The last act, usually, of the “fixin’ to fixin’ to” phase of every legislative session is the governor’s State of the State speech. They’re hard to remember, for the most part, because the Legislature has a tradition of listening politely, clapping a lot, and then ignoring some or all of the items on a given governor’s wish list. But some of it gets into the wiring, and into the ears of lawmakers and even, sometimes, the public.
Health care
In-depth reporting on public health, healthcare policy, hospitals, and wellness issues shaping communities across Texas, from The Texas Tribune.
Big Mo and Little Mo
Gov. Rick Perry’s appraisal reforms don’t have nearly the momentum of last year’s school finance package, though both came out of task forces headed by political figures and comprised of business folks. School finance was hard to crack, but the Legislature wasn’t split on the need to do something. This time, you’ll find disagreement on the nature of the problem and the proposed solutions. This package will be harder to pass.
The Agony of Relief
State spending on school tax relief could force legislators to trample constitutional limits on budget growth next year, vexing conservatives who want both tax relief and limits on government growth.
Ten Questions
Answers, we’ll get on November 7. Questions and speculation, we’ve got now.
The Dinner Bell and Other Ethical Dilemmas
Ethics police are baking up a list of things they want changed or clarified by the Texas Legislature next year, and in the meantime, it has become dangerous for lobbyists to split the tab on officeholder meals and gifts.
A Critical Weekend
If the Senate Finance Committee can make it to Monday or Tuesday of next week with four or five of the school finance components intact, there’s a good chance Texans will see a new business tax, a cut in school property taxes, teacher pay raises and a bag full of other legislative wonders. But it’s gonna be a long weekend.
Spelling R.e.l.i.e.f.
So here’s a question: Does the huge budget surplus make it harder or easier to pass the governor’s proposed tax bill? Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn added $3.9 billion to the $4.3 billion that was already in the surplus — and those numbers don’t include about $1 billion that’s already in the state’s Rainy Day Fund.
Where the Wild Things Are (and Aren’t)
The party primaries include five congressional races, five in the state Senate, and 53 in the Texas House. In other words, it’s a slow to normal election year.
Muddy Waters
Every so often, an experienced reporter from somewhere else will get hired into the Capitol press corps and will proceed to surprise and dominate competitors with stories that should have been obvious to the natives.
Just Enough
What do you call the student who finishes last in medical school? A doctor. And what do you call legislation that passes by just one vote? A law, or one step closer to it.


