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Inman on Cause of the Blast
Inman on Cause of the BlastTexas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.
Inman on History with Unions
Inman on Don Blankenship’s history with Unions.
Inman on Caperton v. Massey
Inman explains Caperton v. Massey scandal and its political implications.
Cutting the Strings
Texas can get $556 million in federal stimulus money without any permanent changes in its unemployment insurance program, according to an advisory letter from the U.S. Department of Labor.
Perry: We’re Not Gonna Take It
Gov. Rick Perry says the state should turn down $555 million in federal stimulus money tied to unemployment insurance, because the requirements are too strict, prompting some lawmakers to say they’ll push to get enough support for the program to go around him.
Up Next: The Ides of March
The “county fair” section of the legislative session — the part at the beginning that’s taken up with glad-handing and rattlesnake roundup demonstrations and mariachis and pre-schoolers and city and county and association “days” at the Capitol — is coming to a close.
Brother, Can You Spare $556 Million?
You’re really out in the weeds when you find yourself listening to arguments about reform provisions for unemployment insurance, but that’s the first of what might be a series of firefights over the federal stimulus money available to the state.
And They’re Off!
The House elected a new speaker. The Senate started with a partisan dogfight. The comptroller filed a gloomy forecast on the state’s revenue for the next two years. The Republican candidates for governor — that’s an election more than a year away — revealed multi-million-dollar bank balances. Once all that had rolled out, lawmakers left for a week. The House will return next week for a day, then do rules the week after that. And the Senate is gone until January 26. Soon enough, it’ll seem like they never left.



