Posts Tagged ‘Texas House District 28’
Friday, June 14th, 2024
Greetings, and welcome to a LinkSwarm so large I had to start working on it Wednesday! Unemployment rises too much to rig it away, home sales crash to Carter levels, Europe’s voters rise up to throw out the left, Hunter is guilty guilty guilty, another blow to the Biden Administration’s tranny Title IX rewrite, Israel rescues some hostages and smokes a Hezbolli terror master, and California continues to do California things.
The Biden Administration has been lying about how high unemployment is. Says who? The Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Every so-called “strong” jobs report has been a disaster if one puts in even a little work to dig below the pristine, if fake, surface. And while we expected this charade to continue indefinitely, and certainly at least until the November election, at which point suddenly all the truth about the ugly labor market would be revealed to usher in the new president amid an economic crisis, we were shocked when none other than the Fed chair admitted today that the Biden admin was rigging jobs data.
In response to a question from a Bloomberg journalist during the post-FOMC presser, asking the Fed chair to comment on the state of the labor market, the Fed Chair said that two years ago the labor market was “overheated” and has since gotten back to “normal”, largely thanks to “supply from to immigration” – translation: illegal aliens have been the main reasons for the increase in employment and the drop in wages and thus, overall inflation, which as we discussed recently, is the narrative that is being pushed out to mitigate demands by most Americans to halt illegal immigration.
Where things got very interesting, however, is when Powell was discussing the demand-side of the labor market: here, he addressed the dropping quits level, the decline in job openings and wages, but more importantly, the rising unemployment rate – from 3.4% to 4.0% which clearly goes against the narrative of red hot payrolls – all of which the Fed chair summarized as strong job creation, yet caveated by saying that “there is an argument that [payrolls] may be a bit overstated.”
Note: he didn’t say “understated” because the “-stating” always goes in just one direction: the one that makes the resident of the White House look good.
In other words, the jobs – like so many things about this Potemkin economy – are a lie, and while Powell immediately realized what he had said, and tried to couch it by adding that payrolls are “still strong”, suddenly the entire narrative of a strong labor market imploded in front of our eyes, because if the Biden admin will lie about a “bit” of the jobs report, it will lie about any part of it.
And, as we have shown above and every month this year, lie is precisely what the Biden administration has been doing, month after month, year after year.
And the biggest stunner, as Edward Snowden put it so eloquently, is that he’s “not sure I’ve ever seen the chairman of the Federal Reserve publicly accuse the White House of cooking the books on employment numbers, but here we are.”
Speaking of which: “Initial Claims Surge To 10-Month Highs As California Joblessness Soars.” “Did we suddenly get a peek at economic reality? The number of Americans applying for jobless benefits for the first time surged last week to 242k (up from 229k and well above the 225k exp). That is the highest since August 2023.” And California, which just happened to implement a minimum wage hike, led far and away with the most claims…
Home sales have dropped so far during the Biden Recession that they’re now back to 1978 levels.
The recession in the U.S. existing home sales market has been so deep that we’re back to late ‘70s levels—despite us now living in a much bigger country:
April 1978: 4.09 million U.S. existing home sales print
April 2024: 4.14 million U.S. existing home sales print*
1978: 223 million U.S. population
2024: 341 million U.S. population
The reason, of course, is that housing affordability has deteriorated so much that many buyers and sellers alike have pulled back from the market. Many homeowners who would otherwise like to sell and buy something else are staying put rather than trading in their 3% mortgage rate for a 7% mortgage rate.
The bad news?
According to a forecast published this week by Goldman Sachs, the recovery for existing home sales could be a slog.
1978: Jimmy Carter was still President, the Bee Gees dominated the music charts thanks to Saturday Night Fever, and a brand new comic strip about a lasagna-loving cat named Garfield debuted. And the average price of a home was somewhere around $56,000. (Yet, somehow, home sales were still stronger during the 1981-82 interest rate hikes than under Carter in 1978…)
Hunter Biden found guilty on all counts in his gun trial.
A jury of Hunter Biden’s peers found him guilty on all three felony charges on Tuesday after a six-day trial that demonstrated that the first son lied on a federal gun-purchase background-check form when he claimed not to be a drug addict.
The verdict was reached after the jury deliberated for three hours, beginning Monday afternoon with the conclusion of closing arguments. Hunter was surrounded by family members, including wife Melissa Cohen Biden and his uncle James Biden, as the verdict was read. First lady Jill Biden missed the verdict announcement and rushed to greet Hunter afterward.
Hunter was found guilty on two charges for lying about his crack-cocaine addiction on federal gun paperwork when he bought a Colt Cobra revolver at a sporting-goods store in Wilmington in October 2018. He was also found guilty on a third charge for possessing the firearm while he was using crack cocaine.
The first son faces up to 25 years in prison, though he’ll likely receive a lighter sentence as a first-time, nonviolent offender. Judge Noreika, who presided over the trial, said that a sentencing hearing will be held in September.
Though Hunter Biden still has a pending tax trial, don’t hold your breath about him going to trial for his role as the Biden crime family’s bagman…
“Court Confirms: Weiss’s ‘Special Counsel’ Appointment Is a Sham.”
I’ve pointed out time and again (including yesterday) that Biden Justice Department AG Merrick Garland’s “special counsel” appointment of Biden Justice Department Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss in the Hunter Biden case is a fraud on the public.
In a pretrial ruling denying the younger Biden’s motion to dismiss the case, Judge Maryellen Noreika has confirmed that Garland’s appointment of Weiss did not comply with federal regulations for appointing special counsels. That, however, was not a basis to dismiss the case — particularly with Garland and Weiss quietly citing the last special-counsel regulation, §600.10 (of Title 28, Code of Federal Regulations), which provides that no one may hold the Justice Department accountable for flouting its own regulations.
To be clear, I have never contended that Garland lacked the authority to assign Weiss, or whoever he wanted to assign, to investigate the Biden case. As Judge Noreika correctly explained, federal statutory law — in particular, §§509, 510, 515, and 533 — vest attorneys general with sweeping power to run the Justice Department as they see fit, including power to designate any DOJ lawyers they choose to run investigations anywhere in the country.
Weiss, for example, is now prosecuting Hunter Biden in Los Angeles, on the tax case scheduled to begin trial on September 5, in addition to the gun case in Weiss’s own Delaware district. That’s because Garland doubled-down in assigning the investigation of the president’s son to the same prosecutor — Weiss — who had just schemed with defense lawyers on a failed sweetheart plea deal that was designed to make all conceivable cases against said son disappear (and only after Weiss had consciously dithered as the statute of limitations steadily eviscerated serious criminal offenses).
Garland is the attorney general, and he has that power. It is power he wields with no fear that Congress will slash the DOJ’s budget, censure him, impeach him, or do anything else but caterwaul over how he abuses it. My point is that Garland has been engaged in a nearly four-year fraud — trying to con the country into believing the Justice Department is neither protecting its boss nor trying, to the extent politically feasible, to protect the president’s son.
The AG refused to appoint a special counsel for the Biden investigation, despite the president’s (and other Biden family members’) being implicated in Hunter’s malfeasance, particularly crimes arising out of his peddling of his father’s political influence for huge pay days from agents of corrupt and anti-American regimes.
Europe’s ruling center left just got smashed in European elections.
Early projections of the EU-election results show that the continent’s right-wing parties have made significant advances as voters signal their dissatisfaction with illegal immigration and inflation. Formerly powerful left-wing parties seem to have been routed, while centrists stayed the course.
This antiestablishment sentiment was expressed most strongly in Germany and France, two of the European bloc’s most powerful countries.
The French results prompted President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve the French parliament in preparation for snap elections on June 30 and July 7, as his party lost badly to Marine Le Pen’s National Rally, which is part of the Identity and Democracy coalition in the European Parliament.
Before crowds in Paris, Le Pen responded to Macron’s announcement: “This historic vote shows that when people vote, people win. . . . We are ready to exercise power, to end mass migration, to prioritize purchasing power, ready to make France live again.”
In Germany, Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his Social Democrats were trounced by a combination of support for the right-wing CDU/CSU and Alternative for Germany (AfD). The left-wing Social Democratic Party (14.6 percent) and the Greens (12 percent) underperformed. Katarina Barley, speaking for the Social Democrats, called it “a bitter evening.” “I am very disappointed.” The AfD, having won 14 percent as of this reporting, is intent on carrying its EU wins to the national elections in October 2025.
Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni was the only leader of a European power to see success, with the right-wing politician’s allied faction, European Conservatives and Reformists, placing first in Italy.
In Spain, the conservative People’s Party took 34.2 percent of the vote, a rejection of socialist prime minister Pedro Sánchez and his Socialist Workers’ Party, which received 30.2 percent. Two other right-wing parties, Vox and Se Acabó La Fiesta (The Party’s Over), received another 14.2 percent between them.
The Greens ceded more ground than any other party in the EU, losing more than a quarter of their seats.
For decades, the ruling Euroelite have insisted that there is no alternative to their high tax, high spending, high debt, high regulation, high immigration, environmental leftist EU superstate. Voters seem to have finally grown tired enough of it that they’re willing to embrace Marine Le Pen if that’s what it takes to make their voices heard.
“Biden Asks Why Europe Didn’t Just Arrest Conservative Candidates Before Election.”
Good news! The Supreme Court has struck down the bump stock ban.
In his opinion, Thomas wrote that, though a bump stock does increase a rifle’s rate of fire, it does not turn it into an automatic weapon.
“A bump stock does not convert a semiautomatic rifle into a machinegun any more than a shooter with a lightning-fast trigger finger does,” Thomas wrote. “Even with a bump stock, a semiautomatic rifle will only fire one shot for every ‘function of the trigger.’”
Justice Samuel Alito wrote in his concurrence that, while the ATF’s interpretation of the Firearm Owners’ Protection Act was an incorrect reading of the statute, there are legislative remedies for the issue of bump stocks.
“The horrible shooting spree in Las Vegas in 2017 did not change the statutory text or its meaning,” Alito wrote. “That event demonstrated that a semiautomatic rifle with a bump stock can have the same lethal effect as a machinegun, and it thus strengthened the case for amending §5845(b). But an event that highlights the need to amend a law does not itself change the law’s meaning.”
“The Lies and Fall of Ibram X. Kendi.” “This man gave America the simplest, most easily applicable binary solution to all of our racial problems. It didn’t matter that it was stupid, at least not from the perspective of his personal enrichment. For a while, it sold…What we lived through in 2020, during the Floyd meltdown and its aftermath, was a onetime necrotic bloom during which the first carrion-feeders on the scene were able to fatten themselves up to spectacular proportions on the collapsed body of American progressive racial and political angst.”
Alas, I fear the idea that the woke poison of social justice is really on the wane may be too optimistic, as Michigan State still has 140+ employees working to implement DEI. Let a thousand pink slips bloom.
Five of seven convicted in Feeding Our Future Covid funds fraud trial in Minnesota. The convicted included Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, Mohamed Jama Ismail, Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff, and Hayat Mohamed Nur. If only we could figure out what they have in common…
Ukraine takes out Russia’s latest and greatest Su-57 “stealth” fighter.
The US has expanded economic sanctions on Russia.
The US has broadened its sanctions on Russia, including a fresh crackdown on banks dealing with sanctioned entities.
It expands a December programme to target foreign banks deemed to be aiding Russia’s war effort in Ukraine.
The US also placed sanctions on the Moscow stock exchange, leading to it halting trading in dollars and euros.
It also moved to try to restrict Russia’s use of technology, including chips and software.
US President Joe Biden signed an executive order in December that imposed sanctions on banks dealing with about 1,200 individuals and companies deemed to be helping Russia’s war machine.
Those measures, which expose banks to the risk of being cut off from the US financial system, have now been expanded to about 4,500 entities.
The US will also target gold-laundering.
Peter Harrell, a former White House senior director for international economics, told the Reuters news agency that the US “is shifting towards something that begins to look like an effort to set up a global financial embargo on Russia”.
As part of this effort, the US Treasury announced that it would impose sanctions on parts of Russia’s financial system, including the Moscow Exchange, which is one of Russia’s main stock exchanges.
The stock exchange, which is Russia’s largest foreign exchange market, said the sanctions had forced it to stop trading in dollars and euros.
The US also focused on technology. Chips and other technology made in the US have been found in downed Russian equipment on Ukraine battlefields, including drones, radios, missiles and armoured vehicles.
The sanctions aim to make it more difficult for companies to supply that tech.
The US will target shell firms in Hong Kong selling chips to Russia.
There are YouTubers saying “Russian economy is crippled” etc., but I remain skeptical. The chips going into Russian drones aren’t anything special, they’re COTS stuff and EPROMs you can get almost anywhere.
“Israeli Military Rescues Four Hostages from Gaza.” Naturally this is good news for decent human beings everywhere and a tragedy for the radical left.
“Lebanon: Israeli Airstrike Kills One Of Hezbollah’s Most Senior Terror Commanders. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Tuesday night eliminated one of Hezbollah’s senior-most terror commanders operating in Lebanon. Sami Taleb Abdullah, who headed Hezbollah’s Nasr terrorist force, and three other Hezbollah commanders were killed in an Israeli airstrikes on a terrorist base located in southern Lebanon.” Good. Remember how commentators have repeatedly opined on the possibility of Hezbollah opening up a “second front” while Israel settles Hamas’ hash? They seem to have done very little but the usual pinprick terror attacks. With all the terror money Iran is sloshing around to Hamas and the Houthi’s, one wonders if they’re stretched to thin to send much Hezbollah’s way…
“Bill Maher Calls Out Campus Protesters for Ignoring the Oppression of Women in Muslim Countries.” “Today, right now, hundreds of millions of women are treated worse than second-class citizens. When you mandate that one category of human beings don’t even have the right to show their face, that’s apartheid.”
An end to the petrodollar? Peter Zeihan asserts that there’s still no real alternative to the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. Let’s hope he’s right. (Hat tip: Stephen Green at Instapundit.)
The American College of Pediatricians releases statement calling for an immediate halt to puberty blockers and gender surgery for minors.
Another day, another federal judge slapping down the Biden Administrations unilateral tranny rewrite of Title IX.
Western District of Louisiana Chief Judge Terry Doughty in an order Thursday declared that Title IX, a federal education law that bars sex-based discrimination, “was written and intended to protect biological women from discrimination.”
“Such purpose makes it difficult to sincerely argue that, at the time of enactment, ‘discrimination on the basis of sex’ included gender identity, sex stereotypes, sexual orientation, or sex characteristics,” Doughty, a Trump appointee, wrote. “Enacting the changes in the Final Rule would subvert the original purpose of Title IX.”
(Previously.)
Still, the Biden Administration continues its tranny push, going so far as to indict the whistleblowing surgeon who exposed lawbreaking transgender procedures at Texas Children’s Hospital.
Brandon Herrera reflects on his narrow election loss.
“Congressman Henry Cuellar’s Bribery, Money Laundering Trial Date Moved to 2025.” Hopefully Jay Furman, the Republican candidate for the Texas 28th Congressional District can retire him in November so he can concentrate on his trial…
Be a cop working a gun buyback program for the San Antonio Police. 2. Take choicest guns for yourself. 3. Profit! (Hat tip: Dwight.)
Old and Busted: LA thieves stealing anything not bolted down. The New Hotness: Actually, they’re stealing fire hydrants now.
Another week, another California chain leaving California. (Hat tip: Dwight.)
Seattle’s $26 minimum wage hike = people just stopped ordering food delivery.
Of course the U.S. Women’s basketball has left Caitlyn Clark off the team. Because we all know queer identity trumps winning a medal for your country…
On the upside, also not competing: “Lia” Thomas. Turns out the Olympics don’t want men competing in women’s swimming. Who could have possibly seen that coming?
Tesla is now officially a Texas company. And Elon Musk’s big payday was approved by Tesla shareholders.
AI music gets good enough. “It’s going to replace people.”
For a brief period after World War II, homes were made of enameled steel. I bet Lustron would offer a pretty high degree of bullet resistance…
“Why the US Drops 14.7 Million Worms On Panama Every Week.” Raccoona Sheldon should write a story…
The ecology of stray dogs in east Austin.
Star Wars, RIP.
Old and Busted: Top Gear presenters offering their own brand of gin. The New Hotness: Tiger tanks offering their own brand of gin.
How 12 Japanese Kanji “ghost characters got into unicode.
“Pfizer Assures Public They Are Preparing For Next Pandemic By Developing An All-New Ineffective Vaccine With Fatal Side Effects.”
“In Hindsight Fans Realize They Were Too Quick To Call The Holiday Special The Worst Star Wars Project Ever…After watching the latest Disney Star Wars offering The Acolyte, however, many fans admit they might have been too harsh to call the holiday show the worst thing to come out of the franchise.”
Tags:2024 Election, Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, aircraft, Alcohol, Alternative for Germany, Austin, Babylon Bee, Biden Recession, Bovington Tank Museum, Brandon Herrera, bump stock ban, California, Clarence Thomas, Crime, Critical Drinker, Critical Race Theory, David Weiss, Democrats, dogs, Economics, Elections, Elon Musk, Emmanuel Macron, EU, Europe, Federal Reserve, France, fraud, Germany, Giorgia Meloni, Global Warming, Guns, Hayat Mohamed Nur, Henry Cuellar, Hezbollah, housing, Ibram X. Kendi, Israel-Hamas War, Jerome Powell, Jihad, LinkSwarm, Marine Le Pen, Merrick Garland, minimum wage, Mohamed Jama Ismail, Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff, Olaf Scholz, Olympics, Pedro Sanchez, Regulation, Russia, Russo-Ukrainian War, Sami Taleb Abdullah, Samuel Alito, Seattle, Social Democratic Party, Social Justice Warriors, Socialist Workers’ Party (Spain), Star Wars, Su-57, Supreme Court, tanks, terrorism, Terry Doughty, Tesla Motors, Texas, Texas House District 28, Title IX, transexual, Ukraine, unemployment
Posted in Crime, Democrats, Economics, Elections, Guns, Jihad, Regulation, Social Justice Warriors, Supreme Court, Texas, Waste and Fraud | 8 Comments »
Tuesday, February 20th, 2024
Today marked the start of early primary voting, so here’s a roundup on Republican state house races.
I’ve posted several times on the need to primary and defeat every one of the Dade Phelan toadies who voted to kill school choice or who voted to impeach Ken Paxton. Every candidate who voted to kill school choiceretired or draw a primary challenger.
So here is a list of every contested Republican state House race, whether the incumbent voted to kill school choice or impeach Paxton, and who their challengers are:
District 1: Gary VanDeaver:
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Dale Huls
Chris Spencer
District 2: Jill Dutton
Dutton is listed as the incumbent because she won the special election for the seat of the expelled and disgraced Bryan Slaton. But she wasn’t in office to vote for or against school choice or the Paxton impeachment.
Challenger:
Brent Money
District 3: Keith Bell
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Joshua Feuerstein
District 5: Cole Hefner:
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Dewey Collier
Jeff Fletcher
District 7: Jay Dean
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Bonnie Walters
Joe McDaniel
District 8: Cody Harris
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Jaye Curtis
District 9: Trent Ashby
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Paulette Carson
District 11: Travis Clardy
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Joanne Shofner
District 12: No incumbent (Kyle Kacal retiring)
Challengers:
Ben Bius
John Slocum
Trey Wharton
District 14: No incumbent (John Raney retiring)
Challengers:
Rick Davis
Paul Dyson
District 15: Steve Toth
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Skeeter Hubert
District 17: Stan Gerdes
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Tom Glass
District 18: Ernest Bailes
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Janis Holt
Stephen Missick
District 19: Ellen Troxclair
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Kyle Biedermann
Manny Campos
District 20: Terry Wilson
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Elva Janine Chapa
District 21: Dade Phalen
As Speaker of the House, Phalen voted Present on the school choice gutting and Paxton impeachment votes, but is known to be the motivating factor behind both.
Challengers:
David Covey (Endorsed by President Trump.)
Alicia Davis
District 24: Greg Bonnen
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Larissa Ramirez
District 26: Jacey Jetton
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Jessica Rose Huang
Matt Morgan
District 28: Gary Gates
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Dan Matthews
District 29: No incumbent (Ed Thompson retiring)
Challengers:
Jeff Barry
Alex Kamkar
Edgar Pacheco Jr.
Trent Perez
District 30: No incumbent (Geanie W. Morrison retiring)
Challengers:
Bret Baldwin
Jeff Bauknight
Vanessa Hicks-Callaway
A.J. Louderback
District 33: Justin Holland
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Dennis London
Katrina Pierson
District 44: John Kuempel
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Greg Switzer
David Freimarck
Alan Schoolcraft (Endorsed by President Trump)
District 53: No incumbent (Andrew S. Murr retiring)
Challengers:
Hatch Smith
Wesley Virdell
District 55: Hugh Shine
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Jorge Estrada
Davis Ford
Hillary Hickland
District 56: No incumbent (Charles “Doc” Anderson retiring)
Challengers:
Pat Curry
Devvie Duke
District 58: DeWayne Burns
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Helen Kerwin (Endorsed by President Trump)
Lyndon Laird
District 60: Glenn Rogers
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Mike Olcott (Endorsed by President Trump)
District 61: Frederick Frazier
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Chuck Branch
Keresa Richardson
District 62: Reggie Smith
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Shelley Luther
District 63: Ben Bumgarner
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Carlos Andino Jr. (website shows as expired)
Vincent Gallo
District 64: Lynn Stucky
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Elaine Hays
Andy Hopper
District 65: Kronda Thimesch
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Mitch Little
District 66: Matt Shaheen
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Wayne Richard
District 67: Jeff Leach
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Daren Meis
District 68: David Spiller
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Kerri Kingsbery
District 70: Incumbent Democrat Mihaela Plesa
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Republican Challengers:
Joe Collins
Steven Kinard
District 71: Stan Lambert
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Charles Byrn
Liz Case (Endorsed by President Trump)
District 72: Drew Darby
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Stormy Bradley
District 74: Incumbent Democrat Eddie Morales Jr.
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Republican Challengers:
Robert Garza
John McLeon
District 76: Incumbent Democrat Suleman Lalani
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Republican Challengers:
Dayo David
Summara Kanwal
Lea Simmons
District 80: No incumbent (Democrat Tracy King retiring)
Republican Challengers:
Don McLaughlin
Clint Powell
JR Ramirez
District 83: Dustin Burrows
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Wade Cowen
District 85: Stan Kitzman
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Tim Greeson
District 86: John Smithee
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? No
Challenger:
Jamie Haynes
District 87: No incumbent (John Four Price retiring)
Challengers:
Richard Beyea
Cindi Bulla
Caroline Fairly
Jesse Quackenbush
District 88: Ken King
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Karen Post
District 89: Candy Noble
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Abraham George
District 91: Stephanie Klick
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Teresa Ramirez Gonzalez
David Lowe
District 97: No incumbent (Craig Goldman retired to run for U.S. Congress)
Challengers:
Cheryl Bean
John McQueeney
Leslie Robnett
District 98: Giovanni Capriglione
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Brad Schofield
District 99: Charlie Geren
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Jack Reynolds
District 108: Morgan Meyer
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Barry Wernick
District 112: Angie Chen Button
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Chad Carnahan
District 119: Incumbent Democrat Elizabeth Campos
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Republican Challengers:
Brandon Grable
Dan Sawatzki
District 121: Steve Allison
Voted to kill school choice? Yes
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challengers:
Marc LaHood
Michael Champion
District 128: Briscoe Cain
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Bianca Gracia
District 133: Mano Deayala
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
John Perez
District 138: Lacey Hull
Voted to kill school choice? No
Voted to impeach Paxton? Yes
Challenger:
Jared Woodfill
Sources:
List of Texas state house races
School choice vote role call
Paxton impeachment vote roll call
Ballot information for the 2024 election.
I’m still missing a few candidate websites, so if you note any errors or omissions, let me know in the comments below.
Tags:2024 Election, A.J. Louderback, Abraham George, Alan Schoolcraft, Alex Kamkar, Alicia Davis, Andy Hopper, Angie Chen Button, Barry Wernick, Ben Bius, Ben Bumgarner, Bianca Gracia, Bonnie Walters, Brad Schofield, Brandon Grable, Brent Money, Bret Baldwin, Briscoe Cain, Candy Noble, Carlos Andino Jr., Caroline Fairly, Chad Carnahan, Charles Byrn, Charlie Geren, Cheryl Bean, Chris Spencer, Cindi Bulla, Clint Powell, Cody Harris, Cole Hefner, Dade Phelan, Dale Huls, Dan Matthews, Dan Sawatzki, Daren Meis, David Covey, David Freimarck, David Lowe, David Spiller, Davis Ford, Dayo David, Dennis London, Devvie Duke, DeWayne Burns, Dewey Collier, Don McLaughlin, Drew Darby, Dustin Burrows, Eddie Morales Jr., Edgar Pacheco Jr., Elaine Hays, Elections, Elizabeth Campos, Ellen Troxclair, Elva Janine Chapa, Ernest Bailes, Frederick Frazier, Gary Gates, Gary VanDeaver, Giovanni Capriglione, Greg Bonnen, Greg Switzer, Hatch Smith, Helen Kerwin, Hillary Hickland, Hugh Shine, Jacey Jetton, Jack Reynolds, Jamie Haynes, Janis Holt, Jared Woodfill, Jay Dean, Jaye Curtis, Jeff Barry, Jeff Bauknight, Jeff Fletcher, Jeff Leach, Jesse Quackenbush, Jessica Rose Huang, Jill Dutton, Joanne Shofner, Joe Collins, Joe McDaniel, John Kuempel, John McLeon, John McQueeney, John Perez, John Slocum, John Smithee, Jorge Estrada, Joshua Feuerstein, JR Ramirez, Justin Holland, Karen Post, Katrina Pierson, Keith Bell, Ken King, Keresa Richardson, Kerri Kingsbery, Kronda Thimesch, Kyle Biedermann, Lacey Hull, Larissa Ramirez, Lea Simmons, Leslie Robnett, Liz Case, Lyndon Laird, Lynn Stucky, Manny Campos, Mano Deayala, Marc LaHood, Matt Morgan, Matt Shaheen, Michael Champion, Mihaela Plesa, Mike Olcott, Mitch Little, Morgan Meyer, Pat Curry, Paul Dyson, Paulette Carson, Reggie Smith, Republicans, Richard Beyea, Rick Davis, Robert Garza, Shelley Luther, Skeeter Hubert, Stan Gerdes, Stan Kitzman, Stan Lambert, Stephanie Klick, Stephen Missick, Steve Allison, Steve Toth, Steven Kinard, Stormy Bradley, Suleman Lalani, Summara Kanwal, Teresa Ramirez Gonzalez, Terry Wilson, Texas, Texas House District 1, Texas House District 108, Texas House District 11, Texas House District 111, Texas House District 119, Texas House District 12, Texas House District 121, Texas House District 133, Texas House District 138, Texas House District 14, Texas House District 15, Texas House District 17, Texas House District 18, Texas House District 19, Texas House District 2, Texas House District 20, Texas House District 21, Texas House District 24, Texas House District 26, Texas House District 28, Texas House District 29, Texas House District 3, Texas House District 30, Texas House District 33, Texas House District 44, Texas House District 5, Texas House District 53, Texas House District 55, Texas House District 56, Texas House District 58, Texas House District 60, Texas House District 61, Texas House District 62, Texas House District 63, Texas House District 64, Texas House District 65, Texas House District 66, Texas House District 67, Texas House District 68, Texas House District 7, Texas House District 70, Texas House District 71, Texas House District 72, Texas House District 74, Texas House District 76, Texas House District 8, Texas House District 80, Texas House District 83, Texas House District 85, Texas House District 86, Texas House District 87, Texas House District 88, Texas House District 89, Texas House District 9, Texas House District 91, Texas House District 97, Texas House District 98, Texas House District 99, Tim Greeson, Tom Glass, Travis Clardy, Trent Ashby, Trent Perez, Trey Wharton, Vanessa Hicks-Callaway, Vincent Gallo, Wade Cowen, Wayne Richard, Wesley Virdell
Posted in Democrats, Regulation, Republicans, Texas, Uncategorized | 7 Comments »