina outbreak, which may be connected to the one we had earlier this year in Texas, wasn’t yet a thing. You know who we have to thank for all this. KFF Health News has more.

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Runoff early voting Day One: Getting started

For a variety of reasons, I probably won’t follow the daily EV reports for the runoff closely, but I will at least keep an eye on them. First, though, this bit from the Chron story on the start of early voting was noteworthy.

Former council member Dwight Boykins and attorney Alejandra Salinas advanced to the runoff after finishing within about 1 percentage point of each other in the Nov. 4 general election.

Salinas received 21.22% of the vote countywide while Boykins took 20.07%, according to official results from Harris County. Salinas led in early voting and Election Day tallies, while Boykins received more mail-in ballots.

The runoff pits two sharply contrasting political profiles against each other.

Boykins, who previously represented District D and ran for mayor in 2019, has leaned heavily on name recognition and a broad list of endorsements from across the political spectrum, including Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez, Commissioner Tom Ramsey, Beto O’Rourke and several Houston council members. He has campaigned on his record of “delivering for neighborhoods,” pointing to projects like bringing an H-E-B to his former district.

Salinas, a Susman Godfrey lawyer and first-time candidate, enters the runoff with a sizable fundraising advantage and the backing of major labor organizations, LGBTQ+ groups and elected officials such as U.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia, Harris County Commissioner Adrian Garcia and District Attorney Sean Teare. Her campaign has centered on equity, worker protections and “fighting for every Houstonian, no matter where they live.”

That’s an interesting collection of endorsers for Boykins. Local politics is weird in its own way. Also, Salinas led only on Election Day, per the HarrisVotes results. I don’t know how much that matters for the runoff, but there it is.

Here’s the Day One EV report for the runoff. A total of 3,028 ballots were cast, 1,382 by mail and 1,646 in person. This is just Houston, not all of Harris County, and it’s just this race plus HCC District II. I’m going to guess right now that we’ll get something like 15-20K total ballots cast early, and that this will be more than half the final total, unlike the November race was. I’ll check back on that later, but without the CD18 race and the state constitutional amendments, we’re in a much lower turnout environment. Go vote, there probably won’t be a line.

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Paxton orders schools to not sign the CSC participation agreement

Interesting. I need to hear more about this.

Seven universities in Texas have been ordered by the state’s attorney general not to sign the College Sports Commission NIL participation agreement.

On Nov. 25, Texas AG Ken Paxton sent out a letter to Texas Tech, the University of Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor University, University of Houston, Southern Methodist and Texas Christian urging them not to sign the CSC agreement, stating numerous issues with the agreement.

“As the chief legal officer for the State of Texas, whose duties include providing advice, counsel, and legal representation to Texas public universities, I am particularly interested and gravely concerned by the wide-ranging implications entering into such an agreement portends for our state and its institutions,” reads the letter.

For context, the 11-page university participant agreement would bind SEC, ACC and Big 12 schools to the terms of the House v. NCAA settlement and to the enforcement decisions of the new CSC, which stipulates that they waive their rights to contest whatever sanctions or rule changes the commission would make in the court of law.

This sparked the attention of mega donor and chairman of the Texas Tech University System Board of Regents, Cody Campbell, who said Texas Tech would not sign the agreement, arguing to the rules are not in compliance with Texas state Laws and university bylaws.

“We will eagerly and fully engage in conversation aimed at finding a legal and workable solution, and I will personally commit to facilitating such discussions,” Campbell said in a social media post.

Cody Campbell is the billionaire Texas Tech booster who’s responsible for all those Save College Sports ads. I’ll get to what this agreement is about in a minute, but first here’s more from Yahoo Sports.

In the letter, Paxton expresses that he is “gravely concerned” about the implications of the agreement and “urges” Texas universities to decline signing. He identifies several reasons that schools should not sign the document, including the requirement to waive legal action, the CSC’s over-extension of authority to penalize programs without a legitimate option for appeal and the concept of schools acquiescing to “unnamed policies.”

Perhaps most notably, Paxton targets the agreement’s notion of arbitration. The agreement provides schools an avenue of arbitration in exchange for not filing legal challenges against the College Sports Commission. However, Paxton writes in his letter, Texas public universities are prohibited by state law from agreeing to arbitration.

“CSC clearly seeks to coerce compliance with its rules and limit a (school’s) means of redress if dissatisfaction arises for any reason,” he writes in a letter that was expected to be distributed to other state attorneys general as well.

The letter follows pushback on the participation agreement from the Texas Tech general counsel, who, in a letter distributed across the Big 12 over the weekend, implored changes to the agreement and recommended the Tech board reject the document. Several other universities — especially private schools — have privately expressed intentions not to sign the agreement without modifications.

The CSC’s agreement was distributed to schools last week and universities were expected to have about two weeks to sign. The pushback now puts in jeopardy the future of college sports’ new enforcement entity and could keep open the door for schools to circumvent the new quasi-salary cap in college athletics.

Without legal protection — or a congressional bill — lawsuits threaten to erode the CSC’s new policies in a similar way to the crumbling of NCAA rules and regulations.

Congress is on a path to potentially help college sports. As soon as next week, congressional lawmakers in the House of Representatives are expected to vote on the SCORE Act, the college sports legislation that grants the NCAA and conference wishes of legal protections to enforce their rules. However, the SCORE Act, though expected to pass the House, will be met with resistance in a U.S. Senate where at least seven Democrats are needed for adoption of the bill.

Again, Cody Campbell is spending all that ad money to oppose the SCORE Act; he favors instead the mostly Democrat-backed SAFE Act. I’m just trying to keep up here.

So what is the College Sports Commission’s NIL agreement? Here’s ESPN from two weeks ago.

The College Sports Commission — the new enforcement agency of college sports — has asked all schools under its purview to agree to waive their right to challenge future punishments in court as part of an agreement that would give the agency significant power to investigate and punish rule breakers in the era of NIL deals and direct athlete payments.

The CSC, which launched in July, sent a 10-page membership agreement to all power conference schools Wednesday afternoon and asked them to sign it in the next two weeks. The terms of the agreement are designed to close loopholes that have made it difficult for the NCAA and CSC to enforce rules established by the recent House settlement that dictate how college athletes can be paid.

The agreement will not go into effect unless every school signs.

“The starting place in all this is the settlement, but the participant agreement really puts a lot of meat on the bones of that in terms of enforcement,” CSC chief executive Bryan Seeley told ESPN on Wednesday.

The House settlement allows each school to spend up to $20.5 million this year in direct payments to its athletes. It also empowers the CSC to make sure any name, image and likeness deals an athlete signs with a third party are for a “valid business purpose” rather than a recruiting incentive. College sports leaders hope that the CSC is able to use its authority to enforce a spending cap that prevents the richest schools from gaining too much of a competitive advantage.

Schools that sign the agreement will waive their right to challenge any CSC rulings in a courtroom. Any appeals of a CSC punishment would instead go through an arbitration process that was agreed upon as part of the House settlement.

The schools must also agree that they won’t try to encourage or assist any other parties — their state’s attorney general, for example — to file lawsuits against the CSC. Any school violating that rule would lose at least one year of revenue from its conference and miss at least one year of postseason play in any sport involved in the dispute.

Many of the rules that govern college sports are susceptible to legal challenges because they aren’t backed by the collective bargaining agreements that provide stability to professional sports leagues. Seeley said college sports leaders are searching for a solution that will keep their peers from exploiting that weakness by filing a lawsuit when they face a potential punishment.

“[Schools] do not want to live in a world where rules are made by individual state lawsuits,” Seeley said. “They don’t want the rules to depend on what state you’re in and what judge you may be in front of. In any individual situation where a school is disciplined, the school may have an incentive to [file a lawsuit] to get out of discipline. But collectively, the schools don’t want that.”

However, many of the key clauses of the agreement apply only if they don’t conflict with a school’s existing state law.

Several states have laws that prevent public institutions from resolving disputes via arbitration. Other states have passed specific college sports-related laws in recent years that contradict some of the CSC’s rules. Seeley said a federal law that replaces those state laws would likely be necessary to completely fortify the new rules from legal challenges.

And here’s CBS Sports.

It has been months in the making and delayed, in part, over disagreements on what a penalty structure should look like. The hope is that all of the Power Four schools will sign it and turn it back in within the next two weeks, a critical time period with the early signing period starting Dec. 3 and the transfer portal window opening Jan. 2.

The 11-page participation agreement obtained by CBS Sports allows the CSC to enforce agreed upon rules, prevents schools from circumventing the system to sue over enforcement decisions they didn’t like (long a problem in the NCAA enforcement model) and requires annual audits of all schools that spent 75 percent or more of the annual rev-share number, among other measures. Notably, it states that it does not override existing state laws.

The piece most critical to CSC CEO Bryan Seeley and his team would prevent schools from pursuing jury trials outside of the CSC enforcement and appeal process. There are arbitration opportunities for the schools and student-athletes, but ultimately every participating school will be bound by the final decisions made. Led by Seely, the CSC was created to enforce revenue-sharing and NIL-related issues in the aftermath of the landmark passing of the $2.8 billion House settlement.

The document states that if any participant (student-athlete, school or associated entities or state officials) brings any suit or claim against the CSC related to membership rules, investigation or enforcement actions, it would “forgo and not receive any and all revenue from its conference and not be eligible to compete in the post-season in the sport(s) involved in the investigation or decision.”

Conference commissioners, athletic directors and others hope all 68 Power 4 schools will sign off on the agreement and bring stability to a landscape where litigation — or the threat of it — has made it nearly impossible for the NCAA to enforce rules, from NIL to eligibility and everything in between.

Once the agreements are signed, Seely and his team will have the runway to crank up the enforcement efforts and prevent salary cap circumvention, among other issues. Currently, every school that opts into the House settlement is able to spend up to $20.5 million annually on direct payments to student-athletes.

Ahead of the House settlement, many programs turned to a popular strategy known as “front-loading,” spending as much of their NIL dollars as possible before entering a world where every deal of $600 or more must be submitted to and reviewed by the NIL Go clearinghouse. With the CSC unable to enforce its rules so far, some within the industry have discussed continuing to spend significant NIL “pay-for-play” money without making it subject to NIL Go’s fair-market-value review.

Here’s the CSC’s own website if you want to know more. At this point what I know is that there’s a lot of money, some of which is intended to go to athletes, a new bit of bureaucracy set up to regulate how that money can be spent and to enforce penalties for infractions, some rich guys who don’t like this, and Ken Paxton, who is never to be trusted but who occasionally does things that are at least directionally correct.

You can see why one’s head might be spinning right about now. As I drafted this, I did not see any indication that other AGs or state governments have taken similar action, but it’s early days. I don’t know enough about this to have a clear idea of where my sympathies should lie, but this is a sufficiently provocative action that I expect to see that void get filled. I’m sure the likes of Kirk Bohls and other college football knowers will have their takes soon enough. For now, at least we know this has happened. Thanks to Reform Austin for the catch.

Posted in Legal matters, Other sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

What would you tell Fort Worth’s Chamber of Commerce about the TEA takeover?

Some folks will get the chance.

Business leaders will get a closer look at school district takeovers this week when the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce tours Houston schools.

The Fort Worth team wants to learn how the state’s 2023 takeover of Houston Independent School District impacted the Greater Houston Partnership and businesses in the area.

“It’s a fact-finding trip,” said Steve Montgomery, president and CEO of the Fort Worth chamber. “We had been talking to their government affairs guy and he was saying, ‘Be sure you do this,’ and ‘Don’t do this,’ so we decided to learn all we could because we don’t really know.”

Montgomery, Mayor Mattie Parker and other business leaders say it’s too early to know the impact of Texas taking control of FWISD on Fort Worth’s economic development efforts.

A strong public education system is key to attracting and retaining companies in North Texas, business leaders say. Incentives matter, but so does having a sizable talented workforce in the fast-growing city. Above all, they said, the business community must support the 67,500 students in Fort Worth ISD because they are the region’s future workforce.

“What I do know is that we’ve got leaders, Mayor Parker, superintendent leadership, that are laser-focused on delivering the best possible results for every student with Fort Worth ISD,” said Robert Allen, president and CEO of the Fort Worth Economic Development Partnership. “At the end of the day, that’s what matters most.”

The intervention — which includes appointing a board of managers and a superintendent — could impact such recruitment, said Michelle Green-Ford, president and CEO of the Fort Worth Metropolitan Black Chamber of Commerce.

“Anything that reflects negatively on our school district and education as a whole has an adverse effect on companies who may want to consider relocating here,” she said in a statement.

Some business leaders said they were disappointed that Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath will name new FWISD leadership in the spring. He appointed a conservator on Nov. 6 who will monitor progress and has the authority to overturn local decisions in the district.

They point to Superintendent Karen Molinar’s progress since she took over as Fort Worth ISD chief in March. Molinar, who has worked nearly three decades in the district, is a candidate in Morath’s national search for superintendent.

However, many expected state intervention after years of failing schools. One campus missing state academic standards five years in a row triggered the Texas law that required the takeover.

See here, here, and here for some background. The article doesn’t say anything about the Chamber’s agenda – how many schools they’ll visit, who will chaperone them, who else they’ll be talking to – so I can’t say if they’re likely to get an informed view or a propaganda tour. I’d certainly encourage them to get outside whatever bubble Mike Miles would like to wrap them in. I’m not saying they should spend their entire trip with Community Voices for Public Education and other Miles critics, but at least one conversation with them would be strongly advised. Either try to get a full picture or save your money. We’ll see what they do.

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We may never know what’s in those intimate Abbott-Elon emails

This was from just before Thanksgiving week, I’m just getting to it now.

Months after fighting to keep secret the emails exchanged between Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office and tech billionaire Elon Musk’s companies, state officials released nearly 1,400 pages to The Texas Newsroom.

The records, however, reveal little about the two men’s relationship or Musk’s influence over state government. In fact, all but about 200 of the pages are entirely blacked out.

Of those that were readable, many were either already public or provided minimal information. They included old incorporation records for Musk’s rocket company SpaceX, a couple of agendas for the governor’s committee on aerospace and aviation, emails regarding a state grant awarded to SpaceX and an application from a then-Musk employee to sit on a state commission.

One is an invitation to happy hour. Another is a reminder of the next SpaceX launch.

The documents were provided in response to a public records request by The Texas Newsroom, which asked Abbott’s office for communications with Musk and the businessman’s employees dating back to last fall. Abbott’s and Musk’s lawyers fought their release, arguing they would reveal trade secrets, potentially “intimate and embarrassing” exchanges or confidential legal and policymaking discussions.

Abbott’s spokesperson, Andrew Mahaleris, said the governor’s office “rigorously complies with the Texas Public Information Act and releases any responsive information that is determined to not be confidential or excepted from disclosure.”

Open government experts say the limited disclosure is emblematic of a larger transparency problem in Texas. They pointed to a 2015 state Supreme Court decision that allowed companies to oppose the release of records by arguing that they contain “competitively sensitive” information. The ruling, experts said, made it harder to obtain records documenting interactions between governments and private companies.

Tom Leatherbury, who directs the First Amendment Clinic at Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law, said companies took advantage of the ruling. Among the most prominent examples of the ruling’s effect on transparency was McAllen’s refusal to disclose how much money was spent to lure pop star Enrique Iglesias to the city for a concert. The city argued that such disclosures would hurt its ability to negotiate with artists for future performances. Eventually, it was revealed that Iglesias was paid nearly half a million dollars.

The problem has been exacerbated, Leatherbury added, by the fact that the Office of the Attorney General, which referees public records disputes, does not have the power to investigate whether the records that companies want to withhold actually contain trade secrets.

“Corporations are willing to assert that information is confidential, commercial information, and more governmental bodies are willing not to second-guess the company’s assertion,” Leatherbury said. (Leatherbury has performed pro bono legal work for The Texas Newsroom.)

[…]

Some records included a note that appeared to explain why. A note on page 401, for example, cited the exemption for competitive bidding records for 974 redacted pages. Names and emails of Musk’s employees were also removed.

“The fact that a governmental body can redact more than 1,000 pages of documents that are directly related to a major business’s activities in Texas is certainly problematic,” said Reid Pillifant, an attorney specializing in public records and media law. (Pillifant has represented a coalition of media outlets, including ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, in lawsuits seeking the release of public information related to the May 2022 mass shooting at an Uvalde elementary school.)

He and other experts said such hurdles are becoming more common as legislation and court decisions have weakened the state’s public records laws.

Four years after the 2015 Supreme Court decision, legislators passed a new law that was meant to ensure the release of basic information about government deals with private businesses. But open government experts said the law did not go far enough to restore transparency, adding that some local governments are still objecting to the release of contract information.

Moreover, lawmakers continue to add carve-outs to what qualifies as public information every legislative session. Just this year, for example, legislators added the following exceptions to public records and open meetings laws: information relating to how government entities detect and deter fraud and discussions during public government meetings about certain military and aerospace issues.

Even with the increasing challenges of accessing public records, Leatherbury and Pillifant were stumped by the governor’s decision to release thousands of pages only to black them out fully. Leatherbury said that the governor’s office may have wanted to show the volume of records responsive to the request.

“They wanted you to see what little you could get in the context of the entire document, even though that’s kind of meaningless,” he said.

The Texas Newsroom has asked the Office of the Attorney General to reconsider its decision and order the release of the Musk emails. There is little other recourse to challenge the outcome.

See here for the background. My best guess is that Abbott did it as a middle finger to those annoying newsies with their intrusive requests. It doesn’t sound like there are any good options going forward, but I’ll say this much: If Dems do manage to have the November of their dreams next year, then I would say one of the first things Governor Hinojosa/White/Bell/Cole/whoever should do is comply with this request in a more meaningful fashion. Assuming that Abbott and his minions haven’t scrubbed them all from the servers first.

Posted in Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Paxton files another peacocking lawsuit

He’s never going to stop.

Still a crook any way you look

Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing the Texas Department of Housing and Community Development, his second lawsuit in as many weeks that targets a state agency for practices he says discriminate against religious groups.

Organizations that receive state funds to help homeless people or support housing programs through the department are not permitted to engage in religious activities within those programs. Paxton argues this rule is unconstitutional and forces religious organizations to alter or abandon core elements of their faith.

“State agencies have no authority to force Christians and other religious organizations to censor their beliefs just to serve their communities,” Paxton said in a news release. “Constitutionally protected religious liberty must be upheld in Texas and across the country. These TDHCA’s provisions within certain programs, which deter funding from going towards churches and religious organizations, must be struck down.”

The housing department did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit.

Most of the affordable housing projects in Texas go through the Texas Department of Housing and Community Development. The agency also doles out state and federal funding to combat homelessness.

Some of the state agency’s programs include: the Emergency Solutions Grants Program; the Homeless Housing and Services Program; the Ending Homelessness Fund; the HOME American Rescue Plan; and the Housing Stability Services Program.

Paxton highlighted these and the Bootstrap Loan Program in his lawsuit because the rules say none of the money can “be used for sectarian or explicitly religious activities such as worship, religious instruction or proselytization.”

The lawsuit does not provide examples of where religious organizations were barred from receiving these dollars, nor does it name someone who was harmed by this rule.

Last week, Paxton filed a lawsuit against Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to put an end to three university work-study programs that he says unconstitutionally discriminate against religious students.

I didn’t pay much attention to that earlier lawsuit, and I can’t say what the legal merits of either of them are. But we’ve seen enough examples of this to know that the merits are not the reason for them. It’s all about the headlines, in pursuit of the primary campaign for Senate. Even without the brain drain at the AG’s office it would be hard to imagine how all of these cases could get properly handled. Ken Paxton, who has already moved onto the next shiny object lawsuit, knows that it won’t be his problem.

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December runoff early voting begins today

Time to vote again.

Early Vote Centers will be open from Monday, December 1 – Tuesday, December 9 (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 Saturday, December 13, Election Day.
The deadline to apply for a mail ballot is December 2. 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.

The following entities have contracted with the office to host their contests. Check your sample ballot to see if you fall within the boundaries for any of these entities.

  • City of Houston – Council Member, At-Large Position 4
  • Houston City College – Trustee, District II

The HCC runoff is between incumbent Renee Jefferson Patterson and candidate Kathy Lynch Gunter. Patterson missed winning outright by 127 votes, but close isn’t good enough, so here we are. Houston City Council At Large #4 I trust you’re familiar with.

My interview with Alejandra Salinas is here, my interview with Dwight Boykins is here, and my interview with Renee Jefferson Patterson is here. The runoff for CD18 is not a part of this election. It will take place on January 31, and that will happen regardless of what SCOTUS says about the new map. Vote now, and get ready to vote again soon.

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Weekend link dump for November 30

This Is All John Roberts’ Fault“.

“You need to be a true degenerate for Las Vegas to break your heart.”

“The Five Eyes national security alliance of the U.S., U.K., Canada, New Zealand, and Australia had been intimate and formidable for decades. Now the erratic policies of the Trump administration are threatening the bond.”

“In this year of immigration raids, child care providers have stepped up to keep families unified amid incredible uncertainty. Some are agreeing to be temporary guardians for kids should something happen to their parents. The workers themselves are also under threat — 1 in 5 child care workers are immigrant women, most of them Latinas, who are also having to prepare in case they are detained, particularly while children are in their care. Already, child care workers across the country have been detained and deported.” I am absolutely on fire with rage about this.

“The stories had the characteristic weirdness of articles written by a large language model—invented anecdotes from regular people who didn’t appear to exist accompanied by expert commentary from public figures who do, with some biographical details mangled, who are made to voice “quotes” that sound, broadly, like something they might say.”

“Colombian artists transform Pablo Escobar’s hippos and excesses into art”.

“What Even Is a ‘Box Office Flop’ Anymore?”

“Liberals really have been America’s strongest advocates for public education, and America’s public education system really is an incredible achievement. But if we want to keep it strong — if we want to make it stronger — then we need to see where we’ve gone wrong, and work quickly to right it.”

RIP, Jimmy Cliff, actor and musician whose best known songs include “Many Rivers to Cross,” “You Can Get It if You Really Want”, and “The Harder They Come”, which was the title track to the movie in which he also starred.

“But regardless of the specific merits or demerits of one local reporter’s story, none of those churches and none of those church-goers are safe now. And that’s the biggest religion story in the country.”

“On the surface, the Superbox media streaming devices for sale at retailers like BestBuy and Walmart may seem like a steal: They offer unlimited access to more than 2,200 pay-per-view and streaming services like Netflix, ESPN and Hulu, all for a one-time fee of around $400. But security experts warn these TV boxes require intrusive software that forces the user’s network to relay Internet traffic for others, traffic that is often tied to cybercrime activity such as advertising fraud and account takeovers.”

Fifteen years. Mazel tov and many more.

“As the tool started to reveal accounts’ information, the effect was like watching the Scooby Doo kids pull one disguise after another from the villain off the week. Improbably lonely and outgoing female American GI with an AI-generated profile picture? Apparently based in Vietnam. Horrified southern conservative female voters with surprising opinions about India-Pakistan relations? Based somewhere in South Asia. Scottish independence accounts? Weirdly, many appear to be based in Iran.”

“How urban farms can make cities more livable and help feed America”.

RIP, Viola Fletcher, oldest living survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

RIP, Gramma the Galapagos tortoise, oldest resident of the San Diego Zoo, estimated age 141 years old.

Still waiting for your Trump phone? You’re going to keep on waiting for it.

RIP, Alicia Chacón, El Paso trailblazer who was the first woman elected as El Paso County clerk, the first Mexican American woman on the El Paso City Council, the first woman elected El Paso County judge, and the first woman in the country to serve as a regional director of the Small Business Administration.

Time to submit your Golden Duke Award nominations.

“AI could be no menace at all to picture-book classics, but it could make high-quality contemporary board books go extinct.”

“A huge amount of the viral content about American politics and American news on social media is from sock puppet and bot accounts monetized by people in other countries. The rise of easy to use, free AI generative tools have supercharged this effort, and social media monetization programs have incentivized this effort and are almost entirely to blame. The current disinformation and slop phenomenon on the internet today makes the days of ‘Russian bot farms’ and ‘fake news pages from Cyprus’ seem quaint; the problem is now fully decentralized and distributed across the world and is almost entirely funded by social media companies themselves.”

No. I mean, come on.

RIP, Danny Seagren, Sesame Street puppeteer and the first live-action Spider-Man, on The Electric Company.

RIP, Fuzzy Zoeller, two-time major champion on the PGA tour, whose career was tainted by a racially insensitive joke about Tiger Woods.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | 1 Comment

On not endorsing Whitmire

This is going to make for a fun debate. And by “fun”, I mean the sort of thing that will make me want to gouge out an eyeball or two.

Mayor John Whitmire

The Harris County Democratic Party will vote on a resolution that would bar Houston Mayor John Whitmire from receiving the party’s endorsement on Dec. 14.

The resolution was advanced this week by the party’s Steering Committee, which voted 17–7 to send it to all Democratic precinct chairs for consideration. The measure was authored by Cameron “Coach Cam” Campbell, a precinct chair and member of the Houston Progressive Caucus, who said he drafted it earlier this year after Whitmire headlined a fundraiser for Republican U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw.

“That was the beginning of it,” Campbell said. “Every penny raised to support a Republican is a penny used to defeat a Democrat. It’s not ideological purity — it’s about what a good Democrat is.”

The resolution accuses the mayor of undermining the party by appearing at the Crenshaw event alongside Republican County Commissioner Tom Ramsey. The resolution cites Crenshaw’s past statements on diversity initiatives, Planned Parenthood and his response to the Jan. 6 attack; Ramsey’s vote against certifying the 2021 Harris County election; and Whitmire’s decision to attend the fundraiser despite Crenshaw being endorsed by the county GOP.

The resolution concludes that Whitmire’s “political behavior…undermines the values and mission of the Democratic Party,” and calls for denying him endorsement in all future elections.

Campbell said Whitmire’s relationship with local Democrats soured further after recent revelations about coordination between Houston police and federal immigration authorities. Campbell also said any pushback the resolution received in the party has mostly been from Democrats who feared being on the mayor’s “bad side.”

“You have to remind folks that he works for us. We don’t work for him,” Campbell said.

Harris County Democratic Party Chair Mike Doyle said the resolution has moved through the party’s standard multistep process. It first passed the Resolutions Committee, then the Steering Committee, and now moves to the County Executive Committee — the full body of roughly 590 precinct chairs.

That meeting will take place Dec. 14 at Baker Ripley House and is open to the public.

There are a number of reasons to not take action here, and a number of reasons to follow through. On the former:

1. It’s basically a moot point, since the HCDP would only endorse in a Dem-versus-Republican race, and Whitmire is highly unlikely to draw a sufficiently prominent Republican opponent who could either freeze out other substantive candidates or force him into a runoff. Indeed, the most likely scenario is that Whitmire draws a high profile Democratic opponent, in which case the HCDP would be barred from making any endorsement anyway.

2. Along the lines of the first item, Whitmire retains a significant amount of support among Democrats. He’s definitely lost some – we don’t know where he is on that right now, the most recent polling is months old and not useful at this time – but it would not surprise me if he has at least a plurality of Dems on his side. The point is that this will be a divisive vote, for no obvious gain.

3. The primary sin of headlining a fundraiser for Rep. Dan Crenshaw certainly rankles, but as we know with a lot of issues it’s not the position as much as the intensity of it. As in, while I doubt many Dems would approve of this, I don’t know how many of them care enough about it for them to change how they feel about Whitmire, and whether or not they support him. You know how polls regularly show that Texas’ abortion ban is unpopular in the state? That hasn’t won us a whole lot of elections, has it? That’s my point.

The case for action is simply that Whitmire, at least as Mayor, just does not embody Democratic values and he needs to hear that. More to the point, candidates and incumbents running for City Council need to hear it, because they will be more vulnerable to any anti-Whitmire backlash, especially in the Democratic Council districts, than Whitmire himself is. Whitmire still needs a majority on Council to pass stuff, and there are several Council members who support him that could feel some heat for it. There are also term-limited Council members who are generally supportive of Whitmire who could be succeeded by candidates who do not.

Or at least, Council members could be incentivized to push Whitmire on specific issues where he has fallen well short of expectations, like his cowardly capitulation on ICE. See the Chron endorsement of Alejandra Salinas for a clear example of the kind of response a repudiation of Whitmire could look like.

The fight inside the Democratic Party these days is not about “progressive” versus “centrist”. It’s about who’s willing and able to stand up to Donald Trump and his Republican enablers as they push hateful, anti-democratic, vengeful policies and seek to exert control over those they consider their enemies. We all know where John Whitmire stands in this fight. It’s his brand. No one should be surprised that a lot of Democrats aren’t happy about it.

One more point:

I guess these local Democrats haven’t heard that MAGA Gov. Greg Abbott is going to put a chunk of his $90 million war chest into Harris County.

And what, we’re going to miss out on millions of dollars in support from John Whitmire as a result? Like, one of the original complaints about Whitmire from people like me is that he’s been busy raising craptons of money but has never spent any of it in support of other Democrats. I’m not worried about what Governor Unpopular is going to do next year. If I had reason to worry about what Mayor Whitmire might or might not do, I’d have listed that as a reason to not take action above. But we all know what Whitmire is going to do in the 2026 election, and that’s nothing. Except raise more money for himself. Which is what he’s always done.

Posted in Local politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Drink that THC while you still can

The clock is ticking.

Houston saw a boom in drinks infused with THC over the past several years, with bars and restaurants seizing on the products as an alternative for people who don’t drink alcohol.

Now that trend might be at risk. As part of the package to reopen the federal government earlier this month, Congress included a provision that will ban the sale of hemp-derived products with more than 0.4 milligrams of THC per container, a threshold that almost all consumable hemp items exceed. It won’t go into effect until next November, but local businesses are already assessing their plans.

At the combination dispensary and coffee shops Wild and Grinder’s Coffee Bar, owner Adyson Howard said the new law could be devastating. After all, much of his business runs on drinks like CBD- and THC-infused coffees, plus “hemp elixirs” in flavors like Maui Mango and the citrusy Pink Loco.

“It would be terrible for us,” Howard said. “That’s what Wild and Grinder’s is. You know, we are Houston’s first cannabis coffee shop, and that’s our brand. That’s our identity.”

The national law also comes just after Texas’ multi-billion dollar hemp industry survived another existential threat over the summer: an attempt at the state level to ban their products.

[…]

“We don’t know what implementation is going to look like,” said Katharine Harris, a fellow in drug policy at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. “But it’s very difficult for me to imagine that the federal authorities will be willing to commit the amount of resources necessary to enforcement of this particular law in all 50 states.”

Further, Harris said, the new law will treat products with more than 0.4 milligrams of THC similarly to marijuana — which, though federally illegal, is a thriving industry in many states.

And with a year before the law goes into effect, Congress has time to change its mind. Houston business owners — Howard among them — are trying to use that time to lobby to their advantage.

“This 365-day pause, as we call it, isn’t a ban,” said Ben Meggs, CEO of the distillery-brewery-cannabis business 8th Wonder and its parent company Bayou City Hemp. “It’s a constructive pause to build fair, consistent regulations that protect consumers and responsible businesses alike.”

Meggs’ company provides many of the city’s bars and restaurants with their hemp-infused beverages, like a canned sweet tea with 5 milligrams of THC and the hemp-derived spirit Ocho Verde Agave. Now, Meggs said he’s working with legislators to introduce “legislation that is positive for low-dose drinks and edibles,” while still getting rid of what he terms bad actors.

He hopes altered legislation would regulate THC products like alcohol, without anything as extreme as a total ban.

See here for some background. None of this is for me, but I agree that it would be bad if this backdoor ban were allowed to take effect. You can hope all you want, but my advice would be to get informed about who supports or opposes what at the federal and state level, and work to elect more of the good guys and defeat more of the bad guys. That information is readily available – I’ll give you a hint, one of the biggest bad guys in the state has a name that rhymes with “Schman Schmatrick” – so get looking. There’s a lot at stake.

Posted in Food, glorious food, National news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Protection racket deadline passes

Still no word from UT.

Last month, the Trump administration gave the University of Texas at Austin and a handful of other universities until Nov. 21 to decide whether they would agree to a series of policy changes in exchange for preferential access to federal funding.

That deadline has now passed, and UT-Austin still hasn’t indicated publicly whether it will sign the agreement, even as other universities have rejected the administration’s offer.

UT-Austin and the White House did not respond Friday to inquiries about whether the university plans to accept, reject or seek revisions to the agreement.

The proposal, known as the “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” would require UT-Austin to define sex as male or female based on reproductive function, cap international enrollment at 15%, freeze tuition for five years and ensure that academic departments include a mix of ideological perspectives among their faculty and programs.

See here and here for the background. I got a brief look at this Statesman story before the paywall kicked in, and it may be the case that some clandestine negotiations are still going on. Hard to say, though a student activist group was celebrating the passing of the deadline with no agreement in place. This is one place where I’d excuse the “duck and cover and hope it goes away” strategy, if that’s what is happening here. Especially given that no other school took this crooked “deal:, let’s hope there’s no more news to be had on this subject.

Posted in National news, School days | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

San Antonio considers moving its elections to November

They should!

Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones

San Antonio Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones has asked City Council to move the city’s municipal elections from May to November, a move state lawmakers set the stage for earlier this year.

The change would save taxpayers $1 million, improve voter turnout and bring San Antonio in line with what many other local governments in Texas are doing, according to a letter Jones sent to council on Tuesday.

Texas lawmakers passed bipartisan legislation earlier this year allowing local governments to move their elections in odd-numbered years to November.

But individual city councils still need to vote in order to move their elections by Dec. 31, or they’ll miss out on the opportunity, absent additional legislation.

Not moving the elections would make San Antonio an outlier among the largest cities in Texas, Jones argued in her letter to council members. Houston and Austin already hold their municipal elections in November, and earlier this month, Dallas City Council voted to join them.

The mayor provided additional materials to council, including a commentary from political science professors Melissa Marschall with Rice University and Zoltan Hajnal with University of California in San Diego arguing that the busier November elections lead to better municipal turnout.

“Nationwide research also indicates that a move from May to November could double turnout, and numbers for Houston and the other Texas cities that hold November elections are in the same ballpark,” the researchers wrote, adding that holding multiple contests on the same ballot is more efficient, and often saves money for local governments.

Austin moved theirs, to November of even-numbered years, a few years ago. I do believe there’s no good reason not to do this, for the stated reasons. I hope San Antonio takes this chance to make the change. The Current has more.

Posted in Show Business for Ugly People | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Texas Association of Business leader sued for sexual harassment

Ugly stuff.

An unidentified woman accused Glenn Hamer, president and CEO of the Texas Association of Business, of sexually harassing and assaulting her before retaliating against her through his perch atop the powerful business group when she rejected his overtures, according to a lawsuit filed Monday in Travis County.

The woman, identified in her court filing as “Jane Doe,” was described on social media by her attorney, Tony Buzbee, as the founder and executive director of Texas Venture Alliance, an advocacy group for startups and entrepreneurs. She is seeking more than $10 million in damages.

The lawsuit alleges that Hamer pursued the woman using his status as head of the Texas Association of Business, or TAB, offering to help advance the woman’s advocacy group and connect her with important people. Hamer also serves as chairman of the Texas Venture Alliance, according to the group’s website, and the two organizations partnered in September 2024 to launch an initiative promoting entrepreneurship in Texas.

In a statement, TAB Board of Directors Chair Bill Jones said the organization was aware of the lawsuit and was putting Hamer on administrative leave “while it conducts a full internal investigation.” Jones added that Megan Mauro, TAB’s vice president and chief of staff, would serve as the group’s interim CEO.

In a 13-page filing, the unidentified woman’s lawyers cast Hamer as the latest in a long line of “unscrupulous men in power” who “have attempted to improperly use that power to coerce those with less power to get what they want.”

“In this matter, the prime perpetrator used his vaunted and respected status to engage in a sexual relationship with a much younger woman by offering incentives available to him by virtue of his position,” the lawsuit continues. “When she at some point refused his advances, he coerced, begged, harassed and ultimately assaulted her.”

Hamer did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

The legal filing also names TAB as a defendant, arguing that the group was “vicariously liable” for Hamer’s actions by allowing him to remain in his position as CEO despite “knowledge of his prior behavior and complaints,” and by failing to adopt policies to prevent such actions.

The Texas Association of Business is among Texas’ most influential business groups, serving as the state’s de facto chamber of commerce and routinely lobbying members of the Legislature on a wide array of business issues.

There’s more and the details are upsetting and gross, so read on at your discretion. Tony Buzbee had announced on Twitter that this lawsuit was being filed a couple of days before it happened, so I was waiting to see it. I don’t quite understand his process of withholding the woman’s identity but then giving more than enough information to easily identify her, but that’s where we are. I’m going to stick with that, however long it lasts. In the meantime, I hope this plaintiff is getting all the support she needs. This is unfortunately going to be a tough journey for her to take.

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Taking care of next summer’s campers

The Trib raises some important points.

Texas officials are requiring youth camps to have weather alert systems, mandated emergency preparedness plans, and various communication methods to help children and their families feel safe when they return this summer. But one thing is still missing from the state plan that some camp leaders say would ensure complete safety at all camps — initiatives to address the mental health of those returning to a place of tragedy.

After the devastating July 4 Hill Country floods that killed at least 137 people, including 27 campers and counselors at Camp Mystic, those who are expected to return to Texas camps this summer could be dealing with the fear of the water, extreme emotions during weather events, consistent nightmares, and more.

“After the flooding, we were hearing from parents and schools that when there was just a simple rainstorm, many of their kids were very, very distressed,” said Julie Kaplow, a licensed clinical psychologist and executive vice president of trauma and grief programs at Dallas-based The Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute.

One of the primary challenges in addressing the mental health needs of campers, staff and their families is that they are spread out across the state, only coming together during the summer. Resources have been poured into Texas Hill Country for flood victims, but for campers and their families who might live miles away, this does little to help.

Camp owners say this is why camps should be better prepared for their return.  

“I am in 100% support of engaging in the physical safety, but I think it has distracted a little bit from the importance of focusing on other aspects of wellness,” Brandon G. Briery, chief program officer at Centerpoint-based Camp Camp, said.

State lawmakers over the summer passed House Bill 1 and Senate Bill 1 requiring camps to address various safety measures including emergency preparedness plans and communication systems, but they gave no guidance to camps on how to serve the mental health needs of campers and staff.

Keli Rabon, a Houston mother whose sons survived the flood at Camp Junta, told lawmakers three weeks after the Hill Country flood during a committee hearing in Kerrville, that for her family the storm wasn’t over. She said her son scans every room for higher ground, checks the weather constantly and battles nightmares of water dripping from the ceiling, and she has been struggling to find the mental health resources to help him.

“I have asked the camp. I have asked FEMA. The answer is the same: ‘Sorry, we don’t know what to tell you. You are in Houston,’” Rabon said demanding that mental health care be a central, funded part of the state’s disaster response. “… I shouldn’t have to rely on a Facebook group of volunteers to find trauma care for my children.”

Attempts to contact Sens. Pete Flores of Pleasanton and Charles Perry of Lubbock who were committee chair and vice chair, of the flood investigation committee and authors and co-sponsors of SB 1 and HB 1 were not returned. Gov. Greg Abbott’s office forwarded questions about mental health resources for camps to Texas Health and Human Services, which did not respond.

Even before the flood, the mental wellness of campers and staff had been a growing concern for camp leaders. As youth mental health has declined across Texas and the country over the past six years, camp directors have reported multiple campers coming in with signs of anxiety and other mental illnesses, and staff — usually college students and young adults — with signs of depression and other more severe mental health problems.

This has led organizations like the American Camp Association, in collaboration with the Alliance for Camp Health and supported by the H.E. Butt Foundation, to create a six-hour mental wellness training program called CampWell to teach staff how to listen and regulate their emotions. This skill can be used for campers and themselves.

Briery, whose six-year term on the state’s Youth Camp Program Advisory Committee ended in August, said he and several others had been advocating for the state’s camp licensing board to consider adding higher-level training requirements for staff to address mental health concerns. He said a work group had been created around the topic and was supposed to convene after the summer camp season ended, but the July 4 flood put those plans on hold — right when it was needed most.

“While the physical safety of our camp community is what’s on everyone’s top of mind right now after the events of July, we have to look at the entire person’s safety, and that includes mental wellness,” Briery said.

I don’t have anything to add to this. I wish everyone involved all the best, and I truly hope the counselors and staff at all of Texas’ summer camps are prepared to handle everything their campers bring with them. It’s not going to be easy. It’s always cringe to start a sentence with “As the father of daughters”, but as the father of daughters, who also sent them to sleepaway camp (Camp Allen, for a couple of years), this whole story has broken my heart a million times. I have nothing but love, respect, and awe for the parents whose children did not come hom from camp this year. May they all find peace and comfort.

I don’t know why the Trib and Texas Monthly picked Tuesday to really punch us in the gut with these stories but they did. Texas Monthly visited with a couple of families who are now suing Camp Mystic. The Trib has this truly shattering story of a couple who lost both of their daughters, as well as two of the girls’ grandparents, in a vacation house they had bought a few years before. Take care when you read them, but do read them. We must never forget.

(You can also try to read this long story about what was happening at Camp Mystic during the flood, which was published by the Express News and ran recently in the Chron print edition, but it’s behind a paywall. There’s a lot of information about that tragedy that is still to be learned.)

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Thanksgiving video break: Age restrictions can’t stop me

You may notice something funny about the familiar video embedded below:

You’ll have to click the link to watch it on YouTube if you want that comforting ritual of “Alice’s Restaurant” this year. I’m sure someone has figured out a way to get around this, so maybe by next year I’ll be able to do so. In the meantime, I wonder if this is also age-restricted:

Okay then. Happy holidays to one and all. I’m thankful you’re here and that you’re less destructive to the furniture than that lot. Enjoy the day and the rest of the weekend.

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Redistricting plaintiffs ask SCOTUS to put the old map back in

As expected.

The original civil rights groups who challenged Texas’ new gerrymandered maps back in August of this year have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate a lower court ruling that would temporarily block the use of the redistricted map in the 2026 elections.

[…]

In asking the Supreme Court to reinstate the lower court’s ruling to block the use of the new map, civil groups such as the Mexican American Legislative Caucus and the Texas State Conference of the NAACP, argued once again that the new map is racially gerrymandered.

“The District Court documented a sequence of events that demonstrated the predominance of race in Texas’s 2025 redistricting process,” the civil rights groups wrote in the Monday filing.

“First, the U.S. Department of Justice directed the State, in a public letter to Governor Abbott, to dismantle four identified majority-minority Congressional districts based on their racial composition. In response, the Governor put redistricting on the agenda for the Legislature’s special session and pledged repeatedly in videotaped interviews that Texas would follow DOJ’s directive to ‘remove’ so-called coalition Congressional districts,” the brief outlines. “In doing so, they took a sledgehammer to the voting power of Black and Latino citizens in those districts.”

The groups also noted in their Monday brief that using the 2025 map would cause chaos, too.

“…even if Defendants were correct that using the 2021 map would cause some confusion, so would using the 2025 map,” the brief notes. “As discussed above, the 2025 map was enacted just three months ago, elections proceeded under the 2021 map just weeks ago, and uncertainty has abounded since the map was passed.”

The court will not make a final decision until the state of Texas responds to this latest court filing.

See here for the previous update. This response was due to SCOTUS on Monday; I can’t tell if there’s a deadline yet for the state to file its response, but my guess is that it would be no later than this coming Monday and might even be as soon as this evening. As noted, that filing deadline is fast approaching.

SCOTUSBlog adds some details.

The Trump administration filed a “friend of the court” brief supporting Texas and urging the justices to pause the lower court’s order. U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the court that the majority of the three-judge district court had “misconstrued” the Department of Justice letter “as having demanded that Texas redraw its map in order to racially gerrymander certain districts, even though the letter denounced racial gerrymandering and asked Texas to rectify racial gerrymanders in the prior map. The court then proceeded to treat any mention of DOJ by a state official as compelling evidence of racial predominance,” Sauer continued, “even though none of those officials said that they needed to engage in race-based redistricting to address DOJ’s concerns.”

In their filings, the challengers pushed back against the state’s suggestion that the Purcell principle required the Supreme Court to stay the three-judge district court’s decision. As one group of individual challengers emphasized, “the election is a year away. The candidate filing deadline for the spring primary is open for weeks yet, and the State submitted declaration testimony—affirmed live at trial—that the filing period could be extended for at least an additional week without causing any disruption.”

There is no reason to believe, another set of individual plaintiffs continued, “that conducting the 2026 elections under the same districts that have governed the last two congressional elections, on the same schedule that the elections would ordinarily have been conducted on, would cause any confusion.” Instead, they contended, the lower court’s order “simply reinstates the status quo: the legislatively-drawn 2021 district boundaries that have governed Texas congressional elections since 2022.”

Moreover, the Mexican American Legislative Caucus added, “[i]f Texas’s interpretation of Purcell were correct, States could insulate any redistricting plan—no matter how unconstitutional—simply by enacting it close to an election.”

The challengers also disputed the state’s argument that, under the Supreme Court’s redistricting cases, the lower court should have required them to offer their own alternative maps. Although such maps may be necessary when the plaintiffs can only muster “meager” direct evidence, the Texas NAACP acknowledged in its brief, the group insisted that the evidence in this case is far from “meager.” “In modern redistricting litigation,” the Texas NAACP wrote, “it is extremely rare, if not unprecedented, for plaintiffs to provide evidence that is so voluminous, diverse, pervasive, and unequivocal as the evidence adduced here.” “When the government officials say they’re doing racial gerrymandering,” one group of individual challengers said, “courts don’t need to sift through hypothetical maps to circumstantially assess their motivations.”

Turning to some of the other factors that the court considers in determining whether to temporarily block a lower court’s order, another set of individual plaintiffs contended that if the 2021 map is reinstated, Texas will not be permanently harmed “from the continued use of congressional districts that the Texas Legislature enacted just four years ago, that have been used for the past two federal elections, and that Texas has consistently defended in court as fair and constitutional.”

U.S. Reps. Alexander Green and Jasmine Crockett, both Democratic members of Congress from Texas,  argued that “[i]t is a foundational principle of constitutional law that the deprivation of protected rights—even for a single election cycle—constitutes irreparable injury.” And in this case, they wrote, it “would not be a theoretical injury. As the trial record reaffirms, many voters—especially in the targeted districts—face immediate loss of coalition representation, sharp declines in political power, and confusion about district boundaries and candidate pools.”

You can see all of the filings related to this administrative stay here; there are already a bunch of amicus briefs. Once SCOTUS has the state’s response they can issue a ruling any time.

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Endorsement watch: Salinas for the runoff

Sometimes the Chronicle makes an endorsement in a race where there may be a runoff and their preferred candidate doesn’t make the cut. They then get to have a do-over for the overtime period. That’s what happened in the Houston City Council At Large #4 runoff, and they made their selection of Alejandra Salinas.

Alejandra Salinas

How quickly politics can change.

Back in our endorsement for the general election, we noted that Alejandra Salinas had an impressive resume, robust grasp of municipal policy and a praiseworthy focus on the important issues that don’t always make headlines. However, we were concerned that she wouldn’t stand up to Mayor Whitmire where necessary. Too few on City Council do. So consider our pleasant surprise when, after the mayor clumsily admitted the city was cooperating with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after months of denials, Salinas released a brief yet powerful statement in response.

“This is wrong,” she wrote on social media. “I am profoundly disappointed in the lack of transparency by the administration. One of my relatives, a U.S. citizen, was wrongly detained by ICE. He is OK, but the unlawful actions of ICE are not. Our city should not enable wrongful actors.”

It was exactly the sort of political bravery we were looking for. We encourage Houstonians to vote for Alejandra Salinas in the runoff election for At-Large 4. Early voting is Dec. 1 – 9, and Election Day is Dec. 13.

Of course, she offers more than punchy social media posts. During our runoff endorsement meeting with the candidates, Salinas honed in on pressing legal questions about whether Houston police officers could be told to exercise discretion on enforcing non-criminal immigrant detainers.

Enforcing these sorts of civil warrants has typically not been the responsibility of local police, but the Trump administration is trying to change that. Legal experts point out that holding Houston residents based on these detainers could violate constitutional rights. Law enforcement leaders — Republicans and Democrats — have argued that forcing police to act like immigration agents wastes resources and undermines community trust.

Salinas was keenly aware of these problems and laid out how the City Council should address them.

[…]

Of course, as Salinas made clear throughout the meeting, she’d much rather work on the core issues of city governance: building and maintaining our infrastructure, drawing down more funding through state and federal grants and building political coalitions that unite our city. We also appreciate how she has taken on many of the road safety concerns prioritized by Jordan Thomas, who earned our endorsement in the general election. No doubt she would do an excellent job helping city leadership tackle the basics.

All Houstonians probably wish City Hall had the luxury of focusing solely on the basics right now.

If that were the case, this choice might be more difficult. Her opponent, Dwight Boykins, has twice been elected to City Council and is endorsed by a broad coalition of Democrats and Republicans. He is charming and friendly, and his background as a political lobbyist also brings useful skills. But despite his experience in office, we found his knowledge about issues and policies at City Hall to be wanting. Boykins was always a better fit for his old District D seat, where he could dedicate his efforts toward delivering for his constituents’ everyday needs.

Boykins represents an old status quo at City Hall, and anyone who wants to maintain it should vote for him.

But Salinas knows exactly what time it is.

And it is time for voters to elect her to City Council.

As noted, the Chron endorsed Jordan Thomas in the first round. He finished a very respectable third in November, with more than enough of the vote to have some influence on the runoff if he chooses to do so. I haven’t seen any official communications from him or his campaign about that so I don’t know where that might stand. The Chron’s star rating system had him as a four-star candidate when they endorsed for November, with Salinas at three and a half and Dwight Boykins at two and a half. For the runoff, they bumped Salinas up to four stars, presumably for the reasons they outlined in the piece. Those of you who have enjoyed the editorial page’s frequent admonitions of Mayor Whitmire for his sins will find this endorsement quite satisfying.

My interview with Alejandra Salinas is here and my interview with Dwight Boykins is here. I’ll take a look at the eight-day runoff reports when they come out. Early voting is almost upon us, so get ready for round two.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of November 24

The Texas Progressive Alliance has been tasting cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie for weeks now as it brings you this holiday-inflected roundup.

Off the Kuff had multiple posts about the redistricting ruling.

SocraticGadfly read about Joaquin Castro’s latest excuse for not running for statewide office and mocked him.

Neil at the Houston Democracy Project says with citations or even a couple of days in jail, Mayor Whitmire may be using police and the law to go after opponents and people in the way of his plans.

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

Franklin Strong celebrates the wins from the November school board elections.

The Barbed Wire notes how our two Senators had previously voted on releasing the Epstein files (spoiler: they both voted No).

Steve Vladeck breaks down the Trump administration’s “war on judges”.

Texas 2036 shows you what to expect from the 2026 Affordable Care Act marketplace.

Lise Olsen counts up the cost of targeting international students in Texas.

The Lone Star Project celebrates the redistricting ruling.

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