Bottom is bottom, even if it is turned upside down. http://uprifunnmvc.com
Former state Rep. Tom Schieffer officially announced his candidacy for governor today outside an elementary school in Ft. Worth. He’s scheduled appearances in Houston and Austin later this afternoon and will then head to South Texas to start campaigning.
His announcement comes just a day after his expected opponent for the Democratic seat, state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, said she wouldn’t enter the race. (Humorist Kinky Friedman is also expected to be in the Democratic field.) She also put in a good word for colleague Kirk Watson, urging him to run. In the same breath she took an indirect stab at Schieffer, whose personal ties to George W. Bush landed him an ambassadorship to Australia and later Japan:
Prominent Democrats must put personal ambitions aside and very pragmatically nominate the person best equipped to win in November. Just because one can win the Democratic nomination for Governor doesn't mean one should, unless he or she is best positioned to defeat the Republican nominee in the fall. That's why I think Senator Kirk Watson should raise his sights and run for Governor.
Maybe that’s why part of Shieffer’s announcement touched on what should have been an obvious point. “I am a Democrat,” he said, “as Sam Rayburn used to say, without prefix, suffix, or apology.” Much of the rest of his speech focused on education and health care—issues that go hand in hand with his oft-repeated concern about Texas becoming a third world state.
Watson, an Austin Democrat and former mayor of the city, said he was flattered by Van de Putte’s endorsement and would think it over, but wouldn’t decide until at least the end of the special session, which many expect Gov. Rick Perry to call in July.
Deep in the Senate's version of the massive TXDoT bill is a provision that, if not stripped out in conference committee, will allow local, state and federal law enforcement agencies to install license plate reading cameras on Texas highways. The technology - already in widespread use in surveillance-crazy Britain - is very powerful, enabling the government to automatically photograph the license plates of moving vehicles and check the information against databases. If the system finds a "match," officers can be alerted.
Continue reading »
Karen Hall’s knees still haven’t recovered from gathering signatures door-to-door for an amendment to Bryan’s city charter. “Democracy is a messy business,” she says, “but we like it.”
Continue reading »
After she lost her first campaign for a House seat from Houston in 2006, Kristi Thibaut showed up in Austin anyway. What she encountered, as she lobbied unsuccessfully for lower utility rates with fellow ACORN activists, was almost enough to make her wonder why she'd wanted that seat in the first place.
Continue reading »
Sometimes our legislators don't even know what's in their own bills. This morning, Rep. Dan Flynn (R-Van) discussed his House Bill 1165 before the Defense & Veterans Affairs Committee and it was evident that he hadn't read - or maybe didn't understand - what all was in it.
Continue reading »
Comments