Biden v. Nebraska.
- Oyez.
- Scotusblog.
- Wikipedia.
- Oyez.
- Scotusblog.
- Wikipedia.
Biden v. Nebraska.
- Oyez.
- Scotusblog.
- Wikipedia.
I’m tempted to say that this is what Madison was referring to in Federalist 10.
In Odessa, as in many other Texas cities, elections for municipal positions such as mayor and city council member are nonpartisan; candidates do not run as Republicans or Democrats. In recent years, though, Odessa politics have become increasingly divisive and ideological, mirroring national trends. Joven and his allies say they are simply representing the values of their conservative constituents. Ector County is overwhelmingly red; Donald Trump won about 73 percent of its 44,591 votes cast in the 2020 presidential election. “We were elected, and the citizens wanted change,” said council member Swanner. Council member Mark Matta, an account manager at an oil and gas supply company who was elected in 2020, also voted to fire Brooks and Marrero. “We weren’t getting anywhere with [Marrero], so we just had to make the decision that we thought was best for the city of Odessa,” he told me. Matta declined to go into greater detail, citing unspecified “pending litigation.”
Several current and former Odessa City Council members told me that while the city is certainly conservative, Joven’s faction, which aligns itself with the MAGA wing of the Republican Party, has introduced a new atmosphere of extreme partisanship, distracting the council from its traditional emphasis on infrastructure and business development. At its first meeting, in November, the newly reconstituted city council voted to declare Odessa a sanctuary city for the unborn, joining more than forty other Texas cities that have outlawed abortion. Odessa’s ordinance is even more restrictive than the state’s abortion ban, providing exceptions only for ectopic pregnancies.
Thompson was alone in voting against the ordinance, arguing that reproductive rights were beyond the scope of the city council. “Why do we need to get involved?” he asked me. “Let’s go build a sports complex. Let’s pave roads.” Since November, though, those typical functions of city government seem to have taken a back seat to Team Joven’s ideological agenda. “It’s very difficult to entice new businesses to come into a city where the local government is so nonfunctional,” said Gene Collins, who served from 2016 to 2020 on the board of the Odessa Development Corporation, which provides financial incentives to spur economic activity. “City employees that we’ve had for a long time have resigned. Others are unsure of their future. Nothing is really getting done in the city.”
This is the standard that must be met by Dominion Voting Systems if they are to succeed in their defamation lawsuit against Fox News.
- Actual Malice.
- Proving Fault: Actual Malice and Negligence.
- What is Actual Malice? Definition & Examples.
Renewed laws against abortion have had unusual consequences. Here is one.
Background:
- Habeas Corpus.
- Habeas corpus in the United States.
A Florida appeals court denied an attorney’s attempt to have a woman released from jail ahead of trial by arguing that her fetus was being illegally detained without charge – but the attorney says he plans to continue the legal battle.
Florida’s third district court of appeal dismissed without prejudice a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed by attorney William M Norris on behalf of the “unborn child” of Natalia Harrell.
The petition argued that the fetus is “a person under the Florida constitution and the United States constitution” and that it therefore should not effectively be detained without charge.
The petition argued that the fetus is “a person under the Florida constitution and the United States constitution” and that it therefore should not effectively be detained without charge.
The ruling, written by judge Thomas Logue last Friday, contains “no opinion on whether such filing is being brought by a party with standing, whether the claims are legally cognizable, whether they have merit, or what remedies, if any, are available”.
Instead, it argued on a technicality that the petition failed to include a factual record of the case – which includes disputed allegations that Harrell has received inadequate prenatal care while in jail – and should be pursued in a lower court.
However, another judge from the panel in the case, Monica Gordo, published a partially dissenting opinion arguing that the court should reject the claim of “unlawful incarceration by the government and find habeas corpus does not lie under these limited and specific circumstances”.
While Gordo agreed that factual disputes about Harrell’s prenatal care needed to be hashed out in a lower court, she argued that the appeals court should rule on the habeas corpus claim, habeas corpus being the common law right for a person being detained to appear before a judge.
Gordo noted that there was agreement that the fetus had not been charged with a crime, and wrote: “To send this part of the petition back for a determination of facts which are undisputed seems odd … I see a significant difference between exercising judicial restraint and punting a legal issue placed squarely before the Court.”
She added: “No more could the government be accused of unlawfully detaining the unborn child in this case than could the mother be guilty of kidnapping over interstate lines if she chose to visit her grandmother in Georgia while eight months pregnant.”
Gordo charged that the case was a “badly-disguised Trojan horse”.
“The argument is nothing more than an attempt for the mother to leverage her unborn child as a basis to be released from lawful detention,” she wrote.
Fall 2024:
One of your fellow students asked the following:
Are there any rights that protect me if I (as a Christian) don't want to participate in selling Halloween related items at my job? Do I have the right to avoid selling or stocking specific items that conflict with my faith such as: evil eye, crystals, sage, etc. . . ? Can I be fired or disciplined for refusing to participate in certain work duties because of my religious beliefs? Can my employer require me to participate in activities that go against my religious beliefs?
How would you answer that question?
Note that this is not about your opinion on the issue. How would the courts handle this?
To add a wrinkle to this, how are the basic rules different based on the wording in the United States Bill of Rights as opposed to the Texas Bill of Rights?
Feel free to use whatever methods you can use to get to an answer, but explain how you derived it.
As always:
- It is due for full credit on midnight the following Monday.
- It will be subject to a penalty if turned in late.
- Is can be turned in for partial credit until the end of the semester.
- The grade is commensurate to the quality of the work.
- There is a 150 word minimum requirement.
- You may write as much as you wish.
_____________________________
Spring 2024:
This is for both 2305 and 2306
- Click on the following blog post:
- - Was the Founding Undemocratic? The Property Requirement for Voting.
Review what Hamilton, Adams, and Madison had to say about why property requirements for voting are beneficial. Try to figure out what they mean by the phrase "a will of one's own." Apparently people who work for a living do not have it, and this is a bad thing.
I want you to figure what the terms means, then figure out whether you have a will of your own. Are your decisions influenced by external actors and events? Or are you completely independent?
The normal requirements apply.
____________
Fall 2023:
Both of these assignments encourage you to explore political conflict on the national and state level.
GOVT 2305
Whose interests were served - or not served - in the recent temporary solution to the "government shutdown."
What seem to have been the major areas of conflict? How much can you find our about them?
- What is a government shutdown?
- US Congress passes stopgap measure to avert government shutdown.
- Shutdown averted: Political winners and losers.
GOVT 2306
The Texas Governor has called a special session of the legislature. He wants then to pass legislation allowing for school vouchers. The issue proposal has passionate supporters and opponents.
Who are they and what is the nature of their disagreement? How are their interests impacted by the proposal? What is the proposal?
- Gov. Greg Abbott says special lawmaking session will begin on Oct. 9, likely on school vouchers.
- Texas House committee report outlines possible path forward for school vouchers.
- Here’s everything you need to know about school vouchers in Texas.
You should have this memorized by now:
- It is due for full credit on midnight the following Monday.
- It will be subject to a penalty if turned in late.
- Is can be turned in for partial credit until the end of the semester.
- The grade is commensurate to the quality of the work.
- There is a 150 word minimum requirement.
- You may write as much as you wish.
Like tyrannical majorities, these are much more likely in smaller than larger governments.
- Corruption in Local Government
Federalist 10.
- Factions
Interest Group Formation.
- Cohesion
The Free Rider Problem.
- Political Free Riding.
- Collective Action and Interest Group Formation.
- Incentives.
Party Systems.
- Party Systems.
The Two Party System.
- Duverger's Law.
Winner Take All Elections.
- Single Member Districts.
Proportional Representation
- Proportional Representation.
- Multi-party system.
- Elections for the Knesset.
Coalition Formation.
- Factions in the Democratic Party.
- Factions in the Republican Party.
Party Eras.
- First Party System.
- Second Party System.
- Third Party System.
- Fourth Party System.
- Fifth Party System.
- Sixth Party System.
Party Polarization
- George Washington's Farewell Address.
- Elite Theory.
- Pluralist Theory.
- Polyarchy.
- Bureaucratic Power.
- Max Weber: There types of authority.
https://www.delawareinc.com/blog/why-delaware-corporate-law-matters-so-much/
https://delcode.delaware.gov/title8/c001/index.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_General_Corporation_Law
https://vaperanger.com/collections/top-10-capn-crunch
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Prelogar
https://www.oyez.org/cases/2022/21-1333
https://www.texastribune.org/2023/02/22/texas-delta-8-marijuana-hemp-arrests/
According to the U.S. Supreme Court in Dunn v Blumstein, yes.
- What is a durational residency requirement?
It includes an acknowledgement of a right to interstate travel.
From Oyez:
Facts of the case:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government-sponsored_enterprise
https://www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/conscience-rights
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/conscience
https://www.eff.org/issues/cda230
https://www.eff.org/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_Frontier_Foundation
Political Topics highlighted in Federalist 10
A rage for paper money
- Wikipedia: Early American currency.
An abolition of debts
- Wikipedia: Early History of Public Debt.
An equal division of property
- America’s lost egalitarian tradition.
Any other improper or wicked project,
Governments have become reluctant to share information.
Which can be a problem.
Before we go further, what is an editorial?
- Click here for it.
Whether Harris County disenfranchised voters and skewed election results by running out of paper in November is debatable. So is the merit of mushrooming election challenges by losing Republicans.
What’s not debatable?
Texas open records laws, once heralded among the strongest in the nation, have been shamefully eroded over the years by lawmakers who seem to fear sunshine as much as they do a primary challenge.
That’s why we applaud Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale for bringing some attention to the public records scandal in this state, regardless of whether the election scandal he’s hoping for pans out or not.
. . . McIngvale accuses the agency of refusing to turn over records he requested relating to November’s midterm election problems. Hidalgo was quick to dismiss McIngvale’s lawsuit this week as politically motivated, which it may very well be, but pure intentions aren’t a qualification to access public information.
. . . his concerns over ballot paper shortages and delays during the 2022 November election in Harris County are widely shared, including by this editorial board.
A report by the election office that was supposed to provide answers on how widespread the paper outages were and how many voters were turned away wasn’t a smoking gun, as we wrote, just smoky. It’s troubling that the county’s online tool measuring estimated wait times at polling places didn’t work and there seems to be no reliable system to keep track of problems and how they’re resolved. It’s unacceptable that the biggest county in Texas is adding fuel to mostly baseless claims on the right that our elections can’t be trusted. Democrats should be as frustrated about that as Republicans.
Mattress Mack’s request, submitted on his behalf by former sleuthing TV journalist-turned-media consultant Wayne Dolcefino, included texts, phone messages and emails for Elections Administrator Clifford Tatum, including correspondence with Precinct 1 Commissioner Rodney Ellis’ office, along with voting machine maintenance records, information about ballot paper, and communications between officials and judges overseeing polling locations.
The county says it turned over some information. The rest of the request? It met the familiar fate that Texas journalists know all too well when we try to access even benign information maintained by government entities – from the state to the local police department.
Harris County referred it to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office, seeking an opinion on whether it can claim “ongoing litigation” as an excuse to withhold the information from the prying eyes of the public.
Going to the AG used to be largely reserved for cases when requests raised security or privacy concerns. The presumption of the Texas Public Information Act has long been that public records are public property and most should be accessible to the owners.
Today, government agencies seem to consider it almost perfunctory to seek safe harbor from AG to hide information, using a “competitive harm” excuse to withhold public contract information or a “policymaking” exception to shroud even routine personnel and administrative decisions. Exceptions for police and investigative information are even used to keep grieving parents from obtaining autopsies and other records on their children’s deaths.
A 2019 investigative report by the Chronicle’s Jeremy Blackman and ABC13 found that the number of requests to the AG from state and local agencies seeking to withhold public information nearly doubled in the past decade, reaching 32,000 in 2018. Nearly all are granted.
. . . Harris County is just one of many agencies engaging in cover-your-butt behavior enabled by the Texas Legislature. Lawmakers, with the help of the Texas Supreme Court, have riddled the Texas Public Information Act with so many holes and escape hatches that the thing barely resembles the strong open government statutes that emerged after the Sharpstown stock fraud scandal in the 1970s.
Texans have a right to know what their government is doing, how their tax dollars are being spent, and yes, how their elections are being run. That right is under assault by lawmakers, an enabling AG, and by local officials happily exploiting the TPIA’s weakness.
No public information means no public accountability. That is a true threat to our democracy.
Dominion Voting Systems has sued Fox News for defamation over claims that its machines changed vites from Trump to Biden in the 2020 presidential election.
Here's background:
- US Dominion, Inc., et al. v. Fox Corporation, et al.
- Fox knew vote rigging claims were false, Dominion says, as network defends coverage.
- Fox stars privately bashed election fraud claims the network pushed.
- Dominion Voting Systems: Defamation Lawsuits.
What is defamation?
- LII: defamation.
- Wikipedia: Defamation.
- Britannica: Defamation.
How has the Supreme Court handled defamation cases?
- Oyez: Cases - Libel, defamation.
- Actual Malice.
- Will the Supreme Court reconsider a landmark defamation case?
More on fiscal federalism.
- Click here for the article.
Houston is about to give one of its most dangerous stretches of road a multi-million dollar makeover.
The City of Houston announced at a city council meeting Wednesday that the federal government is chipping in $28.7 million to enhance safety measures on a stretch of Bissonnet Street between S. Dairy Ashford Road and Hillcroft Avenue.
The seven-mile section of Bissonnet runs from Bissonnet and S. Dairy Ashford near the Alief area, to Bissonnet and Hillcroft, located between Sharpstown and Bellaire in west Houston. It's one of the deadliest roadways in the Bayou City: data from the city of Houston shows that more people die in fatal car accidents on Bissonnet than on any other street in Houston.
The city secured the funds to improve safety on Bissonnet through a federal grant program called Safe Streets and Roads for All. Houston is one of 510 communities to receive funding for safety improvements through the program, which doled out $800 million in grant awards that were announced by U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Wednesday.
"It's a competitive grant from the Department of Transportation," Mayor Sylvester Turner told ABC 13. "It's the largest grant anybody received in the State of Texas," Turner added.
"The project will help reduce traffic deaths and serious injuries along the corridor, which travels directly through the underserved communities of Alief-Westwood, Gulfton, and Braeburn, significantly impacting people of color and families of low income," U.S. Department of Transportation officials wrote in the project's description.
The advocacy group LINK Houston, which pushes for "a robust and equitable transportation network so that all people can reach opportunity," said improvements to this stretch of road have been a long time coming. The organization has named one of the intersections included in the improvement plan amongst the most dangerous intersections in Houston.
For both GOVT 2305 and 2306
So you might want to run for public office? (you never know)
For 2305, answer in terms of national office, for 2306 answer in terms of state or local office.
A few things to consider:
- What office do you want to run for?
- Are you qualified?
- How do you get on the ballot?
- What are the rules regarding campaign funding?
- etc...
Right now I'm only interested in the nuts and bolts of getting the right paperwork done.
A few places to look:
Federal Election Commission:
- Registering a candidate.
Texas Secretary of State:
- Qualifications for All Public Offices.
- Running For a Local Office (City, School District, Other Districts).
Texas Ethics Commission:
- First Steps for Candidates Running for a City Office.
General Advice:
- NPR: How to run for office.
You know the basics:
- It is due for full credit on midnight the following Monday.
- It will be subject to a penalty if turned in late.
- Is can be turned in for partial credit until the end of the semester.
- The grade is commensurate to the quality of the work.
- There is a 150 word minimum requirement.
- You may write as much as you wish.
Money in politics.
- Click here for the story.
Deason is using his nonprofit Texans for Free Enterprise and joining up with former Chairman Larry Taylor, former Rep. Simmons, and others
Saying he wants to bring every idea to the table, Dallas GOP megadonor Doug Deason shared with Quorum Report on Tuesday that he’s entering the “school choice” debate with an eye toward giving parents “a much stronger voice and say in the educational choices for their children.”
Using his 501(c)4 Texans for Free Enterprise, which was first launched when Deason and megadonor Bob Rowling wanted to push the legislature toward reforms in title insurance, Deason is now bringing in former GOP lawmakers and other experts to tackle the school choice debate.
Following the release of committees last week and the State of the State Address this week, Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas House leadership are perhaps on a collision course over Education Savings Accounts/school vouchers, which Deason supports.
Who is Doug Deason?
- Lone Star Justice Alliance.
- Deason Capital Services.
- Transparency USA.
- Fortunate Son.
The State of the State address doesn't seem to be especially open these days.
- Click here for the article.
Lawmakers and other guests invited to attend Gov. Greg Abbott's State of the State address at a corporate site in San Marcos on Thursday were told they must sign a nondisclosure agreement and leave their cellphones outside of the venue, according to a memo distributed last week and obtained Tuesday by the USA TODAY Network.
The 7 p.m. speech is scheduled to be delivered at the Noveon Magnetics Corp. manufacturing facility about 6 miles south of downtown San Marcos. Abbott will lay out his priorities for the 140-day legislative session that began last month.
The location had not been publicly disclosed and no reporters will be allowed inside the venue, except a crew from the television news stations that will air and livestream the governor's speech.
"Because Noveon has national security and corporate espionage concerns, they will require attendees to sign a non-disclosure agreement," the governor's office said in its memo that instructed those invited to respond by Feb. 12. "Noveon has also requested that all attendees either not bring cell phones or, alternatively, have those phones bagged onsite until after the attendees leave the facility."
Renae Eze, Abbott's spokeswoman, told the USA TODAY Network that the NDA requirement was later rescinded but the cellphone prohibition will stand.
Abbott, a Republican who began his third term last month, is again departing from the traditional State of the State format in which the governor gives the speech in the daytime during a joint session of the Legislature every other year inside the chamber of the Texas House. The speech was moved away from the Capitol in 2021 when activity inside the building was restricted to minimize the spread of COVID-19.
According to the company's website, Noveon's magnets are used in the generation of electricity.
"Magnets are at the heart of electrification," the company says in its homepage. "Our powerful, next-generation EcoFlux magnets are changing the way we electrify the world, ushering in a new era of mobility and high-efficiency, low-carbon energy production."
Felons are stripped of their right to vote. Texas state law does not allow a convicted felon to regain voting rights until they have completed their sentence, parole, or probation. Upon completion, Texas automatically restores the right to vote, but you will have to register to vote again and you may be asked to provide evidence that your sentence has been completed.
In Texas, felons also lose their right to bear arms. Once convicted of a felony, you cannot legally carry a firearm. The tricky part comes in the way that Texas law permits a felon to possess a firearm if he or she has gone five years without a felony conviction, but federal law makes it illegal for a convicted felon to possess a firearm unless the felon has been pardoned. While there is this tension between state and federal law, federal law is given priority which means that it is almost impossible for a convicted felon to legally purchase a firearm.
If you are convicted of a felony, you also lose the right to serve on a jury panel. This right may be restored if you receive a pardon. The same is also true of losing your right to hold public office after a felony conviction. Furthermore, a felony conviction will disqualify you from holding certain professions. The conviction will stay on your record for life and will come up anytime someone performs a background check.
- Can Convicted Felons Have Guns in Texas? A Guide to Firearms Laws.
Under Texas law, a person who’s been convicted of a felony can be charged with unlawful possession of a firearm. Prosecutors must prove the following elements to convict a defendant of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon:
- The defendant’s release from prison or community supervision, mandatory supervision, or parole, or
- The defendant possessed a firearm after being convicted of a felony but before the fifth anniversary of the defendant’s release from confinement following the conviction of a felony, or
- After the same period at any location other than the premises at which the defendant lives
For a full list: Restrictions After a Felony Conviction.
Campaigns aren't just for winning elections:
- 10 of the Best PR Campaigns of 2022.
- Top Social Media Campaigns of 2022.
1. Twitter’s If You Can Dream It, Tweet It Campaign
2. KFC’s #UnboringMornings
3. Firehouse Subs Rewards Week
4. Reddit’s Super Bowl Awareness Campaign
5. #Barbiecore
6. McDonald’s Menu Hacks Campaign
7. Oscar Meyer Bologna Face Masks
8. Spotify Wrapped Campaign
9. _Folk_lor Weekly Product Drops
10. Scent & Fire’s Twosday Campaign
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/02/15/supreme-court-sports-betting-ruling-fallout/
https://newrepublic.com/article/170586/counterman-colorado-stalking-first-amendment
https://txrising.org/about/
https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=88R&Bill=HB1176
https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/counterman-v-colorado/
Pushing the boundaries of searches and seizures.
- Click here for the article.
The administration of Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) helped defeat a bill this week to put menstrual data stored on period-tracking apps beyond the reach of law enforcement, blocking what supporters pitched as a basic privacy measure.
Millions of women use mobile apps to track their cycles, a practice that has occasionally raised data-security worries because the apps are not bound by HIPAA, the federal health privacy law. New concerns arose after the Supreme Court gave states the right to ban abortion in June, with some abortion rights groups warning that the information could be used to prosecute women or doctors who violate a state’s restrictions on the procedure.
S.B. 852, proposed by Sen. Barbara A. Favola (D-Arlington), would have prohibited search warrants from being issued for menstrual data stored on computers or other electronic devices. The measure sailed out of the Democratic-led Senate last week on a 31-9 vote, with every Democrat and half of the chamber’s 18 Republicans in support.
But a Republican-led House subcommittee voted along party lines Monday to “table” the bill — essentially killing it — after Maggie Cleary, Youngkin’s deputy secretary of public safety and homeland security, detailed the administration’s concerns that the measure could restrict subpoena powers.
“While the administration understands the importance of individuals’ privacy, we do oppose this bill,” she began. “This bill would be the very first of its kind that I’m aware of — in Virginia or anywhere — that would set a limit on what search warrants can do. … Currently any health information or any app information is available via search warrant. And we believe that should continue be the case.”
If approved, Cleary said, the bill would “ultimately open the door to put further limits on search warrants down the road, and that would be incredibly problematic.”
A good look at local government in Texas
But recall that the state has the ability to prevent these from being implemented.
- Click here for it.
The measure is designed to provide for the City Council to appoint a Justice Director. The measure provides that the roles of the Justice Director are to reduce incarceration and mitigate law enforcement practices. The Justice Director cannot have worked in law enforcement or have significant financial investments in the law enforcement industry. Under this measure, the Justice Director reports to City Council and will provide a justice impact statement to prior to any City Council vote affecting the city justice policy.[1]