The Brief: April 10, 2012
After a sluggish few months on the campaign trail, Ron Paul today returns to his roots. Full Story
/https://static.texastribune.org/media/images/RonPaul-Speaks.jpg)
David Muto was the editor of TribTalk, The Texas Tribune's opinion page. He is also the Tribune's copy editor. A Richardson native, he attended the University of Texas at Austin, where he earned degrees in journalism and Spanish.
After a sluggish few months on the campaign trail, Ron Paul today returns to his roots. Full Story
Your evening brief: Paul to campaign in Texas this week; Dewhurst camp demands apology from Cruz over Tea Party leader's comment; former death row inmate wins bid for DNA testing Full Story
With the state's voter ID law still tied up in court, another voting-related controversy has surfaced. Full Story
Your evening reading: Santorum met Perry privately in Texas for "courtesy visit"; Bernard Rapoport, Texas Democratic stalwart, dies at 94; the politics of a winner-take-all primary in Texas Full Story
Supporters of Rick Santorum, who this week faced intensifying calls to drop out of the presidential race, have seized on a new game plan for the Texas primary: Change the rules. Full Story
Your evening reading: Santorum supporters pushing to make Texas primary winner-take-all; cost of redistricting legal battle for state approaching $1 million; Paul begins California campaign push Full Story
His opponents may be preparing to campaign harder in Texas, but Mitt Romney appears to be winning the state's endorsement race. Full Story
Your evening reading: Texas schools net hefty Mega Millions payday; Wal-Mart heiress disputes report that she endorsed Craig James; Texas cities join brief criticizing Arizona immigration law Full Story
The Texas primary is still eight weeks away, but that hasn't stopped Rick Santorum and Ron Paul from trying to scoop up delegates here. Full Story
Your evening reading: Republican state representatives file ethics complaint against Michael Quinn Sullivan; Combs touts survey showing Texas businesses skeptical of health care reform; Jackson Lee drafting neighborhood-watch bill Full Story