The top elected leaders of Texas are far-right extremists–Governor Greg Abbott, Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, and Attorney General Ken Paxton.
Abbott is passionate about school vouchers, despite the fact they would harm rural public schools. He called multiple special sessions of the legislature last year specifically to pass vouchers, but failing each time.
Gov. Abbott got more than $10 million from Pennsylvania billionaire Jeff Yass to oust the moderate Republicans who blocked vouchers. He won most of those races, defeating conservatives who prioritized their constituents over the wishes of the Governor, Jeff Yass, Betsy DeVos and the Texas oil and gas billionaires Wilks and Dunn, devout evangelical supports of vouchers.
A new session of the legislature opened. The hard right backed Rep. David Cook to be Speaker of the House. Rep. Dustin Burrows ran against him. Abbott, Patrick, and Paxton supported Cook. Burrows won. Burrows received more Democratic votes than Republican votes.
The Texas Tribune has the story.
Burrows won the speaker’s race after two rounds of voting, edging out Cook by a vote of 85-55. During the first round, Rep. Ana-María Rodríguez-Ramos, a Richardson Democrat, received 23 votes from fellow Democratic members — enough to keep Burrows and Cook from reaching the majority threshold of 76.
In the ensuing runoff round, twelve Democrats who had voted for Rodríguez-Ramos switched to Burrows. He also netted two more GOP votes from members who defected from Cook. Nine members marked themselves present without voting for either option, and one member, Yvonne Davis of Dallas, was marked as absent.
Burrows’ winning coalition was made up of 49 Democrats and 36 Republicans, drawing instant backlash from hardline members and activists who vowed revenge in next year’s primaries.
The Abbott wing of the party–more MAGA than Trump–is furious.
The question is: Does this mean that Abbott’s voucher plan will lose again?
A time for watchful waiting.

Texas could still end up with Abbott for as long as he lives. Texas has no term limits for governor.
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It’s possible. Abbott is a dime-store Trump.
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Thank goodness for the Democrats and moderate Republicans in Texas. Abbott and his band of extremists are probably working on a scheme to retaliate against them.
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Hi Diane, just by the way, here’s a page on how to add or change your sharing buttons, for instance, BlueSky would be useful …
https://wordpress.com/support/sharing/
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Thanks, Jon.
I am a technological klutz
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I don’t understand Texas politics. How could you get an extremist like Abbot and still have some moderate republicans?
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Texas Democrats still have some fight left in them as well.
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Roy, as the saying goes, a politics is local.
I can’t understand why Texas keeps electing Abbott.
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It’s nice to see a “RINO” got the Speaker’s chair in TX, and a pleasure to watch even the deep-red TX Republican party torn by infighting. However, let’s not get too sanguine: Burrows is pro-voucher program.
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Burrows is a real Republican. He is not RINO. He voted for vouchers.
But his victory was a defeat for the extremists: Abbott, Patrick, Paxton.
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Yup, I get it. I mean “RINO” in quotes because that’s what extreme MAGAs call real Republicans.
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