Archive for May, 2017

Tea Party Republicans Revolt Against House GOP Leadership … – Houston Public Media

The split has already wrecked the chances of more than 100 bills as the legislative session nears its end.

Correction:An earlier version of this story stated in the last paragraph that this will be Joe Straus last term as House speaker. A spokesman for the speakers office tells us he has made no such announcement. We regret the error.

A split in the Republican ranks could doom hundreds of bills still pending before the Texas Legislature. Tea party members frustrated with House GOP leaders have already brought business in the lower chamber to a halt.

Last night at midnight marked the cutoff for the House to vote on bills originating in the chamber this session. Members of the House Freedom Caucus railed that they were being stifled as the leadership focused on pressing through as many bills as possible. When the deadline passed, the group used a procedural move to kill more than 100bills scheduled for a vote today.

Whats happened to us has been personal retribution, said State Rep. Jeff Leach (R-Plano), who announced the move. Its been personal attacks, personal retribution, petty, personal politics. And this caucus has had enough of it.

Brandon Rottinghaus, political science professor at the University of Houston, says the rupture could make it much harder for Republicans to work together. The person who has to be the great unifier here is [Governor] Greg Abbott, he says. How Greg Abbott governs and how he chooses to run out the clock on these last pieces of legislation, what he signs and why are going to be pretty telling for what the future of the party will be.

Rottinghaus says the split is only likely to get wider next year.

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Tea Party Republicans Revolt Against House GOP Leadership ... - Houston Public Media

This Week: In ‘Mother’s Day Massacre,’ Tea Party Caucus Derails 100+ Bills – The Texas Observer

On Friday, the group of about a dozen lawmakers derailed an entire slate of more than 100 bills that were on the Local and Consent Calendar, an expedited path for legislation that is not expected to be controversial or face opposition. Bills on that calendar sail through unless at least five members object.

Some Lege watchers, playing off the upcoming holiday, began calling the incident the Mothers Day Massacre. As the dust settled, lobbyists, lawmakers and activists began to assess the damage.

Among the bills that likely died this week: a proposal to tackle the states farmworker housing crisis, a medical marijuana bill, two that wouldve addressed Texas alarmingly high maternal mortality rate, an anti-lunch-shaming bill that wouldve kept schools from identifying students who receive free or reduced lunch, an anti-gentrification measure and proposals to add protections for LGBT people to housing and employment laws. While theres a chance several of the proposals that did not advance this week such as priority anti-abortion measures will find life this session as an amendment or Senate version, the majority will have to wait for 2019.

The Texas Senate voted Tuesday to license immigrant family detention centers, which critics call baby jails, as child care facilities. The bill, which was written by a private prison corporation, allows the state to exempt the centers from any minimum standards it deems necessary in order to license them. Under the legislation, the centers could detain immigrant children for the duration of their asylum cases much longer than current law allows.

Conservatives in the House advanced a religious freedom bill this week that could result in the denial of prospective adoptive parents who are LGBT, unmarried or dont attend church weekly. House Bill 3859 could also shield faith-based foster families who subject gay children to harmful conversion therapy or refuse to provide reproductive health care to teens.

A stripped-down version of the Sandra Bland Act unanimously passed the Texas Senate Thursday. The bill isnt the uncompromising criminal justice overhaul its author intended, but it does raise standards of care for inmates with mental health issues.

A GOP-backed bill speeding through the Texas Legislature would abolish straight-ticket voting, the option that allows Texans to vote for a partys entire roster of candidates with a single selection. In 2016, 63 percent of Texans cast a straight-ticket ballot. Democrats have called the bill a form of voter suppression and said it could embroil Texas in yet another civil rights lawsuit.

More than half the Texas House signed on to legislation that would legalize medical marijuana for patients with a debilitating medical condition, but the proposal fell victim to legislative deadlines this week. House Bill 2107 was declared dead by its Republican and Democratic authors, who said the bill gained unheard of momentum for pro-marijuana legislation in Texas. They vowed to pass the measure during the 2019 legislative session.

Late last Sunday night, Texas Governor Greg Abbott sparked criticism when he signed Senate Bill 4, the controversial sanctuary cities ban that allows local police officers to be deputized to enforce federal immigration law. Abbott decided against a press conference or notifying the media and signed the bill into law around 7 p.m. after a five-minute, vertically filmed speech on Facebook Live.

We spent an afternoon with the king of birding in Texas, Victor Emanuel. His new memoir, One More Warbler, hit shelves this week. Birders are the luckiest people, Emanuel says. If youre interested in tropical fish, you have to go to where you can see them. You want to see art, you have to go to an art museum. We dont have to do any of that! Beauty is all around us. Birds are all around us. We can see birds everywhere. At least the ones that are left.

Join us Saturday, May 20, at 6 p.m. at Book People in Austin, where author and Observer contributor Rachel Pearson will read from her new memoir, No Apparent Distress: A Doctors Coming-of-Age on the Front Lines of American Medicine. Observereditor Forrest Wilder hosts the conversation. Read an excerpt from Pearsons book in our April issue and get more details about the event at the Book People website.

This years MOLLY National Journalism Prize gala, a celebration of great reporting and nonprofit journalism on June 8, will feature a keynote conversation with Jamelle Bouie, chief political correspondent for Slate. Get your tickets now!

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This Week: In 'Mother's Day Massacre,' Tea Party Caucus Derails 100+ Bills - The Texas Observer

Blair County Tea Party seeks to expand influence in Pa. – Altoona Mirror

With local elections days away and another national fight on the horizon, Blair County Tea Party members met Friday in Altoona for their annual gathering their first ever under a unified Republican government in Washington, D.C.

Both the setting and the mood had changed from past years: Now indoors at the Bavarian Hall, the crowd and speakers celebrated President Donald Trumps victory and called for renewed efforts to defend his government. It was a noticeable change from past meetings, where attendees called for resistance against federal overreach under then-President Barack Obama.

Last November we voted in an agenda a new agenda, your agenda, said state Rep. Rick Saccone, R-Jefferson Hills, who is seeking the GOP nomination to challenge U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., next year. That agenda is to simplify the tax code, to reduce government spending.

And while standard tea party issues like taxes and national debt were mentioned, the deeper message was that conservatives must seize the remaining levers of power in Harrisburg and Washington.

Saccone described Trumps enemies the news media, college faculty, left-wing activists among them as a six-pronged force constantly challenging the executive. Only by voting out figures like Casey could Trumps agenda be enforced, he said.

The message was the same at other levels. Gubernatorial candidate Sen. Scott Wagner, R-York, didnt make it as planned, but in an address supporting him, state Rep. John D McGinnis, R-Altoona, compared the state senator directly to the president.

I heard somebody say, Scott Wagner is the Donald Trump of Pennsylvania,' McGinnis said. I beg to differ: Donald Trump is the Scott Wagner of national politics.

McGinnis described Wagners broad financial support during his own election to the state House in 2012. The trash-disposal magnate pumped $30,000 into the McGinnis campaign and provided material and legal help, he recalled.

Not long afterward, Wagner won his own seat in the Senate and is now challenging Democratic Gov. Tom Wolfs re-election.

The message was clear: A unified insurgent force had overthrown orthodox Republicans in Harrisburg and Washington and now those victories had to be redoubled.

The battle has just started, Tea Party President Rhonda Holland told the audience, listing the challenges they still face. We really must be vigilant on all items.

Mirror Staff Writer Ryan Brown is at 946-7457.

HOLLIDAYSBURG The Blair County Sheriffs Department is awaiting a second canine officer expected to arrive ...

HOLLIDAYSBURG In an attempt to curb excessive speeding on a borough road, officials voted Thursday to ...

HOLLIDAYSBURG Blair Countys processing of issuing new and renewed licenses to carry firearms is on hold for ...

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Blair County Tea Party seeks to expand influence in Pa. - Altoona Mirror

Portugal Wins Eurovision Song Contest; Bulgaria Second; Moldova Third – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

Portugal was the top vote-getter in the 2017 Eurovision Song Contest, the annual festival traditionally watched by a television audience of an estimated 200 million people.

Portugal, behind singer Salvador Sobra, was declared the winner early on May 14 in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv. The winner was determined by a combination of points awarded by national juries and voting by telephone and text message from participant countries.

Ukraine won the right to host the event by virtue of winning the event last year.

The winning song was titled Amar Pelos Dois, giving Portugal its first victory since it initially entered the contest in 1964.

The final featured performers from 26 countries, including artists from Belarus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, and host Ukraine.

Portugal had 758 points. Bulgaria finished second with 615, while Moldova was third with 374.

Azerbaijan was 14th with 120 points, Belarus 17th with 83, Armenia 18th with 79, and Ukraine 24th with 36.

The 27-year-old Sobral and Italy's Francesco Gabbani, who finished sixth, were touted as the favorites, according to bookmakers. The youngest entrant, Bulgaria's 17-year-old Kristian Kostov, had been ranked third.

Security was reportedly intense, as the country is fighting a conflict against Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine

President Petro Poroshenko announced on Facebook that he was canceling a planned appearance at the event because of a shelling incident in the eastern city of Avdiyivka that left four civilians dead.

This year's competition saw some controversy when Ukraine barred Russia's entry, Yulia Samoilova, from coming to Kyiv because she had performed in the Russia-annexed Ukrainian region of Crimea in 2015.

Russia, in response, decided not to allow her to participate by video or to send another contestant. Russia has also decided not to show the event on television.

Before the final night, it emerged that Bulgarias Kostov had also performed in Crimea soon after Moscow's illegal annexation, but Ukrainian officials said she was allowed to enter Ukraine now because she had been just 14 at that time.

The Eurovision contest began in 1956 with just seven entrants.

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Portugal Wins Eurovision Song Contest; Bulgaria Second; Moldova Third - RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

Questions Surround Ukraine’s Bailouts as Banking Chief Steps Down – New York Times


New York Times
Questions Surround Ukraine's Bailouts as Banking Chief Steps Down
New York Times
But at the same time, anticorruption groups have been raising questions over where those billions of dollars have gone, concerns that have been amplified after Ukraine's central bank chief resigned amid an investigation into a bailout of the country's ...

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Questions Surround Ukraine's Bailouts as Banking Chief Steps Down - New York Times