Paxton acquitted on all counts

Welp.

A crook any way you look

The Texas Senate on Saturday acquitted Attorney General Ken Paxton of 16 articles of impeachment alleging corruption and bribery, his most artful escape in a career spent courting controversy and skirting consequences of scandal.

No article received more than 14 of the required 21 votes to convict. Only two of 19 Republican Senators, Bob Nichols of Jacksonville and Kelly Hancock of North Richland Hills, voted in favor of convicting for any article — a stark contrast to the nearly 70% of House Republicans who impeached the attorney general in May.

Paxton, who attended just two days of the trial and was not present to witness his exoneration, was characteristically defiant.

“The sham impeachment coordinated by the Biden Administration with liberal House Speaker Dade Phelan and his kangaroo court has cost taxpayers millions of dollars, disrupted the work of the Office of Attorney General and left a dark and permanent stain on the Texas House,” Paxton said in a statement. “The weaponization of the impeachment process to settle political differences is not only wrong, it is immoral and corrupt.”

The dramatic votes capped a two-week trial where a parade of witnesses, including former senior officials under Paxton, testified that the attorney general had repeatedly abused his office by helping his friend, struggling Austin real estate investor Nate Paul, investigate and harass his enemies, delay foreclosure sales of his properties and obtain confidential records on the police investigating him. In return, House impeachment managers said Paul paid to renovate Paxton’s Austin home and helped him carry out ­and cover up an extramarital affair with a former Senate aide.

In the end, senators were unpersuaded.

“This should have never happened,” Sen. Bob Hall, R-Edgewood, told reporters outside the chamber. He criticized what he called a rushed and flawed investigation by the House.

The not guilty verdicts immediately restored Paxton to office, lifting the automatic suspension triggered by the House vote in May to impeach him. The votes sealed the failure of a risky gambit by House Republicans who began in secret in the spring to investigate, and then purge, a leader of their own party.

And they came after sustained pressure on senators from grassroots groups, conservative activists and the leader of the state Republican Party who vowed retribution at the ballot box if Paxton was convicted.

Paxton’s wife, Sen. Angela Paxton, R-McKinney, was on hand to witness his acquittal. Required to attend but barred from deliberating and voting because of her relationship with the accused, she listened stone-faced during the trial as multiple witnesses testified about the attorney general’s infidelity, exposing as a lie his 2018 declaration to his wife and senior aides that the affair was permanently over.

After the acquittal, she hugged her husband’s lead lawyer, Tony Buzbee, and shook hands with the defense team.

The Senate also voted 19-11 to dismiss the remaining four articles of impeachment that the chamber had agreed to set aside prior to the trial. Those articles dealt with Paxton’s long-running securities fraud case, which is expected to go to trial early next year.

Despite the victory, Paxton’s troubles are far from over. He faces trial on charges of securities fraud dating back to 2015.

I don’t even know what to say about this other than I don’t think we got nearly enough division on the GOP side out of this, but perhaps that remains to be seen. I’ll just move onto this related story about his remaining legal troubles, which will not have such a friendly and credulous jury deciding them.

[Paxton] still faces state securities fraud charges, a case that has stretched out for eight years and counting, starting with an indictment just months after he took office in 2015. The case has been delayed for years by pretrial disputes — including a back-and-forth battle over the trial venue that saw it moved to Houston from Collin County, which Paxton represented as a state lawmaker.

And Paxton has been under investigation by the FBI since October 2020, although no charges have been filed.

[…]

Federal law experts and former prosecutors contacted by The Texas Tribune say the impeachment result isn’t likely to alter the course of Paxton’s securities fraud case. As far as the FBI investigation, they said, witness testimony in the impeachment hearings could help federal officials evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of their case.

In the state case, Paxton faces two counts of securities fraud, a first-degree felony that carries a punishment of up to 99 years in prison, stemming from his 2011 efforts to solicit investors in Servergy Inc. without disclosing that the McKinney tech company was paying him to promote its stock. Paxton also faces one count of failing to register with state securities regulators, a third-degree felony with a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison.

Sandra Guerra Thompson, a former New York City prosecutor who teaches criminal law at the University of Houston Law Center, said Paxton’s victory in the impeachment trial likely means his state criminal case will continue on its present trajectory.

“The same motivation to try to delay [the case] would continue from his perspective, and the prosecutors would have the same motivations to move forward,” she said. “It’s very perilous for a public official to have charges like that against them. Because even if you get them reduced to a misdemeanor, they’re still crimes of moral turpitude. So it’s problematic.”

A conviction, she said, would have made a plea agreement more likely because prosecutors would have less urgency to take the case to trial in an effort to remove him from office.

Last month in a Houston courtroom before a new judge, defense lawyers and prosecutors agreed to return Oct. 6 to deal with pending motions and set a trial date.

“At some point, it has to come to an end,” special prosecutor Brian Wice told reporters afterward. “I think today was the first step in a journey of a thousand miles to make sure that justice ultimately comes to be.”

One can only hope. There’s also that State Bar of Texas complaint, which could result in sanctions up to and including disbarment, but nothing criminal and nothing that would disqualify him from office. The next hearing in that case was supposed to have started this past Monday but was put on hold for obvious reasons. I expect we’ll get a new court date soon, maybe for before the state securities fraud trial in October, more likely I think for after.

I’m not going to ruin the rest of my Saturday with hot takes. I’m going to watch a little football, and we have Dynamo tickets for the evening. I will note two things before I close. One was this prediction from Republican consultant and data guy Derek Ryan, who suggested that if there wasn’t 21 votes to convict some number of Republican Senators would likely flip back to acquittal, a prediction that appears to have been borne out in the aftermath. And two, there may yet be some real lingering division that could yet have political implications down the line.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick broke his personal silence Saturday on Attorney General Ken Paxton’s impeachment after the Senate voted for acquittal, blasting the House’s impeachment process as deeply flawed.

“The speaker and his team rammed through the first impeachment of a statewide official in Texas in over 100 years while paying no attention to the precedent that the House set in every other impeachment before,” Patrick said from the dais after the verdict was finalized.

House Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, fired back, saying Patrick ended the trial by “confessing his bias and placing his contempt for the people’s House on full display.”

Patrick was the presiding officer of the trial — effectively the judge — and his feelings on the matter were the subject of much speculation. While he got praise for how he handled certain aspects, like the trial rules, he also drew scrutiny for accepting $3 million from a pro-Paxton group in late June.

[…]

Patrick also called for a state constitutional amendment reforming the impeachment process. He proposed that all House testimony should be given under oath and subject to cross examination, adding that an impeached official “should not be put on unpaid leave” while awaiting trial.

Patrick also said “millions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted on this impeachment” and called for a “full audit” of the House’s spending on it.

Phelan responded with a statement that was just as hostile, saying Patrick “attacked the House for standing up against corruption.”

“His tirade disrespects the Constitutional impeachment process afforded to us by the founders of this great state,” Phelan said. “The inescapable conclusion is that today’s outcome appears to have been orchestrated from the start, cheating the people of Texas of justice.”

There is no love lost between Patrick and House Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, who have previously battled over policy issues. But Patrick’s speech represented a new escalation in their feud and came after he withheld his personal opinion on the impeachment for months, trying to show he was taking the trial seriously.

And shame on anyone who believed that he was. I’m just going to say to Dade Phelan and any other Republican member of the House that Dan Patrick just completely slimed, the answer to this problem, no matter where you are and what you’re doing in two years’ time, is to vigorously support and campaign for an opponent to Dan Patrick in 2026. And yes, that includes whoever his Democratic opponent is, because we both know he’ll glide through the primary. Either that, or just accept all the shit that he’s going to dump on you and concede that he’s correct to do so. Which option do you prefer?

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Yes, let’s plant more trees

Good to see.

Some of Houston’s most vulnerable neighborhoods could soon see new shade trees and better parks.

Driving the news: The Houston Endowment granted $8 million to Trees for Houston and the Houston Parks Board to help increase access to parks across the city and plant trees in places where they’re sorely needed.

  • $4 million is going to each organization to “supercharge” their work, Lisa Hall, vice president of program strategy at the Houston Endowment, said in a blog post.

How it works: The Houston Parks Board will use the funds to focus on small park projects, per the blog post. Previous grants from the endowment went toward bigger, signature parks like Buffalo Bayou.

  • Plus, a significant part of the grant is the inclusion of Trees for Houston, a decades-old organization that plants trees in parks and neighborhoods across the city.

Why it matters: Houston is home to several heat islands, where heat-absorbing surfaces and structures contribute to higher temperatures.

I’m lucky enough to live in a neighborhood with a lot of trees, and the only way I was able to walk my dog during the day this summer was to stick to routes with lots of shade. That was bearable even on the hundred-degree-plus days. One of the reasons I heard during this miserable time for why it stayed so damn hot during the night was that the streets absorbed so much sunlight and heat during the day that they never really cooled down overnight, which had a corresponding effect on the city as a whole. Trees, and the shade they generate, is an answer for that. So yes, more trees. They’re good for lots of reasons.

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Time for your next COVID shot

I’m ready.

Pfizer via AP

The U.S. approved updated COVID-19 vaccines Monday, hoping to rev up protection against the latest coronavirus strains and blunt any surge this fall and winter.

The Food and Drug Administration decision opens the newest shots from Moderna and Pfizer and its partner BioNTech to most Americans even if they’ve never had a coronavirus vaccination. It’s part of a shift to treat fall updates of the COVID-19 vaccine much like getting a yearly flu shot.

There’s still another step: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must sign off. A CDC advisory panel is set to issue recommendations Tuesday on who most needs the updated shots. Vaccinations could begin later this week, and both the COVID-19 and flu shot can be given at the same visit.

COVID-19 hospitalizations have been rising since late summer although –- thanks to some lasting immunity from prior vaccinations and infections –- not nearly as much as this time last year.

But protection wanes over time and the coronavirus continually churns out new variants that can dodge prior immunity. It’s been a year since the last time the vaccines were tweaked.

[…]

The newest shots target an omicron variant named XBB.1.5. That specific strain is no longer dominant but it’s close enough to coronavirus strains causing most COVID-19 illnesses today that FDA determined it would offer good cross-protection.

These newest shots replace combination vaccines that mixed protection against the original coronavirus strain and even older omicron variants. Like earlier versions, they’re expected to be most protective against severe illness, hospitalization and death, rather than mild infection.

And on Tuesday the CDC officially recommended that “everyone 6 months and older get an updated COVID-19 vaccine”. Your Local Epidemiologist has some recommendations for when you should get your next shot, based on when you got your previous one and/or when you were last infected. We got ours pretty early on last time and haven’t had any infections since then, so I’m thinking we’ll probably get on it in the next couple of weeks. Don’t want to rush in too quickly because you want the max protection you can get going into winter, but you also don’t want to wait so long that you catch it in the interim. Cases are on the rise and most people aren’t up to date on their shots, so calculate your risk carefully. CNN has more.

Posted in National news, Technology, science, and math | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

Impeachment trial update: The Senate’s long weekend

Closing arguments have been made.

A crook any way you look

The prosecution and defense made their closing arguments Friday morning in the impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton, telling wildly contrasting tales of the eight days of witness testimony.

The House impeachment managers insisted that they proved their claims of bribery and corruption, arguing that the jury of 30 senators had no choice but to convict.

“Unlike the public servants here today, he has no regard for the principles of honor and integrity,” said impeachment manager Rep. Andrew Murr, R-Junction. “He has betrayed us and the people of Texas, and if he is given the opportunity he will continue to abuse the power given to him.”

Paxton’s team said the prosecution’s case was full of holes, circumstantial evidence and misdirection. And they framed Paxton as the victim of a “witch hunt” orchestrated by Texas House leadership, “the Bush dynasty” and insubordinate former deputies-turned-whistleblowers in his office.

Acquittal was the only logical response, they said.

“All of this foolishness that they’ve accused this man of is false,” said Paxton’s attorney, Tony Buzbee. “The question I have in my mind is whether there is … courage in this room to vote the way you know the evidence requires. I think there is. I hope there is. I pray there is.”

The House case centers on Paxton’s relationship with Austin real estate investor Nate Paul, his friend and political donor. The prosecution alleges that Paxton repeatedly abused his office to help Paul investigate his enemies, delay foreclosure sales of his properties, gain the upper hand in a lawsuit with a charity and obtain confidential files on the police investigating him.

The closing arguments ended a nine-day trial during which the House called 13 witnesses and the defense called four. The case is now in the hands of senators. Conviction on any of the 16 articles of impeachment would permanently remove Paxton from office.

See here for the previous update, and read on for the substance of the closing arguments. I’m not about to make any guesses about what might happen. Just remember that one conviction, on any of the counts, means that Paxton is out as AG. A separate vote would be taken to determine if he would be allowed to run for state office again.

As to when we might get an answer to that, the answer is probably soon.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told senators before they left the floor to deliberate on the 16 impeachment articles against suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton that they can return at any time, with at least 30-minutes notice, to vote on each article.

Unless they’re ready to vote, they must deliberate until at least 8 p.m. tonight but can go longer if they want, Patrick said.

If more time is needed, they must return at 9 a.m. Saturday and deliberate until at least 8 p.m. A Sunday session would start at noon through at least 8 p.m., Patrick said.

If senators are not ready to vote by then, Patrick said he could decide to sequester them in the Capitol.

I had originally thought that the Senate might want to adjourn for the weekend to think it over on their own, but that ain’t happening. It’s possible I’ll have to add an update to this later tonight or tomorrow morning if they finish things off. Otherwise, they get to have a lot of together time. Stay tuned.

UPDATE: Indeed, the Senate will be back to deliberate more today. They may already be there by the time you read this.

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Once again with the residency question

Every election, without fail.

Robin Williams, a police officer in Missouri City, was 16 months into her long-shot bid to become Houston’s next mayor when city officials made a discovery that threatened to suddenly end her campaign: She did not actually live in the city.

On her application to run for mayor, Williams listed the address of her home near the South Belt, even though it is just outside city limits. The city, which requires candidates to be registered voters in the city and to live there for a year before the election, rejected her application.

Williams claimed she had made a mistake, and two days later she filed another ballot application, this one asserting she lived at a separate home inside the city that she does not own. But her voter registration still was tied to her home outside Houston, so she still ran afoul of the first requirement. The city rejected her ballot application again, and the deadline to file a new ballot application passed.

Soon after, Williams filed a third and final application, this time to run as a write-in candidate. She will appear that way on the ballot when Houston voters head to the polls in November to elect a new mayor.

Williams is one of seven candidates running for elected positions at City Hall whose ties to properties outside Houston cast doubt about whether they live in the city they seek to represent. They include a former City Council member, a pastor who made a runoff against an incumbent in 2019 and a top executive in the city controller’s office.

When candidates file to run for office in Houston, city attorneys verify that the address they list as their permanent home is in Houston and inside the district they are running in. They verify the candidate is registered to vote in the city, and they ensure the candidate has checked a box swearing to have not been convicted of a felony. Eight candidates, including Williams, were rejected this year based on those checks.

The city does not do any further investigation beyond those initial checks. And in Williams’ case, they allowed her to continue filing new applications.

The Chronicle obtained every candidate’s ballot application in a records request, and then reviewed property and court records, voter registrations, business licenses and other publicly available documents to see which candidates have ties to addresses that could cast doubt about their residency. The review found six more candidates with conflicting documents.

All seven will appear on the ballot, in part because residency requirements have been loosely enforced by Texas courts for years. As long as candidates have ties to a Houston address and can claim they intend to live there, the courts have ruled that they satisfy the requirement.

That ambiguity creates enough wiggle room for some to skirt the spirit of the law, renting apartments or owning property inside city limits while continuing to actually live in the suburbs.

Other candidates include MJ Khan, Willie Davis, Donnell Cooper, Conchita Reyes, and Shannan Nobles. Khan’s residency was questioned back when he was a Council member, and typically nothing came of it. I’ve railed about this sort of thing plenty of times in the past, mostly about city offices since I want city elected office to be limited to people who have actual skin in the game, but I have accepted the fact that all I’m doing is banging my head against a wall. The state laws are lax and loosely interpreted as noted – if ten percent of the attention now paid to “voter fraud” was paid instead to where candidates and elected officials actually live, the landscape would be quite different – and the simple fact is that wealthy people can buy a second house or rent an apartment so as to comply with the letter of the law. It is what it is. I appreciate what the Chron is doing here because the only viable avenue for those who care about this is to know whose residency may be in question. You can do with that information whatever you want, I just want you to have it. So there you are.

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Endorsement watch: For Fair For Houston

The Chron endorses the other city ballot proposition, the Fair For Houston item.

Floodwaters, as we know, don’t care about arbitrary county lines. Neither do homeowners having to muck out their living rooms because politicians can’t work out a fair regional plan to balance development with downstream flooding risks.

But somebody’s got to care about these vital issues and how they affect individual communities as well as the sweeping swath of 13 counties whose fates are intertwined by nature’s whim and public policy. That’s why the Houston-Galveston Area Council exists. You may not have heard of it, or its acronym H-GAC, but the regional planning body has considerable influence in many issues that affect our daily lives.

Trouble is, the influence of those of us who live in Houston and Harris County — by far the most populous jurisdictions represented on the council — hasn’t kept pace with our growth — or our shifting priorities.

Consider that, after Hurricane Harvey, H-GAC approved a plan that designated just 2 percent of $488 million in federal funds to the city of Houston. In another ordeal, the council’s transportation committee OK’d an I-45 highway expansion plan over the concerns of Houston and Harris County and it took a lawsuit and months of bitter back-and-forth with the TxDOT to work out a compromise.

It’s clear that Houston and Harris County need more representation on the council and on the eight-county transportation policy committee, where Houston has just three of 28 votes. Yet, when H-GAC agreed to reconsider the voting structure back in 2021, the council, against the urging of Houston and Harris County leadership, ultimately decided to keep the status quo.

They don’t get the last word, though. Houston voters do, thanks to a scrappy grassroots campaign that has put fairness and regional governance on the ballot in November.

Proposition B, a charter amendment, would require Houston’s representatives on the board to either get H-GAC to renegotiate the voting structure to make it more proportional for everyone involved or leave the organization, an option that pretty much all parties agree isn’t desirable and at least some feel isn’t likely, either.

“At the core of our push is that we really believe in democracy and we want to empower our elected officials,” said Ally Smither, communications director with the Yes on Prop B campaign.

All of this may seem wonky or like petty squabbling over a few contentious decisions but the truth is that as the region shifts, the very question of how it should grow is at stake. Does endless highway expansion serve us well? Has development led to downstream flooding? What kinds of walkable infrastructure projects deserve funding? Sure, the bulk of what H-GAC does is workforce training but these sorts of planning decisions are critical to our future and this proposition gives the city important leverage to have a real say in that future.

See here for previous related blogging. The Chron is now all in on the city of Houston ballot items. This endorsement is a pretty good overview of the issue, so read the whole thing. If you have any specific questions you’d like me to ask when I interview someone from Fair For Houston, leave it in the comments.

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Interview with CM Letitia Plummer

CM Letitia Plummer

As noted yesterday, there are two At Large Council members running for re-election. CM Letitia Plummer is the incumbent in At Large #4, where she has focused on police reform, Houston’s food deserts, and the need for apartment inspectors. She is a graduate of Spelman College and the Baylor College of Dentistry, and has her own dental practice in Pearland. She is also the first Muslim woman elected to Houston City Council and was previously a candidate for Congress in 2018 – you can listen to the interview I did with her for that here. Here’s the interview I did with her for this year:

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez
Tarsha Jackson
Leah Wolfthal
Melanie Miles
Abbie Kamin
Sallie Alcorn

This week was (mostly) At Large Council candidates, and next week will be more of the same with At Large #2 as the main focus. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Judge Hidalgo to return to work October 2

Glad to hear her recovery is going well.

Judge Lina Hidalgo

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo is extending her leave of absence for treatment of her clinical depression until Oct. 2, her office announced Thursday.

Hidalgo will be discharged Saturday from the out-of-state, inpatient mental health facility she has been at since late July and transition to outpatient care, her office said. Neither Hidalgo nor her office has identified the facility or the state.

In a letter accompanying her office’s statement, Hidalgo said she feels a lot better after a month-and-a-half of treatment, but the process has taken longer than expected.

“My initial treatment plan had me returning to my regular schedule in September, but my discharge date was moved back, which moves back the re-acclimatization period,” Hidalgo wrote. “The way my doctors explained re-acclimatization to me is that you would not go from heart surgery straight to running a marathon, in the same way that they do not want me to go straight back to my usual schedule.”

Hidalgo wrote that she will continue to be in contact with her office and the Harris County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management while she continues treatment.

[…]

Hidalgo will not return before the Sept. 19 budget meeting and has no plans to attend it virtually, spokesman Brandon Marshall said Thursday.

Her absence means if Precinct 3 Commissioner Tom Ramsey, a Republican, skips the meeting, the court will be unable to pass its proposed property tax rate because state law requires at least four of the court’s five members to be present to set a tax rate. Any delay presumably would be short-lived because the deadline for setting the tax rate is the end of October, by which time Hidalgo will have returned.

See here for the background. The Court has functioned fine in her absence, and if she returns on the schedule indicated, then there really isn’t any opportunity for quorum shenanigans. I’m glad to hear she’s doing well and wish her all the best.

I’m sure the timing of this announcement had something to do with that absolute piece of shit “op-ed” from whiny loser A**x M****r that for some unfathomable reason the Chron decided they needed to run. You can find it yourself, they’ve been pimping it shamelessly on their homepage and editorial page. I have no idea why the editorial board continues to be enthralled by this loser – does she have pictures of them doing unspeakable things to a Jose Altuve bobblehead or something? I’m going to say something I’ll regret later if I continue so I’ll just end it here.

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Impeachment trial update: The prosecution rests

Apparently, Wednesday was a bit chaotic.

A crook any way you look

The House impeachment managers rested their case against Ken Paxton on Wednesday amid a dramatic day that centered around questions of whether the attorney general’s paramour would take the stand and an abandoned effort to force a vote for an early verdict.

Paxton’s lawyers sought to cast doubt on a key prosecution claim that Nate Paul, the attorney general’s friend and donor at the center of the trial, paid to renovate the Austin home owned by the attorney general and his wife.

And the prosecution bungled its attempt to call the woman Paxton allegedly had an affair with, a crucial witness that could have helped prove the second element of the House’s bribery claim. Another impeachment article alleges Paul employed the woman in return for Paxton abusing the power of his office to help Paul harass and investigate his perceived enemies.

The House impeachment attorneys were racing against the clock Wednesday. At the start of the day, the prosecution had five hours and 17 minutes remaining to present their case, while Paxton’ side had almost double that.

Around 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, toward the end of the seventh day of the trial, House lawyer Rusty Hardin announced the managers would rest. But he quickly realized he made the announcement too soon, cutting off further questioning of the current witness by either side. Paxton defense lawyer Tony Buzbee said he was fine with that and instead of beginning to present the defense’s case, he motioned for a directed verdict, a request for a dismissal of the articles of impeachment for lack of evidence.

That set off a kerfuffle as jurors realized the seriousness of what Buzbee was seeking. They met behind closed doors for about 45 minutes to consider the request.

When they returned, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, the presiding officer of the trial, announced Paxton’s lawyers had withdrawn their motions for the dismissal and the trial would proceed with the defense’s witnesses.

See here for the previous update. The Witness That Was Promised was Laura Olson, the alleged now-former girlfriend of Ken Paxton.

Laura Olson, the woman with whom Paxton allegedly had an affair, did not take the stand Wednesday afternoon after she planned to plead the Fifth Amendment, two sources with knowledge of the situation confirmed to Hearst Newspapers.

The Fifth Amendment allows people the right to not self-incriminate. In a civil trial, witnesses can be called to testify even if the court knows they will do so only planning to plead the Fifth. Civil juries are allowed to consider this adversely against them. But the same can’t be used in a criminal trial.

Last week, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, when ruling on whether Paxton could be compelled to testify, likened the proceedings to a criminal trial.

After about a 20-minute, unscheduled hearing Wednesday, Patrick, who is presiding as judge over the Senate trial, said from the dais that Olson was present but had been “deemed unavailable to testify.”

After some senators seemed to question the decision aloud, Patrick said attorneys on both sides had “agreed” on the matter. Dressed in white with a red overcoat and an oversized Balenciaga-brand bag, Olson was then seen leaving the Capitol.

Olson is central to the House managers’ case against Paxton because they have alleged that Paul hired Olson as a favor to Paxton so he could see her more easily. In exchange, they allege, Paxton used his office to do favors for Paul.

I don’t know what to make of that, and so far no further explanations have been forthcoming. I will hope that the gossip mill does its job and someone runs a story about what really went down in the near future. In the meantime, the defense called its first witness yesterday, some impeachment expert, which sounds kind of boring but whatever. The defense may wrap up today or Monday, there will be some time for rebuttals and I assume closing arguments, and it sounds like the “jurors” will get handed this little hot potato early next week. Stay tuned. The Statesman and WFAA have more.

UPDATE: And the defense rests.

Ken Paxton’s defense team rested their case Thursday evening after a full day of testimony in which they attacked several of the 16 impeachment articles and downplayed the suspended attorney general’s conduct as merely a part of his duties.

The prosecution and defense will present closing arguments beginning at 9 a.m. Friday, after which the rules call for senators to deliberate in private before emerging to cast votes on each of 16 articles of impeachment.

Support from 21 senators — two-thirds of those eligible — is required to permanently remove Paxton from office on any article. If an article is sustained, a separate vote would be held on whether to ban Paxton from again serving in state elected office.

Each side was given 24 hours to present their cases, and Paxton’s attorneys began Thursday with more than eight and a half hours remaining — compared with just over two and a half hours for the House impeachment managers. Over the course of the trial’s nearly two weeks, Paxton was accused of going to great and illegal lengths to help his friend and donor, real estate investor Nate Paul, despite repeated warnings from top deputies in his office who later reported him to the FBI for bribery. Meanwhile, Paxton’s lawyers focused most of their time and energy on questioning prosecution witnesses.

On Thursday, they used their remaining time to call four current agency executives who defended Paxton from claims that he had abused his office to the detriment of the state and Texans.

We may get verdicts sooner than I thought, but if I were going to place a bet, it would be on the Senators deciding to mull it over until Monday. We’ll see.

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Dispatches from Dallas, September 15 edition

This is a weekly feature produced by my friend Ginger. Let us know what you think.

This week, in news from Dallas-Fort Worth, we have a grab bag of stories. Ken Paxton is keeping his pension no matter how the Senate votes; DPD oversight reform; local crime statistics; a day at DFW airport; a TCU student’s murder inspires public safety improvements in Fort Worth; G.W. Bush on PEPFAR in the Washington Post; Dallasites hit by a scam over water bills; unintended consequences of a statewide food truck law hit Dallas County; Coffee City in East Texas and its cop shop shut down; the Texas Rangers (law enforcement) and their supporters have come after a Dallas author; improvements at Fair Park; and some very lucky dogs.

This week’s post was brought to you by the music of Windham Hill Records, which is about what you need when you’ve spent two days having the old insulation sucked out of your attic and the new insulation blown in. That’s super loud, and Windham Hill is nice and quiet.

Without further ado, let’s jump into this week’s news.

  • The DMN tells us that Ken Paxton won’t lose his pension even if he’s impeached because the laws and regulations around state pensions are super complicated. Also, as I’m getting a feel for the Star-Telegram’s mostly Republican opinion columnists, I think I’ve found the Never Trumper: You want a smoking gun? A hush money receipt? This is as close as it gets in Paxton trial. It’s complicated but I agree it’s not that complicated.
  • Bad timing: with the big bond package coming next year that includes $200 million in housing bonds, the city’s Directors of Housing and Planning are both quitting by the end of the month. DMN story; Dallas Observer story. The planning director is moving out of the city; the housing director is going to work for HUD.
  • Here’s a piece on police oversight reform in Dallas from the DMN. They’re interested in how their reports on misconduct revealed that DPD’s internal affairs isn’t living up to federal standards; what I found interesting is that former chief Renee Hall is one of the pro-reform activists mentioned in the article.
  • In actual non-police crime, the Dallas Observer tells us that the good news is that violent crime is down here but murder is up. As someone who lived through the “if it bleeds, it leads” coverage of Houston’s murders in the 80s, when there was a murder or two every day on local news, the numbers I see on local news still sound low. Related news from KERA tells us that violent crime is common in older apartment complexes in Dallas, which I don’t know about but certainly jibes with my experience as an apartment dweller, then a homeowner, in Houston.
  • It’s the 50th anniversary of DFW Airport and here’s a puff piece on what 24 hours at the airport is like. In a nod to our crime coverage, though, here’s recent news about car theft at DFW, which is on pace to almost double last year’s numbers and something like triple the numbers from 2019.
  • Also on the crime beat, here’s an opinion piece by Fort Worth mayor Mattie Parker on the steps the city and county are taking following the murder of TCU student Wes Smith in the 7th Street entertainment district. We were in Fort Worth visiting the Kimbell for its big Maya exhibit over Labor Day weekend and overheard some college students talking about the murder at a restaurant near the school. This is clearly a big-deal case for the school population and I’m not surprised it’s generating a response from local leaders.
  • Local ex-president George W. Bush doesn’t sound off much about politics these days, but he wrote, or at least assembled, this Washington Post opinion piece on renewing funding for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). I generally have no use for Bush, but PEPFAR was an important achievement, and I’m glad he’s speaking up for it. Also, I always appreciate Republican calls for bipartisanship that support legislation for helping folks out, even if the only Republicans who make them any more are lame-duck or retired.
  • Dallas County has reported 19 human West Nile cases this year.
  • September 15 is Democracy Day and the Star-Telegram has an opinion for it: Want a better democracy? Quit asking us to vote so dang much. On the one hand, he’s not wrong that it’s a lot of work to keep up with what and who is on the ballot, and that November elections are better attended than May elections. On the other hand, celebrating Democracy Day by asking for less of it is a choice.
  • Upsetting news for area bigots: D-FW companies stick by DEI programs despite culture wars that have smeared efforts: Three quarters of surveyed Dallas-Fort Worth companies have metrics and goals attached to their DEI initiatives. I hope the usual angry suspects bust a blood vessel on reading this news.
  • Meanwhile, speaking of local loudmouths who have said unfortunate things, we have a couple of items. Jerry Jones was named in Jim Trotter’s discrimination and retaliation lawsuit against the NFL, which is bad in a week when people should be talking about the Cowboys’ victory over the Giants. Meanwhile, Southlake-Carroll ISD has a couple of big talkers letting it all hang out on Twitter; these two gentlemen are developing a business academy for the district and their tweets may derail them. As a local activist tweeted, “Will Southlake Carroll’s Business Academy allow girls?” You could ask the same question about gay students, Black students, students who mask, and a whole host of other kids.
  • Chad Green a McKinney ISD trustee, has announced a campaign for District 12 of the State Board of Education. I’m in District 9, so I won’t be voting against him, but anyone who says he’s a “conservative fighter who will lead with innovation” is not my candidate.
  • There’s disconnection phone scam targeted at Dallas Water Utilities customers going around this summer. We haven’t gotten this call but I’ve seen the warnings on their web site when I paid our bill. Stay safe and wary about weird phone calls, friends!
  • Department of Mistakes Have Consequences: Dallas County Commissioners approved a 5% raise for everybody in their next budget except for 13 officials in the juvenile department. They may get theirs after the state completes its ongoing (discussed in these posts previously) investigation into the detention center. I understand John Wiley Price’s objection to exempting specific people from raises, but I also see why Price lost the vote.
  • Department of Unintended Consequences: HB 2878 went into effect on September 1. It’s a law sponsored by a Southlake representative to fix things in Tarrant County so food trucks can get a county permit instead of multiple city permits. Sounds great, right? But while it was written narrowly for Tarrant County, it also applies to Dallas County and they didn’t know they were on the hook until the end of last month. Like the DMN, I’m not sorry about the improvement but I do wish Dallas County had known, or been informed, they might start issuing these permits when the law was under consideration.
  • Here’s a sad story about a North Texas family split by the January 6 insurrection. Dad participated and one of the kids turned him in; the piece is about how the family navigated the situation.
  • Two articles about coastal mitigation presented without commentary to my Gulf Coast friends. First, the BBC has a piece on Babcock Ranch: Florida’s first hurricane-proof town. Second, NPR reports that San Francisco considers lifting the Ferry Building by 7 feet to save it from the sea.
  • Y’all may be more up to date in Houston than I am on this story because it’s KHOU original reporting, but Coffee City in East Texas has deactivated its police department and fired the chief after KHOU’s investigation. Apparently the town has 250 people, the police chief had hired the department up to 50, and a lot of them were cops that had trouble in previous police jobs. Coffee City is on Lake Palestine, so about an hour and a half from me, so I consider it within my remit.
  • As the heat dies down from this summer, here are a couple of news items relevant to our ongoing struggle with climate change. The BBC has a piece on How Texas is racing to thwart the heat which covers work in Austin and San Antonio. We all need more heat mitigation strategies because it’s only getting hotter. And The 19th reports on how Extreme heat is linked to higher risk of life-threatening delivery complications for pregnant people, which is doubly relevant in Texas considering our maternal mortality statistics were terrible even before Dobbs.
  • The DMN’s Watchdog columnist has a piece on how the Texas Rangers compiled a dossier and an enemies list over a 2020 book on the Rangers that detailed some of their nastier history. (This is the law enforcement agency, not the baseball team.) The book’s author is a former DMN journalist and used a FOIA request to get the dossier. A millionaire business supporter also hired a PR firm to go after the author. It’s a pretty ugly story. As someone who almost went into history as a profession at the university level, I learned enough to know that arguments about this kind of history are actually arguments about current politics. So in that spirit, I offer links both to the book’s wikipedia page and its publisher page on the grounds that a book like Cult of Glory that people really don’t want you to read should go on your TBR list.
  • Here’s an update on plans for Fair Park including a new three-story parking garage on site and a new park for the locals. The parking situation at Fair Park has been ghastly since I started going to North Texas Irish Festival back in the early 00s, and it’s worse every year as I get less able to walk in from the distant lots. I hope the management is right and the garage will improve the situation, and I hope the park is a good thing for the local residents.
  • There are going to be 31 new foods and drinks at the State Fair this year. Don’t read this article before you eat, or maybe do and you’ll have worked up an appetite. I’ll take a raspberry chipotle jalapeño popper grilled cheese and some fried surf and turf, please and thank you!
  • Last but not least, let’s end on a feel-good story about a pup who survived a fire when her humans’ home was struck by lightning. The house was a total loss, but all three of the family dogs made it: two by escaping and the third was found alive in the debris.
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Interview with CM Sallie Alcorn

CM Sallie Alcorn

There are three open At Large Council seats this year, which means there are two incumbents running for re-election. Council Member Sallie Alcorn is the incumbent in At Large #5, serving as the chair of the Regulatory and Neighborhood Affairs Committee. She was twice a Chief of Staff before getting elected herself, most recently to CM Stephen Costello, and also worked in the city’s flood recovery office. I could give you more things that she’s done but it’s probably better for you to just read her City Council bio because she’s done a lot and there’s only so much space here. She’s been a board member of the Houston-Galveston Area Council (H-GAC) and is set to serve as its Chair, so you can be sure we talked about the Fair for Houston issue. Here’s the interview I did with her in 2019, and here’s the interview I did with her now:

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez
Tarsha Jackson
Leah Wolfthal
Melanie Miles
Abbie Kamin

This week is (mostly) At Large Council candidates, starting with At Large #1 but not limited to that. At Large #2 will be next week. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

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Connecting Buffalo Bayou Park and Memorial Park

I approve of this.

Two popular Houston parks may finally be bridged together after Harris County Precinct 4 unveiled a $13.5 million Buffalo Bayou Greenway Connector project to join the recreation areas.

Harris County Commissioner Lesley Briones announced $170 million for 32 infrastructure projects in the county. Memorial Park and Buffalo Bayou Parks were to selected for what the precinct says will help “improve access to parks and close critical connectivity gaps.”

“High-quality infrastructure is critical to our quality of life and safety, and is at the heart of thriving communities,” Briones said. “I am committed to getting more done for the people of Harris County by being proactive about collaboration. Through these strategic partnerships, we will be able to deliver more — and better — projects across Precinct 4, and this collaboration will help us build a brighter, more resilient future for our children.”

Over the next year, 11 projects will begin moving through the final design, permitting and construction process, according to a news release. All projects are anticipated to break ground in 2024.

These projects “will bridge essential gaps in the Bayou Greenways system and improve accessibility and community connections for thousands,” said Beth White, president and CEO of Houston Parks Board.

For Houstonians, traveling between the two parks, especially for walkers and bicyclists, is difficult. To get from Buffalo Bayou Park to Memorial Park, walkers and bicyclists would have to travel more than a mile for each destination.

Joe Cutrufo, executive director of BikeHouston, worked to bring awareness to the obstacles of traveling between the parks for bicyclists. BikeHouston even petitioned for the trail to be funded.

“This gap between Buffalo Bayou Park and Memorial Park is one that we hear about all the time and one that we’ve been pushing to fill for some time now,” he said. “There’s a greenway in Buffalo Bayou Park at the very western edge of Buffalo Bayou Park just past Shepherd Drive … there’s a 5-foot sidewalk all the way to Memorial Park.”

Cutrufo said if the trail is completed, the pathway would become among the most popular trails in the city, “There are only a handful of ways to enter the park and even fewer ways to get there safely on a bike. So, connecting Memorial Park and Buffalo Bayou Park, with a safe and comfortable trail, is going to help a lot of people.”

This is part of a larger infrastructure investment called “Places 4 People”, about which you can read more here. The Buffalo Bayou and its trails and parks are just a true gem for the city, and connecting it like this to Memorial Park is fantastic. Kudos to Commissioner Briones for driving this. And what a huge change it is to have multiple Commissioners who remember that Harris County also includes the city of Houston. I for one can’t imagine Steve Radack ever doing this.

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More on the HISD District of Innovation pursuit

Some good stuff from the Chron.

Houston ISD took the first step Thursday in the process to be a District of Innovation, a move that would allow it to seek exemptions to several state laws.

To become a DOI, an HISD committee must draft an innovation plan that outlines the specific exemption the district plans to seek, and then both the District Advisory Committee and school board must approve of the plan and any future amendments. A total of 965 out of the roughly 1,000 traditional school districts are DOIs

There is no comprehensive list of all the state laws that DOIs can seek exemption from, but districts most commonly seek exceptions to laws mandating that the school year start on the fourth Monday of August, teacher certifications, probationary contracts for new teachers, class size limits and minimum months of service for educator contracts, according to the Texas Education Agency.

“As long as it is not prohibited by either statute or rule, districts can include it in their plan,” TEA spokesperson Jake Kobersky said.

The 10 largest DOIs in the Houston-area have all approved the same two exemptions to state laws regulating teacher certification and the start of the school year. Beyond that, several of those DOIs, such as Katy ISD and Fort Bend, have approved additional exemptions to other education-related state laws.

State-appointed superintendent Mike Miles has said he wants HISD to seek the designation so the district can start the school year earlier and increase the number of class days from 172 to at least 180.

He declined to say which, if any, further exemptions he was interested in having the district pursue, except he indicated during a press conference Thursday that he was not in favor of getting a broad exemption to limits on class sizes.

“I don’t want to get ahead of the board and I don’t want to get ahead of the planning committee, but I can tell you this, my encouragement to any planning committee or DAC or the board is ‘Do things that make sense for kids and will help kids excel and exceed,’” Miles said. “Generally speaking, really large class sizes (don’t) help.”

HISD is holding its first meeting regarding the District of Innovation process at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Hattie Mae White Educational Support Center.

See here for some background. I will say again, a large majority of school districts have received this designation, so whatever else one might say about it, it’s not some weird trick. It’s common enough that one thinks the Lege ought to revisit some of the laws that are most often bypassed via this usage. Be that as it may, there are useful and reasonable things a school district might do with the DOI designation. There’s also a complete lack of trust in what Mike Miles may want to do with it, which is a whole ‘nother thing.

I’ve talked about the lack of trust in Mike Miles quite a bit. I will admit that much of it is my own perception, both of how he has gone about his business and the clear response we have all seen to it. I got some more evidence of this in my email this week, from a District Advisory Committee member who reached out to me to share a letter sent to HISD teachers to ask for their feedback on this, and a sample of the feedback that was received. To put it mildly, there’s a lot of skepticism about this plan. I invite you to look that over and see for yourself. You can feel however you want about Mike Miles and his plans and the reaction to them. What is increasingly clear is that a lot of people don’t trust him, and he doesn’t seem to be bothered at all by that. I will say again, I believe that situation is unsustainable. How long it can last, we’ll see. Oh, and that meeting is for today, so go attend or watch online if you can.

On a side note, the Chron also solicited some feedback from teachers and parents about the first week of school, and as above the responses are overwhelmingly negative. I didn’t note this before because the format isn’t conducive to excerpting, so go read it for yourself. Again, maybe this is just a very vocal minority, and maybe the results will be so good that none of this will matter eventually, but from where I sit right now it’s hard for me to see how this all has a truly happy ending, and more to the point I don’t think it had to be this way. But here we are.

UPDATE: From today’s Chron:

The new state-appointed leaders governing Houston ISD will soon choose new members for an advisory committee that will play a key role as Superintendent Mike Miles pursues District of Innovation status for the school system.

Miles can appoint an unlimited number of people and each of the nine board members can appoint two people to serve on the District Advisory Committee, a group whose approval is necessary for HISD to become a District of Innovation, according to a district spokesperson. HISD has not yet released names of the new members.

On Wednesday evening, some members of the advisory committee received an email from Kari Feinberg, the HISD chief of staff and new facilitator of the committee, informing them that their role has been terminated.

“As is customary, the School Board and Superintendent will announce appointments to the District Advisory Committee to bring new voices and perspectives to the table,” Feinberg wrote in the email. “Your appointment to the DAC has now ended effective immediately, and we thank you for the time, energy and insight you have provided so far.”

[…]

While she understands that new board members typically get to pick their own appointees, [ousted member Karina] Quesada said she believes that the removal of committee members appointed by elected officials strips away another layer of accountability and community representation.

“That was a way for the community to still have a voice,” she said. “These people are not elected…We didn’t have a say in that, and now we’re certainly not going to have a say on who represents the community to protect us.”

Meanwhile, Heather Golden, an HISD parent who was appointed by District V Trustee Sue Deigaard in January, says she has been asked to stay on the committee as one of Miles’ appointees.

It was not immediately clear how many appointed committee members have been asked to remain on the committee. Golden said she does not know why Miles appointed her but accepted the offer to stay on the committee out of a sense of obligation to Deigaard.

Golden said she vocally supported the plan for a District of Innovation when the proposal came before the committee several years ago. She liked that the plan would move up the first day of school and provide more time for instruction, both reasons that Miles has given for seeking the status.

Now, however, Golden said she will not commit to voting one way or another for Miles’ plan until she sees the details.

“The devil will be in the details of what he proposes, and I do not intend on being a rubber stamp,” Golden said. “If it’s not done well, I’m going to have a hard time voting for it. If it’s done well, then sure.”

Bradley Wray, a teacher at Deady Middle School who joined the committee earlier this year, called the replacement of the appointed members “disappointing.” He remains on the committee as an elected member.

“It’s the last bit of democracy where we have a bit of power over HISD,” Wray said. “Especially with the big District of Innovation vote coming up potentially, we should have people who somewhat represent the voters of Houston.”

Wray is the one who sent that email I noted above, per the story. This is indeed about evading oversight. If the District Of Innovation designation is a good idea – and as I have said, it clearly has merit and is a normal thing for districts to do – then it should be possible to get it passed on those merits. This is such a bad look.

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Texas blog roundup for the week of September 11

The Texas Progressive Alliance wishes a happy start of the football season to those who celebrate (and peace and football-free weekends to those who don’t) as it brings you this week’s roundup.

Continue reading

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Interview with CM Abbie Kamin

CM Abbie Kamin

We take a brief diversion from the At Large races today to have a conversation with Council Member Abbie Kamin, the incumbent in District C. A civil rights attorney who served the Associate Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League’s Southwest Regional Office and served on the Mayor’s Commission Against Gun Violence prior to her election, CM Kamin now chairs the Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee and is Vice Chair of the Quality of Life Committee. She proposed an amendment to the current budget that will allow for the creation of the first comprehensive dashboard in the country that integrates all available firearm injury data into one place. You can listen to the interview I did with her for the 2019 runoff here, and you can listen to this election’s interview right here:

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez
Tarsha Jackson
Leah Wolfthal
Melanie Miles

This week is (mostly) At Large Council candidates, starting with At Large #1 but not limited to that. At Large #2 will be next week. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Impeachment trial, Week 2: This could actually be the end

They’re on the clock.

A crook any way you look

The clock is quite literally running down on the impeachment trial of suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick on Monday morning told the Texas Senate — which is serving as the jury — that the historic trial could wrap up by the end of this week.

The prosecution and the defense were each given 24 hours to present their case and cross examine witnesses.

By the close of Monday — the fifth day of the trial — attorneys for the House impeachment managers who are prosecuting the case against Paxton had around 9.5 hours left, while Paxton’s defense lawyers had a little more than 12 hours.

The prosecution used more than 40% of its time on just four witnesses called in the first week: Jeff Mateer, Ryan Bangert, Ryan Vassar and David Maxwell, who were among the top deputies in the attorney general’s office who reported their boss to the FBI.

In total, eight witnesses have been called by the prosecution. Paxton’s lawyers have yet to call their own witness, and have used their time on cross examination. But it’s appearing unlikely either side will make a significant dent in the list of nearly 150 witnesses subpoenaed, according to a report published by the Dallas Morning News.

If both sides keep their current pace, it could pose problems for the House prosecutors who have less time left than Paxton as of Tuesday morning. They could find themselves unable to cross examine the defense’s witnesses if they run out of time.

“I want to be very clear that one side or the other could have more time left that the other side could not respond to,” Patrick warned both sides Monday. “Those are the rules that both sides proposed and agreed to its up to you to strategize and manage your time properly.”

Yet while the impeachment trial has been unprecedented in many ways, the use of time limits is not unique, particularly in civil trials. Often, judges do not want to waste jurors’ time and time limits can reduce court costs.

Sam Sparks, a federal judge based in Austin, often sets time limits for civil trials in his courtroom, using a chess clock to keep track of each side.

Nonetheless, the time limits are weighing heavily on the minds of the attorneys involved in the case and are driving strategies on both sides.

As the story notes, the chief strategy of the defense is to raise a bunch of objections while prosecutors are questioning their witnesses, thus eating into their allotted time. I feel like there should be the equivalent of “stoppage time” for them to compensate, but this is Dan Patrick’s show. We’ll see how it goes.

Meanwhile, the star witness for Tuesday was Brandon Cammack.

A junior lawyer testifying at Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial said Tuesday that he kept Paxton informed through encrypted communications of every step he took in launching a criminal investigation into law enforcement officials at the behest of one of the attorney general’s wealthy donors.

[…]

That lawyer, Brandon Cammack, told the jury of state senators who could decide Paxton’s political fate within days that he consulted with the attorney general about how to proceed. Cammack also said he kept Paxton apprised as he obtained a series of grand jury subpoenas with guidance from the developer’s lawyer.

“I did everything at his supervision,” Cammack said of Paxton.

[…]

Cammack testified Tuesday that he met several times with Paxton, Paul and Paul’s lawyer about Cammack’s investigation, and regularly forwarded Paxton information Paul’s lawyer was sending him about whom to target with grand jury subpoenas. Cammack said Paxton used the encrypted email service Proton Mail for these communications and that the attorney general told him to communicate over encrypted messaging service Signal.

Cammack said he learned that Paxton had a different official email address when he saw it copied on an email from one of Paxton’s deputies ordering Cammack to stop his investigation.

In 2020, Cammack was five years out of law school and had a modest criminal defense practice in Houston. He testified that Paxton hired him at the recommendation of Paul’s lawyer, whom he said he knew socially. Cammack recalled that as he was being hired Paxton told him he would “need to have some guts” for the investigation Paxton had in mind. He said he was exited to be working for Texas’ top lawyer and impressed after the attorney general took him to watch a news conference. “It was cool,” Cammack said.

It didn’t stay cool.

Brandon Cammack, the Houston attorney that Ken Paxton hired to investigate Nate Paul’s adversaries, testified that Paul’s lawyer provided him with a list of people to subpoena and that, after he received two cease and desist letters, he was told by the Attorney General’s Office that he’d have to “eat” a $14,000 invoice for his work.

Cammack’s testimony outlined the direct role that Paul’s lawyer, Michael Wynne, played in the attempts to investigate Paul’s adversaries in September 2020. Wynne, Cammack said, insisted that he be with Cammack as he issued subpoenas for phone and other records to some of Paul’s adversaries.

At one point, Cammack said he spoke with the spouse of a deceased clerk for the court that issued the search warrants for Paul’s businesses. He said Wynne and Paul suggested that the clerk had potentially died from “foul play” — insinuating that she was the victim of the same cabal that they claimed was targeting Paul.

Cammack said he became increasingly concerned that he was being misled about why he had been hired after he was visited by U.S. marshals, and felt like he’d “gotten the rug pulled out from me.”

He was asked to drive at the last minute from Houston to Austin for a meeting at Paul’s home. Paxton was there wearing running shorts, but spent most of the time talking on the phone outside. Cammack said he received little new information about what was expected of him, why U.S. marshals had contacted him or why he hadn’t been paid yet.

Later, Cammack said he was again called from Houston to Austin for a meeting with Paxton and Brent Webster, who played a direct role in firing whistleblowers who reported Paxton to the FBI. The two took him to a Starbucks for a 15-minute meeting during which Cammack said Paxton barely spoke. He said Webster told him that his contract was “not any good,” that he would need to “eat” the $14,000 in work he’d done and that the two almost left him without giving him a ride back to his car.

“It was offensive,” he said.

Cammack also lamented Paxton’s decision to involve him in the Paul matter, saying his name was dragged through the mud, that it hurt him professionally and that the only thing he received in return were two cease and desist letters.

“I had a whole entire life before all of this,” he said.

Kind of poignant, actually, and a reminder that one should endeavor to treat one’s co-conspirators well, lest they turn state’s evidence against you. The full impeachment archives are here and the Brandon Cammack archives are here, and the Chron has its own Cammack coverage.

One more thing, from Monday:

Attorney General Ken Paxton’s former chief of staff testified Monday afternoon that she repeatedly warned him that his participation in a secret extramarital affair was harming staff morale and could be “ethically, legally and morally challenging.”

The alleged affair is central to the impeachment trial of the now-suspended attorney general, whose political fate will be decided by the state Senate as soon as this week. Paxton is accused of accepting bribes from real estate developer Nate Paul, his friend and campaign donor. Prosecutors in the case say those favors from Paul included employing the woman with whom Paxton was involved.

“I told General Paxton quite bluntly that it wasn’t my business who he was sleeping with,” said Katherine “Missy” Cary, describing a 2019 meeting with the politician, “but that when things boiled over into the office and into the state work, that it became my business.”

Cary said she had concerns about the use of state resources to support and conceal Paxton’s affair. In response, she said, Paxton became angry, “red in the face” and at one point raised his voice loud enough for staff to hear through the closed office door. Then he stormed out of the room, she said.

Cary, the first woman to serve as chief of staff in the Office of the Attorney General, is the first witness during the impeachment trial who was not among the whistleblowers that reported Paxton to the FBI for bribery and abuse of office in 2020. They claimed Paxton abused the power of his office to help Paul thwart an ongoing federal investigation of his businesses.

[…]

Cary said Paxton’s travel aides and security detail complained to her throughout the spring and summer of 2018 that they were working strange or excessive hours because of Paxton’s affair.

At times, Paxton’s wife, Angela, would call the office to ask about her husband’s location or schedule. Staffers were uncomfortable answering, Cary said.

Cary decided to confront Paxton for the first time that summer. She said she told Paxton that the affair could “open one up to bribery, misuse of office, misuse of state time.”

In the fall of 2018, Paxton hosted a meeting at his campaign headquarters with his wife and staffers from both his office and his campaign, Cary said. There, he admitted to the affair and apologized.

Angela Paxton, who was elected to the state Senate in 2018, was crying, and Cary said her “heart broke for her.” Afterward, she said, “I thought this type of behavior was out of his life for good.”

Cary said she later learned that wasn’t the case, which led her to confront him again in the summer of 2019.

I must have a heart of stone, because it remains intact. Angela Paxton has chosen her course, so I will keep my sympathies in reserve. If the so-called “Christians” who fervently back Ken Paxton had any reason to feel uncomfortable about that, Ms. Cary’s testimony should have been the time for it. Ain’t gonna happen, but there is is anyway.

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The fight over abortion access in New Mexico

Great story from the AP.

The sanctuary in Grace Covenant Reformed Church was packed.

People stood shoulder to shoulder wherever they could — near the stained glass windows depicting scenes from the Bible, behind the neatly lined rows of chairs that serve as pews, against a wall covered in crosses made from painted wood, wire, glass and ceramic red chiles.

Bibles and hymnals rested under every seat, but they weren’t used that Monday night last September. There was no sermon, because this wasn’t a church service.

Residents of Clovis, a town of some 40,000 people a mere 20-minute drive to the Texas state line, crammed into this little brick building that night to discuss a plan of action to ban abortion.

Just three months earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court had issued its ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson, overturning Roe v. Wade, the landmark case that had legalized abortion in the U.S. for almost 50 years.

As trigger laws banning the procedure began going into effect across the nation — in places including neighboring Texas — abortion providers took up residence in New Mexico, which has some of the most permissive abortion laws in the U.S.

“As the laws in this country change before our very eyes,” Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said on the day Roe was reversed, “I will continue to fight for the right to a safe, legal abortion in New Mexico and stand as a brick wall against those who seek to punish women and their doctors just because they seek the care they need and deserve.”

In the year since Dobbs, New Mexico has been a brick wall and a safe haven — for those who provide abortions and those who desire or need them.

But it’s also become something else: a new battleground in the fight over access to abortion in this country, with smaller towns and bigger cities — and American versus American — warring against one another.

“We gained a lot of ground with the overturning of Roe v. Wade, but now it’s at the state level,” said Logan Brown, a science teacher from Portales, New Mexico, who helped organize the September church gathering. He’s a self-proclaimed abortion abolitionist, intent on outlawing abortion at all stages, for any reason.

“Now,” Brown said, “instead of one battlefield, it’s 50 battlefields.”

[…]

Post-Roe, 57% of Planned Parenthood patients in New Mexico are from Texas, according to the agency, with others coming from Oklahoma, Arizona and elsewhere.

“This was not by accident,” Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains said in an emailed statement. “Home-grown reproductive justice groups have been organizing on the ground for decades to ensure New Mexico maintains the right to self-determination.”

Despite those efforts, the sudden and massive increase in abortion-seekers was not something New Mexico was necessarily prepared for, said Dr. Eve Espey, chair of the OB-GYN department at the University of New Mexico.

When the need for abortion care first began increasing, clinics adjusted scheduling and staffing, expanded telehealth capabilities, and extended hours, Espey said. This was helpful in accommodating not only clinical care but mental health concerns and logistical issues like helping patients with transportation, child care and funding.

“I think we can handle the numbers that are coming in, but we know that we’re seeing the tip of the iceberg,” Espey said. “We know that we’re only seeing the patients who have the means or who have the health literacy, who have connections, internet skills and all of the things that are required to come sometimes 14 hours.”

[…]

New Mexico is typically described as a blue state and, at all levels of government right now, it is. Since 2019, Democrats have held the governor’s office and led the state House and Senate. The state attorney general and secretary of state are Democrats, too.

The population centers of Albuquerque, Santa Fe and Las Cruces are dominated by Democratic voters. But head east, to towns like Clovis, Hobbs, Roswell and others, and the ideological balance shifts.

“It’s much more Republican,” said Timothy Krebs, a University of New Mexico political science professor. “You’ve got cattle ranchers, you’ve got farming, you’ve got oil and gas, and then you’ve got proximity to Texas, which I think influences things.”

See here, here, and here for some general background. The story, which has a dateline of Clovis, NM, also focuses on the efforts of Texas-based fanatic Mark Lee Dickson to get smaller towns in New Mexico to declare themselves “abortion sanctuary cities” – see here and here for more on that foolishness. I drafted this before the story about trying to make it illegal to drive to places like New Mexico for the purposes of getting an abortion, but there was a lot of news and you know how these things go.

It’s important to remember that while New Mexico is a neighbor of ours, our population centers and theirs are still a long way away. We just drove back from a couple of days in Santa Fe, and it was 14 hours on the road, over two days, with the shortest stops for gas, food, and the bathroom that we could manage. You can cross the state line into Louisiana and pull right into a casino parking lot, but it’s different with New Mexico. Albuquerque is 289 miles west of Amarillo and 322 miles northwest of Lubbock, per Google Maps. Anyone going to New Mexico for abortion care is not making a day trip out of it.

Also, too, the roads to New Mexico pass through a bunch of red rural towns, where the same fanatics at work in New Mexico are trying to criminalize driving through their towns for the purpose of getting an abortion. (I’ll talk about that in a separate post.) This is of course completely unconstitutional, in the same way that criminalizing driving through one’s town to gamble at a Louisiana casino would be, but go tell that to SCOTUS.

Finally, as a reminder, while NM is pleasingly blue now, things can and do change. Their previous Governor was a Republican. George W. Bush carried the state in 2000. Nothing is guaranteed. The goals remain getting a national abortion access law on the books and turning Texas blue. Anything less leaves us where we are, with even that much in the balance. Now go read the rest of the story.

Posted in National news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Interview with Melanie Miles

Melanie Miles

Continuing on in At Large #1 we have Melanie Miles, a board-certified family law attorney and member of the Harris County Sheriff’s Civil Service Commission. Miles has a degree in computer information systems and worked as a systems engineer for EDS and owned a consulting company of her own before going to law school. She was a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority in college where she became friends with someone named Kamala Harris. I didn’t ask about that in the interview but I did ask about other things, and you can hear it all here. Please note there was a brief WiFi issue that affected the audio during the call, but we got that cleared up.

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez
Tarsha Jackson
Leah Wolfthal

This week is At Large Council candidates, starting with At Large #1 but not limited to that. At Large #2 will be next week. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 9 Comments

The lawsuit over the omnibus voter suppression law has begun

Settle in, this will take awhile.

Two years after voting rights groups challenged Texas Republicans’ sweeping overhaul of its voting and election laws, the case comes to trial Monday in a federal court in San Antonio. The lengthy roster of plaintiffs will argue certain provisions of the new law made it harder for voters of color to cast ballots, with some alleging the effect was intentional.

More than 20 state and national organizations brought a collective five lawsuits against the law, often referred to as Senate Bill 1, that have been consolidated into this case. The groups claim several provisions of the law violate federal laws including the Voting Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act and the First, 14th, and 15th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution.

The trial is expected to go until late October, and U.S. District Judge Xavier Rodriguez may not issue a decision until months later. Experts say it’s unclear and too soon to tell whether a decision will come in time to affect elections and voting in 2024, especially since appeals could draw the process out.

Republicans rammed the law through in 2021, with Democrats accusing them of legislating in response to baseless and unsupported allegations of nonexistent voter fraud. Ever since, election observers have closely monitored the effects of the law’s changes to how Texans vote and how election officials administer elections.

“These rules have gotten so incredibly complicated, that now [voters] almost need a lawyer to understand what you can and cannot do,” said Nina Perales, the vice president of litigation at the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and a lead attorney representing plaintiffs La Union del Pueblo Entero and the Southwest Voter Registration Project.

For example, she said, it’s now illegal for a person who assists voters to receive or accept compensation. That’s the sort of work nonprofit advocacy groups have done for several years, especially for the elderly and people with disabilities.

“Some people don’t speak English. Some people can’t read or write. We have a lot of elderly in our community, people with disabilities, too. It is not true that every voter has somebody in their house with them, who can help them navigate the process. Some people turn to community resources for that,” Perales said.

Among the provisions the plaintiffs are challenging:

  • One that prohibits election officials from distributing mail-in ballot applications to voters who did not request them. The provision came in response to an effort in Harris County, the state’s most populous, to expand voting access during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, when election officials sent out absentee ballot applications to voters who were eligible to use them.
  • A ban on 24-hour and drive-thru voting. Harris County also provided those voting options during early voting in 2020. Republicans challenged drive-thru voting unsuccessfully at the time, and later banned it as part of SB 1.
  • A ban on mail-in ballot drop boxes. In 2020, Gov. Greg Abbott originally limited their use to only one location in each county. SB 1 subsequently banned them entirely.
  • New requirements for anyone who provides transportation to more than seven voters. These drivers must submit their personal information and authorization for providing such transportation to the government.
  • Provisions restricting providing assistance to voters casting a ballot at the polls and completing absentee ballots. Those providing assistance at the polls must fill out a form with an oath affirming the voter is qualified to receive help. Those helping voters with their absentee ballot must provide information about their relationship to the voter and whether they are being paid.
  • The elimination of an employer’s obligation to let employees take time off to vote.
  • Provisions that expand poll watchers’ access. The law limits election workers’ ability to remove those poll watchers “who intimidate voters or otherwise interfere with the voting counting processes,” the lawsuit says.

[…]

Last year, a provision restricting assistance at the polls for voters with disabilities and limited English language proficiency was permanently blocked in a separate lawsuit after a judge found it violated the Voting Rights Act. That provision is now no longer in effect and thus, won’t be part of this trial.

The law also added ballot security requirements to the election administration process in the state, including a mandate for elections administrators in counties with a population of more than 100,000 people to provide 24-hour video surveillance of any area of the election office that contains voted ballots, including the room where the votes are counted on election night. Taxpayers in those counties footed the bill for costs associated with the new rules. This provision isn’t being challenged in court.

See here and here for more on the parts of the law that have already been blocked, and here for the previous update, in which the lawsuit mostly survived a motion to dismiss. That was last August, to give you some idea of the speed with which this stuff tends to move.

I am reluctantly skeptical about this lawsuit. I agree with the goals and that everything they’re contesting in this law is nasty and heinous and rooted in racism, I’m just not at all convinced that the plaintiffs can prevail, even in a limited fashion, given the Fifth Circuit and SCOTUS. The law is a laundry list of Things Republicans Don’t Like And Have The Power To Ban, which tends to get a favorable reception these days. I really, really hope I’m wrong. The Current has more.

Posted in Legal matters | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on The lawsuit over the omnibus voter suppression law has begun

Two Controller candidates favor Fair for Houston

The third is Orlando Sanchez.

Chris Hollins

A ballot measure seeking to increase Houston and Harris County representation on regional councils is getting support from city controller candidates.

Chris Hollins, the former Harris County Clerk, expressed his support for the measure Wednesday. His opponent, City Councilmember Dave Martin, in backing the measure. A third candidate for the controller position, however, isn’t so sure.

Proposition B, brought about by the grassroots organization Fair for Houston, is an attempt to bring increased representation to governing bodies such as the Houston-Galveston Area Council (HGAC), which siphons federal funds into 13 counties and 100 local governments. The group focuses on regional needs including disaster recovery and transportation. If it passes, the measure would require Houston representatives to exit regional organizations that do not apportion votes based on population. The group has 37 members, with just two Houston representatives, even though Houston makes up 30% of the region’s population.

“One person, one vote. That’s the basis of our democracy,” Hollins said in a news conference Wednesday. He said that right is being “denied to all Houstonians.”

“As your next City Controller, it will be my job to help solve the fiscal challenges our city faces, and that includes working with other elected leaders to make sure Houston gets every dollar we’re entitled to,” he wrote in an email Wednesday.

[…]

Martin agreed with Hollins, citing his vote to pass the measure.

“I’ve been dealing with this for since 2016, with every member of City Council, and we’re all fully in support of the ballot initiative,” Martin said Wednesday.

“We have 2.3 million people that live in the city of Houston and we have 637 square miles of infrastructure that should be treated according to those statistics, instead of one of 107 (cities) or one of 13 (counties),” Martin said. “What happens in Houston has a direct impact on all these other cities and all these other counties.”

After seven years of fighting for more dollars, Martin said the HGAC forced City Council’s hand to vote to add the ballot measure.

But not all candidates were quick to endorse. Sanchez, who is running a second time for city controller, said the issue is “a moot point” for the city controller, so he doesn’t plan on endorsing the proposition either way.

“I don’t see any scenario where the controller has any influence on the outcome, the reorganization of HGAC, any amendments to the State Government Code,” Sanchez said. “This is a political decision that’s going to have to be driven by the voters … I just don’t see a role for me, as a candidate for controller, to be involved in this debate.”

That stance certainly tracks with Orlando Sanchez’s overall body of work as an elected official. To be fair, he also expressed concern about what will happen in the event that Houston does exit HGAC, and that is a very reasonable concern, one I share with him. I’ll be asking about that when I interview someone with the Fair for Houston crew. The larger goal is unassailable, and it’s good to see Hollins and Martin on board with it. The fourth candidate, Shannan Nobles, did not provide a comment for the story.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Two Controller candidates favor Fair for Houston

Interview with Leah Wolfthal

Leah Wolfthal

As I said last week, most of the action is in the At Large races, where there are three open seats and a lot of candidates. There are six candidates in At Large #1, including a current HISD Trustee that I have no interest in talking to and a candidate with no finance reports or web presence. I reached out to three of the other four and heard back from two, so that’s how we will begin the week. First up is Leah Wolfthal, who was one of the earlier entrants into any of the races and one of the first 2023 candidates I met while out and about last year. Wolfthal has worked in the non-profit space as the former Executive Director of the Center for Urban Transformation, at Communities in Schools and at Feeding Texas. She has also worked at the University of Houston. Here’s the interview:

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez
Tarsha Jackson

This week is At Large Council candidates, starting with At Large #1 but not limited to that. At Large #2 will be next week. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Rep. Carl Sherman enters Senate primary

Crowded in here all of a sudden.

Rep. Carl Sherman

State Rep. Carl Sherman, D-DeSoto, announced Saturday he is running for U.S. Senate, becoming the latest Democrat to launch a campaign to challenge Republican Sen. Ted Cruz.

Sherman, a pastor, jumped in the race calling for higher salaries for police officers and more hospitals in rural areas of the state.

“Texas needs a United States senator who will stand up for all of us, our children, our families, small-business owners and the working people of Texas. We need more good paying jobs in Texas, not just jobs, but good-paying jobs,” Sherman said.

Sherman joins a primary that already includes two prominent Democrats in U.S. Rep. Colin Allred of Dallas and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez of San Antonio. Nueces County District Attorney Mark Gonzalez resigned Tuesday to also run in the primary.

Sherman was first elected in 2018 to represent House District 109, a solidly blue district south of Dallas. He previously was mayor of DeSoto.

[…]

Sherman did not emerge as a potential candidate until late June. He has shrugged off any disadvantage from the late start.

“If God is calling you to do something, then it’s never too late,” Sherman said in a Dallas TV interview that aired last month.

Well, if I actually had put money on Rep. Sherman staying in his safe legislative seat, as I had said before, I’d be a little poorer today. I maintain my skepticism of his viability in a campaign that includes Colin Allred, but that’s his problem and not mine. With the earlier entrance of now-former Nueces County DA Mark Gonzalez, we have a real four-candidate race. There are at least three other candidates out there, but these are the four that matter. If nothing else, I hope that generates a lot of interest and attention.

Along those lines, here’s some more about Rep. Sherman and his intentions, per this preview story from the DMN:

Sherman set a press conference at the DeSoto town center to make what his campaign described as a major announcement about his political future. Dallas County Democratic Chairman Kardal Coleman, among others, said Friday they expect it to be a campaign launch.

Sherman signaled as much, promising that he would be joined by the mayors of DeSoto and Wilmer, along with Alissa Charles-Finley — sister of Botham Jean, a Dallas man shot and killed by a Dallas police officer — and Lee Merritt, lawyer for the Jean family.

“This will affect the race in a positive way,” Coleman said. “We have a lot of strong Democrats throughout the state, specifically here in Dallas County, who voters are excited to see take on Ted Cruz.”

[…]

Coleman isn’t worried about the rivals splitting support in their home county, adding that with Allred and Sherman in the race, Black turnout is likely to grow in the primary.

“Primaries are healthy,” he said. “People in Texas, specifically in Dallas County, are ready to see Ted Cruz go home.”

[…]

“Welcome to the fight,” Gutierrez said in a campaign statement. “It’s going to take every single one of us to beat Ted Cruz and get Texas back on track.”

Democrats viewed the growing field as a sign of enthusiasm for ousting Cruz, who barely survived a challenge from former El Paso Rep. Beto O’Rourke in 2018.

“Long shot races don’t attract as much interest as competitive races do,” said Kathleen Thompson of Progress Texas.

“The fact that there are so many qualified candidates shows that Ted Cruz is beatable.”

There’s a lot of optimistic quotes from Dems in this story, which is both understandable and mostly reasonable. Generating excitement among the base and making people believe that Ted Cruz can be beaten are both achievable goals. I expressed some doubts about the need for Mark Gonzalez’s candidacy when he entered. I have those same doubts about Carl Sherman. The question isn’t just “Would I be a better Senator than Ted Cruz”, which is a bar that can be cleared by a three-day old loaf of sourdough, it’s also “Am I a better candidate than the others already in this race”. You could say that’s what the primary is for, and that’s fair. I view it as if we’ve already got one or more entrants that are broadly acceptable and have no obvious red flags, then I’m not sure what the value is in just adding more similar choices. Obviously, not everyone sees it that way, and your mileage may vary.

If nothing else, we’re creating a larger pool of candidates who have run statewide, which ought to be of help in 2026. I can’t say I’m convinced that the larger field will generate excitement and draw attention, but I’m intrigued by the possibility. I don’t really know Gonzalez or Sherman, they may surprise me. I don’t agree that longshot races don’t attract as much interest as competitive races do – we’ve had some multi-candidate fields for dark red Congressional districts in recent years – but I would agree that competitive races draw more interest from quality candidates. Something is telling all of these guys that they can beat Ted Cruz. Let’s listen to them and see what we think.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

That other high speed rail line is moving along

Hadn’t heard about this in awhile, but it’s now clearing some key regulatory obstacles.

TexasOklahomaPassengerRailStudyRoutes

A high-speed rail line from Fort Worth to Dallas is moving “full steam ahead” and could be ready even before the proposed Dallas-Houston line that received a recent boost with the news that Amtrak is coming on board, officials said.

First proposed in 2017, the Fort Worth-Dallas high-speed rail project would run parallel to Interstate 30 and is spearheaded by the North Central Texas Council of Governments. That project will formally enter its environmental phase in September and is expected to be cleared by the federal government by 2024.

[…]

A key to making the Fort Worth-Dallas high-speed project successful is ensuring it is part of a larger, statewide system — similar to the interstate highway system, [Brendon Wheeler, program manager for transportation planning at the Council of Governments] said.

The Council of Governments is also exploring other rail corridors, most notably along Interstate 35, connecting Fort Worth through San Antonio and all the way down to Laredo.

At this time, no funding or investments have been committed to the Fort Worth-Dallas rail line, but getting the project environmentally cleared will help change that, Wheeler said. By clearing these hurdles upfront, potential partners will be more likely to invest.

“We’ve heard from several entities that operate high-speed rail around the world, private entities that are interested in funding projects — the major risks that they face coming to the U.S. to try and replicate their success here is they don’t know the federal environmental process like we do, and facing those risks costs money to them,” Wheeler said.

[…]

While the Dallas to Houston and Dallas to Fort Worth lines are still years away, [Rick Harnish, executive director of the High-Speed Rail Alliance] said, it’s now up to the state to come up with a rail plan to connect all the major metropolitan areas in Texas.

The goal is to have the Fort Worth-Dallas and Dallas-Houston lines be “one seat,” which means there are no transfers between each stop.

“That’s something the state needs to show leadership on,” Harnish said. “And the fact that the state has not in any way since doing the initial planning of a high-speed line from Fort Worth to San Antonio, they’d been out of the game. And that’s a real bummer for the people who live in Texas.”

See here for some background – this project has been around for a long time, too – and here for more on the more expansive plans going south from Fort Worth. As this story notes, the D/FW rail line already has most of the right of way it would need, so it will have fewer issues than Texas Central has had with that. At this point, all I can say is I hope to live long enough to see all of this come to fruition. It all makes so much sense, and we have absolutely no leadership in the state pushing for it – quite the reverse, really. Hope is what I have for now.

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

Weekend link dump for September 10

“But another major Giuliani development has drawn less attention: An FBI whistleblower filed a statement asserting that Giuliani “may have been compromised” by Russian intelligence while working as a lawyer and adviser to Trump during the 2020 campaign.”

“Domain names ending in “.US” — the top-level domain for the United States — are among the most prevalent in phishing scams, new research shows. This is noteworthy because .US is overseen by the U.S. government, which is frequently the target of phishing domains ending in .US. Also, .US domains are only supposed to be available to U.S. citizens and to those who can demonstrate that they have a physical presence in the United States.”

Naomi Klein deserves better.

“The Volunteer Moms Poring Over Archives to Prove Clarence Thomas Wrong”.

“But as the former executive director of the National Governors Association for 27 years, I have worked with well over 300 governors. During that time I have been part of many conversations with governors regarding other governors running for president. So I know that some current and former governors on both sides of the aisle would have another reason for why DeSantis is stalling. If you were to ask them, I expect they would mostly smile and say quietly, “It is because he has become an imperial governor” – one who believes he is all-powerful and that all his decisions will be just applauded and never questioned or opposed.”

“How in God’s name could so many lawyers get involved in something like this?”

Lock her up.

RIP, Steve Harwell, co-founder and former lead singer for Smash Mouth.

Among other things, Jimmy Buffett was a mensch.

RIP, Marilyn Lovell, wife of Apollo 13 commander James Lovell, who spoke often about the difficulties of being an astronaut’s wife.

Good lord, E**n M**k is a piece of shit.

“This entire case has driven home a harsh truth about not simply celebrity conspiracies but the entire concept as a whole: there is no out to the madness. No proof will sate those who are head-deep in uncovering the truth because they don’t even know how to define that.”

I too saw Blue Oyster Cult at the Mount Rushmore Festival. Or maybe it was Coachella. Who can even say? (FYI and for real, I saw Blue Oyster Cult at Rockefeller’s in Houston in, like, 1991 or so, back when Rockefeller’s was still a kickass music venue. We had seats up near the stage. My ears rang for three days afterwards. Ah, youth.)

Other approved expenses for all homeschooled students this academic year include swing sets, foosball tables, air hockey tables, skateboards, kayaks, standup paddleboards, dolls, and stuffed animals.”

“An example: Mark Meadows is back in the headlines again for his diligent efforts to subvert the outcome of the 2020 presidential election—but somehow, the fact that Ginni Thomas, the wife of a sitting justice, was texting him to urge that he do precisely this act has fallen away almost completely.”

“From crypto to Donald Trump, it’s remarkable how eager people are to be bullshitted. They’re so eager that it does no harm to explicitly announce that you’re bullshitting them. Neither crypto enthusiasts nor Trump fans care. In fact, they revel in the bullshit. The more the better.”

“The AI-generated Drake-The Weeknd song was submitted to the Grammys for reasons”.

“A federal court has, for the second time this year, ruled that Donald Trump defamed E. Jean Carroll, who accused the former president of sexually assaulting her in a New York department store dressing room in 1996.”

“The Supreme Court’s Fake Praying Coach Case Just Got Faker“.

The strange case of the former aide to Rudy Giuliani who’s gone off the grid.

“Hurricane Idalia is being credited with delivering a flamingo-palooza to the Eastern United States this week.”

Lock him up.

Lock him up.

Posted in Blog stuff | Tagged | 2 Comments

First week of impeachment ends

I will state upfront that I followed the impeachment trial from a bit of remove. There’s still a lot going on elsewhere, and thanks to the massive amounts of data dropped during discovery, there really hasn’t been anything new or shocking so far. There’s a ton of news out there, with various sites doing live coverage during the day, so I’m going to go a little lightly here. We’ll start with the Trib and its Saturday summary story.

A crook any way you look

The first week of suspended Attorney General Ken Paxton’s history-making impeachment trial closed Friday with only four prosecution witnesses taking the stand in the first four days.

Even so, the broad strokes of the cases being presented by lawyers for the House impeachment managers and Paxton’s defense team emerged in Tuesday’s opening statements and during frequently tedious, sometimes contentious questioning of witnesses.

Among the many subplots, these themes are likely to guide a trial that could take several additional weeks — ending when senators deliberate in private and emerge to cast votes that will determine whether the three-term Republican will return to work or be permanently removed from office.

Paxton attended the opening hours of his trial on Tuesday, during which senators overwhelmingly rejected his attempts to dismiss the articles of impeachment and his lawyer entered not guilty pleas on his behalf. He was absent the rest of the week.

The trial is set to resume Monday at 9 a.m.

[…]

State Rep. Andrew Murr, R-Junction, gave the opening statement on behalf of the House impeachment managers. He promised senators would hear testimony portraying Paxton as obsessed with helping Paul — who was under state and federal investigation for his business dealings — despite warnings and objections from his top lieutenants at the agency.

Paxton engaged in “egregious misconduct,” he said.

“The state’s top lawyer engaged in conduct designed to advance the economic interests and legal positions of a friend and donor to the detriment of innocent Texans,” Murr said, adding that Paxton “turned the keys of the office of attorney general over to Nate Paul.”

Ryan Bangert, Paxton’s former deputy first assistant attorney general, testified Wednesday and Thursday that Paxton took an unusual interest in matters involving Paul, such as pressing to overrule two agency decisions that denied Paul access to documents related to an active investigation into Paul’s businesses.

“We were devoting far more resources to Nate Paul than we ever should have,” Bangert said.

“I was deeply concerned that the name, authority and power of our office had been, in my view, hijacked to serve the interests of an individual against the interests of the broader public,” Bangert added. “It was unconscionable.”

On Friday, impeachment lawyers called their fourth witness, David Maxwell, Paxton’s former director of law enforcement. Maxwell was out of state when seven senior agency officials reported Paxton to the FBI in 2020. Instead, Maxwell took his concerns to other law enforcement officials and was later fired from the agency.

Maxwell said he found Paul’s complaint to be “absolutely ludicrous,” including claims that search warrants were improperly altered in a web of conspiracy that included a federal magistrate judge.

As a result, Maxwell said, he urged Paxton to drop his interest in Paul. “I told him that Nate Paul was a criminal … and that, if he didn’t get away from this individual and stop doing what he was doing, he was going to get himself indicted.”

You can see more of the Trib’s coverage here. Their story on the first prosecution witness, Jeff Mateer, is a good read.

In more than six hours of testimony, Mateer — the first witness called by the House impeachment managers — detailed his growing concerns through the summer and fall of 2020 about Paxton’s relationship with Paul, culminating in Mateer’s decision to join other senior advisers in reporting the attorney general’s behavior to the FBI on Sept. 30.

“I concluded that Mr. Paxton was engaged in conduct that was immoral, unethical, and I had the good faith belief that it was illegal,” Mateer testified.

Paxton’s lawyer attempted to cast Mateer as a rogue employee and disloyal friend of Paxton, arguing that the former first assistant jumped to conclusions about impropriety based on incomplete and inaccurate information. Attorney Tony Buzbee also accused Mateer of leading an attempted coup against Paxton.

But as Paxton has cast the impeachment as a persecution led by Democrats and liberal Republicans, Mateer presented a problem. He is an evangelical Christian and champion of religious liberty whose hiring by Paxton was praised by conservatives. And unlike four other senior deputies who filed a whistleblower lawsuit and later negotiated a proposed $3.3 million settlement — prompting Paxton’s camp to suggest they had a financial motivation for their allegations — Mateer simply quit within days of meeting with FBI agents in 2020.

[…]

As expected, the attorney general’s affair with Laura Olson, the former Senate aide Buzbee identified by name during the trial, took center stage in the trial.

Mateer exhibited a pained expression when asked about the relationship, as Paxton’s wife, Sen. Angela Paxton, sat about 30 feet away — present for the trial but barred from deliberating or voting by Senate rules. Prodded by impeachment lawyer Rusty Hardin, Mateer said the affair was the missing piece that explained the bizarre behavior Paxton had exhibited in asking his senior deputies to help Paul.

Mateer added that he was present for a 2018 meeting in which Paxton, joined by his wife, admitted to the extramarital affair but said it was over and that he had recommitted to his marriage.

“Mr. Paxton apologized and, using Christian terminology, I would say he repented,” Mateer said. “I assumed it was over because that’s what he said.”

Sen. Paxton, at her desk, took notes as Mateer spoke. She has maintained a bright disposition during the trial, chatting with colleagues during breaks and waving to supporters in the gallery.

I guess we can consider Laura Olson to be a public figure now. Imagine being known as “Ken Paxton’s secret girlfriend”. Anyway, it’s important to remember that Jeff Mateer, and indeed all of the former senior staffers that Paxton either fired or chased out, whether or not they later sued, are not good guys. They did the right thing, they showed good moral character and ethical behavior in trying to keep Paxton from turning the AG’s office into a complete joke, and they deserve credit for that. But they were recruited by Ken Paxton in the first place, to help Ken Paxton carry out his atrocious and harmful agenda, which they are all fully aligned with; indeed, Jeff Mateer is now working for one of the more evil organizations out in the private sector. They did the right thing in regard to Paxton. That doesn’t make them the good guys in any way.

There’s coverage from the Chron here, here, and here. The DMN’s coverage, which you may or may not be able to see without a subscription, is here. Here’s an interesting story from Texas Monthly about briefly being a paid shill for Ken Paxton. For a national view aimed at an audience that is only vaguely aware of the proceedings, this Slate story covers the basics. I’ll check in periodically as we go forward, mostly looking for new things if any arise. Otherwise I’ll probably just do more weekend summaries.

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Houston to fund database to track gun violence

This is a good thing.

A data project to track gun injuries will receive city funding as trauma centers across Houston saw a steady increase in firearm injury victims in recent years, but lacked a systematic way to report the gun violence.

There is no uniform reporting for both fatal and non-fatal gun violence injuries in Houston’s trauma centers. To address the gap, the city Wednesday announced a $240,000 Health Department project to collect data from various databases and develop a dashboard to show the different types of gun incidents in Houston, why they occur and whom they affect.

Loren Hopkins, chief environmental science officer for the Houston Health Department, said the lack of comprehensive analysis of firearm data up to now has stumped the city’s progress on combating gun violence.

“We really haven’t seen improvement,” Hopkins said during a committee meeting in July. “All trauma centers in Houston have seen a huge increase in firearm injury victims since the pandemic, and this has just been steadily rising since 2018, regardless of all the efforts people have been putting into it.”

District C Councilmember Abbie Kamin, chair of the Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee, said the goal is to help the city come up with better public health-oriented policies to deter gun violence.

“We’re home to the largest medical center in the world. It may be a surprise to some that we do not already have something like this,” Kamin said, adding her team is still working out the timeline for the project’s implementation. “Now, the city of Houston and our public health partners will finally have a centralized location to collect relevant information, analyze it, and turn it into health-based actions to reduce injuries and save lives.”

Very glad to see this, and I look forward to seeing what the data tells us. The federal government was barred for years from collecting this data, because the pro-gun fanatics wouldn’t allow it. This is a small step forward, but an important one. Kudos all around.

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The Pat Walsh Memorial Bikeway

I love this.

Friends remember Pat Walsh as someone who saw the big picture of what Houston could be, and the little details necessary to get a massive city bureaucracy headed in the right direction. Now they want the former planning director’s name on a big new bikeway, perhaps fittingly made up of some of the incremental improvements he helped come to fruition.

“It is important that contribution be remembered,” said Kevin Strickland, one of the proponents of the bikeway’s creation.

If the idea can wind its way through the city’s processes, some Walsh helped craft, the 9-mile Pat Walsh Bikeway would connect Loop 610 north of the Heights to Loop 610 south of NRG Park.

“A big part of the strategy here is letting people know with one bikeway they can cross the city,” said Emmanuel Nunez, one of the people pressing for the bikeway, which would include many long-sought connections in the existing trail system.

The proposal was approved Wednesday by the infrastructure committee of Houston’s Bicycle Advisory Committee, the first of many uphill paths the proposal faces to become an official designation.

Walsh was Houston’s planning director from 2014 to 2018, when he died at 45 from an aggressive form of brain cancer detected that summer. Despite his short time leading the department, his impact has been immense on the city’s growth, Strickland said, and the expansion of bike lanes in the city.

[…]

The bikeway dedicated to Walsh would stretch from the Heights, where the existing bike trail along Nicholson ends at 26th Street, to the new bike path along Almeda to Loop 610 near NRG Park, a distance of around 9 miles. Between the Heights and NRG, the bikeway would be stitched together by connections to Patterson Street where improvements are planned to its crossing at Washington Avenue, along the Jackson Hill Bridge that connects to the Buffalo Bayou trail system, and along Woodhead and Alumni where cyclists share the road with drivers on neighborhood streets that cross many major intersections.

“We want this to be a bikeway that connects many parts of the city,” Nunez said.

If built, it also becomes a major north-south spine for cyclists who already have good east-west connections along Houston’s bayou trail system. Linked by the proposed Walsh bikeway, Nunez said, many other neighborhoods can claim accessible, safe bike routes.

Key to the bikeway’s design — which would incorporate signs designating it for Walsh — would be what Nunez called a “train stop approach” to directions along the path denoting major locations and interest points. The design mimics that of light rail stations, showing the order on a simple line with some indication, perhaps, of cycling times and distances between the stops.

“This is only going to be useful if it is stitched together,” Nunez said.

[…]

The bicycle committee, which meets again in October, can at that time or later approve a recommendation for the bikeway to bear Walsh’s name. From there, Fields said city staff will take that approval to Turner, who then must assign a department to report on the potential change and its impacts. Officials also would notify and potentially seek the approval of neighborhood groups in the area around the bikeway — which crosses more than a dozen civic club boundaries.

City Council would eventually have to give its blessing to the change as well. Not to mention the connections that would have to be made taking the various segments and stitching them together.

That report mentioned in the penultimate paragraph would include recommendations for how to connect the various pieces of the existing (or in the works) parts of the trail. Getting funding for whatever construction would be needed is part of that as well. This will take a few years if all goes well, and will be dependent on the next Mayor to ensure the work keeps going.

I recommend you look at the overview of the plan as put together by A Tale of Two Bridges. Right off the bat, the success of this as a concept will depend on the Patterson Bridge. Getting around or through Rice University – the “Alumni Drive” part of the trail – will either require a detour around the campus, thus making the trail longer, or the willingness of Rice to allow the trail to cross it, which I daresay will need some persuasion. I’d argue that it’s in the school’s interest to give people who will be coming to the campus anyway for sports, the Shepherd School, the Media Center, and more, a convenient way to get there without driving and thus free up parking for those who have to drive, but I’m a member of the extended Owl family and not an actual alumnus, so I don’t know how much weight that carries. But there you have it.

If you look at the somewhat confusing Houston Bike Plan map, you can see the different segments (some of which as noted are themselves still in the planning or construction phases) and the gaps between them. Putting this all together makes so much sense, and would be good for non-bikers as well, again by taking cars off the road and out of the parking lots. I’ll be banging the drum for this at every opportunity.

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“District of innovation”

We’ll see what this means.

Houston ISD’s state-appointed school board unanimously voted Thursday to begin the process of becoming a “District of Innovation,” a move that could ultimately allow the district to extend the school year for students and teachers.

The designation, which most Texas districts have sought, would give HISD the option to skirt dozens of state laws related to school operations. HISD officials haven’t officially specified which exemptions they might seek, but new Superintendent Mike Miles and board member Angela Lemond Flowers said adding more days to the school year is a top priority in starting the process.

“I very strongly believe that we need to take everything in our toolkit possible because we have big gains that we need to achieve,” Flowers said. “Our hands are bound right now to days, and so this opens up that flexibility.”

Barring an unexpected reversal, a board-appointed committee will draft a plan in the coming weeks that outlines the recommended exemptions. The plan must receive approval from HISD’s District Advisory Committee, which is largely composed of community members and HISD employees chosen by the board and the superintendent. Finally, two-thirds of HISD’s appointed board must support the plan.

Miles, who was installed along with the nine-member board to lead HISD in June, said he thought HISD students need 180 to 185 days in class each school year, up from the current schedule of 172 days. The tweaks to the academic calendar likely would mean adding more work days for teachers, most of whom currently clock 187 days.

“If we were to change the length of the school year, yes, the number of workdays would change also,” Miles said.

The potential for extending the teacher work year has drawn early complaints from some educators opposed to shortening their summer break. Rebecca Williams, a teacher at Navarro Middle School on the district’s east side, said she and many of her co-workers are worried about the possible changes.

“A lot of my colleagues are halfway out the door now,” Williams said. “When the District of Innovation comes, they will be totally out the door.”

Texas requires schools to start classes on the fourth Monday in August, but the vast majority of districts start earlier due to their District of Innovation status. About 965 out of roughly 1,200 districts have received District of Innovation status, including Dallas, Austin and San Antonio independent school districts, according to the state.

By starting the school year earlier, HISD could add more instructional days in August and avoid going deeper into June.

The District of Innovation system allows for sidestepping many laws related to academic calendars, educator certification, class sizes and teacher benefits. Other laws, however, cannot be shoved aside, including those addressing curriculum, special education, the school board’s power and the state’s academic accountability system.

HISD officials are expected to clear the path for approval of a District of Innovation plan, largely by reconstituting the District Advisory Committee. The committee shot down an attempt by HISD’s prior leadership in 2021 to pursue the designation, in part so the district could start the school year earlier.

See here for a preview story on this. I’m not opposed to this (*), on the grounds that I think more instruction time would be beneficial to students and because so many other districts, including other large urban districts, have the same designation. Thursday’s What Next podcast talked about this in the context of trying to catch up students for the COVID-induced learning loss. The evidence favors the idea, though we won’t really know until we try. As a strategy for improving outcomes, it is certainly reasonable.

I have two concerns. One is that asking the teachers to do more work necessitates paying them commensurately. According to Friday’s CityCast Houston episode, that would be the case, to the tune of about $3K for the teachers. Whether that’s enough and whatever other conditions may need to apply is a matter for HISD and the teachers to discuss and hopefully agree to. A unilateral decree from on high is not acceptable.

The other concern is the stacking of the District Advisory Committee to allow this to happen. There’s little enough oversight on Mike Miles as it is. If the DAC is not convinced that this is a good idea, we should at least ask why before we bulldoze them. Maybe they have their heads in the sand, I don’t know. But they have a voice for a reason, and we should hear them out. I do not like the idea of essentially bypassing them as an obstacle. I guess we can all add that to our list of grievances for the TEA.

Anyway. Whatever does happen, I hope HISD does a much better job than it’s been doing at explaining themselves to the community, and giving people a chance to provide feedback in a meaningful way. I don’t think that’s too much to ask. The Chron and the Press have more.

(*) Full Disclosure: My youngest is now a junior in high school, so the ensuing shorter summer that we would get from this will affect me personally for at most one school year. That puts me firmly in the “Easy For You To Say” bucket. I acknowledge this.

UPDATE: Forgot to mention, the Board of Managers also voted to keep the existing teacher evaluation system (T-TESS) in place for the rest of the year. The HFT dropped their lawsuit related to this as a result.

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Ken Paxton’s sleaze goes beyond his (alleged) crimes and misdemeanors

Just a reminder, in case you needed it.

A crook any way you look

When Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton held a news conference in May decrying state lawmakers’ anticipated vote to impeach him, he framed the decision as not only a threat to his political career but as one that endangered the slew of lawsuits he’d filed against the Biden administration.

Paxton, who has since been suspended from office, faces an impeachment trial that starts today. He has long positioned himself as one of the country’s strongest conservative attorneys general, relentlessly pursuing nearly 50 lawsuits against the federal government on issues that include immigration, health care and the environment. Such messaging raised Paxton’s national profile, appealed to his base of conservative supporters and helped him tamp down political pushback stemming from allegations of wrongdoing that have dogged his eight-year tenure.

But as Paxton has aggressively pursued such lawsuits, he has repeatedly declined to do a critical but less glamorous part of his job: represent state agencies in court.

Despite his role as Texas’ lead attorney, Paxton has denied representation to state agencies at least 75 times in the past two years, according to records obtained by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune. The denials forced some of those agencies to assume additional, unanticipated costs as they scrambled to secure legal assistance.

“Every time he backs out of one of these cases – and an agency, a university has to get outside counsel, if they get the funding approved – that’s costing the taxpayers a lot of extra money, because that’s one of the principal reasons the AG’s office exists, is to provide these basic legal services, basic legal defense,” said Chris Toth, former executive director of the National Association of Attorneys General.

Over the years, some of Paxton’s representation denials have become public. Among those is his longtime refusal to defend the state Ethics Commission against lawsuits filed by the now-disbanded Empower Texans, a political action committee, and the PAC’s then-head Michael Quinn Sullivan. Empower Texans contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaign and loaned him $1 million, according to campaign finance reports. Another has been his choice not to represent the State Commission on Judicial Conduct after it issued a public warning to a justice of the peace who refused to perform same-sex marriages despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized the unions.

But the scope of the denials has not been fully known. Neither have details of other times he has said no to state agencies seeking representation.

In one such instance, Paxton declined to represent the University of Houston–Clear Lake after students filed a lawsuit alleging the university wouldn’t recognize their organization because of the group’s requirement that its officers be Christian. Until then, the attorney general’s office had never before declined to represent the university in a case, said university spokesperson Chris Stipes.

In another instance, Paxton’s office not only held off on a decision to represent the University of Texas System in an affirmative action case, but also withheld a determination on whether the university could hire outside legal counsel, forcing multiple delays. That choice stands in contrast to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s decision to represent the University of Texas at Austin in a similar case 15 years earlier when he was the state’s attorney general.

Texas lawmakers in 2021 required the attorney general’s office to begin reporting each time it declined to represent a state agency. It’s unclear what prompted the mandate.

ProPublica and the Tribune obtained records documenting dozens of denials through a Public Information Act request, but the vast majority do not include a clear reason for the decisions. The attorney general’s office declined to provide specifics about its communications with state agencies, including those that occurred before the reporting requirement went into effect, citing attorney-client privilege. The office also did not respond to a question about whether the agency tracked these denials prior to 2021.

Lawmakers took additional action this year, requiring the attorney general to start giving reasons for the denials beginning Sept. 1.

It’s a long story so go read the rest. I’ve mentioned a couple of these before but quite a bit of this was new to me. The issue with UT, in which Paxton neither defended them nor allowed them to hire their own counsel, was the most egregious, and it was only resolved after Paxton was suspended due to the impeachment. If it wasn’t clear why the wingnut billionaire class is all in on Paxton, it’s because he acts like their valet, deploying his office when it suits him and them and not doing so otherwise. There are plenty of loathsome figures in Texas politics, but Ken Paxton really is in a class by himself. Go read and see for yourself.

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Endorsement watch: For the proposition allowing Council members to put an item on the agenda

I didn’t think we’d begin Endorsement Season with a charter referendum, but here we are.

This is no way to run a representative democracy in the nation’s fourth-biggest city. Thankfully, Houstonians have an opportunity to change that in this year’s local elections. Voters will have to decide whether to approve a charter amendment that would enable three or more council members to, by written request, have an item placed on the weekly City Hall agenda for the full council to consider. For instance, if Plummer and just two other members supported her proposed ordinance to charge slumlords a fee for neglecting repairs, they could put it on the agenda and force the council to vote on it. The charter currently allows three council members to call a special meeting and set the agenda, but that maneuver is seen as a rebuke of the mayor, and as such, rarely attracts a required quorum of council members.

The amendment to enhance the council’s legislative power would not slide Houston toward a system of minority rule. In fact, the amendment petition was supported by a strikingly diverse coalition of local political groups, including the Houston fire union, the Harris County Republican Party, the right-leaning group Urban Reform, Indivisible Houston and the Houston chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America.

We believe the amendment would simply empower the communities that elected Houston’s 16 council members — five of whom, like Plummer, are at-large, representing the entire city. Councilmembers should be able to give a full public hearing to the issues that matter most to the people they serve.

Opponents of the amendment believe that it would encroach on the mayor’s ability to get things done and lead council members to bring pointless resolutions and politically unpopular ordinances to the floor that stand no chance of passage. Anyone who’s sat through a Harris County Commissioner’s Court meeting knows all too well how maddeningly inefficient it can be when stacked agendas turn into marathon sessions that drone on for hours.

While that is a salient concern, we believe it sells short the seriousness of the council as a deliberative body. Consider that right now, the only forum for a council member to enact priorities without the mayor’s approval is during budget negotiations, when members can propose individual amendments for the full council to consider.

The change would allow a bloc of council members to bring up an item for consideration whether the mayor likes it or not, but the item could still face significant hurdles to passage. It would still have to win majority support from the full council.

That doesn’t strike us as an infringement on the mayor’s broad power, just a check.

See here, here, and here for some background. Yes, the petitions for this referendum were certified in 2021 but we are voting on it now. I believe this will be City of Houston Proposition A on your ballot; the Fair for Houston item is apparently Prop B, so that would make sense.

I have expressed the concerns noted by the Chron about this referendum in the past. I have also had a couple of people I trust push back against those concerns in conversation with me, using language similar to what the Chron editorial board uses here. I’m still not fully sold on this item but I’m thinking it over. I’ll be asking some of the folks I interview about it as well, so you’ll get to hear more opinions about it. Now I can’t wait to see what the Chron says about Fair for Houston. In any event, I don’t recall seeing a finance report for a campaign related to this item in the , so as yet I can’t say what kind of push there may be for or against it. I have always believed this would pass, but if there’s a big No campaign and nothing to counter it, then it could go down. I don’t think that will happen, but we’ll see.

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Dispatches from Dallas, September 9 edition

This is a weekly feature produced by my friend Ginger. Let us know what you think.

This week, in news from Dallas-Fort Worth, we have a lot of business. We start with coverage of the Ken Paxton trial. Then we move on to the Senate race and some local state House races, Prager U and some of the awful people who sponsor it, ransomware news, city and county budget updates, the awful heat and its effects, fair food, dinosaur tracks, and zoo babies, among other things. This week’s post was brought to you by the music of Hauschka (Volker Bertelmann), a modern classical composer and performer.

We start this week with local boy gone bad Ken Paxton. Local pre-trial reporting included the news that half of Texas voters think Paxton should be removed as Attorney General. Here’s Paxton and his supporters, including his wife and Sid Miller, in Collin County celebrating Labor Day (which you would have thought was a little communist for those guys, but whatever). Not everybody in Plano thinks Paxton is fantastic, though, as this Texas Newsroom series of interviews shows. It turns out some of their GOP folks didn’t know what all he was accused of.

Propublica has taken a look at some of the things Paxton wasn’t doing in office, specifically refusing to represent state agencies and forcing them to spend money on outside counsel. Our tax dollars at work! Last but not least, the AP has some details about the perks Paxton enjoyed as AG, a story that really takes the cake. Quite literally: the cake was from HEB and worth $45, and they gave it to his staff but he took it home himself.

We also have a lot of backgrounders: Angela Paxton from the DMN; Jeff Mateer, one of the early prosecution witnesses from the Star-Telegram; Nate Paul, Paxton’s buddy, again from the Star-Telegram; and Paxton’s purported affair partner, also from the Star-Telegram. The DMN also has an editorial on the “Shameful Six” senators who voted against trying Ken Paxton. I like that name, so let’s help it catch on. Last but not least, we have some Texas Republican politicians opinionating about the trial: John Cornyn, trying to be in the middle of the Republican road, and former House Rep Louie Gohmert, a loudmouth we haven’t heard from in a while, who is unsurprisingly against the guy he tried to primary out of the AG office. Even a stopped clock, etc.

In other North Texas news:

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Interview with CM Tarsha Jackson

CM Tarsha Jackson

It’s more than fair to say that first-term District B Council Member Tarsha Jackson had a long, strange trip to electoral success Even then there were still things that happened, but she made it in the end. Jackson is a longtime community activist whose life changed when her son was incarcerated when he was just 11 years old. She is a co-founder of Texas Families of Incarcerated Youth and the former Harris County Director for the Texas Organizing Project. She served on the transition team of Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg, and she has been the recipient of multiple awards for her organizing and advocacy work. Here’s the interview:

PREVIOUSLY:
Kathy Blueford-Daniels
Dani Hernandez
Judith Cruz
Plácido Gómez
Mario Castillo
Cynthia Reyes-Revilla
Joaquin Martinez

This week was district Council candidates, and while the week is over I’ll have at least one more of those for you. Next week we begin with the At Large candidates, starting with At Large #1. The Erik Manning spreadsheet is here. My previous posts about the 2023 HISD election are here and here. My posts about the July campaign finance reports for City Council candidates are here and here.

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All candidates should support repealing the revenue cap

Long overdue to get rid of the stupid thing.

The Gulf Coast AFL-CIO released a platform for City Hall on Saturday that calls for eliminating Houston’s property tax revenue cap and avoiding worker layoffs.

The union has endorsed state Sen. John Whitmire’s campaign for mayor, and he was on hand at its annual Labor Day breakfast Saturday. The plan initially was for Whitmire to sign off on the platform, but he did not end up doing it.

Whitmire said he shares the union’s concerns and vision, though his support for some of the priorities — such as doing away with the revenue cap — is more conditional.

Before placing a referendum on the ballot, Whitmire told the Chronicle he will have to get the city’s finances in order. That matches rhetoric from Houston’s other major contenders for City Hall’s top job, who say they will need a few years before trying to amend or eliminate the cap that voters approved in 2004. It essentially ties the amount of increased property tax revenue the city can take in to population and inflation growth.

“I think we need to do some real housekeeping before we consider a revenue cap referendum,” Whitmire said. “After we do our due diligence and take measures to cut out conflicts of interest, waste and duplication, yes. But there are several steps that would have to be taken before we do that.”

U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, Whitmire’s main rival, has offered a similar answer, saying she wants to get through a couple budget cycles at City Hall before making a final decision. Attorney Lee Kaplan has described himself as a “confirmed skeptic” of the idea, and former Metro Chair Gilbert Garcia has opposed it outright, saying it would be unwise to seek a change given the city’s inefficient spending.

Only Councilmember Robert Gallegos has said explicitly that he would make the case to the voters, though he cautioned they ultimately would make the call.

“Right now, the city has been able to continue operating due to the fact that we have (federal) money we were using, that’s coming to an end.” Gallegos said at a forum this week. “As the next mayor, I’m just going to be the leader to try to convince the voters the importance of getting rid of the revenue cap.”

Houston voters approved the cap in 2004, tying the amount of increased revenue the city can collect from property taxes to a formula that accounts for population and inflation growth, or 4.5 percent, whichever is lower. The city first hit the cap in 2015, and it has resulted in property tax rate cuts in eight of the last nine years.

In that time, the city’s tax rate has fallen 16 percent and City Hall has foregone about $1.8 billion in revenue that it would have collected if the tax rate remained steady. The median homeowner in that span has saved roughly $1,000, or $100 per year, although that calculation does not include the savings they will see this year, since the city adopts its tax rate in September.

You know how I feel about this. The cap is based on a fallacy and a “growth” formula that’s stricter than the state’s. It serves no useful purpose and is the main reason the city’s finances are a mess. I have no idea what Whitmire or any of the other candidates think “housekeeping” or whatever means before dealing with the cap, but as a reminder, about 65% of the city’s budget is for public safety, and the city is now forbidden by state law from cutting that. (Indeed, we are likely to spend a whole lot more in the near future.) You can twiddle around the edges, or you can recognize reality. I’m heartened by the number of candidates I’ve interviewed so far who have zeroed in on this rather than mouth the usual platitudes about cutting waste or whatever. I don’t see myself supporting anyone who doesn’t understand this and isn’t willing to work towards it.

Posted in Election 2023 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Isaiah Martin to run for CD18

The primary is now officially contested regardless of what happens in the Mayor’s race.

Isaiah Martin

Isaiah Martin, a University of Houston graduate who has been volunteering for Democrat Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee’s mayoral campaign, launched a campaign Wednesday for her congressional seat.

Martin, 25, briefly ran for an at-large seat on Houston’s City Council earlier this year before dropping out in March to “help other candidates get elected this cycle.” He helped Jackson Lee’s social media efforts and traveled with her on the campaign trail. He said he has been interning for her for two years.

Jackson Lee can run for re-election to the U.S. House if she does not win the mayoral race, and she clarified that she has not endorsed any candidates. Other hopefuls have filed to run for the seat Jackson Lee has held since 1995, including former Councilmember Amanda Edwards, who dropped out of the mayor’s race after Jackson Lee’s entrance.

Martin said in his announcement he is hoping to become the next Gen-Z member of Congress. If elected, he could become the youngest, a distinction held by Rep. Maxwell Frost, 26, D-Florida.

[…]

The deadline for candidates to run in the primary elections is Dec. 11. Jackson Lee has not said whether she would run for re-election. A widely-expected mayoral runoff would occur right around the filing deadline, either on Dec. 9 or Dec. 16. A new bill passed in 2023 leaves that decision up to the secretary of state’s office.

You can see the announcement here and the video here. This is my district, so obviously I’m interested, and I’m very much looking forward to the October finance reports. Martin will have a ways to go to catch up to Amanda Edwards in that department, but a decent showing in the three weeks he’ll have in September for that report may tell us something. Do keep in mind, the primary election is now less than six months away. There’s less time to catch up than you think. As Yogi Berra said, it gets late early out here.

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