RGV Republican Liberty Club

Promoting Liberty & Freedom in the Rio Grande Valley

Browsing Posts published by Kevin

Texas HB 300 is DEAD!

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Congratulations and thank you to all the people who called their Representatives in opposition to this monstrous piece of bad legislation.

from http://www.texasturf.org/

It was messy, and full of drama, but the grassroots, with the help of infighting among lawmakers over the “local option” gas tax hike, managed to slay a beast of a bill that would have unleashed horrific provisions upon Texans for GENERATIONS to come.

Thank you for all the phone calls and emails to your legislators, and for your support and sacrifices to come to Austin to give testimony to these committees and hung in there when it felt like they weren’t listening and would NEVER do right by the PEOPLE of this great State.

Thank you, thank you, thank you for sticking with us through these 5 months of hard-fought battles during the session and for many of us, years of uphill struggles to bring accountability and fix transportation policies that are outright rip-offs. Without this grassroots army, the train wreck would have continued unabated with untold damage.

Play by play…
The final version of the bill from conference committee wasn’t even posted until 11:40 PM Saturday night. We had 24 hours to read a 1,000 page bill….IMPOSSIBLE! I was able to get a side by side report of the actual, final changes in text (that report was 178 pages!) and managed to inform lawmakers of the horrible provisions still left in HB 300 to give us ammo to KILL HB 300. Read them here.

We put out a call for supporters to meet us at the Capitol yesterday for a last push to prevent lawmakers from selling off Texas highways to foreign corporations and KILL HB 300. When we arrived, word got out that Senator John Carona announced he was going to filibuster HB 300 because his “local option” 10 cent gas tax hike was taken out of the bill.

Support in the House started to waiver as it appeared HB 300 was going down in the Senate. The House bill wasn’t eligible for a vote until 11:40 PM, just 20 minutes before the clock ran out. If they couldn’t pass it, they still had to pass the safety net bill before the stroke of midnight. It was going to be tricky!

An added wrinkle…
We found out about some chicanery with the safety net bill (after hearing we were trying to kill the sunset bill and push TxDOT’s sunset to next session). HB 300 author Carl Isett magically changed TxDOT’s sunset date in the safety net bill to 4 years instead of the 2 years as it was originally written. Apparently this was a move to force lawmakers to choke down his anti-taxpayer, anti-reform HB 300 under the guise that it was better than nothing. But rather it smacked of dirty politics to try and say, “you take our bill or get no change at TxDOT for 4 years.”

After we made the rounds and staffers were tight-lipped about their reps position for or against the bill, Rep. Vicki Truitt threatened to filibuster HB 300 in the House (following Carona’s footsteps, she wanted the 10 cent gas tax hike and was willing to KILL the bill over it).

Then, House Transportation Chairman Joe Pickett at one point threatened to “release the conferees” and call up the senate bill for a vote instead of the House bill hoping to vote it down handily to send a message to the Senate that the House didn’t want their bill. School children behave better than these people. The Senate version was chalk full of the WORST provisions imaginable (worst case scenario), including the 10 cent gas tax hike. So I didn’t find the move particularly funny. It was an awful scare until I figured out what Pickett was doing.

By the time the dust settled, it was 11:40 PM and they never called up HB 300 (already declaring it DEAD, for all the wrong reasons, but dead nonetheless) and went straight to the safety bill. Now the safety net bill, having been hijacked and no way to change it since all the final version of bills had to have been filed by midnight Saturday, needed to DIE. We couldn’t let TxDOT off the hook for another 4 years. But if the safety net bill didn’t pass, TxDOT would be dissolved (many would cheer such a scenario, but not lawmakers who live and die by getting road projects built for their districts).

So Rep., David Leibowitz led the charge and stalled passage of the bill and midnight came and went and NO HB 300 and NO safety bill passed.

TxDOT ABOLISHED (for a few hours)
For about 16 hours, TxDOT was officially ABOLISHED! Oh, I slept well last night…

Today, the House was only to do technical changes (like remove conflicts within bills, mismarked section numbers and the like), but they AGAIN broke their own rules and managed to extend TxDOT for another 2 years (which was the original plan, just a lot more messy!) through a resolution. Lawmakers would do anything to avoid a special session, so they snuck the continuation of TxDOT into a resolution on stimulus funds (and where to deposit them).

The House officially adjourned, sine die only moments ago. While we didn’t reform the agency and get the GOOD provisions passed, we averted diaster and CDAs, that sell our highways to foreign companies, sunset August 31. If CDAs die, TTC-35 dies with it. The TTC-69 was excepted OUT of the moratorium bill last session (which we vehemently opposed), so CDA contracts for that corridor can continue until 2011.

The local government 391 commissions we’ve been forming all over the state will now be the only thing (aside from litigation) standing between East Texas and a possible 1,200 foot wide Trans Texas Corridor!

CDAs may have been snuck into another bill somewhere…
With the “chubbing” over Voter ID, many bills died in the House. So the Senate started attaching their bills to House bills and there were a flurry of conference committee reports filed at midnight Saturday with no way to read them all to see if CDAs got snuck into a bill. Considering the House arrived at sine die before the senate today, and since both chambers routinely suspend their own rules, the Senate may have slipped CDAs into a bill today AFTER knwoing for certain that CDAs will sunset this summer absent the passage of HB 300.

What’s also uncertain is what happens to the bills that gave RMAs the authority to enter into CDAs if CDAs are going to sunset? Which law will take precedence over the other? So there are many open questions and disaster may be lurking around the corner. But for today, we can enjoy a BIG VICTORY #2!

from http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Economy-dips-at-a-57-percent-apf-15380738.html

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. economy sank at a 5.7 percent pace in the first quarter as the brute force of the recession carried over into this year. However, many analysts believe activity isn’t shrinking nearly as much now as the downturn flashes signs of letting up.

The Commerce Department’s updated reading on gross domestic product, released Friday, showed the economy’s contraction from January to March was slightly less deep than the 6.1 percent annualized decline first estimated last month. But the new reading was a tad worse than the 5.5 percent annualized drop economists were forecasting.

It was a grim first-quarter performance despite the small upgrade. It marked the second straight quarter where the economy took a huge tumble. At the end of last year, the economy shrank at a staggering 6.3 percent pace, the most in a quarter-century.

Economists are hopeful that the economy isn’t shrinking nearly as much in the April-to-June quarter as the recession eases its grip. Forecasters at the National Association for Business Economics, or NABE, predict the economy will contract at a 1.8 percent pace.

Other analysts think the economic decline could be steeper — around a 3 percent pace. Some think it could be less — about a 1 percent pace.

“Things are getting less awful,” said Bill Cheney, chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services.

Less dramatic cuts by businesses factor into the expected improvement. Consumers, however, are likely to be cautious. There’s been encouraging signs recently with gains in orders for big-ticket manufactured goods, some firming in home sales and a slowing in the pace of layoffs.

“The speed of the drop will slow,” predicted Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.

On Wall Street, a late-day rally gave stocks a lift. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 96.53 points to close at 8,500.33.

The economy’s dismal performance over the last two quarters underscored the toll the recession, which started in December 2007 and is now the longest since World War II, has had on the country. Businesses have ratcheted back spending and slashed 5.7 million jobs to survive the fallout. Financial firms have taken huge losses on soured mortgage investments. Banks and other companies have been forced out of business. Home foreclosures have soared.

Weakness in the first quarter mostly reflected massive cuts in spending by businesses on home building, equipment and software and many other things. U.S. exports plunged, so did spending on commercial construction and inventories. But some of those drops — while huge — were a bit less than first estimated, contributing to the tiny upgrade in overall first-quarter GDP.

All of those reductions — as well as cutbacks in government spending — more than swamped a rebound in consumer spending. However, consumers weren’t nearly as energetic as the government first estimated. They boosted spending at a 1.5 percent pace, according to the revised figures. That was less than the 2.2 percent growth rate estimated a month ago.

The government makes three estimates of the economy’s performance for any given quarter. Each estimate of gross domestic product is based on more complete information. The third one will be released in late June. GDP, which measures the value of all goods and services produced in the United States, is the best gauge of the nation’s economic health.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and NABE forecasters say they expect the recession to end later this year, barring any fresh shocks to the economy. NABE forecasters predict the economy could start growing again in the third or fourth quarter.

President Barack Obama’s stimulus package of increased government spending and tax cuts, along with aggressive action by the Fed to spur lending, should help revive the economy.

Still, both the Fed and private economists caution that any recovery will be lethargic and that unemployment — now at 8.9 percent, the highest in 25 years — will continue to march upward in the months ahead.

Many economists say the jobless rate will hit 10 percent by the end of this year. Some say it could rise as high as 10.7 percent in the second quarter of next year before making a slow descent.

One of the forces that plunged the country into a recession was the financial crisis that struck last fall and was the worst since the 1930s. Economists say recoveries after financial crises tend to be slower.

Original article here: http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/026972.html

Who cares about the needs of a critical care patient when there’s a State Trooper’s hungry ego to feed?

Emergency Medical Technician Maurice White, Jr., a paramedic with the Creek Nation EMS in Oklahoma, was shuttling a patient to the hospital when he was stopped by a State Trooper. White, intent on getting the patient the care she needed, hadn’t noticed that the trooper had been behind him with lights flashing; when the trooper zoomed by, he made radio contact and snarled at White that he “should consider checking [his] rear view mirrors.”

A little while later the Trooper, operating his vehicle with typical recklessness, cut off a car driven by a family member of the patient and signaled for White to pull over. Seeing a woman sitting next to the Trooper, and thinking she might need medical care, White complied — only to find himself under assault and the subject of a spurious arrest on the way to the hospital.

Several other brown-shirted state police materialized, and White was swarmed; at one point, one of the skinheaded state stormtroopers had his hand on White’s throat.

Once again, in keeping with the quasi-official media protocol, this episode was described by local ABC affiliate news as a “scuffle” or a “confrontation,” rather than a criminal assault by several armed tax-feeders on a medical professional in the course of carrying out his

Welcome back!

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Well, I just wanted to say hello and welcome back. The website is obviously in transition right now. I’m loading all sorts of stuff in the backend to allow for much more dynamic content by our members. Watch this space, as things wil progress with the intention of having greater communication and more content available for your perusal. Good things a’coming!

Your Friend in Liberty,

Kevin

Tea Party Pictures!

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Well, the Tea Party is over with. It was a resounding success here in McAllen. The expected turnout was not only met, but was overcome handily. Thank you to those all who attended who care about this once great country and wish to restore it. The fight must go on to restore the Republic! In the meantime, feel free to view some pictures that were taken at the Tea Party. Just click right up top on the link to the gallery to see the pictures.

Thanks again to all those who took the time to get off the couch and get involved.

And for those who asked about purchasing that wonderful Gonzales flag with the AR-15 on it, please see: http://www.texasflagman.com/catalog/

Dear Friend of Liberty

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Welcome to our new home page! This month of April, 2009 marks the first anniversary of the formal reorganization of our local chapter. Our first full year has been an eventful and encouraging one. Various members have participated, working in the Republican Primary, the State Convention, the Lincoln Day Event, the General Election, and the development of the statewide Liberty Movement in Texas.

I speak for myself when I tell you that your Chairman is a liberty loving, Bible believing, Christian Texan, and a Republican voter since 1960. In the realm of politics, this means that I believe in the God of the Bible, The One who warned the children of Israel of the oppression and suffering that would come if they demanded a king. I believe in the Christ of the Bible, who taught His disciples that there are limits to what secular government may demand. I believe in those limits, and that human dignity, faith, family and society came before government. I believe that they still do come before government.

You may or may not share my faith, but I hope you do share my love for liberty, and that you also share my strong desire to return America to its roots in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

You may feel at times that you are alone in the Valley in your love for liberty. I felt that way once, as well. But then I found others who believe as I do and we formed the Republican Liberty Caucus, a strong and growing action-oriented association of liberty loving Republicans.

What can one person do? It’s hard for a freedom-loving American to keep hope alive these days when in every election cycle the same entrenched interests give us the same kind of no-choice politicians and call it democracy.

It seems as though principle doesn’t matter, but rather only money, power and influence. This year was no exception. In fact, the 2008 election brought a renewed determination in many of us that we must bring about a renewal of liberty now, or it may be forever too late.

If you believe in Liberty, please consider joining us. Our regular monthly meeting is normally held on the first Monday of each month. Click on the link to the Meetup site for additional information about current plans.

For liberty,

John Pankratz

Chairman, RGVRLC

Here are some upcoming events in which you may want to take part:

April 15: Tea Party at Archer Park, McAllen starting at 5:30 PM

April 23: HCRP Lincoln Dinner 7:00 PM April 23 at Nomad Shrine Club in Pharr. Purchase tickets in advance