Texas politics daily reading (14 April 2011)

Top Stories

  • Texas House passes property rights bill – Gary Scharrer, Houston Chronicle

    The Texas House tentatively approved a bill Wednesday that clamps down on governments’ ability to seize property using eminent domain, an issue Gov. Rick Perry declared an emergency at the start of the legislative session.

    Strengthening individual property rights at the state level became an ongoing emergency with the U.S. Supreme Court’s misguided Kelo decision.

  • Texas House voting scores – Mark Jones, Baker Institute
    Take a look at the chart — ideology and partisanship finally match in Texas politics.
  • Hispanic Conservatives – William Murchison, The American Spectator

    [A] poll more than a year ago asserted that 54 percent of Texas Hispanics call themselves conservative, as against 18 percent who self-identify as liberal or progressive. Maybe so, to judge from how things went at the polls in Texas last November. Four Hispanic Republicans won state house seats in Hispanic territory. Three of the Democratic losers were likewise Hispanic. With the election over, along came Rep. Aaron Peña, a Democrat, to cross over to the Republican side due to what he identified as the overlap of his own views with those of the GOP.

    Of particular note, from this same standpoint, was the contest in formerly Anglo-Czech-Slovak Williamson County, home base for Dell Computer, lying just north of Austin, where a Hispanic woman, Diana Maldonado, two years earlier wrested the seat from a white man. In 2010, one Larry Gonzales wrested it back for the GOP. Nobody — Anglo, Hispanic, or what-not — seemed to notice anything but the philosophical and partisan divide between the two candidates. Walloping the Democrats, rather than fretting over ethnic identity, turned out to be the big thing.

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