The prevailing theory among Republicans, at least publicly, is that their House herd of 101 will always move together as one, and there will be peace and harmony in the land and all that.
2010
T-Squared: Dear Earl Weaver…
There’s no way to put lipstick on this particular Oriole: We screwed up, plain and simple, in writing that you are “in heaven.”
Struggling to Sue
The tort reform state lawmakers passed in 2003 made it more difficult for patients to win damages in any health care setting, but none more so than emergency rooms, where plaintiffs must prove doctors acted with “willful and wanton” negligence. Tort reform advocates say the law is needed to protect ER doctors operating in volatile environments. But medical malpractice attorneys argue the threshold is nearly impossible to cross. โYouโd have to be a Nazi death camp guard to meet this standard,โ says one.
TribBlog: Jailbreak Aimed at Bolstering Cartel Ranks
The inmates who escaped from a prison in Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, which sits across from Laredo, are likely part of a plan to bolster the ranks of the Zetas cartel, says Webb County Sheriff Martin Cuellar.
TribWeek: In Case You Missed It
Ramsey on what a GOP supermajority means, Ramshaw on a crime victim not eligible for crime victims’ compensation, M. Smith on grave matters and state regulation, Hamilton on the college pipeline at San Antonio’s Jefferson High, Hu on a senator’s anticlimactic return, Grissom on the coming closure of juvenile lockups, Aguilar on the return of residents to their drug-war-torn Mexican town, Galbraith on next session’s energy agenda, Philpott on the legal fight over federal health care reform and Stiles on the travel expenses of House members: The best of our best from Dec. 13 to 17, 2010.
TribBlog: Jailbreak on the Border
At least 140 prisoners escaped from a Nuevo Laredo prison today, though that number is believed to be a conservative estimate. Mexican media outlet El Universal reported this morning that the number of escapees could exceed 190.
The Midday Brief: Dec. 17, 2010
Your afternoon reading: good and bad news (mostly bad) in unemployment numbers; Ike dispute resolved
The Brief: Dec. 17, 2010
The Tea Party just got a little bit more organized. And the Democrats, already woeful, just got a little bit more irritated.
Grave Mismanagement?
In October 2001, Marcos Guerraโs wife and three daughters laid him to rest at the cemetery in San Benito where members of his family had been buried for three decades. Almost four years later, they were at his graveside again, burying him a second time, after the cemetery moved his body without their permission and exhumed his remains. Now the familyโs legal battle with one of the largest funeral services providers in North America, which has faced class-action lawsuits in several states, has reached the Texas Supreme Court โ and is raising questions about the stateโs regulation of after-life care.
Atmospheric Politics
Every politician needs a villain. George W. Bush had Saddam Hussein; Barack Obama had George W. Bush. Gov. Rick Perry has the EPA., which has had the audacity to order Texas to do more to clean its air.


