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New episode of the podcast is out! Find The Outsider Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Substack, and YouTube and subscribe.

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Open Thread | Texas GOP Holding Black Legislator Hostage | 3CHICSPOLITICO
Nicole Collier, Texas lawmaker who slept at statehouse, files lawsuit challenging police escorts The Fort Worth Democrat was confined in the Capitol overnight after refusing to be shadowed by state police, a requirement for lawmakers who had left the state over the GOP redistricting plan. By Eleanor Klibanoff Aug. 19, 2025 19 hours ago State Rep. Nicole Collier, a Fort Worth Democrat who has…
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Texas Democrat Forced to Sleep in Capitol After Refusing 24-Hour Police Escort: After weeks spent out-of-state in an effort to deny Texas Republicans a quorum for an extreme redistricting plan—designed at Donald Trump’s behest to give the GOP a five-seat advantage in the House of Representatives—the state’s Democrats are still refusing to back down. After the Democrats’ departure, Gov. Greg Abbott went as far as signing arrest warrants for the absent lawmakers—and when several of the Democratic legislators returned on Monday to Austin, the state capital, they were immediately met with GOP retaliation. On Monday, Republican House Speaker Dustin Burrows ordered that the returning lawmakers could only leave the House floor with written permission and a 24-hour police escort until the House reconvened on Wednesday. While many of her colleagues agreed to these terms, Democratic state Rep. Nicole Collier stood her ground. State Reps. Gene Wu and Vince Perez, who reportedly signed the agreement, joined Collier in her protest. She’s now suing the state legislature for unlawful imprisonment. “If you leave the Capitol,” House Administration Committee Chair Charlie Geren told Collier, according to the lawsuit, “you are subject to arrest.” On Monday night, state Reps. Collier, Wu, and Perez, who were among the returning Democrats, slept propped up on leather swivel chairs on the state House floor. This was my night, bonnet and all, in the txlege. thisisme pic.twitter.com/46YgqbMUk8— Nicole Collier (@NicoleCollier95) August 19, 2025 If the GOP redistricting plan succeeds, it would not only help the party maintain its narrow control of the House in the 2026 midterm elections, but would also guarantee the disenfranchisement of Black voters, of whom Texas has more than any other state. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Mother Jones (@motherjonesmag) “My constituents sent me to Austin to protect their voices and rights,” Collier said according to ABC. “I refuse to sign away my dignity as a duly elected representative just so Republicans can control my movements and monitor me with police… http://news.usaunify.org/TMZl9f
State Senator Angela Paxton: Texas Legislature passes largest property tax cut in Texas history
Friend,We finally did it! The Texas Legislature has passed the largest property tax cut in Texas history. Senate Bill 2 delivers $18 billion in property tax relief by buying down the school district tax rate, increasing the homestead exemption, and reforming the appraisal process. Senate Bill 3 helps 67,000 small businesses by eliminating the franchise tax for them. We also passed House Joint…
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From “Catastrophe 88,” the Texas Observer guide to the new session of the state legislature, opening tomorrow:
Elections have consequences. This political bromide is overused for a reason—it’s reliably true. And this year, the fallout for vulnerable Texans could be particularly destructive.
After something approaching a blue wave swept across Texas in November 2018, a chastened Republican majority in the Legislature kept its focus in the 2019 session on serious policymaking—school finance and property tax reform—while largely forgoing their typical red-meat fare.
Republicans thwarted expectations of another Democratic surge in November 2020, and the next year the GOP ignored the problems laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic crisis, instead focusing on passing as much right-wing legislation as possible over the course of a regular session, plus three painful specials.
The final outcome was ugly: Abortions were effectively banned by threat of bounty, handgun permits were done away with, voting laws were made more restrictive, transgender kids were targeted with statutory bigotry, and school curricula on race and history were whitewashed. Profound policy problems, meanwhile, were left to fester.
Critically, the state’s electoral districts were redrawn for the next decade to ensure incumbent Republican majorities will be insulated from electoral backlash while the state’s growing numbers of people of color and Democratic-aligned voters are kept at bay.
This fresh gerrymander set the table for another Republican rout last November as the GOP maintained strong majorities in the state House and Senate and easily swept the state’s high-powered executive offices—led by Governor Greg Abbott’s 11-point defeat of Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke.
Firmly in control, Abbott, Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, and GOP lawmakers are now free to do as they please—to pick up where their vengeful 87th legislative session mercifully left off just over a year ago.
Some top Republicans hinted during campaign season that they might want to soften the sharpest edges of their draconian and unpopular ban on abortion or pull back on the most extreme parts of their so-called “election integrity” laws. But there’s little reason to think this legislative session will yield moderation. The party’s activist base is eager to continue the march toward one-party authoritarianism, punishing political enemies and catering to political patrons as they go.
Read the full guide on the Texas Observer.
88th legislation session is coming in January....are we ready for the battle again ....we follow the lead of @transtexas when it come to the legislation in TX ...what orgs keep yall up to date on bills and legislation in ya area? #txlege #trans #transrightsarehumanrights🌈 https://www.instagram.com/p/Cl0VjrpugfM/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
COVID pandemic has not increased state-tax spending on Texas' public schools
School finance formulas allocated $23.7 billion in state aid in 2022 to help pay for educating 5.4 million students in more than 1,000 local school districts and charter schools. That's a 3.2 percent drop from 2021, which in turn was a mere 0.1 percent higher than 2020, after major legislative changes to school funding starting in Fall 2019. Nonformula grants to schools did increase in 2022, thanks to federal COVID relief for public education.
Schools get much of their state aid early in the school year, because local property taxes -- the single largest revenue source supporting Texas schools -- aren't due until January 31.