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Sweeping Texas bill to curb abortion pills dies in the House

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Eleanor Klibanoff – 2025-05-28 05:00:00


A Texas bill aiming to aggressively restrict abortion pills failed after missing a House deadline. Senate Bill 2880, backed by anti-abortion groups, would have allowed lawsuits with \$100,000 penalties against those involved with abortion pills and barred state court challenges. The bill stalled in the House State Affairs committee, drawing criticism of Chair Ken King for delaying its progress. Supporters accuse House leadership, including Speaker Dustin Burrows, of lacking priority on the issue amid other conservative focuses. Some see the bill’s failure as a shift in Texas politics, offering a rare glimmer of hope for abortion access advocates.

Bill curbing the flow of abortion pills into Texas likely dead” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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A sweeping proposal to crack down on abortion pills is likely dead after it failed to meet a key deadline in the Texas House. The bill, which had support from state and national anti-abortion groups, was seen as the most aggressive attempt yet to stop the flow of abortion pills into the state.

Senate Bill 2880 passed the Senate easily last month despite concerns from Democrats, but had languished in the House State Affairs committee before it passed out at the last minute. The report didn’t make it to the committee that schedules bills to come to the House floor in time to meet the Tuesday deadline.

“This is a significant failure from the House,” Texas Right to Life president John Seago said. “When you look at the opportunity this bill had, it seems like there was a deliberate effort to slow the bill down, if not to kill it.”

The bill would have allowed anyone who manufactured, distributed, prescribed or provided abortion pills to be sued for $100,000, expanded the wrongful death statute and empowered the attorney general to bring lawsuits on behalf of “unborn children of residents of this state.”

The bill contained several unique legal provisions, including one that said the law could not be challenged in state court, prompting separation-of-powers concerns among legal experts. Any state judge who found the law unconstitutional could be personally sued for $100,000.

Conservatives blamed State Affairs Chair Ken King, a Republican from Canadian, for sitting on the bill for more than three weeks before passing it out at the last minute. More than 40 lawmakers signed onto a letter calling on King to bring the bill up for a vote.

“If Chairman King kills a bill that would protect tens of thousands of innocent children from the murder that is abortion, Republicans will be forced to hold him accountable,” said Rep. Nate Schatzline, a Fort Worth Republican, at a press conference on Friday.

King, a six-term Republican, is relatively moderate for the Texas House, which has become more conservative in recent sessions. While Texas Right to Life has been critical of his allegiance on certain abortion issues, even going so far as to endorse his primary opponents, other anti-abortion groups, like Texas Alliance for Life, have long supported him as an ally. King did not respond to a request for comment.

Seago intimated that King would be in the running for Texas Right to Life’s “biggest disappointment” award, but said the bill stalling out reflected a larger issue with House leadership. He credited Speaker Dustin Burrows, a Lubbock Republican, for his long-standing support on abortion issues, but said he didn’t do enough to move the ball on this bill.

“For the speaker, it’s not an issue of his values, it’s an issue of his priorities,” Seago said. “For something that is controversial like this, that is going to be a tough floor fight, you have to have the speaker not just say he’s supportive of it, but actually push it.”

In a session busy with other conservative priorities like school vouchers, THC, bail and voting, further restricting abortion pills fell down the priority list for some lawmakers, especially as a majority of Texas voters opposed authorizing private lawsuits against someone who provides abortion pills.

After a bruising few years that saw the near-total banning of abortion in Texas, abortion access groups saw a sliver of hope in the failure of this bill.

“It wasn’t so long ago that the Texas Legislature could pass any extreme anti-abortion law,” said Molly Duane, senior counsel with the Center for Reproductive Rights. “This feels like a pretty radical change from just a handful of years ago.”

With the deadline for bills to come to the House floor in the rearview mirror, some conservative lawmakers are assessing ways to get aspects of the bill tacked onto existing legislation, or taken up in special session, Seago said. But he acknowledged these are likely long-shot proposals at this point in the session, which ends Monday.

“A lot of conservative legislators are looking for any and every opportunity to walk away with pro-life victories,” he said. “So as long as that political window remains open, we’ll keep pushing it.”


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/05/28/texas-abortion-pill-bill-dies/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

The post Sweeping Texas bill to curb abortion pills dies in the House appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This content is primarily reporting on a conservative-backed bill aiming to restrict abortion pills in Texas and presents perspectives mainly from conservative politicians and anti-abortion groups. However, it also includes moderate viewpoints, quotes from opponents, and context about broader public opinion against extreme restrictions. The tone is factual and balanced but leans slightly toward a conservative or center-right viewpoint due to the emphasis on legislative process details and statements from Republican lawmakers and pro-life advocates.

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Dog daycare, boarding deaths prompt push to protect pets from negligence under Texas law

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www.kxan.com – Avery Travis – 2025-05-29 21:30:00

SUMMARY: Texas lawmakers have overwhelmingly approved “Pancho’s Law” (HB 285), aimed at protecting pets from negligence by adding criminal negligence to the Texas Penal Code for cruelty to non-livestock animals. The law was inspired by Pancho, a dog who died in 2021 at a Dallas daycare, highlighting loopholes allowing pet service businesses to evade accountability. Advocates, including families who lost pets like Kali and Roland, stress the need for legal recourse and industry regulation. While some pet service operators worry about criminal liability, many support the bill to hold negligent parties accountable. The bill now awaits Gov. Greg Abbott’s signature.

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Bill named for UT Austin student passes, closes sexual assault loophole

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www.kxan.com – Cora Neas – 2025-05-29 11:11:00

SUMMARY: Texas passed House Bill 3073 to close a sexual assault loophole by criminalizing sex with a person who is voluntarily intoxicated. Previously, prosecutors had to prove the assailant administered substances without the victim’s knowledge, limiting justice for survivors like Summer Willis, the bill’s namesake. The new law defines sexual assault as non-consensual if the assailant knows the victim is too intoxicated to consent. Supported by Governor Greg Abbott and survivors’ advocates, the bill goes into effect September 1, 2025. It reflects a decade-long effort to better protect survivors and acknowledge power dynamics in consent.

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The Love and Loss of the Quintanillas

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www.texasobserver.org – Francesca D’Annunzio – 2025-05-29 09:54:00


The documentary Selena y Los Dinos, directed by Isabel Castro, offers an intimate portrayal of Tejano superstar Selena Quintanilla and her family through unseen footage and interviews. Premiered at South by Southwest in Austin, the film reveals the Quintanillas’ humble beginnings, struggles with cultural identity, and their close-knit, down-to-earth nature. It captures Selena’s bilingual journey, early aspirations, and joyful moments with her band and family. The documentary thoughtfully focuses on the family’s grief and Selena’s enduring legacy, deliberately avoiding the story of her murderer. Fans at the screening enthusiastically celebrated Selena’s groundbreaking impact on Latino culture and music.

Tejano music superstar Selena Quintanilla has been gone for 30 years, but the late singer’s family issharing unseen footage of her life in a new documentary, which had its Texas debut at Austin’s Paramount Theater at this year’s South by Southwest festival.

Selena y Los Dinos is the first feature-length documentary film produced about the late singer and her family band. Directed by Mexican-American filmmaker Isabel Castro, the movie offers a tender portrait of the lives, love, and loss of the Quintanilla family. 

The film follows the family’s tribulations using a tapestry of decades-old intimate camcorder footage and recent interviews woven together. Some salient scenes include: the primary-school aged Quintanilla children rehearsing and making faces at the camera and Selena laughing alongside guitarist Chris Pérez not long before the two became a couple, stitched alongside a recent interview including his telling of their first “I love yous” exchanged in Laredo.

Archival footage brings viewers to Selena’s humble beginnings, from the foreclosure on the family’s home and restaurant in Lake Jackson after the decline of the town’s economy to a brief flash of a local social services office where the Quintanillas waited to file papers for food stamps.

The Selena statue in Corpus (Shutterstock)

In an interview shot inside a van chock-full of costumes, Selena giggles as she answers the question: “What’s your final goal?” Her answer was ready: “Mercedes Benz. I don’t care if I have to live in it!” she exclaimed, unaware of the fame and fortune that awaited her.

Castro’s depiction of Selena and the band reveals a goofy, down-to-earth family, even after they struck success. After signing a record deal, the two Quintanilla sisters filmed a tour of their California hotel room: “I am in Long Beach, California, lifestyle of the rich and famous!” Selena yelled, her arms splayed out as she posed in front of the building.

Photos and interviews carefully stitched together also explore the nuances of Tejano identity—the struggle of straddling two identities and two cultures—and the beauty, banality, and occasional blunders of being (or not being) bilingual. 

Abraham Quintanilla, Selena’s father, recalls stories of his youth growing up during an era of segregation and anti-Latino sentiment. Although Spanish was his first language, he struggled to speak it fluently decades later when the band was breaking into the Mexican music market in the ’90s. Growing up for part of their childhood in Lake Jackson, the small petrochemical town south of Houston, the children did not feel in touch with their roots, Selena’s brother explained in the film (though that changed when they moved to Corpus Christi).

In one early scene, a Spanish-speaking journalist interviews a teenage Selena, asking about how the band had made their costumes—white denim jumpsuits with bursts of multicolored splatter paint—to which she replied in English: “wet paint!” 

“And for the people listening in Mexico?” he asked her in Spanish, encouraging her to explain the provenance of the costumes in the language his audience spoke. “Los paint-amos,” she replied, which was immediately met with the journalist’s laughter.

Later in the film, Castro includes photographs of Selena’s Spanish studying materials, and archival media footage shows the late singer as a young adult confidently expressing herself in both languages in TV interviews.

As for the woman who murdered Selena in 1995, the film essentially ignores her altogether. The film’s exploration of the loss of Selena’s life focused on the family’s grief and the late singer’s legacy. Even 30 years after her death, Selena’s influence remains powerful, in Corpus Christi and far beyond.

As a non-Hispanic Texan with a deep appreciation of Tejano and Latin American music, raised far from South Texas in a Collin County suburb, what struck me most about this movie was the audience’s journey alongside the Quintanilla family. Throughout the film, attendees put their hearts on display. They cheered. They erupted in laughter. Some sobbed, as if Selena were, too, part of their own family. Any mention in the film of Selena breaking down doors for the Latino community, breaking the glass ceiling for women, or breaking into a bilingual music market just before her death was met with thunderous applause and shouts of joy.

As theater workers ushered us out of the Paramount Theater, fans paused for a moment to pose for photos or pay their respects to Selena’s now elderly father, who sat in a wheelchair by the exit. I’d joined a friend of mine and her mother at the screening. The mom, a proud Tejana who raised her kids listening to Selena, was among those who stopped to greet Abraham.

She leaned in. “Thank you for sharing your daughter with us.”

The post The Love and Loss of the Quintanillas appeared first on www.texasobserver.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents a respectful and humanizing portrayal of Selena Quintanilla and her family without promoting a political agenda. It focuses on cultural identity, family struggles, and the legacy of the late singer through a documentary. The tone is largely celebratory and inclusive, emphasizing heritage and community impact rather than ideological positions. While it touches on issues like segregation and bilingual identity, it does so in a historical and cultural context rather than a partisan or political one. Overall, the piece is neutral and balanced in its coverage.

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