On February 16 I will be joining an amazing lineup of local party officials, former candidates, elected officials and campaign professionals as part of the One Day Campaign School Local Elections 101 event.
I'll probably be taking notes when I'm not on stage.
It's a discussion about how to run for public office for candidates and staff sponsored by Texas Victory Consulting that will break it down to the nuts and bolts of how to build your campaign.
It's taking place from 8:30 AM-3:30 PM, and continental breakfast and lunch will be provided. You have to register for it, and it's $50 for early bird registration. The at the door cost will be $65 and you can do so at this link.
Location for this event will be the Buffalo Soldier Museum at 3816 Caroline Street.
Hope to see you there
.
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Thursday, February 07, 2019
Monday, January 28, 2019
2019 Houston Pride Grand Marshal Nominee Finalists Named
Houston Pride revealed on Thursday night this year's class of 2019 Grand Marshal nominees at an event held at Guava Lamp that also revealed the theme for this year's parade.
The theme is 'Summer of 69', to reflect the fact this is the 50th anniversary year of the Stonewall rebellion that kicked off the modern TBLGQ rights movement.
Houston Pride Grand Marshal nominees are comprised of people who have made significant achievements and contributions to our local LGBTQ community.
According to Lo Roberts (yep, we're related), the president of Houston Pride, 2019 was the best year ever for Grand Marshal nominations
This year's Houston Pride Grand Marshal nominees are:
For the first time ever, Houston Pride has created a non binary Grand Marshal category.
Voting has already started for it. The voting will run until April 7, with the winners being announced on April 25. The honorary grand marshals will also be announced on that date.
Here's the link to vote....
The theme is 'Summer of 69', to reflect the fact this is the 50th anniversary year of the Stonewall rebellion that kicked off the modern TBLGQ rights movement.
Houston Pride Grand Marshal nominees are comprised of people who have made significant achievements and contributions to our local LGBTQ community.
According to Lo Roberts (yep, we're related), the president of Houston Pride, 2019 was the best year ever for Grand Marshal nominations
This year's Houston Pride Grand Marshal nominees are:
Male identifying finalists:
Eric Edward Schell
Jason Black
Harrison Guy
Eric Edward Schell
Jason Black
Harrison Guy
Female identifying finalists:
Shannon Baldwin
Janie Lopez
Iris Rodriguez
Shannon Baldwin
Janie Lopez
Iris Rodriguez
Non-Binary finalists:
Becca Keo-Meier
Julien Gomez
Mike Webb
Becca Keo-Meier
Julien Gomez
Mike Webb
LGBTQ-Ally finalists:
Erika Richie
Marian Luntz
Constable Alan Rosen
For a parade that had serious diversity problems under its previous president, .it is the most diverse Pride grand marshal class ever and nice to see. It was past time that the Grand marshal nominees reflected the diversity of this city.Erika Richie
Marian Luntz
Constable Alan Rosen
For the first time ever, Houston Pride has created a non binary Grand Marshal category.
Voting has already started for it. The voting will run until April 7, with the winners being announced on April 25. The honorary grand marshals will also be announced on that date.
Here's the link to vote....
Labels:
Grand Marshal,
Houston,
pride,
pride parade,
Texas
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Houston Trans Woman Shot, Misgendered By Houston Chronicle
Anytime and anywhere a trans woman is shot I have a major problem with it. But when the crap happens in my Houston backyard less than a mile from where I live I take it personally.
A 24 year old Black trans woman known as Pinky was chased Thursday morning through a busy Chevron station parking lot just after 11 AM CST. The gun wielding miscreant shot at Pinky twice, cornered her by the front door of the gas station located on the corner of Beltway 8 and Richmond Ave in West Houston, and fired three shots at her at point blank range.
She was taken to a nearby hospital in unknown condition.
The surveillance cam video obtained by ABC13 is disturbing and infuriating to watch.
I know that location well because it has a Frenchy's that I love to patronize. That station because it is on a major street by one of our busy H-town freeways is always busy.
So somebody saw something or knows something that will lead to the arrest and conviction of this fool.
The approximately 5' 8" Black male assailant wearing a gray hoodie got away in a light colored SUV, possibly a Honda. HPD is definitely looking for his reprehensible behind.
If you have any information that will expedite that happening, you are urged to call Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS (8477)
As for Pinky, her Houston trans family will definitely be checking on her to make sure she is okay, and once the waste of DNA is apprehended, stand with her when he is inevitably tried and brought to justice.
What also has me incensed and concerned about about what happened besides the fact it was in my neighborhood is that the Houston Chronicle dipped into the transphobic pool to report on this story.
Note to Jay R. Jordan: A trans woman is a WOMAN, not a man. It was not necessary for you to go there and try to justify your transphobia by adding the sentence about Pinky's ID.
I find it interesting you could point out the incorrect ID, but couldn't report Pinky's name
Another point I need to make is this. What is or isn't on that ID is not germane to this story.
Houston cis Black community and cis Black community leaders and politicians, several questions for you to ponder.
When will you FINALLY step up and say it is NOT okay to shoot at or kill Black trans people and act on it? When will our Black trans lives matter to you? How many of us have to die this year before you finally conclude that enough is enough?
And another FYI for you. Black trans Houstonians vote.
A trans woman was shot and ended up in the hospital as a result of what happened Thursday. It is infuriating to me and the Houston trans community that once again, instead of respectfully reporting on it like ABC13 did, transphobia was injected into this incident by our main local newspaper.
A 24 year old Black trans woman known as Pinky was chased Thursday morning through a busy Chevron station parking lot just after 11 AM CST. The gun wielding miscreant shot at Pinky twice, cornered her by the front door of the gas station located on the corner of Beltway 8 and Richmond Ave in West Houston, and fired three shots at her at point blank range.
She was taken to a nearby hospital in unknown condition.
The surveillance cam video obtained by ABC13 is disturbing and infuriating to watch.
I know that location well because it has a Frenchy's that I love to patronize. That station because it is on a major street by one of our busy H-town freeways is always busy.
So somebody saw something or knows something that will lead to the arrest and conviction of this fool.
The approximately 5' 8" Black male assailant wearing a gray hoodie got away in a light colored SUV, possibly a Honda. HPD is definitely looking for his reprehensible behind.
If you have any information that will expedite that happening, you are urged to call Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS (8477)
As for Pinky, her Houston trans family will definitely be checking on her to make sure she is okay, and once the waste of DNA is apprehended, stand with her when he is inevitably tried and brought to justice.
What also has me incensed and concerned about about what happened besides the fact it was in my neighborhood is that the Houston Chronicle dipped into the transphobic pool to report on this story.
Note to Jay R. Jordan: A trans woman is a WOMAN, not a man. It was not necessary for you to go there and try to justify your transphobia by adding the sentence about Pinky's ID.
I find it interesting you could point out the incorrect ID, but couldn't report Pinky's name
Another point I need to make is this. What is or isn't on that ID is not germane to this story.
Houston cis Black community and cis Black community leaders and politicians, several questions for you to ponder.
When will you FINALLY step up and say it is NOT okay to shoot at or kill Black trans people and act on it? When will our Black trans lives matter to you? How many of us have to die this year before you finally conclude that enough is enough?
And another FYI for you. Black trans Houstonians vote.
A trans woman was shot and ended up in the hospital as a result of what happened Thursday. It is infuriating to me and the Houston trans community that once again, instead of respectfully reporting on it like ABC13 did, transphobia was injected into this incident by our main local newspaper.
Labels:
anti-trans violence,
Houston,
media,
media transphobia,
Texas,
toxic masculinity
Monday, January 14, 2019
Introducing The Texas Legislative LGBTQ Caucus
While many people inside and outside the state of Texas were upset that our bid to fire Ted Cruz came agonizingly short, it was a bigger win in other areas in terms of ending the Republican rule in Texas.
We flipped several populous Texas counties to Democratic control, including my home county of Harris County. We flipped several Texas state court of appeals districts. And most importantly, we flipped twelve seats in the Texas House to put in striking distance of flipping that chamber in 2020
With the 2019 session of the Texas Legislature now going into its second week, we had another moment of history happen with the founding of the first officially recognized Texas LGBTQ Caucus!
Rep Mary Gonzalez's office released an announcement heralding the founding of the new caucus.
"Nearly one million Texans identify as part of the LGBTQ spectrum, signaling a drastic need for representation at all levels of elected office," the press release said.
The founding members of it all identity as members of our community, and they are Rep. Mary González (D- Clint) Rep. Celia Israel (D- Austin) , Rep. Jessica González (D- Dallas) Rep. Erin Zweiner (D - Austin) and Rep. Julie Johnson (D - Dallas).
The caucus is open to any member regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. The goal of the Texas LGBTQ Caucus is to according to Rep Mary Gonzalez is "to advocate for proactive legislation that creates greater equity in Texas.".
Congratulations on the founding of this new caucus. May it grow beyond these initial members, and may you be successful in pushing for legislation that does create a better Texas for all of us.
TransGriot note: Photo of caucus by Casey Chapman-Ross
We flipped several populous Texas counties to Democratic control, including my home county of Harris County. We flipped several Texas state court of appeals districts. And most importantly, we flipped twelve seats in the Texas House to put in striking distance of flipping that chamber in 2020
With the 2019 session of the Texas Legislature now going into its second week, we had another moment of history happen with the founding of the first officially recognized Texas LGBTQ Caucus!
Rep Mary Gonzalez's office released an announcement heralding the founding of the new caucus.
"Nearly one million Texans identify as part of the LGBTQ spectrum, signaling a drastic need for representation at all levels of elected office," the press release said.
The founding members of it all identity as members of our community, and they are Rep. Mary González (D- Clint) Rep. Celia Israel (D- Austin) , Rep. Jessica González (D- Dallas) Rep. Erin Zweiner (D - Austin) and Rep. Julie Johnson (D - Dallas).
The caucus is open to any member regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. The goal of the Texas LGBTQ Caucus is to according to Rep Mary Gonzalez is "to advocate for proactive legislation that creates greater equity in Texas.".
Congratulations on the founding of this new caucus. May it grow beyond these initial members, and may you be successful in pushing for legislation that does create a better Texas for all of us.
TransGriot note: Photo of caucus by Casey Chapman-Ross
Labels:
caucuses,
government,
LGBT,
Texas,
the Lege
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Moni's Investiture Speech For Judge Bill McLeod
The text of the speech speech I'm delivering for Judge Bill McLeod's investiture today.
To Judge McLeod, distinguished judges, friends and guests in attendance.
Happy Blue Year to all of you!
It is a sincere honor and pleasure to have been asked to say a few words at this investiture ceremony today, While I have attended a few of these investiture ceremonies in the past and will be attending quite a few more during the rest of this month and into February, this is the first time I have gotten to participate in one of these beyond just being in supportive attendance of the judge being sworn in.
One of our local sheroes in Barbara Jordan once said,“What the people want is simple. They want an America as good as its promise.
Substitute the words ‘Harris County’ for America, and you have the reason why we are sitting in this ceremonial courtroom today.
We are sitting here because of the historic change that Harris County voters enabled on November 6 with their votes. We are sitting here because Harris County voters wanted a county as go as its promise, and wanted its leadership to reflect the beautiful diversity of all 5 million of us who are please to call this part of southeast Texas home. .
As part of the yearning to have leadership that reflected the diversity of this community, it’s why on November 6 we elected a diverse slate of talented servant leaders with decades of experience practicing law to serve on our Harris County judicial benches.
The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr said that, "Law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice and when they fail in this purpose they become the dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress."
Judges play an important role in our system of government because they are the umpires who call the legal balls and strikes and ensure that justice is impartially served regardless of race, creed, color, gender identity or economic status.
And having known Judge McLeod personally for several years, I he is a caring, compassionate and loving person. He is a wonderful community leader with a keen legal mind. I have no doubts that he will bring his full self into the task of ensuring justice is served and fairly administered for all who appear before him.
.
Congratulations, your Honor. May you have a long and successful term serving the citizens of Harris County on the County Court at Law Number 4 bench.
Happy Blue Year to all of you!
It is a sincere honor and pleasure to have been asked to say a few words at this investiture ceremony today, While I have attended a few of these investiture ceremonies in the past and will be attending quite a few more during the rest of this month and into February, this is the first time I have gotten to participate in one of these beyond just being in supportive attendance of the judge being sworn in.
One of our local sheroes in Barbara Jordan once said,“What the people want is simple. They want an America as good as its promise.
Substitute the words ‘Harris County’ for America, and you have the reason why we are sitting in this ceremonial courtroom today.
We are sitting here because of the historic change that Harris County voters enabled on November 6 with their votes. We are sitting here because Harris County voters wanted a county as go as its promise, and wanted its leadership to reflect the beautiful diversity of all 5 million of us who are please to call this part of southeast Texas home. .
As part of the yearning to have leadership that reflected the diversity of this community, it’s why on November 6 we elected a diverse slate of talented servant leaders with decades of experience practicing law to serve on our Harris County judicial benches.
The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr said that, "Law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice and when they fail in this purpose they become the dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress."
Judges play an important role in our system of government because they are the umpires who call the legal balls and strikes and ensure that justice is impartially served regardless of race, creed, color, gender identity or economic status.
And having known Judge McLeod personally for several years, I he is a caring, compassionate and loving person. He is a wonderful community leader with a keen legal mind. I have no doubts that he will bring his full self into the task of ensuring justice is served and fairly administered for all who appear before him.
.
Congratulations, your Honor. May you have a long and successful term serving the citizens of Harris County on the County Court at Law Number 4 bench.
Labels:
Harris County,
Houston,
investiture,
legal/justice,
Texas
Speaking At Judge McLeod's Investiture Ceremony Today
Another day in Houston, another investiture ceremony. Because of the Democratic judicial sweep that cleaned all 59 benches in the Harris County court system of every sitting Republican judge, we've had the pleasure of gleefully watching or attending a investiture every day.
Today, it's Judge William McLeod's turn, and this time I'll be an active participant in one instead of a guest sitting in the audience watching it.
I've been given the honor by Judge William McLeod to be one of the two speakers at his investiture in the ceremonial courtroom on the 17th floor of the Harris County Civil Courts building.
Looking forward to doing that starting at 2 PM CST, and if you can make it, hope you'll join me there to honor him.
Today, it's Judge William McLeod's turn, and this time I'll be an active participant in one instead of a guest sitting in the audience watching it.
I've been given the honor by Judge William McLeod to be one of the two speakers at his investiture in the ceremonial courtroom on the 17th floor of the Harris County Civil Courts building.
Looking forward to doing that starting at 2 PM CST, and if you can make it, hope you'll join me there to honor him.
Labels:
ceremony,
Harris County,
Houston,
investiture,
judges,
swearing in,
Texas
Tuesday, January 08, 2019
First Meeting Of The New Harris County Commissioners Court Today
We have been having a wonderful first week of the New Year because we flipped Harris County to dark blue in the 2018 midterms.
There has practically been an investiture ceremony for our new diverse group of Democratic judges every day at the county courthouse, and I'm speaking at one of them on Thursday for Judge Bill McLeod.
At 10 AM CST this morning we'll get to gleefully watch another historic Harris County political moment as we have our first Harris County Commissioners Court meeting of 2019 with our Democratic majority in place.
It will also be the first one in which our new County Judge Lina Hidalgo will be presiding over.
I'm a native Houstonian, but I have never gone downtown to attend a Harris County Commissioner's Court meeting because in large part of it being a Republican controlled body and a waste of my time to do so.
Now with a diverse Democratic majority on it for the first time since I was in high school, this governing body for the third largest county by population in the United States (Harris County has 5 million residents) has gotten my undivided attention.
Elections matter people, and because of the blue tsunami that swept through Harris County and swept GOP officeholders out with it, it's a brand new day here politically.
We have already seen evidence of that at the county courthouse, where the new judges elected in the Democratic sweep of all 59 judicial benches filed a motion yesterday to withdraw from the appeal of the bail bonds system lawsuit. The county bail bond system was declared unconstitutional
The suit alleges the county unfairly jails those charged with misdemeanors who cannot afford bail. A federal district judge ordered Harris County to remedy the situation, but the suit has been held up in the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. All the Republican criminal court judges named in the lawsuit were swept out of office
Partisan political hack Stan Stanart was fired as county clerk by Harris County voters and replaced by Dr. Diane Trautman. One immediate change was the ability to register to vote online on the county clerk website. Discussions have started to implement countywide voting centers in which you are able, just as you can during the early voting period, to do so at any location on Election Day.
One of the items on the agenda for the Harris County commissioner's court meeting is a $15 minimum wage for all county employees.
Looking forward to attending my first ever Commissioner's Court meeting.
There has practically been an investiture ceremony for our new diverse group of Democratic judges every day at the county courthouse, and I'm speaking at one of them on Thursday for Judge Bill McLeod.
At 10 AM CST this morning we'll get to gleefully watch another historic Harris County political moment as we have our first Harris County Commissioners Court meeting of 2019 with our Democratic majority in place.
It will also be the first one in which our new County Judge Lina Hidalgo will be presiding over.
I'm a native Houstonian, but I have never gone downtown to attend a Harris County Commissioner's Court meeting because in large part of it being a Republican controlled body and a waste of my time to do so.
Now with a diverse Democratic majority on it for the first time since I was in high school, this governing body for the third largest county by population in the United States (Harris County has 5 million residents) has gotten my undivided attention.
Elections matter people, and because of the blue tsunami that swept through Harris County and swept GOP officeholders out with it, it's a brand new day here politically.
We have already seen evidence of that at the county courthouse, where the new judges elected in the Democratic sweep of all 59 judicial benches filed a motion yesterday to withdraw from the appeal of the bail bonds system lawsuit. The county bail bond system was declared unconstitutional
The suit alleges the county unfairly jails those charged with misdemeanors who cannot afford bail. A federal district judge ordered Harris County to remedy the situation, but the suit has been held up in the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. All the Republican criminal court judges named in the lawsuit were swept out of office
Partisan political hack Stan Stanart was fired as county clerk by Harris County voters and replaced by Dr. Diane Trautman. One immediate change was the ability to register to vote online on the county clerk website. Discussions have started to implement countywide voting centers in which you are able, just as you can during the early voting period, to do so at any location on Election Day.
One of the items on the agenda for the Harris County commissioner's court meeting is a $15 minimum wage for all county employees.
Looking forward to attending my first ever Commissioner's Court meeting.
Labels:
Blue wave,
Commissioner's Court,
government,
Harris County,
Houston,
midterm election,
midterms,
Texas
Friday, January 04, 2019
Congratulations Judge Rabeea Collier!
Yesterday afternoon I got to witness some Texas history being made.
While many people have heard of the 17 African American women being elected to the judicial benches in Harris County, another story being missed is that we had a large group of Asian American judges running for office in this cycle as well.
One of those judges who was successfully elected was Rabeea Sultan Collier. This was her second run for a judicial bench. She lost a Democratic primary runoff for the 11th District bench in 2016.
Her second run was much more successful. She overwhelmingly won the 2018 Democratic primary race for the 113th District Court seat, and comfortably defeated the Republican incumbent Michael Landrum in the November midterm election.
The TSU Thurgood Marshall School of Law grad has been a practicing attorney for 12 years. She's served as a board member of the Harris County Democratic Lawyers' Association, the Association of Women Attorneys, and served on the State bar of Texas' Women in the Profession Committee.
During the 2018 cycle, Collier made history on multiple fronts with her November 6 win. She became the first person of Pakistani descent and the first Muslim woman to ever win a Texas judicial bench.
I had the honor and distinct pleasure of watching Rabeea's investiture ceremony yesterday inside a packed Harris County Civil Court building ceremonial courtroom in which she took the oaths of office.
As of Wednesday morning, she began writing her own chapter of the distinguished history of the 113th District Court. She is only the second woman ever to serve as a judge in this court.
Along the way she will serve as a role model and a leader to many inside and outside her community
Congratulations Judge Collier! It was an honor and a pleasure to be there to witness history and meet your family. I know you will be an outstanding judge, and continue to be a trailblazing leader in our community.
While many people have heard of the 17 African American women being elected to the judicial benches in Harris County, another story being missed is that we had a large group of Asian American judges running for office in this cycle as well.
One of those judges who was successfully elected was Rabeea Sultan Collier. This was her second run for a judicial bench. She lost a Democratic primary runoff for the 11th District bench in 2016.
Her second run was much more successful. She overwhelmingly won the 2018 Democratic primary race for the 113th District Court seat, and comfortably defeated the Republican incumbent Michael Landrum in the November midterm election.
The TSU Thurgood Marshall School of Law grad has been a practicing attorney for 12 years. She's served as a board member of the Harris County Democratic Lawyers' Association, the Association of Women Attorneys, and served on the State bar of Texas' Women in the Profession Committee.
During the 2018 cycle, Collier made history on multiple fronts with her November 6 win. She became the first person of Pakistani descent and the first Muslim woman to ever win a Texas judicial bench.
I had the honor and distinct pleasure of watching Rabeea's investiture ceremony yesterday inside a packed Harris County Civil Court building ceremonial courtroom in which she took the oaths of office.
As of Wednesday morning, she began writing her own chapter of the distinguished history of the 113th District Court. She is only the second woman ever to serve as a judge in this court.
Along the way she will serve as a role model and a leader to many inside and outside her community
Congratulations Judge Collier! It was an honor and a pleasure to be there to witness history and meet your family. I know you will be an outstanding judge, and continue to be a trailblazing leader in our community.
Labels:
Harris County,
history,
Houston,
judges,
Texas
Final Ruling Issued In Houston Drag Queen Story Time Federal Case
The final ruling was issued yesterday in the Houston Drag Queen Story Time case, and the hatemongers lost
Chief District Judge Lee H. Rosenthal issued he final ruling yesterday swatting away the evilgelicals attempt to shut down the event in a case that was filed back in October.
Rosenthal granted the city of Houston's request to terminate the case, stating the court didn't have jurisdiction because the plaintiffs didn't have standing to sue, and the plaintiffs had failed to establish that the freedom of religion clause had been violated by the storytellers.
The haters contended that program where drag queens read books at the Montrose library violated the freedom of religion of library patrons.
Yeah, right.
They argued in court documents that drag queens and transgender storytellers would 'indoctrinate children to believe in another religion', which the suit identifies as Secular Humanism. The activists believe the storytellers would 'groom children at the event to become transgender.'
Excuse me for a moment while I double over in laughter at that last delusional sentence in that paragraph.
The Houston Public Library in a previous court filing, explained their rationale for hosting the Drag Queen Story Time events
The fake faith based haters plan to appeal They tried to spin their crushing legal defeat as 'happiness the case is out of Judge Rosenthal's hands'. Judge Rosenthal was appointed by President George HW Bush.
Mayor Turner and the HPL declined comment concerning the ruling.
Chief District Judge Lee H. Rosenthal issued he final ruling yesterday swatting away the evilgelicals attempt to shut down the event in a case that was filed back in October.
Rosenthal granted the city of Houston's request to terminate the case, stating the court didn't have jurisdiction because the plaintiffs didn't have standing to sue, and the plaintiffs had failed to establish that the freedom of religion clause had been violated by the storytellers.
The haters contended that program where drag queens read books at the Montrose library violated the freedom of religion of library patrons.
Yeah, right.
They argued in court documents that drag queens and transgender storytellers would 'indoctrinate children to believe in another religion', which the suit identifies as Secular Humanism. The activists believe the storytellers would 'groom children at the event to become transgender.'
Excuse me for a moment while I double over in laughter at that last delusional sentence in that paragraph.
The Houston Public Library in a previous court filing, explained their rationale for hosting the Drag Queen Story Time events
“Throughout their history, American public libraries have been on the front lines of promoting inclusivity and dispelling intolerance. The Houston Public Library is committed to celebrating the diverse and culturally rich communities here in Houston through a broad array of programs and resources we offer. All our programs are free, open to the public, and accessible by choice,” the legal filing stated.
The fake faith based haters plan to appeal They tried to spin their crushing legal defeat as 'happiness the case is out of Judge Rosenthal's hands'. Judge Rosenthal was appointed by President George HW Bush.
Mayor Turner and the HPL declined comment concerning the ruling.
Labels:
faith-based hate,
Houston,
legal/justice,
Texas
Wednesday, January 02, 2019
Historic Change Comes To Fort Bend County!
When I was growing up in Houston, I had a great uncle and aunt who lived in Rosenberg that we used to visit every Christmas until they moved to Houston during my college years. Fort Bend County was despite a sizable Black population, largely white and conservative leaning.
It was Tom DeLay's power base during the 80's and 90's as a reliably red suburb on the southwest corner of purple to blue Harris County. DeLay rose from here to prominence in the Texas GOP and a state legislative seat. He eventually got to Washington DC repping the 22nd Congressional District, and became the House Majority Leader and a major adversary of President Bill Clinton.
Fort Bend County isn't red any more. It has increasingly been trending purple because of the numerous suburban neighborhood that have popped up around Missouri City, Sugar Land, Katy and Rosenberg like Mission Bend, Sienna Plantation, Quail Valley and others.
Fort Bend County not only became since the 80's one of the Houston metropolitan area's fastest growing suburbs next to Montgomery County to the north of us, it is also rapidly diversifying.
That spells political trouble for the Texas and Fort Bend County Republican Party.
Tom DeLay Country finally flipped blue in the midterms, and while we were at NRG Center yesterday gleefully celebrating Harris County going deep blue, down I-69 our suburban neighbors were having a very Happy Blue Year celebrating their own historic gains.
The Fort Bend Democrats had come close in 2016. Hillary Clinton became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Fort Bend County in decades, but unlike here in Harris County, Republicans still won countywide, but by much narrower margins than usual.
That set the stage for what happened on November 6 when the Blue electoral tsunami hit Fort Bend County.
Brian Middleton became the first African American ever elected as the Fort Bend County DA. He was also the first Democrat elected as Fort Bend County DA in 25 years.
But they didn't stop there. KP George was also elected to become Fort Bend County judge (the chief executive of the county) and become the first South Asian elected a county judge anywhere in the state of Texas.
George, as Lina Hidalgo made happen here in Harris County, unseated a longtime Republican incumbent in Robert Herbert, who had held the position for 15 years.
Missouri City also elected its first African American mayor in Yolanda Ford. The lifelong resident of the town and city council member beat incumbent mayor Allen Owen, who had been running the city for nearly 25 years.
Fort Bend County also elected seven Democratic judges, one of them being a high school classmate of mine in Teana Watson. This was her third attempt at a judicial run, losing in 2012 to James Shoemake for the 434th District Court, then four years later narrowly losing the race for the 400th District Court to GOP incumbent judge Maggie Jaramillo.
The third time was the charm for Watson in her race for the Fort Bend County Court At Law #5 bench, comfortably beating Republican Harold Kennedy.
Shapnik Khan, the vice chair of the Fort Bend Democratic Party, also attributed the wins to the increasing diversity of the county.
“It’s the minorities like us,” he said in an interview with Ella Feldman. “The Asian-Americans, the Hispanics, the African-Americans, it’s a combination of the different ethnicities. They’re moving in, and not only moving in, but getting involved.”
That they are. Even more importantly, they are working together to change the county for the better and make its leaders and government officials as diverse as Fort Bend County is.Congrats Fort Bend Dems! The easy part is over of flipping the county blue. Now comes the hard work of keeping it that way.
It was Tom DeLay's power base during the 80's and 90's as a reliably red suburb on the southwest corner of purple to blue Harris County. DeLay rose from here to prominence in the Texas GOP and a state legislative seat. He eventually got to Washington DC repping the 22nd Congressional District, and became the House Majority Leader and a major adversary of President Bill Clinton.
Fort Bend County isn't red any more. It has increasingly been trending purple because of the numerous suburban neighborhood that have popped up around Missouri City, Sugar Land, Katy and Rosenberg like Mission Bend, Sienna Plantation, Quail Valley and others.
Fort Bend County not only became since the 80's one of the Houston metropolitan area's fastest growing suburbs next to Montgomery County to the north of us, it is also rapidly diversifying.
That spells political trouble for the Texas and Fort Bend County Republican Party.
Tom DeLay Country finally flipped blue in the midterms, and while we were at NRG Center yesterday gleefully celebrating Harris County going deep blue, down I-69 our suburban neighbors were having a very Happy Blue Year celebrating their own historic gains.
That set the stage for what happened on November 6 when the Blue electoral tsunami hit Fort Bend County.
But they didn't stop there. KP George was also elected to become Fort Bend County judge (the chief executive of the county) and become the first South Asian elected a county judge anywhere in the state of Texas.
George, as Lina Hidalgo made happen here in Harris County, unseated a longtime Republican incumbent in Robert Herbert, who had held the position for 15 years.
Missouri City also elected its first African American mayor in Yolanda Ford. The lifelong resident of the town and city council member beat incumbent mayor Allen Owen, who had been running the city for nearly 25 years.
Fort Bend County also elected seven Democratic judges, one of them being a high school classmate of mine in Teana Watson. This was her third attempt at a judicial run, losing in 2012 to James Shoemake for the 434th District Court, then four years later narrowly losing the race for the 400th District Court to GOP incumbent judge Maggie Jaramillo.
The third time was the charm for Watson in her race for the Fort Bend County Court At Law #5 bench, comfortably beating Republican Harold Kennedy.
Shapnik Khan, the vice chair of the Fort Bend Democratic Party, also attributed the wins to the increasing diversity of the county.
“It’s the minorities like us,” he said in an interview with Ella Feldman. “The Asian-Americans, the Hispanics, the African-Americans, it’s a combination of the different ethnicities. They’re moving in, and not only moving in, but getting involved.”
That they are. Even more importantly, they are working together to change the county for the better and make its leaders and government officials as diverse as Fort Bend County is.Congrats Fort Bend Dems! The easy part is over of flipping the county blue. Now comes the hard work of keeping it that way.
Labels:
election,
Fort Bend County,
history,
Houston,
midterm election,
suburbs,
Texas
Tuesday, January 01, 2019
Swearing In Of Harris County Officials Today!
Happy Blue Year!
In a few hours, I'll be at NRG Center to watch the swearing in ceremony for all our newly elected Harris County officials.
For those of you who aren't aware of what happened here on Election Night, Harris County (translation the county that Houston is in) went dark blue on November 6.
A blue tsunami swept through the most populous county in Texas and swept out every incumbent Republican judge. Harris County voters replaced them with a diverse, experienced group of Democratic judges that included 19 Black women.
The blue tsunami also put Lizzie Fletcher in George HW Bush's old TX-7 congressional seat that had been in Republican hands for 50 years. It also gave us an opportunity to send former TX state Senator Sylvia Garcia to Washington DC along with Fletcher as part of the new Democratic House majority taking office in 48 hours.
Garcia, along with Veronica Escobar, who won the race to succeed Beto O'Rourke in Congress, become the first Latinas Texas has ever sent to the US Congress.
Democrats also got control of the Harris County Commissioners Court with the election of Latinx peeps Lina Hidalgo as our new county judge and Adrian Garcia as Precinct 2 commissioner.
In addition to making our Harris County judicial ranks finally look like the diverse county we are, we also fired Stan Stanart, our much loathed county clerk, and replaced him with Diane Trautman.
The county clerk is the person who administers voting procedures, and Stanart was a partisan GOP hack hellbent on suppressing votes. That ends today
Marilyn Burgess will take office today as our Harris County District Clerk. We also sent Orlando Sanchez packing and replaced him with a new county treasurer in Dylan Osborne
What a wonderful way to kick off 2019 in terms of watching dozens of Democrats get sworn into office as the Republicans they replaced suck their teeth and whine that 'straight ticket voting cost us our offices'
Naw GOP boo boos. It wasn't straight ticket voting that did you in. It was the fact your party is seen by a majority of voters as intolerant and hostile to people of color. The Republican Party has become toxic to a majority of Harris County voters, and you refuse to deal with the reality of that.
You Harris County GOP fans let that truth sink into those hard heads while I get dressed to watch my friends and every Democrat I gleefully voted for get sworn into office.
Labels:
events,
Harris County,
Houston,
politics,
Texas
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Rooting For Fort Bend Marshall
Yesterday started the Texas high school football championship weekend here in the Lone Star State. It's a smorgasbord of Texas high school football, with twelve title games from Class A (six man) to Class 6A being played at one location over the next four days. with all the games being broadcast on Fox Sports Southwest.
It also makes it easier for all the collegiate recruiters to check out players they either have signed during the NCAA early signing period or spot one they may not have noticed previously that is a late football bloomer.
The championship games location are rotated between Houston, Dallas and San Antonio because all three cities have domed stadiums, This year and in 2019, all the games will be played at AT&T Stadium in Arlington
In Texas high school football and basketball, the top four teams in each district make the playoffs. Two teams are placed in the Division I playoff bracket, and the other two in the Division II bracket based in enrollment.
I'm always rooting for Houston area teams that make it to the title game in their class, and this year is no different.
The highly anticipated Class 6A Division I game on Saturday night has undefeated Galena Park North Shore (15-0) who rolled over perennial powerhouse Katy in their usual clash at NRG Stadium and also beat them in the regular season. The Mustangs try to complete their perfect season against unbeaten DFW area homeboys Duncanville (14-0), who beat top 5 nationally ranked Allen in their march to the finals.
In the Class 6A Division II game Saturday afternoon Beaumont West Brook (13-2) will take on unbeaten perennial East Texas high school powerhouse Longview (15-0).
In the Class 6A Division I game it's a clash of the unbeaten old versus the new kids on the playoff block. The Highland Park Scots, the team with the most wins in Texas high school football history, that has played in some legendary games still talked about among Texas high school football fans, and is the alma mater of Detroit Lions QB Matthew Stafford, takes on Alvin Shadow Creek.
The Sharks are playing their first year of varsity football, and are trying to attempt the feat their district mates Manvel failed to accomplish by winning a state championship in their first year of play.
The game I'll definitely be watching is taking place on Friday night in Class 5A Division II.
Unbeaten Fort Bend Marshall (15-0), who made a deep playoff run last year but fell short, tries to capture its first state title against (15-0) Aledo. The Bearcats were upset in the state title game last year against College Station, and are looking to avenge that loss at Marshall's expense.
Aledo has more than few UIL championship trophies in their school trophy case, having won six state football titles in the last nine years.
Marshall is not only trying to complete an unbeaten season, they are trying to do so while grieving the loss of their senior teammate Drew Conley days before their semifinal playoff game.
Conley was murdered by his uncle, and five days later the Buffs pulled out an emotional game against Corpus Christi Calallen last week 19-17 to punch their ticket to the Jerrydome.
The other reasons I'm rooting for Marshall is the school is named for the eminent Supreme Court justice, and their school colors are the same black, gold and white my Falcons wore.
The Buffs were recently visited by Houston Texans DB Tyrann Mathieu for a motivational speech.
We'll see if it worked for the Buffs tomorrow night at 7 PM. Go Buffs! Do it for Drew. Bring that Class 5A Division II title back to the Houston area!.
TransGriot Update: They hung with them for a quarter, but Aledo unfortunately beat Marshall 55-19
Labels:
championship,
FBISD,
football,
high school,
Texas
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