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TexasTowelie

(112,063 posts)
Wed May 28, 2014, 12:49 PM May 2014

Burkablog: The Tea Party Takes Charge

The big winners from the primary runoff were Dan Patrick and the tea party. The big loser was the state of Texas, which sailed into unknown territory. The tea party, collectively, is in total control of the state, and the consequences are going to be staggering. All state services are in peril, in particular, the public schools. It’s the revenge of the know-nothings.

What will Dan Patrick be like as lieutenant governor? We know that he is aggressively anti-immigrant, so we may have to deal with Arizona-style immigration legislation, sanctuary cities laws, disinvestment in higher education, and privatization of public education. The one thing we know about the tea party with certainty is that they are angry--they are the definition of sore winners. The new lieutenant governor is not going to inherit a bed of roses. He has no relationship with the Speaker of the House. I doubt that he will have a good relationship with Greg Abbott. My guess is that Patrick is already thinking about the next election, and that he plans to challenge Abbott for governor in 2018. His ego won’t let him stop at lite guv.

One thing I believe with absolute certainty: Dan Patrick as lieutenant governor will hasten the day Texas turns purple. His personal history is one of recklessness and carelessness. There are going to be train wrecks along the way. I have serious doubts about whether the tea party can govern or whether Patrick can get along with his peers without having a meltdown along the way. His followers have no understanding of, or inclination for, negotiation and compromise, and they didn’t run the table at the ballot box last night; Straus’s team outperformed Michael Quinn Sullivan’s. The fundamentals of politics don’t change. You have to understand that you can’t always get what you want.

The question looming over the 2015 session is, frankly, whether state services can survive the session. The state has a lot of money, but will the tea party allow lawmakers to spend it? Or will the money just linger unspent in the Rainy Day fund? There are going to be some potholes in the road ahead--assuming that the tea party lets us build any roads.

http://www.texasmonthly.com/burka-blog/tea-party-takes-charge

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Burkablog: The Tea Party Takes Charge (Original Post) TexasTowelie May 2014 OP
Texas Monthly: Paul Burka Might Not Be Mike Levy, BUT Vogon_Glory May 2014 #1
I believed he was having an anxiety on TV, last night, when he spoke about accepting the win. n/t DhhD May 2014 #2
This is the trend to watch PDittie May 2014 #3

Vogon_Glory

(9,113 posts)
1. Texas Monthly: Paul Burka Might Not Be Mike Levy, BUT
Wed May 28, 2014, 02:52 PM
May 2014

Paul Burka might not be Mike Levy, but I still consider Texas Monthly's breathless cheer leading for Republican politicians one if the reasons that the Lone Star State may well be on a Hell-bound train after the November elections.

Voting against Texas Tea-baggers might be as futile as pro-Union Texans voting against seccession, but I'm voting Democratic anyway

PDittie

(8,322 posts)
3. This is the trend to watch
Thu May 29, 2014, 09:57 AM
May 2014

How many of these "moderate" (sic) Republicans start getting off the Tea Party crazy train.

LVdP must capitalize on it, and its effects need to ripple up to Davis and down the ticket to Collier, Sam Houston and the other Democrats. There is a real opportunity to stem the Red Tea Tide five months from now, and -- surprise! -- it isn't going to come from Battleground Texas. It's going to come from enough Republicans voting for a few Democrats in the fall.

Read the comments at that link above, particularly those by commenter WUSRPH. Read Erica Grieder's post at TM, and take note of the underground feud between Dan Patrick and Ken Paxton.

How many of the so-called sane Republicans abandon their party for principle is where the election will turn.

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