A Travis County judge on Wednesday ruled against a request to stop the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute, but because the lawsuit is still in play, the fund canโt go into effect.
Despite court win, Texas dementia fund still paused from going into effect
Fired after gender identity lesson, professor sues Texas A&M, arguing her free speech rights were violated
Melissa McCoul, arguing she was fired to appease political critics, is seeking to get her job back and other restitution.
Texas Education Agency warns districts of potential state takeovers for โencouragingโ student protests
The state education agency issued guidance to districts after Gov. Greg Abbott directed its commissioner to investigate the student protests of killings by federal agents.
On the issues: a Q&A with the Texas Democrats running for U.S. Senateย
To help primary voters differentiate between the two, we asked Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico where they fall on major issues, ranging from international policy to taxes. See where they stand, and how they differ.
Texas Tech struggles with new rules that changed what students learn about race, gender, sexuality
The systemโs chancellor said he meant to instill clarity and accountability, but three weeks into the spring semester, some instructors say the standards are vague and have led to censorship.
After El Pasoโs ME ruled migrantโs death a homicide, ICE sent the next body to an Army hospital
ICE bypassed the county medical examiner in favor of a military facility for the autopsy of a Nicaraguan man and wonโt release a ruling to the public.
TribCast: Did the winter storm show our grid is fixed?
In this weekโs episode of The Texas Tribuneโs podcast, our hosts speak with Matt Boms about the Texas electrical grid’s strong performance during the recent winter storm. Does that mean the problems of 2021 are behind us?
Introducing the Tribuneโs spring fellows
Our fellowships are valuable learning experiences, providing part-time work in the spring and fall semesters and full-time positions over the summer break.
Texas jails have more than 400 pregnant inmates monthly. The state is trying to understand what happens to them.
As a part of a yearlong study, Texas county jails are collecting data about pregnant inmatesโ prenatal care, mental health indicators, pregnancy outcomes and more.
Texas Supreme Court primaries: Who is running and what to know
The high court, currently made up entirely of Republicans, decides some of the most consequential cases impacting everyday Texansโ lives. Hereโs a look at whoโs running for the courtโs four seats on the 2026 ballot.


