https://txssc.txstate.edu/tools/tde-toolkit/drill-requirements
https://tea.texas.gov/about-tea/laws-and-rules/texas-administrative-code/texas-administrative-code-title-19-part-2
https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/Text.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=SB11
ominous right?
- Click here for the article.
Six hundred and sixty-six new Texas laws will go into effect this Wednesday. Debated, passed and signed during the 87th Texas Legislature, these laws include changes to public safety, health care and K-12 education.
- Click here for the article.
The 2022 elections in Texas favor Republican candidates. They haven’t lost a statewide election for more than a quarter of a century, and they’ve been in the majority of the Texas House and Senate for two decades. Republicans quashed Democratic efforts to gain ground in the 2020 elections.
The first great resource made available to economic interests in the U.S.
- Click here for the article.
Under President Thomas Jefferson, Congress passed he Land Act of 1804, superseding the Harrison Land Act of 1800. Both the act of 1800 and that of 1804, were passed to make migration to the western United States more attractive. The Harrison Act defined the minimum amount of land that could be purchased at 640 acres, while the 1804 act permitted the government to auction the land on credit with a standard 25% down payment and 6% interest. Much of the land available was in the Mississippi territory and was very well suited to growing cotton, much more fertile than the over-farmed lands of South Carolina. But in the immediate years after the land act of 1804, the market for English textiles and American cotton was depressed due to the trade embargoes enacted by the British and French. When Jefferson, responded with the Embargo Act of 1807, dealing a death blow to the industrial New England, it left the South with even less demand for their cotton, and kept the prices of land in the Mississippi territory low.
Despite, the low demand for Cotton and Indian hostilities in the area, settlers and speculators purchased over 77,000 acres of land in 1810. In 1809, President Madison had ordered land sales in what was to become the state of Alabama, and Americans living in crowded eastern states were drawn to the fertile lands and freedoms of the open territory. But soon, many more would follow them due to two major events. First, during the war of 1812, as a result of the Battle of Horsehoe Bend, the Creek tribes were signed the Treaty of Fort Jackson and ceded 23 million acres of their territory in Alabama and Georgia to the United States Government. Second, in 1815 with the final defeat of Napoleon and the collapse of the France's Continental blockade the demand for English textiles exploded, driving imports of Cotton into Europe causing it's prices to climb from 20 cents per pound in 1815 to 30 cents in 1817. As cotton prices rose, so did the demand for these fertile lands including the newly acquired 23 million acres, driving prices up. In Madison County, Alabama the prices increased from $2 per acre in 1817 to $7.40 per acre by 1818, with reports for some acres going for as high as $78. With rising prices, came land speculators. These were wealthy capitalists who were buying large tracts of land at low prices in expectation that the prices would rise.
In late 1817, President James Monroe was well aware of the land speculation, and he wanted to make it clear to Congress, that it was the nation and the public, not land speculators that ought to be benefiting from the increase in land value. In his first State of the Union address, Madison asked Congress to consider what new provisions could be made to the land acts of 1800 and 1804 to ensure that the land was used for emigration and that profits were returned to the public. Monroe began by reminding Congress that the nation had admitted into the Union several new states for which there was much vacant land soon, and demand for this land would likely increase with the termination of Indian hostilities. Monroe wrote that "the public lands are a public stock, which ought to be disposed of to the best advantage for the nation" and "the nation should therefore derive the profit proceeding from the continual rise in their value". Monroe explained that settlers or "emigrants" should be encouraged to compete and purchase the the land at a fair price, but that that the main objective should be to maximize the profit of the nation over the individual. While, there is no real way to stop wealthy capitalists from benefiting under any mode of sale, he warned against allowing forward looking speculators who might amass "vast bodies" of lands at low prices. Aside from taking profit, which should be left to the public, these speculators would also have the power to "control the emigration and settlement in such a manner as their opinion of their respective interests might dictate". And with this, Monroe asked Congress consider "such further provision may be made in the sale of the public lands, with a view to the public interest".
Notice the relationship between political power and education.
- Click here for the entry.
For a full look at the number of governments - especially local governments - in the United States.
- Click here for the link.
The numbers as of 2017
National - 1
State - 50
County - 3,031
Municipal - 19,495
Townships - 16,253
School Districts - 12,754
Other Special Districts - 38,542
A great look at federalism and voting rights.
- Click here for the article.
- Click here for the entry.
The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2021 (H.R. 4) is proposed legislation that would restore and strengthen parts of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, certain portions of which were struck down by the United States Supreme Court decision of Shelby County v. Holder in 2013, and was weakened further by Brnovich v. DNC in 2021. Particularly, it would restore the Voting Rights Act of 1965's requirement that certain states pre-clear certain changes to their voting laws with the federal government. It was re-introduced in the 117th Congress, and is named after late Georgia Representative and voting rights activist John Lewis. On August 24, 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the bill by a margin of 219 to 212, though it still needs approval by the U.S. Senate before it can be sent to the president to be signed into law.
- Click here for info on H.R. 4.
This is what the bill seeks to accomplish:
This bill establishes new criteria for determining which states and political subdivisions must obtain preclearance before changes to voting practices may take effect. Preclearance is the process of receiving preapproval from the Department of Justice (DOJ) or the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia before making legal changes that would affect voting rights.
This is a preliminary syllabus. The final version will be available once the class is set up on blackboard
Department of Political Science
University of Houston
GOVT 2306 – 05 – 13464
GOVT 2306 – 06 – 18610
US and Texas Constitutional Politics
_____________
Professor: Kevin Jefferies
Office:
Office Hours:
Class Time and Place:
GOVT 2306 – 05 – 13464: MW 1-230pm SW 101
GOVT 2306 – 06 – 18610: MW 230-4pm SW 101
Phone:
Email: kejeffe2@central.uh.edu
Blog: The Weaker Party.
_____________
Textbooks:
US GOVT 2306: U.S. and Texas Constitution and
Politics, University of Houston, Ebook
- We The People 13e
- Governing Texas 5e
Try This Link:
https://digital.wwnorton.com/wtp13govtex5govt2306
________________
Grading:
25% - Average of weekly quizzes
25% - Average of weekly 150 word written assignments
25% - Average of four tests and a final exam
25% - Class Essay
Here’s more detail on each:
1
– Chapter Quizzes. There will be an
online quiz for each chapter. You can find each on the left hand column of
blackboard under “quizzes.” The quiz questions will be pulled randomly from the
book’s test bank. They can be any format. The will have 25 questions, and you
will have two hours to complete them. They are intended to guide you through
the chapters. All the quizzes will be opened at the beginning of the semester,
and close the last day of class. Until then, you can take them as many times as
you like. You will receive the highest grade you score.
2 – Written Assignments. Three written assignments will be opened on Blackboard at the beginning of class. They will be all due at the end of the semester. Each is to be at least 150 words long – but you may go over. The subject matter will cover some aspect of the week’s news, especially as it reflects on that week’s material.
3 –Tests and Final Exam. There will be a test after each module. They will contain 80 questions and you will have 60 minutes to complete them. The questions will be presented to you one at a time, and you will not be able to backtrack. You will have only one chance to take each test – but you may use your book and notes. The final will be comprehensive. It will have 120 multiple choice and true / false questions.
4 – A 1000 Word Critical Essay. Look on blackboard for your topic I want this to be well researched (three sources at minimum) and objective. This is not an opinion piece. You don’t learn anything rehashing your opinions. You will be graded on quality, length, grammar, depth, and all that. As college students you should know what makes a paper great, good, adequate, or bad.
An all purpose source of legislative info
- Click here for the site.
For our look at federalism:
- Click here for the full article.
Something that will likely lie behind the upcoming redistricting.
- Click here for the article.
Setting the stage for what is expected to be a bruising battle over political representation, the results of the 2020 census released Thursday showed that Texas’ explosive growth over the past decade was again powered by people of color.
Pete McRae’s Rising LoneStars
- Click here to check it out.
Everything you need to know about how states will redraw districts based on recent numbers.
- Click here for it.
This is the data that will be used by state legislatures to redraw legislative districts this fall.
- Click here for it.
Public Law 94-171 refers to the current law governing how the census bureau will do so.
- Click here for the relevant info.
It lives in section 141 of title 13, United States Code, which you can find here.
https://definitions.uslegal.com/c/call-of-the-house/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capias_ad_respondendum
https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/Docs/GV/htm/GV.418.htm
https://www.houstontx.gov/courts/pdf/COH_MCA_Mon_Dkt.pdf
https://www.houstontx.gov/courts/index.html
https://www.wdmtoolkit.org/business-processes/warrant-process-flow/warrant-types
- Texas universities, committed to full returns, face fall terms with surging COVID-19 numbers and no mask mandates.
- As coronavirus rages again in Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott resists statewide action, hamstrings local leaders.
- Texas won’t require schools to notify parents of COVID-19 cases.
- Gov. Greg Abbott’s order banning mask mandates in Texas schools faces lawsuit, defiance by big-city districts.
- Dallas County, Bexar County officials fight Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s ban on mask mandates in court.
- Texas judges temporarily allow officials in Bexar and Dallas counties to issue mask mandates, despite Gov. Greg Abbott’s ban.
https://gov.texas.gov/uploads/files/press/PROC_second_called_session_87th_legislature_IMAGE_08-05-21.pdf
For our look Texas' shift from statewide Democratic to Republican power.
- Click here for it.
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/08/04/texas-energy-industry-donations-legislature/
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/08/04/texas-mask-mandate-greg-abbott-covid/
https://files.texaspolicy.com/uploads/2018/08/16095232/Corrections-Budget-and-Prison-Operations.pdf
- Click here for the article.
After a lengthy court battle, the Texas Department of Safety has started allowing voters to update their voter information at the same time they update their driver’s license information online.
- Gov. Greg Abbott draws criticism for ordering state troopers to pull over vehicles with migrants, saying it will stem COVID-19 risk.
- U.S. attorney general blasts Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s latest border directive and threatens a legal battle.
- Justice Department sues Texas over Gov. Greg Abbott's order for law enforcement to pull over vehicles with migrants.
- Gov. Greg Abbott's border security initiative rolls out with confusion, missteps and a whole lot of state troopers in Val Verde County.
A look at the people who build the bulk of our regional highways.
- Click here for the site.
- About us: