Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is using the state seal to shield himself against accusations by former top aides. And former Gov. Rick Perry is using it as well โย as a backdrop for a sales pitch.
Ross Ramsey
Ross Ramsey co-founded The Texas Tribune in 2009 and served as its executive editor until his retirement in 2022. He wrote regular columns on politics, government and public policy. Before joining the Tribune, he was editor and co-owner of Texas Weekly. He did a 28-month stint in government with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. Before that, he reported for the Houston Chronicle, the Dallas Times Herald, as a Dallas-based freelancer for regional and national magazines and newspapers, and for radio stations in Denton and Dallas.
Analysis: Texas lawmakers have two contentious voting fights ahead โ if they can stay in the same room
After a standoff that lasted more than a month, the Texas House appears to have enough state representatives in Austin to conduct business. The divisions are deep, relationships are frayed and redistricting lies ahead.
Analysis: Texas, the bellwether state
A number of the top issues facing the country โ mask mandates, voting, immigration โ have something in common: Texas.
Analysis: Texas government grinds to a stop โ of the governorโs choosing
Itโs happening slowly, but during the Texas governmentโs long summer, with legislative walkouts, fights over voting rights, and new battles over whatโs safe and whatโs not, Gov. Greg Abbott is mostly getting his way.
Analysis: Fiddling while the pandemic rages
The Texas Legislature is meeting. Partisans are fighting. And there is a surge in COVID-19 cases just as the stateโs public schools are opening. Guess whatโs getting the least amount of attention from state lawmakers.
Analysis: The pandemic breaks into Gov. Greg Abbottโs special session agenda
The business of the new special legislative session is like that of the failed first one, with some big items added in apparent response to the rise of the delta variant of the coronavirus in Texas.
Analysis: Schools open in Texas with unvaccinated K-6 students and months of learning loss to overcome
Public schools in Texas are reopening this month as parents, students and educators balance learning losses from virtual classes during the pandemic with an alarming rise in COVID-19 and a large number of unvaccinated students.
Analysis: Groundhog Day in Texas
A lot of the news from the last few days โ about the Legislature, about COVID-19 and about immigration โย has a real dรฉjร vu quality to it. And thereโs a good reason for that.
Analysis: Texas government has to put Humpty Dumpty together again
A partial shutdown of state government wouldn’t do anyone in state politics any good. Lawmakers still have time to erase the governor’s veto of the Legislature’s budget โ but not a lot of time.
Analysis: In Texas, sports can be a religion. Thankfully, politics are not involved. Oopsโฆ
Nothing offers a better distraction from nasty political fights over serious subjects than nasty political infighting over Texas college sports.


