Think a Democrat has a chance in Texas?

AZ Jim

R.I.P. With Us In Spirit Only
Think again....


[h=1]Texas GOP tries to pluck the liberal thorn from its side[/h]news.yahoo.com/texas-gop-tries-pluck-liberal-thorn-side-182836892.html
By PAUL J. WEBER 6 hours ago
. View gallery





AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — For years Republicans have controlled every lever of Texas politics — every statewide office, both houses of the Legislature, the state Supreme Court. Every nexus of power, that is, but one: the capital city.


Liberal Austin has made itself a painful exception to Republican rule. The big college town where Whole Foods got started is home to the grand jury that indicted former Republican Gov. Rick Perry while he was in office and to judges who authorized a gay wedding and struck down abortion restrictions and GOP cuts to public schools.


Finally, though, the Texas Legislature has put its boot down. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott this month is signing laws that will draw power away from solidly Democratic Travis County and weaken its local jurisdiction over state business done inside its borders. Political corruption cases will now be steered to the hometowns of the accused and Travis County judges, who are all elected Democrats, can now no longer singlehandedly upend major legislation.


"I understand that some of the Travis County politicians jealously wanted to hold onto this unfair advantage, but they shouldn't be able to," said Republican state Rep. Mike Schofield, who sponsored the changes in the Legislature and is a former Perry aide.
The outspokenly conservative Perry once called Austin "the blueberry in the tomato soup." The booming city, propelled by its thriving technology and entertainment industries, nurtures an oddball charm and progressive politics — taking the lead on banning plastic bags and guided by a slacker slogan that urges locals to keep it weird, man.


Meanwhile, voters in the rest of Texas keep sending more and more Republicans to run the Capitol downtown. Democrats virtually sweep elections in Travis County, but in statewide races they're 0-for-113 since 1994.
One of the new legal changes defangs the state's Public Integrity Unit that had jurisdiction over political corruption cases. Because the unit runs out of the Travis County District Attorney's Office, conservatives have long grumbled that it wields a partisan hand. The complaints escalated to outrage when former Republican House Majority Leader Tom DeLay was convicted of money laundering in 2010.


View gallery

File - In this Nov. 6, 2014 file photo, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, right, answers questions from the med …

But the final straw was Perry, who's now launching his second run for president under the cloud of a criminal indictment. He was charged last year with abusing his power after vetoing the unit's funding in 2013 in a dispute with Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg, an elected Democrat. Perry has pleaded not guilty.


Henceforth, political wrongdoing will be investigated by the Texas Rangers, and the accused will face trial in their hometowns instead of Austin.
"We lost funding for very important functions because of a bunch of political rhetoric that was false," said Travis County Assistant District Attorney Gregg Cox, who runs the unit. He added: "They have politicized the judicial branch at this point. The judicial branch should be free from political influence."


Cox said that only three cases in the last 15 years would've been taken away from his unit under the new rules — and two of the accused were Democrats. Even DeLay would still be prosecuted through his unit today, Cox said, because the changes only apply to state officials.
Republicans also overhauled how state courts will handle lawsuits over school finance or voting maps — two of the biggest decisions legislatures make. Last year an Austin judge struck down the state's school finance system, dealing GOP lawmakers a setback over funding cuts orchestrated in 2011. The new rules will put three-judge panels over those major cases.


Two of the judges on the panels will be picked by the Texas Supreme Court, which is entirely Republican. Richard Gray, the lead attorney for more than 600 school districts suing Texas, says he thinks the intent was to make it "more difficult to try school finance cases."


Republicans say far-reaching decisions shouldn't fall to one judge and deny trying to stack the deck.
"Assuming a lack of integrity on the part of the chief justice of the Supreme Court is over and above the line," Schofield said.
Bedraggled Texas Democrats aren't happy, but are mostly surprised it took this long.
"If Republicans wanted to celebrate Christmas in April," Democratic state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer says, "they have the votes."
___
Follow Paul J. Weber on Twitter: www.twitter.com/pauljweber
.
 

No interest in a state who is decimating the Democrat party by redistricting and censuring opposition here in America? What have we become? How obvious does it have to be?
 
Well Jim, it took me two reads to get my head around this thread. I will attempt to kick start the discussion with a few questions.

This is what I do and do not understand and I am happy to stand corrected if I have anything wrong.
#1 Almost all of Texas votes Republican all of the time with the exception of the capital city, Austin, which is in Travis County.

#2 Travis County, unlike the rest of the state, elects Democrat judges.

#3 Corruption trials, which used to be tried in Travis County, will now be tried in the home town of the accused, which for the most part their judges will be Republicans.
This should move the trial from one seemingly biased court to a differently biased court. Is it reasonable to assume that either court would be politically biased when assessing corruption? (Home town? The town of their primary residence?)

#4 The Public Integrity Unit ? Does this preside over trials or simply decide which cases will go to trial? Is it part of the judiciary or part of the prosecutors office? I think there is a big difference when it comes to potential bias.

#5 "Republican House Majority Leader Tom DeLay was convicted of money laundering in 2010". Was this a jury trial or a judge only decision? Again, the answer is important to deciding whether bias is a factor in the verdict.

#6 Rick Perry "was charged last year with abusing his power after vetoing the unit's funding in 2013 in a dispute with Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg, an elected Democrat." Is this a criminal charge or a constitutional dispute? Could it have been brought for political reasons? My nose tells me that this is a possibility but not necessarily a sure thing. I need to hear from someone with local insights.

#7 " Last year an Austin judge struck down the state's school finance system, dealing GOP lawmakers a setback over funding cuts orchestrated in 2011". I have no inkling about this situation. Public school funding is determined by the state governments and administered by public servants. Judges are never involved. I would appreciate some background information that explains how this could be a matter for courts.

#8 "more than 600 school districts suing Texas". Apart for not understanding why they would do this, my understanding is that cases that used to be tried before one judge will now require a panel of three judges, the majority of which are almost guaranteed to be Republicans. This would not be a problem if the judiciary was independent of the government (separation of powers) but the implication is that this is not the case in Texas.​

Am I reading this correctly, and is it a problem in other states or just Texas?
 

Last edited:
No interest in a state who is decimating the Democrat party by redistricting and censuring opposition here in America? What havec we become? How obvious does it have to be?

This is exactly what is happening here, but hey, their decision will probably help Perry get out of his mess....Yee Haw!

[h=1]The schools are suing the state for unconstitutional under funding..[/h][h=1]Judge rules school finance system unconstitutional[/h]Source: Houston Chronicle

AUSTIN -- A judge on Thursday again declared Texas' school finance system unconstitutional, reaffirming his 2013 ruling that struck down the current mode of funding public education as inefficient and inadequate.

The office of Attorney General Greg Abbott, who is representing the state, has said it would appeal if the judge ruled for the four plaintiff groups representing more than 600 school districts, including Houston ISD and Cypress-Fairbanks ISD in Harris County.

Abbott is expected to ask to bypass an intermediate appeals court in favor of kicking the case up to the Texas Supreme Court.

The 400-page ruling issued Thursday was the latest salvo in nearly two years of litigation, and marked another major victory for the plaintiffs representing nearly three in four Texas schoolchildren. They challenged the adequacy and equality of the Texas' public education funding, suing the state after lawmakers cut $5.4 billion from the budget in 2011.

Read more: http://www.chron.com/news/politics/texas/article/Judge-rules-school-finance-system-5718242.php



.....same thing with the nursing homes in Texas, Seabreeze started a thread about Texas Nursing homes and how they were rated one of the lowest in the country.....here is the thread....


https://www.seniorforums.com/showthread.php/14730-Top-Rated-Nursing-Homes-are-Hard-to-Find-in-Texas



http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/745780... Texas nursing home leaders are concerned about how they will care for the frail and elderly if lawmakers carry out plans to drastically reduce the state Medicaid budget.Deep cuts would gut many nursing homes, forcing them to pare back services, reduce staff or even close, administrators said. A majority of the state's nursing home residents depend on Medicaid for long-term care."This is an unprecedented crisis we are facing in the state," said George Linial, president and CEO of the Texas Association of Homes and Services for the Aging.Medicaid is a state-federal funded program that provides health care assistance for children, pregnant women, disabled and elderly people. Senate and House budget proposals call for a 10 percent reduction in Medicaid spending to help close a budget shortfall, but the loss totals 33 percent when the loss of federal matching funds from the stimulus package is factored in, the association said. The stimulus funding runs out in June and won't be replaced.Based on a survey to determine how dependent nursing homes are on Medicaid, the association estimates that 80 percent of the state's 1,054 nursing homes would close and more than 60,000 residents would lose care if Medicaid funds dropped by 30 percent. In the Houston-Galveston area, 65 out of 76 facilities would close and more than 7,000 elderly would lose care, the association said.-snip- I'll be willing to bet that if you took the time to check the states that have lowest rating on Nursing home care they'll mostly be red states.

....all of this, then the Republicans turned around and voted Attorney General Abbott the new Governor of Texas.....Yee Haw!
 

Back
Top