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Texas House passes Hill Country relief effort | Texas

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-21 19:48:00


The Texas House passed a six-bill relief package addressing the July 4 Hill Country floods after Democrats left the state for 17 days, blocking legislation by breaking quorum. The package includes safety measures for youth camps, disaster preparedness enhancements, a new Texas Interoperability Council, funding for early warning systems, fraud protections, and local government support. House Speaker Dustin Burrows emphasized improving emergency systems, but Rep. Brian Harrison opposed four bills, criticizing expanded government roles and allowing Democrats’ amendments after their protest. Despite Harrison’s lone opposition, the package passed overwhelmingly. The Texas Senate and Governor Abbott are expected to approve the bills.

(The Center Square) – The Texas House passed a relief package for Texas Hill Country victims but it was not without controversy.

While House Democrats claimed their priority was flood relief in the first special session, they left the state for 17 days and missed voting on the flood relief package in the last session. More than 50 Democrats absconded to prevent a quorum from being reached, effectively blocking all legislation and killing the session.

After a second special session was called, a quorum was met and the House passed the congressional redistricting bill Democrats had left Austin in protest over. Next, the Texas House passed a package of six bills to provide relief and implement a series of reforms in response to the July 4 Hill Country flood disaster.

The package includes HB 1, to require safety measures for youth camps; SB 2, to strengthen disaster preparedness and emergency management response across multiple agencies; HB 3, to create the Texas Interoperability Council to develop a statewide strategic plan and implement an integrated emergency communication infrastructure; SB 5, to allocate funding for disaster relief, early warning systems, enhanced weather predictability, and interoperability infrastructure; HB 20, to create protections related to charitable solicitations fraud; and HB 22, to allocate funding for local governments to implement early warning systems and interoperability improvements.

After the package passed, House Speaker Dustin Burrows said the Texas legislature examined “the systems and processes in need of improvement so we are better prepared for all future emergencies.”

State Rep. Brian Harrison, R-Waxahachie, voted against four of the six bills, saying “government solutions can often be worse than the problems they’re intended to solve.” He also opposed amendments added by Democrats. He voted for HB20 and HB5 and voted against the rest, often as the sole lone no vote.

HB1 “started out as a good bill that I intended to support. However, Democrats were allowed to amend the bill on the floor in a way that may harm or shut down countless camps where safety has not been an issue, nor is likely to be at risk from life threatening floods,” Harrison said.

He also said House Democrats who shut down the entire legislative process shouldn’t have been allowed to make amendments.

“It is indefensible that after breaking quorum for weeks House leadership rewarded them today by allowing them to ruin what started out as a good, reasonable bill,” he said.

The bill passed by a vote of 135-1, according to the unofficial vote tally. Harrison was the lone no vote. 

Three bills, SB 2, HB 3 and HB 22 “unnecessarily grow government,” which Harrison opposes, causing him to vote against the bills.

SB 2 creates “new occupational licenses when Texas already has more occupation regulations than any other state,” including every single Democrat state in the country, he said. The bill “usurps voters by allowing their locally elected officials to be removed from office too easily, and creates new red tape that I believe will make it harder to find volunteers in future emergencies.” Everyone voted for the bill except for Harrison and Republican Reps. Lowe, Money and Olcott.

HB 3 creates “an entirely new government entity with significant and unchecked authorities without necessary transparency and safeguards, and delegates too much new power to the Governor and executive branch bureaucrats,” he says. Everyone voted for the bill except for Harrison.

HB 22 expands “an existing corporate welfare fund that has nothing to do with emergency response and should be abolished (not given more authority to spend tax dollars arbitrarily),” he says. It also “increases the likelihood of increased spending and taxes in future budgets” to continue funding it. Everyone voted for the bill except for Harrison.

The Texas Senate is expected to pass the bills, which Gov. Greg Abbott says he will sign into law.

The post Texas House passes Hill Country relief effort | Texas appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



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

The article primarily reports on legislative actions and the positions of Texas lawmakers regarding a flood relief package, presenting statements from both Democrats and Republicans. However, the tone and framing lean slightly toward a Center-Right perspective. This is evident in the emphasis on Republican Rep. Brian Harrison’s criticisms of government expansion and Democratic amendments, as well as the detailed presentation of his opposition to several bills on grounds of government overreach. The article highlights his viewpoint extensively without providing equivalent Democratic rebuttals or broader context, which subtly favors a conservative critique of government intervention. Nonetheless, the piece remains largely factual and descriptive rather than overtly ideological, focusing on legislative developments and individual stances rather than promoting a partisan agenda.

News from the South - Texas News Feed

Texas Senate expected to take up GOP congressional map

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feeds.texastribune.org – By Kayla Guo – 2025-08-22 05:00:00


The Texas Senate is set to approve a new congressional map designed to maximize Republican seats, potentially adding up to five GOP-held districts by dismantling Democratic strongholds in Austin, Dallas, Houston, and South Texas. This mid-decade redistricting, pushed by President Trump to secure a House majority in the 2026 midterms, faces fierce Democratic opposition, who argue it suppresses Black and Latino voters’ rights. Democrats staged a two-week walkout to block the map, prompting unprecedented Republican responses. The map’s approval has sparked retaliatory redistricting efforts in California and other blue states, intensifying a national partisan battle over electoral boundaries.

Texas Senate expected to take up GOP congressional map, last stop before Abbott’s desk” 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.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.


The Texas Senate on Friday was expected to consider a new congressional map gerrymandered to maximize Republican representation, putting the plan on a path to the governor’s desk after weeks of intense partisan clashing.

Republican lawmakers were poised to push the map through over fierce Democratic opposition, launching a national redistricting war from Albany to Sacramento while positioning the GOP to net up to five additional seats in Texas.

The map, demanded by President Donald Trump to fortify the GOP’s U.S. House majority in next year’s midterm election, would hand up to five additional U.S. House seats to Republicans by dismantling Democratic bastions around Austin, Dallas and Houston, and by making two Democrat-held seats in South Texas redder. The new lines would also keep all 25 seats already held by Republicans safely red.

The pickups are meant to help the GOP hold onto its razor-thin congressional majority in a midterm election year that is expected to favor Democrats — potentially making the difference between a continued Republican trifecta in Washington, or a divided government with one chamber intent on investigating Trump and bottlenecking his agenda.

That has put Texas lawmakers at the front lines of an issue with national stakes. Republicans earned kudos from Trump for pushing the new boundaries through the state House, while Democrats won support from national party figures, including former President Barack Obama, Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin and U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York.

Though congressional lines are typically redrawn once every 10 years following the decennial census, Republicans justified the aggressive and unusual move to do so in the middle of the decade by saying it was legal to craft new boundaries at any point and for purely partisan gain. They also pointed to the party’s margins of victory in 2024 and the need to counter blue-state gerrymandering to further support their push.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that states can draw electoral maps on partisan grounds. But under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the lines cannot diminish people’s voting power based on race.

Democrats argued that the new map would increase Republicans’ advantage by unconstitutionally suppressing the vote of Black and Latino Texans. They framed the push as a power grab by Trump meant to stack the deck in next year’s election.

Texas’ anticipated approval of the map has set off a tit-for-tat redistricting push in California, where Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed a map voters would have to approve that could yield five new Democratic-leaning seats, effectively offsetting GOP gains in Texas. Other blue-state governors and national Democratic leaders are backing retaliatory gerrymandering as the Trump administration also pushes GOP-controlled Florida, Indiana, Missouri and Ohio to draw more red seats.

The new Texas map cleared its biggest hurdle Wednesday when, after more than eight hours of tense debate, the state House adopted the plan along party lines.

Lacking the votes to stop the map in the GOP-dominated Texas Legislature, more than 50 House Democrats staged a two-week walkout earlier this month, grinding the lower chamber to a halt by denying the quorum needed to conduct business.

Republicans unleashed an unprecedented response to drag them back to Texas, issuing civil arrest warrants, asking a court to extradite them from Illinois, seeking to declare over a dozen Democrats’ seats vacant and clamoring for legislative punishments upon their return.

After most Democratic lawmakers returned to Austin Monday, Republican Speaker Dustin Burrows, seeking to maintain a quorum, required each of them to agree to a police escort to leave the Capitol building. Rep. Nicole Collier, D-Fort Worth, refused and was confined to the Capitol for the next 54 hours, prompting a national media frenzy.

Democrats portrayed the walkout as a victory for sparking a national movement in support of retaliatory redistricting, and as just the first part of a longer fight against the map. In the House on Wednesday, Democratic lawmakers pressed their Republican colleagues on the plan’s impact on voters of color, working to establish a record they could use in a legal challenge seeking to kill the lines before next year’s election.

“This fight is far from over,” Rep. Gene Wu of Houston, chair of the House Democratic Caucus, said after the map’s passage in the lower chamber. “Our best shot is in the courts. This part of the fight is over, but it is merely the first chapter.”


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/08/22/texas-congressional-redistricting-map-senate-governor-desk/.

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 Texas Senate expected to take up GOP congressional map 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-Left

The article focuses on the Texas congressional redistricting map, highlighting its Republican origins and the partisan conflict it has sparked. It provides detailed coverage of Democratic opposition and criticisms, including concerns about voter suppression among minority groups, and frames Republican efforts as a “power grab” led by Trump. The inclusion of national Democratic figures’ support for opposition and the emphasis on Democratic strategies and responses suggest a slight lean toward a Center-Left perspective. However, the article maintains a measure of balance by covering Republican justifications and legal points, which keeps it from tilting strongly left or right.

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Dinosaur teeth reveal secrets to Earth's past, UT study finds

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www.kxan.com – Eric Henrikson – 2025-08-22 05:00:00

SUMMARY: A University of Texas study analyzed dinosaur teeth fossils from the late Jurassic period to uncover their diets and behaviors. Paleontologist Liam Norris examined calcium isotopes in teeth from herbivores like Diplodocus, Camarasaurus, and Camptosaurus, revealing varied feeding habits such as ground-level and canopy browsing, with each species targeting different plants to coexist. Carnivores like Allosaurus mainly consumed flesh, avoiding bones, while Eutretauranosuchus likely ate fish. The research shows dinosaurs couldn’t chew but swallowed food whole, aiding new understanding of ancient ecosystems. This study enriches paleontology, offering deeper insights into dinosaur life and evolution.

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Taylor Swift's new album version sparks 'Taycapitalism' criticism

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www.kxan.com – Teddy Grant – 2025-08-21 22:30:00

SUMMARY: Taylor Swift is set to release her 12th studio album, “The Life of a Showgirl,” with six different versions—including limited-edition vinyl variants—available until August 23. Fans, known as Swifties, have criticized her for the numerous variants and high prices, dubbing the marketing strategy “Taycapitalism.” Swift has used this approach with previous albums, encouraging fans to buy multiple versions. In May, she regained ownership of her master recordings from Shamrock Capital for around $360 million, allowing her full control over her music. The new album is scheduled for release on October 3, continuing Swift’s blend of artistic and business maneuvers.

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The post Taylor Swift's new album version sparks 'Taycapitalism' criticism appeared first on www.kxan.com

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