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K-12 Education

Texas Law Hurts Students

Imagine if a state enacted a law that wound up banning the use of the latest medical technology during a crisis. Practically speaking, that is what Texas has done in education. In 2013, the state of Texas passed a law prohibiting any new public school districts from offering full-time online education. The law said only...

May 5, 2020
Economy

Open Up Now

The data is in and the implications are clear: Texas has flattened the curve and prevented the COVID-19 pandemic from taking more lives. Our state hasn’t come anywhere close to seeing a run on hospitals, demonstrating our system is more than capable of handling anyone who contracts the disease. Now is the time to reopen the Texas economy and...

May 5, 2020
Health Care

Texas Does Not Need Medicaid Expansion

Have Texas lawmakers “made the coronavirus fallout worse” by not expanding Medicaid? That’s what Gilberto Hinojosa, the chairman of the Texas Democratic Party claims in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. His prescription is for the Legislature to expand Medicaid as soon as it convenes in January. First, a little background. In the last decade, we have seen substantial changes...

May 5, 2020
Taxes & Spending

Don’t raise taxes when Texans can least afford it

The coronavirus has wreaked havoc on lives — and livelihoods. In the coming months, when we hopefully have more answers about how to defeat the virus in order to save the former, cities and counties will have a big decision to make that will affect the latter: How much will they increase property taxes this...

May 4, 2020
Election Integrity

Mail-in voting is not a cure-all for voting amid a pandemic

Texas Democrats have a cure-all for our worries about in-person voting in upcoming elections. They want to expand mail-in balloting to include every Texan. Republicans who point to problems with the plan are said to be trying to suppress the vote, or are callously indifferent. “Voters should not have to choose between their lives or...

May 3, 2020
Criminal Justice

Safety first both outside, inside jails

By now, it is unlikely that anyone hasn’t heard of “social distancing.” Since the emergence of the novel coronavirus earlier this year, a full-court press of public initiatives have been enacted to curb its spread — with the need to physically distance ourselves from one another as the chief aim. Though not without great economic...

May 1, 2020
Criminal Justice

Emergency Coronavirus Loans Will Cripple Some Small Businesses

As America prepares to get back to work, will some people be left behind? The Small Business Administration (SBA) has adopted rules for emergency COVID-19 loans that exclude otherwise eligible existing small businesses from relief solely because they are owned in part by individuals who have a criminal record. Given that at least 19 million Americans have a felony...

May 1, 2020
Economy

In A Bid To Weaken America, China Extends A Hand To The States

On April 19, Hu Xijin, the editor-in-chief of the Global Times, one of the leading official English-language newspapers in China, wrote a disturbing piece titled “Cooperate with US states on virus fight, not federal government.” Of course, Hu must be a member in good standing of the Chinese Communist Party, as is expected for the leader...

April 30, 2020
Economy

The time to cut spending in Texas is now

Texas has weathered many a budgetary crisis before, and while we don’t know how deep this downturn will be, we know the strength of the Texas spirit and our state’s determination to secure a better future for our children. In a recent interview with the Texas Tribune, Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar said the one-two punch of...

April 30, 2020
Higher Education

The Impact of the Left’s Takeover of Academia on the Quality of Higher Education

It will surprise few that college campuses in America lean left. But does it matter? Research suggests that the left’s takeover of academia is hurting the quality of new science produced on campuses. And new evidence hints that students’ educations may be harmed as well. What are the Dangers for Science? One of the primary...

April 29, 2020
Local Government

Homelessness Rights and Wrongs

Proponents of the city of Austin’s repeal of its ban on homeless encampments and other vagrancy laws have tried to justify their support by pointing to a recent federal court decision out of Idaho. Not only is this Ninth Circuit opinion not binding in Texas but the court’s rationale would not apply to the situation...

April 28, 2020
Criminal Justice

Release of those in prison doesn’t jeopardize the public’s safety

It’s nearly impossible to practice social distancing in the most restrictive environments we have — state prisons. COVID-19 is killing corrections officers and incarcerated people, including a New Jersey Department of Corrections officer earlier this month. The states must find a way to balance public health and public safety with carefully tailored policies. New Jersey has...

April 28, 2020
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