Lead Stories The 19th - April 14, 2026
Gonzales, Swalwell resigning amid sexual misconduct allegations Two members of Congress facing sexual misconduct allegations from former staffers have announced they will resign from the House amid a push to expel them from Congress. Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell, who represents California’s 14th Congressional District, and Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales, who represents Texas’s 23rd Congressional District, both said Monday they plan to resign. In a statement, Swalwell apologized to his family and staff for “mistakes in judgment” he’d made while vowing to fight the “serious, false allegation made against me.” He did not say in his statement whether his resignation was effective immediately. “I am aware of efforts to bring an immediate expulsion vote against me and other members,” he said. “Expelling anyone in Congress without due process, within days of an allegation being made, is wrong. But it’s also wrong for my constituents to have me distracted from my duties.” Gonzales, who has already suspended his reelection bid, said he too was resigning. “There is a season for everything and God has a plan for us all,” he said in a statement on X. “When Congress returns tomorrow, I will file my retirement from office. It has been my privilege to serve the great people of Texas.” Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, chair of the Democratic Women’s Caucus, wrote earlier in a social media post: “Reps. Gonzales and Swalwell are not fit to serve. They must resign. If they do not, I will vote to expel them.” Republican Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, who represents Florida’s 13th Congressional District, had said she planned to introduce a resolution, which would need two-thirds of the chamber’s vote, to expel Swalwell from Congress. Gonzales is accused of sending explicit texts to a now-deceased former aide and coercing her into a sexual relationship. On March 5, Gonzales announced he was dropping his bid for reelection ahead of an Ethics Committee investigation into his affair with a former staffer. The next day, the congressman admitted to the affair in an interview with conservative talk show Joe Pags, calling it a “lapse in judgment.” Dozens of Swalwell’s former congressional and campaign staffers also signed a public letter Sunday calling for him to drop out of the gubernatorial race — which he did that night — and resign from the House.> Read this article at The 19th - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 14, 2026
Abbott threatens to pull $110M in grant funds if ICE policy isn't revoked Gov. Greg Abbott is threatening to pull $110 million in grant funds from Houston if the city does not revoke its new policy limiting cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. The director of Abbott’s Public Safety Office, Andrew Friedrichs, told Mayor John Whitmire that Houston was out of compliance with its agreement for state grant funds and must revoke the policy by April 20, according to a letter obtained by the Houston Chronicle. If the city does not, the letter states, Houston would be on the hook for repaying $110 million within 30 days of the grant's termination. Houston City Council last week eliminated a police department policy that required officers to wait 30 minutes for ICE agents to pick up people with civil immigration warrants. It also required the department to make reports to the council about its cooperation with ICE. The proposal passed in a 12-5 vote, with Whitmire in support. "Gov. Abbott expects all local governments -- cities or counties -- to cooperate with ICE in enforcing federal immigration laws," said Abbott spokesman Andrew Mahaleris. "Creative efforts by local governments to get around that obligation are unacceptable." Houston's proposal was brought forward by Council Members Alejandra Salinas, Abbie Kamin and Edward Pollard under Proposition A, which allows any three council members to add items to meeting agendas as long as they’re lawful. Whitmire, in a letter to council members Monday evening, said Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton had also opened an investigation into whether the city had violated state law with the new policy. In a separate press release, Whitmire said he had “repeatedly warned” Salinas, Kamin and Pollard about the potential legal and financial ramifications of passing the policy. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Kerr County Lead - April 14, 2026
A long day on the stand for Camp Mystic, here are takeaways from Monday's hearing A Travis County district court heard nearly five hours of testimony Monday in the first of three days of evidentiary hearings in the wrongful death lawsuit stemming from the deaths of 28 people at Camp Mystic during the July 4, 2025, Guadalupe River flood. Camp Mystic director Edward Eastland spent the entire day on the stand under direct examination by plaintiffs’ attorney Brad Beckworth. The defense has not yet had the opportunity to present its case. Here is what we learned on Monday. 1. The camp publicly claimed it received no warning. That was false. Defense attorney Mikal Watts told the press after the March injunction hearing that Camp Mystic “didn’t get a warning” before the flood. Edward Eastland admitted under oath Monday that he received a National Weather Service Flash Flood Warning directly to his cell phone at 1:14 a.m. 2. One night watchman was left in charge of more than 500 children. When camp leadership went to sleep on the night of July 3, a single night watchman was the only adult actively monitoring more than 500 children spread across more than 100 acres. Counselors returning from nights off in Kerrville warned the camp’s senior office assistants at 12:40 a.m. that it was raining so hard they had been scared to drive. That warning was never passed to the sleeping directors. 3. The first priority was moving canoes, not evacuating children. Eastland was woken at 1:45 a.m. — not to begin an evacuation, but to move canoes and waterfront equipment to a soccer field. By the time he reached the main office, the land bridge was already overflowing, cutting off more than 150 girls on Senior Hill. No camp director or staff member attempted to contact those stranded children for more than three hours. 4. The camp had no written evacuation plan. Eastland admitted Camp Mystic had no written evacuation plan — a violation of the Texas Administrative Code. > Read this article at Kerr County Lead - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 13, 2026
Aaron Reitz: Why I’m backing a former opponent in the runoff for Texas attorney general “We’re in a battle for the soul of our state and nation. The main arena in which we wage this war is the justice system. That’s why we need an attorney general who’s ready to fight — and win.” That’s how I opened every stump speech at nearly 150 campaign stops during my nine-month campaign for Texas attorney general. It resonated with over a quarter million Republican primary voters — but not enough for me to make the runoff. Now the competition is between U.S. Rep. Chip Roy and state Sen. Mayes Middleton. My position remains the same: We are at war with the radical left in court. But on the question of who should lead us to victory as attorney general, I choose Mayes Middleton over Chip Roy. I first met Mayes in the summer of 2014. I was 27 years old, had just finished active-duty service in the Marine Corps, and was a summer fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation before attending the University of Texas School of Law. Mayes was 32 and deeply involved with TPPF. In 2016, he joined their board of directors as the youngest member. Because of our proximity in age, we naturally got along well, and I was impressed with his intelligence, temperament and principled approach to law and policy. We fell out of close contact over the next few years but saw each other regularly on the usual circuit of Republican events: conferences, award galas, fundraisers and Lincoln-Reagan dinners. While I was clerking on the Texas Supreme Court, I watched as Mayes launched his first insurgent campaign for the state House in 2018 against an incumbent aligned with then-Speaker Joe Straus. Mayes beat him by 14 points. Mayes then sailed to re-election in the House in 2020 before setting his sights on his hometown state Senate seat in 2022. He was in such a dominant position that the incumbent senator simply stepped aside. Mayes again won — overwhelmingly. Meanwhile, I was serving as Attorney General Ken Paxton’s deputy and then as Sen. Ted Cruz’s chief of staff. During both the 88th and 89th legislative sessions, Mayes became one of my favorite state senators because of the causes he took up. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories San Antonio Express-News - April 14, 2026
‘A big blur’ – Edward Eastland describes doomed rescue effort at Camp Mystic As floodwaters ripped through its grounds, the power suddenly failed at Camp Mystic shortly before 4 a.m. on July 4, leaving the secluded Texas Hill County retreat cloaked in darkness. Edward Eastland tearfully told a state district court Monday about the harrowing scene he encountered while trying to help 23 campers and counselors stranded at the camp’s Twins I and II cabin near the south fork of the Guadalupe River. Most of the children in the cabin were 8-year-old girls staying at the camp for the first time. A torrential thunderstorm had pushed the water so high that it soon reached the cabin’s ceiling. A counselor yelled that the strong current was pushing girls out one of the cabin’s doors. “I grabbed two girls,” said Eastland, 42, a director of the Camp Mystic Guadalupe River campus. “I held on to those girls, holding on to the door frame. There was another girl in Twins I who jumped on my back. I don’t know who it was, but they put their arms around my neck before we got washed out. The water came up over my head very quickly. “Then I’m assuming I was on the soccer field in the water, just churning, just grabbing for tree branches. I don’t remember how long it took me to get to the tree where all the other girls were found. I didn’t think there were any girls with me, but some counselors said there was at least one camper with me when they saw me. That part of the whole night is a big blur for me.” Asked what became of 8-year-old Austin child Cile Steward, a first-time camper, Eastland began to cry. “I don’t know,” Eastland said, weeping as his wife, Mary Liz, another Camp Mystic Guadalupe River director, bowed her head and also began to cry. Steward’s mother and the parents of other Camp Mystic victims also wept quietly throughout the courtroom. > Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 14, 2026
Arthur Schechter, Houston attorney, former U.S. ambassador and Metro chair, dies Arthur Louis Schechter, a prominent Houston attorney, philanthropist and political figure who served as U.S. ambassador to the Bahamas under President Bill Clinton and later chaired the Metropolitan Transit Authority, died Monday. He was 86. Schechter, a longtime Democratic Party supporter, built a wide-ranging legacy in law, public service and philanthropy, with influence that extended from Houston to Washington, D.C. "He departed this life surrounded by his loving family," his relatives said in a statement. "A distinguished attorney, devoted philanthropist, dedicated public servant, steadfast political ally, passionate civic activist, and beloved pillar of the Jewish community, Ambassador Schechter leaves behind a legacy that touched the lives of countless individuals across Houston, the nation, and beyond." Clinton, who appointed Schechter ambassador to the Commonwealth of the Bahamas in 1998, said in a statement to the Houston Chronicle that Schechter was “a brilliant lawyer, a dedicated philanthropist and a wonderful friend.” "If Arthur had your back, even when the going got rough, you never had to turn around to see if he was still there," Clinton said. "Houston, America, and the world are better off because of his life of service. Hillary and I will miss him very much. Our prayers are with Joyce, his entire family, and everyone who loved him." Former Houston mayor Annise Parker described Schechter as a central figure in the city's civic life. "He was a pillar of Houston's social and philanthropic and political life," Parker said. "Yes, he was a passionate Democrat. But more than that, he was active in charitable organizations of all kinds and a pillar of the Jewish community." Those who knew Schechter described him as personable, charismatic and proud of his Jewish faith. "He had a larger-than-life personality," Parker said. "He was the life of the party — outrageous, silly, but brilliant."> Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Texas Monthly - April 14, 2026
Have Democrats turned on the mainstream media? When Carlos Espina took the stage on the third night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention, in Chicago, nearly everyone in attendance—including him—was surprised. The ponytailed 25-year-old Spanish-language social media influencer had been given a three-minute time slot to speak about the value of immigrants to the United States and to warm up the crowd for Bill Clinton, Tim Walz, and a preannounced “surprise” appearance by Oprah. Espina began his speech by noting that when his parents immigrated to the U.S. from Uruguay and settled in College Station, they wouldn’t have believed that one day their son would address a massive crowd at a major U.S. political event. Or for that matter that he’d amass a following of 14 million. Influencers—they get the job done. Espina’s featured appearance, however, was not as unlikely as he’d suggested. The Democratic Party had invited more than two hundred influencers, credentialed them more pitiably as “content creators,” and ushered them into the convention alongside disgruntled members of that formerly dignified group known as journalists. Upstairs, at a studio space dubbed the blue carpet, the creators battled reporters for interviews with key politicians. On the floor, they fought journalists for seats. Many in the press lamented that the insurgents had been welcomed in. Two years later, it’s obvious which group has retained its influence. The rush of front-facing videos from the floor of the DNC was a screaming comet of an omen. Most candidates in Texas now have budgets devoted to creators and programs to keep them up-to-date on posting opportunities. Indeed, just one week after the deadline for candidates to file for the 2026 Texas Senate primary, Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico were engaged in a digital arms race. In mid-December, Espina received an email from the “Crockett Creators” asking him to join the congresswoman’s influencer network. Talarico had gotten there first, however, and filmed a video with him two days later. It was clear early on that this new cohort would drive the news cycle. In January, pro-Talarico influencers—many of them from out of state and not exactly Nate Silver–level analysts—debated Crockett’s electability, leading to coverage in The New York Times. Then in early February, Morgan Thompson, a Dallas-based influencer who had been part of the Talarico creator program, claimed in a TikTok post that Talarico had called Colin Allred, a former Democratic Senate candidate, a “mediocre Black man.” > Read this article at Texas Monthly - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Public Media - April 14, 2026
CenterPoint Energy’s customer satisfaction rating increases, according to independent survey CenterPoint Energy has seen a slight increase in its consumer satisfaction ratings compared to a survey conducted last year by the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). The ACSI administers national surveys across several U.S. industries. Its 2026 energy utilities customer satisfaction ratings were based on a national survey of 33,759 customers who were contacted between January of 2025 and December of 2025. The national average score for electric investor-owned utilities this year was 72 out of 100. CenterPoint's national rating for its electricity services rose from 70 to 72, as measured on a 100-point scale. Its 70-point rating from the 2025 survey reflects data from 2024, when Hurricane Beryl and a derecho left parts of Houston without power for days – and in some areas, more than a week. The utility company, which provides electric transmission and natural gas distribution services, is headquartered in Houston, though it also operates in other parts of the South and the Midwest. Forrest Morgeson, the director emeritus of research at the ACSI, said CenterPoint's ratings likely increased in this year's survey because of "a significant reduction in outage minutes in the first half of 2025." "Improved reliability like that is going to drive stronger customer satisfaction, particularly in an industry like this one where electricity is one of those things we don't notice until we don't have it," he said. CenterPoint's electricity services rating in the south also increased from 70 to 72, though its score fell short of the regional average of 75 points. > Read this article at Houston Public Media - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Batallion - April 14, 2026
Susan Ballabina named sole finalist for Texas A&M president by Board of Regents The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents appointed System Executive Vice Chancellor Susan Ballabina, Ph.D., as sole finalist for president of the System’s flagship campus on Monday, April 13. “On behalf of the Board, we are confident Dr. Ballabina is the right leader for Texas A&M University,” Board Chairman Robert L. Albritton said in a press release. “She brings unparalleled knowledge of Texas A&M, a collaborative leadership style and the experience and know-how to guide the university with vision and purpose. Equally importantly, she cares deeply about the people and communities this university serves.” Ballabina now enters a state-mandated 21-day waiting period before the Board can take final action. “Having worked alongside so many dedicated members of this university for the past 30 years, I’ve seen firsthand the remarkable impact Texas A&M has on students, communities and our state,” Ballabina said in a press release. “I am honored by the trust and confidence of the Board of Regents and Chancellor [Glenn] Hegar, and if given the opportunity, I look forward to building on the incredible work already underway and leading Texas A&M into its next chapter.” In her current role, Ballabina works with the Regents to “advance key strategic initiatives” across the System’s 12 universities and eight state agencies, according to a press release from the A&M System. Before her most recent position, Ballabina served in a variety of roles at A&M at both the university and System level, including previously serving as chief of staff in the Office of the President and leading Texas A&M AgriLife. > Read this article at The Batallion - Subscribers Only Top of Page
D Magazine - April 14, 2026
First Mexican American Dallas City Councilmember Anita M. Martinez has died Anita N. Martinez, the first Mexican American elected to the Dallas City Council and the founder a dance company that bears her name, has died. She celebrated her 100th birthday in December. Born in 1925 and raised in the Little Mexico neighborhood, Martinez’s public service began at an early age with a campaign to pave Pearl Street in her neighborhood. She raised four children, supported her family business, El Fenix, and volunteered for a variety of organizations before she was elected to represent West Dallas in the City Council in 1965. A decade later, she would found the Anita N. Martinez Ballet Folklorico with the hopes of reconnecting young people with their heritage through dance. It grew over the years, and now reaches more than 50,000 students a year through its performances. (The company was named Best Dance Company in 2024’s Best of Big D awards.) “She was more than a leader—she was a mentor, a trailblazer, and a fierce advocate who broke barriers as the first Mexican-American woman elected to the Dallas City Council, fighting tirelessly on behalf of the working poor and the most vulnerable among us,” the Anita N. Martinez Ballet Folklorico said in a statement announcing her death. “She was a trailblazer and a cherished pillar of the Dallas community,” said Dallas County Commissioner Elba Garcia, who added that Martinez was a friend and mentor. > Read this article at D Magazine - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Baptist News Global - April 14, 2026
New report says Dilley Detention Center is an American horror story A new report by human and immigrant rights groups documents horrific conditions and treatment of families at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center located about 70 miles south of San Antonio, Texas. The April 1 report by Human Rights First and RAICES relies on research through immigration data and extensive interviews with families held at the federal facility between April 2025 and February 2026. The sprawling center has become the Trump administration’s sole location for incarcerating immigrant families and children. The study concluded that “inhumane conditions, routine mistreatment and due process violations experienced by families at Dilley are pervasive and systemic.” Constitutional and other legal protections are routinely violated at the Department of Homeland Security site, including arbitrary detentions and violations of statutory prohibitions against returning asylum seekers to the countries they fled because of persecution. Operated by prison contractor CoreCivic, Dilley housed more than 5,600 people, including parents, newborns and toddlers, during the 10-month stretch covered by the report. Other organizations also have documented abuses at the Texas facility. The Marshall Project reported ICE has placed more than 6,200 people at the center during President Donald Trump’s current term. That report explained that child immigrants have been placed in detention going back multiple administrations, but that practice was halted by President Joe Biden in 2021. > Read this article at Baptist News Global - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KRIS - April 14, 2026
Texas Attorney General launches investigation into Lululemon over alleged toxic chemicals in activewear Attorney General Ken Paxton has launched a formal investigation into athletic apparel giant Lululemon USA Inc., examining whether the company has misled consumers about potential health risks associated with its products. Paxton issued a Civil Investigative Demand (CID) to the Vancouver-based company as part of a probe into whether Lululemon's activewear contains PFAS — commonly known as "forever chemicals" — that could pose health risks to consumers. Lululemon, which generated over $11 billion in fiscal year 2025, has built its brand around wellness and sustainability messaging. The company markets itself as a health-conscious lifestyle brand emphasizing performance and environmental responsibility. However, the Attorney General's office says emerging research and consumer concerns have raised questions about synthetic materials and chemical compounds potentially present in Lululemon's apparel that may be linked to serious health issues. The investigation will focus on whether Lululemon's products contain PFAS chemicals that health-conscious consumers would not expect, given the company's marketing claims. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are synthetic chemicals that have been associated with endocrine disruption, infertility, cancer, and other health problems. These chemicals are dubbed "forever chemicals" because they don't break down naturally and can accumulate in the human body and environment over time. "Americans should not have to worry if they are being deceived when trying to make healthy choices for themselves and their families," Attorney General Paxton said in a statement. "I will not allow any corporation to sell harmful, toxic materials to consumers at a premium price under the guise of wellness and sustainability." > Read this article at KRIS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 14, 2026
True Texas Project presentation dubs Texas ‘ground zero’ for Islamic threat “We will not let them get away with it anymore,” Krista Schild said near the end of her presentation outlining the threat of Islam Monday night at the Texas Star Golf Course in Euless. She said Texas is the “ground zero” for Muslims wanting to take over the nation. The state’s Muslim population is estimated to be about 313,000, or a little more than 1.1% of the population of Texas, according to the World Population Review. Tarrant County’s chapter of the True Texas Project hosted Schild to inform attendees about the “hottest topic” in Texas politics, President Fran Rhodes told the Star-Telegram. Schild is the Texas Director at RAIR Foundation USA, an organization aiming to defend America’s constitution, borders and Judeo-Christian values. Before the talk began, Republican elected officials and candidates including District Court Judge Andy Hsu, District Clerk Tom Wilder and Senate District 9 candidate Leigh Wambsganss asked the crowd for their vote in upcoming elections. The talk given Monday night largely focused on the “power network” Muslims have in government and warned that if action is not taken, America could become an Islamic nation. Schild said RAIR was instrumental in getting Gov. Greg Abbott to declare the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as foreign terrorist organizations. The action allows heightened enforcement against the groups and prohibits both from purchasing or acquiring land in Texas. Among other Islamic groups, Schild labeled the Muslim Student Association and CAIR as dangerous organizations leading the Islamic infiltration and recruiting children to an extreme militant movement. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Observer - April 14, 2026
Frisco leaders address ‘Indian takeover’ rhetoric, balk on public speaker changes For months, public speakers have stood at the Frisco City Council podium and denounced the city’s growing Southeast Asian population. The speakers have alleged widespread visa fraud, labor law violations and incompatible cultural practices, and argued that the shifting demographics are making Collin County less American year after year. The fiery comments have been posted across social media, garnering hundreds of thousands of views and inspiring subsequent public speakers to attend council meetings. The rhetoric has put a spotlight on the Frisco City Council, and the increased attention may have led the horseshoe to hesitate in adopting a new set of public speaker rules. The ordinance discussed on April 6 would have changed each public speaker’s time from five minutes to three, but the council said that the issue had become “politicized.” Mayor Jeff Cheney said that because the mayor presides over meetings, it would make sense for Frisco’s next mayor to determine whether the proposed ordinance change is appropriate. Cheney is term-limited, and the election for his replacement will be held on May 2. The council did approve updated rules for decorum, which ban public speakers from using props or signs and bar them from approaching council members directly. Still, some individuals took to the podium last week to lament that the “Indian takeover” crowd has been permitted to spew hate unchecked. “People are observing an absence of intervention. People are coming up here and disparaging immigrants with no consequences,” said one woman who identified herself by her first name, Ankita. “I know that these remarks don’t physically harm anyone here, but they do harm people outside of this room.” Some speakers have accused the city council of being complicit in the face of Frisco’s demographic change. According to a city-released 2026 population overview, 33% of Frisco’s residents are Asian, up from 26% in 2020 and 10% in 2010. One of the most recurring claims is that Indian Americans are coming to Frisco as part of an H-1B visa fraud scheme. H-1Bs are a federal program that allows employers to hire workers from outside the U.S., and claims of widespread fraud are unsubstantiated. > Read this article at Dallas Observer - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 14, 2026
Tarrant County commissioners to discuss how to prevent 'misleading' topics during meetings Tarrant County Judge Tim O'Hare wants to prevent topics he considers "misleading and inaccurate" to be discussed during commissioners court meetings. O'Hare's agenda item for Tuesday's meeting also requests commissioners to identify gaps that could "allow misleading, unclear, or inaccurate agenda topic descriptions," and consider implementing measures to help further prevent such topics be published on the agenda. In a statement to KERA News, O'Hare said it's the court's responsibility to ensure Tarrant County residents aren’t misled by agenda item language. "Last month, an item was placed on the agenda and the language used to describe the item grossly mischaracterized the actual facts and data," O'Hare's statement read. "The official Tarrant County Commissioners Court agenda is no place for misleading the public to try to score political points, and especially not when the facts alleged are false. The public deserves better.” In a statement, Precinct 2 Tarrant County Commissioner Alisa Simmons said this discussion raises questions about what gets discussed during meetings. "When legitimate and vetted agenda items start being labeled ‘misleading,’ it raises a bigger question," Simmons said. "Are we trying to ensure accuracy, or limit what gets discussed in public? I believe this is connected to O’Hare’s ongoing efforts to avoid open briefings designed to educate the electorate and add information items at the request of constituents." > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Express-News - April 12, 2026
Lithium discovery bringing landmen back to Texas’ Smackover Formation Inside his office just off Mount Vernon’s town square, attorney B.F. Hicks lays a map out on his desk. At speed, he points at different tracts, reciting who lives there, what size their property is and which companies he’s heard have sent landmen to knock on their door to negotiate lithium leases. What happens in Northeast Texas could shape the nation’s energy future. The region has emerged as a key player in the domestic race for lithium — the mineral essential to the batteries in electric vehicles, cellphones, and renewable energy storage — as the U.S. scrambles to secure its own supply. For a few years now, the infiltration of companies into this rural region of Texas searching for lithium — a critical ingredient for storing solar energy and powering electric vehicle batteries —has become a topic of conversation over dinner at the local chophouse or in catching up at the historical society meeting. Sometimes, it’s behind closed doors as friends, family and neighbors gossip about who’s getting the best offers for their mineral rights. Being an energy frontier for other parts of Texas isn’t new to residents in Franklin and surrounding counties, as some of their backyards have started to fill with solar panel farms and battery energy storage systems, all fuel powering the “green economy.” But now, they’re learning that deep beneath their feet is salty water that could become a key resource in the United States’ global fight for full energy independence. The Smackover Formation, which sweeps broadly from East Texas to Florida and once gushed with oil, now is being hailed as containing some of the purest lithium brine in the world. Hicks, one of the most vocal local leaders opposing industrial-scale solar projects, actually welcomes the potential that lithium can bring to the community. The historian and longtime attorney has signed a lithium lease for a portion of his pristine Daphne Prairie; he’s now helping others do the same. He’s hoping to get the best deal for his clients — and perhaps most important, make sure the surface land is as protected and preserved as possible.> Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Express-News - April 13, 2026
Texas SNAP soda, candy ban leaves diabetics, hypoglycemics at risk While filling up at a gas station recently, Janell Britton’s vision started to darken and blur, and her body broke out into a sweat. She suffers from hypoglycemia, a condition characterized by chronic low blood sugar, and she was minutes away from passing out. Having used all her cash to get gas, Britton pulled out her SNAP card to purchase soda, the cheapest and quickest way for her body to get sugar. With new SNAP purchase restrictions, this method for instant relief will no longer be available to her. As of April 1, Texans in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also informally called food stamps, can no longer use benefits to purchase sweetened beverages and candy. While they agree that diabetics and hypoglycemics should eat nutritious foods to prevent their conditions from worsening, health experts and those with these chronic conditions also say the new SNAP restrictions will prevent them from quickly accessing sugar when their blood sugar levels drop to dangerously low levels. They say these restrictions result in inequitable treatment of people on SNAP because their wealthier peers who have these conditions can purchase these food items more easily. “By restricting certain foods, it inadvertently sets people such as myself up for an emergency,” said Britton, who works as a substitute teacher in Everman near Fort Worth. “This is a life-threatening situation and can end badly. It may sound good on paper, but in practice, it is not a good thing.” Several diabetics and their family members also expressed similar concerns on Texas Health and Human Services’ Facebook post announcing the SNAP changes. “Diabetics with hypoglycemia require sugar like in candies and juices to avoid going into a coma,” one comment reads. Other comments say, “My son is an insulin dependent diabetic what is he supposed to do?” and “My husband drops low a lot, we can’t afford sodas or juices. He can’t drink orange juice. He is a kidney failure patient.” Supporters of last year’s Senate Bill 379, which created these SNAP restrictions, have said the legislation aims to curb the consumption of unhealthy foods. Sen. Mayes Middleton, the Galveston Republican who authored the bill, has said taxpayers are funding the purchase of sweetened beverages and candy that worsen health conditions among SNAP beneficiaries and result in “taxpayer-funded health care.” > Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories Mediaite - April 14, 2026
Cook Political shifts four Senate races toward Democrats, key race now a toss-up Jessica Taylor, the Senate and governors editor for The Cook Political Report, dropped the political forecaster’s latest analysis on the state of the 2026 U.S. Senate races and offered some dire news for Republicans hoping to keep their slim majority. Cook Political shifted four Senate races toward the Democrats: an open seat in North Carolina, Sen. Jon Ossoff’s (D-GA) reelection bid in Georgia, the open race in Ohio, and Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-NE) reelection bid in Nebraska. Both the Georgia and North Carolina races shifted from “toss up” to “lean D,” while the key Ohio race moved from “lean R” to “toss up.” Ricketts’s race moved from “solid R” to “ likely R” – leaving the seat firmly in likely GOP hands. “With an increasingly sour national environment for Republicans, the Senate battlefield is shifting in Democrats’ favor. But due to the difficulty of the map, winning back a majority still remains a tall order. The GOP remain the narrowing favorites to retain the upper chamber. However, that outlook could change in the coming months,” wrote Taylor in her analysis on the shifts. As of right now, the Democrats would have to win all the seats leaning their direction, and the three toss-up races – Maine, Michigan, and Ohio – to get to a 50-50 split in the Senate. A split would still leave the GOP with the majority as Vice President JD Vance would have the tie-breaking vote. In Cook’s race standings, Alaska is the only “lean R” state the Democrats could possibly take to win an outright majority. Iowa, Nebraska, and Texas are in the “likely R” column and appear out of reach as of now. > Read this article at Mediaite - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 14, 2026
Senate Republicans are eager to see an Iran War off-ramp Senate Republicans returning to Washington on Monday said they need to see a plan to end the war with Iran before they will vote to extend the military operation. “They need a plan for how to wind this down, how to get an outcome that actually leads to a safer, more secure Middle East and, by extension, a stronger national-security position for the United States,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters on Monday. Congress returned to session Monday after a two-week recess –– more than six weeks since the U.S. and Israel began its bombing campaign against Iran. Lawmakers are quickly approaching the 60-day mark to vote on whether to continue the conflict. While lawmakers remained in their states, President Donald Trump threatened sweeping attacks on Iranian civilian infrastructure, warning that a whole “civilization” could be wiped out. That pressure campaign helped produce a shaky two-week ceasefire that gave way after weekend talks failed to deliver a broader deal to end the war. On Monday, the Trump administration escalated with a naval blockade that raised new fear of a more sustained conflict in the region and drove gas prices even further up. Before the recess, many Senate Republicans said they were comfortable with a quick-and-limited military operation aimed at pressuring Iran into a deal and reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Now, as the war stretches on and the ceasefire is set to end soon without a deal in place, some Republicans are starting to sound more uneasy about where the war is headed and are demanding an exit plan. Sen. Thom Tillis told reporters on Monday that he was “looking at the 60 day target” when it comes to voting onextending the military campaign under the Authorization for Use of Military Force of 2001, first used against Afghanistan.> Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 14, 2026
Trump post appearing to depict him as Jesus removed amid backlash President Donald Trump’s posting of an imagethat appeared to depict him as Jesus drew rare criticism from the religious right, prompting allegations of blasphemy and calls for him to take down the post before it was deleted. Shortly after posting a screed against Pope Leo XIV on Sunday night as he returned to Washington from Florida, Trump shared an image that appeared to be AI-generated in the style of a painting, depicting him in a longwhite robe with a red cloak draped around his shoulders. In one hand was an orb glowing with light; Trump’s other hand rested on the forehead of a man in what resembled a hospital bed — light beaming from the man’s head as Trump appeared to pray for his healing. Patriotic symbols including an eagle, fireworks and the Statue of Liberty filled the frame. Unlike the post criticizing Leo, whom Trump later said he didn’t like and is too “liberal,” the image evoking Jesus drew swift criticism from some evangelical Christians and conservative Catholics who have otherwise expressed near constant support for Trump’s decisions. “I don’t know if the President thought he was being funny or if he is under the influence of some substance or what possible explanation he could have for this OUTRAGEOUS blasphemy,” wrote Megan Basham, a prominent conservative Protestant Christian writer and commentator. “But he needs to take this down immediately and ask for forgiveness from the American people and then from God.” The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Trump’s intent in posting the image. Following the backlash and after appearing on the president’s Truth Social account for more than 12 hours, the image was deleted. Asked about the post Monday afternoon, Trump said he posted it.> Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Examiner - April 14, 2026
Hegseth-affiliated pastor Doug Wilson says Trump ‘has to do better’ after AI Jesus debacle Pastor Doug Wilson, the Reformed theologian who has gained notoriety as a spiritual mentor to government officials, including War Secretary Pete Hegseth, believes President Donald Trump needs clearer spiritual guidance after committing “blasphemy” with artificial intelligence. Trump posted an image to social media Sunday evening that depicted himself in scarlet robes and illuminating light that evoked the appearance of Jesus Christ. He removed the image on Monday morning after the illustration, which portrayed him healing a sick man while being prayed to by adorers and watched from above by celestial beings, was criticized as blasphemous by Christian supporters. At a later press availability, Trump told reporters that he “thought it was me as a doctor and had to do with [the] Red Cross” and blamed the press for stoking the outrage. Wilson, however, said the explanation does not quite cut it. “I am glad he deleted it, and glad that he rejected the idea of portraying himself as Christ,” he told the Washington Examiner on Monday night. “But this was not manufactured by the press — it hit pretty much everybody the same way, Left, Right, and in the middle. “It was a robe around his neck, not a stethoscope, and the cosmic figures in the sky were something else, and the woman with praying hands.” The pastor continued, “Even with his explanation accepted, it was accidental blasphemy, not high blasphemy. He has to do better either way.” > Read this article at Washington Examiner - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 14, 2026
Threats to library funding end with settlement by Trump Administration The Trump administration has reached a settlement with the American Library Association and a union of cultural workers, bringing to an end its yearlong effort to dismantle the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal agency. The settlement, reached by the Justice Department last week, affirms that the agency will continue issuing grants and operating its programs, which provide support to institutions in every state and territory. The Trump administration reaffirmed that it had reinstated all previously canceled grants, in keeping with a separate legal ruling last year, and reversed all staff reductions. It also promised not to take any further steps to reduce the agency. Sam Helmick, the president of the American Library Association, said the threats had set off “a chain reaction” of cuts in services and called the settlement a victory for “every American’s freedom to read and learn.” “This settlement protects life-changing library services for communities across the country,” Helmick said. The Institute of Museum and Library Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The settlement agreement says that the Trump administration officials who were sued “reject the allegations” made in the complaint and “maintain that all of I.M.L.S.’s restructuring actions” were lawful. The fate of the agency, which has a budget of roughly $290 million, had been uncertain since March 2025, when President Trump issued an executive order calling for its elimination. The administration installed Keith E. Sonderling, the deputy secretary of labor, as acting director. The agency then began moving to lay off its roughly 70 employees and cancel previously approved grants. The American Library Association, a nonprofit that promotes libraries, and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees filed a lawsuit arguing that the cuts violated the Constitution and federal law by usurping Congress’s authority over how federal funds are spent. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Politico - April 13, 2026
Missouri town fires half its city council over data center deal Voters in a small Missouri town, unhappy with the city council’s approval of a $6 billion data center, struck back at the polls last week, ousting all four incumbent council members running for reelection. Tuesday’s election in Festus, Missouri — a city of 12,000 people along the Mississippi River a half-hour south of St. Louis — is the latest example of growing public backlash against cities agreeing to host hyperscale data centers over the objections of residents concerned about their local impacts. On the same day as the Festus election, voters in Port Washington, Wisconsin, a Milwaukee suburb, where tech giants Oracle and OpenAI are building a $15 billion data center campus, also registered their disapproval by overwhelmingly passing a first-of-a-kind referendum to restrict future projects. At least three other cities across the country will vote on similar measures this year. The rout of half the Festus City Council was fueled by a surge in voter turnout and widespread frustration with the data center approval process. “It’s really the way the deal was handled that led to this kind of uprising,” said Rick Belleville, who won the nonpartisan race for Ward 4 councilman by more than 40 percentage points over incumbent Jim Tinnin, who’d voted to approve the data center. The other three losing incumbents were: Jim Collier, Brian Wehner and Bobby Venz. Belleville, 70, has never run for public office before and walked neighborhoods and knocked on doors during the campaign. What he learned was that residents were frustrated by the city’s unwillingness to hear their constituents and a general lack of transparency around the project, he said. “I ran because I thought the city was not listening to people,” he said. > Read this article at Politico - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Hill - April 14, 2026
Judge dismisses Trump’s Wall Street Journal defamation suit over Epstein story A federal judge tossed President Trump’s defamation suit against The Wall Street Journal on Monday over a story it published detailing a letter Trump allegedly sent to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday. Trump denies writing the letter and claims it was faked. But U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles ruled the president failed to allege “actual malice,” the high bar public figures must clear to pursue defamation claims. “The Complaint comes nowhere close to this standard. Quite the opposite,” Gayles wrote. Gayles, who serves on the federal bench in Miami, was appointed by former President Obama. Trump can now attempt to amend his lawsuit and try again. Trump launched the suit in July after the Journal published a 2003 letter he allegedly sent to Epstein for his 50th birthday. It purportedly includes several lines of text “framed by the outline of a naked woman” and ends, “Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret.” Trump says he told the Journal the letter was a fake before it ran the article and that it should have known the story was false. The Journal has stood by its reporting. The judge’s ruling doesn’t address whether the president actually wrote it. “Because the Court finds that the Complaint fails to adequately allege actual malice, it declines to address these issues at this juncture,” Gayles wrote. “Moreover, whether President Trump was the author of the Letter or Epstein’s friend are questions of fact that cannot be determined at this stage of the litigation.” > Read this article at The Hill - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The City - April 14, 2026
Mamdani's "tax the rich" agenda isn't spooking Wall Street after all Earlier this month, real estate giant RXR and its partner TF Cornerstone filed for a permit to tear down the Grand Hyatt Hotel famously built by Donald Trump and replace it with a 95-story office building that will cost $6.5 billion to construct. The project won City Council approval back in 2021, but is finally advancing now amid signs that — despite differences with Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his tax-the-rich agenda — Wall Street and the financial sector are eager to pay record rents for new office space. “The demand is there,” RXR CEO Scott Rechler told THE CITY. “I had a meeting Thursday with brokers who work with financial service companies and they told me their clients are growing so fast that when their leases are nearing an end they always need more space than they currently occupy.” During the pandemic, the headlines spotlighted a series of Wall Street firms that relocated elsewhere, especially to Miami. Efforts to defeat Mamdani’s push for higher taxes on the wealthy and corporations have led to stories predicting companies would flee New York. But the numbers tell a different story. Wall Street employment in the city is at a record. Available office space on Park Avenue, a key location for those firms, is almost nonexistent in the most attractive buildings. And developers are planning three new towers on Park, confident there will be financial firms to fill them. “There is really only one driver of the decisions financial companies make and that is where the people they want to work for them are and where those people want to live and work,” said Mary Ann Tighe, CEO of the real estate firm CBRE’s Tri-State region and a broker who has worked on scores of the most important office deals in recent decades. “And New York is still a magnet for those young people.” It is true that Wall Street firms are expanding elsewhere in the United States and the city’s share of securities industry employment is also at a record low. But that is not an exodus.> Read this article at The City - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories NBC News - April 13, 2026
Oil prices surge after Trump says U.S. will blockade the Strait of Hormuz The price of oil surged Sunday night after President Donald Trump said the U.S. would blockade the Strait of Hormuz after peace talks with Iran failed. U.S. crude oil soared 8%, to more than $104 per barrel. International Brent oil jumped more than 7%, to $103 per barrel. Wholesale gas prices also spiked 6%, while heating oil, a proxy for jet fuel prices, jumped 10% in early trading. Stock futures declined sharply. Futures that indicate where the S&P 500 will trade fell 1%, Nasdaq 100 futures slid 1.3%, and Dow futures tumbled more than 500 points. "Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump said on Truth Social. "I have also instructed our Navy to seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran," Trump added in the post. The Strait of Hormuz is one of most important waterways for oil and other energy products, such as liquefied natural gas. Before the war, hundreds of ships per day passed through it, carrying that energy to the global marketplace. But on most days since the war began Feb. 28, fewer than 10 ships a day have been able pass through. "Reopening the Strait has become the market’s most time-sensitive priority," JPMorgan Chase commodities analysts said Sunday. "The last tanker to clear Hormuz on February 28 is expected to reach its destination around April 20, marking the point at which pre-closure barrels are fully exhausted from the global supply chain." Last week, only 24 ships passed through the strait out to the ocean. On Friday, only two ships passed, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence that was shared with NBC News. Neither were oil or gas tankers. Trump made the announcement early Sunday after Vice President JD Vance, along with Trump's special envoy for peace, Steve Witkoff, and Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, flew to Islamabad to hold talks with Iranian regime leaders amid a two-week ceasefire.> Read this article at NBC News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Express-News - April 13, 2026
Senate GOP leaders hold off on investing more in John Cornyn, for now Last week, the GOP's powerful Senate Leadership Fund super PAC announced it was committing $342 million to support a slate of candidates across eight states. Texas, whereU.S. Sen. John Cornyn, is fighting for political survival in a runoff against state Attorney General Ken Paxton on May 26, was not one of them. NationalRepublican leaders' decision to so far hold off in committing more money to the state comes as the Cornyn continues to lag in the polls behind Paxton, ahead of what could be a competitive midterm race against Democratic state Rep. James Talarico. With President Donald Trump so far declining to endorse in the race – after suggesting he would do so following the primary – some of the the president's supporters have been calling for the party's fundraising arms to forgo investing more into Cornyn's primary campaign when Republicans are facing competitive Democratic challenges elsewhere in November. "RINO/Uniparty Senators like John Cornyn remain in office for decades so when you get a chance to replace them with true American First conservatives you have to seize the opportunity," Alex Muse, a conservative influencer, wrote on X last week. The Senate Leadership Fund, which iscontrolled by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, declined to comment for this story. Alex Latcham, the fund's executive director, told The New York Times last week that he didn’t see Texas as competitive in November, but would reconsider if the dynamics changed. > Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 13, 2026
AI is using so much energy that computing firepower is running out The artificial intelligence gold rush is rapidly drying up the supply of the one resource that AI developers can’t do without: computing power. The sharp capacity crunch has caused consternation among power users, forced companies to scuttle products and led to reliability problems. The issues are a warning sign for the AI boom, as they may limit the utility of powerful new AI tools just as massive amounts of users have begun to rely on them to boost productivity. Over the past few months, demand has exploded for “agentic” AI, autonomous tools that use the technology to independently perform tasks, from writing software code to scheduling house tours for real-estate brokers. Companies have been scrambling to secure the availability of computing capacity needed to serve a growing base of customers who are also significantly increasing their AI use. “Everyone’s talking about oil, but I think what the world is mainly short of is tokens,” said Ben Pouladian, an engineer and tech investor based in Los Angeles. A token is a unit of measurement in AI to track how much computing resources are being used for a task. “AI is at this point no longer just some chatbot that we ask for a recipe while we stand in front of the fridge. It’s orchestrating tasks, it’s getting smarter,” Pouladian said. All of it points to a classic problem that has popped up in technology booms throughout history, from the 19th-century railroad expansion to the telecom and internet explosion of the early 2000s. Demand is growing far faster than companies are able to access resources and build out infrastructure. Historically, price increases have been among the only ways to address a supply crunch, but such a move could be perilous for frontier AI companies, who are in a ferocious competition to gain users. Hourly rental prices for GPUs, the microchips used to train and run AI models, have surged since the fall. Anthropic, the maker of popular chatbot Claude and viral coding app Claude Code, has been plagued recently by frequent outages. The company has begun metering computing supply to users during peak hours, but the rollout has been marred by customers who have complained that they are reaching the limit far too quickly. > Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Express-News - April 13, 2026
U.S. House members could vote this week to boot Tony Gonzales U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales could face a vote to expel him from the House as soon as this week after a growing number of members expressed support for ousting him and Rep. Eric Swalwell of California over new allegations of sexual misconduct, raising the specter of a rare special election in a midterm year. The move to expel Gonzales, a third-term Republican from San Antonio, gained steam after U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., said Friday that she would file a motion to eject Swalwell, citing a former aide’s allegation of rape reported by the San Francisco Chronicle. On Sunday, Luna said she’d pair that motion with a resolution for Gonzales’ expulsion. House Democrats plan to force the vote on Gonzales if Luna proceeds with her effort against Swalwell, a Democrat, Axios and the New York Times reported, citing two unnamed congressional aides with knowledge of the tentative plan. By Sunday afternoon, at least five Republicans and five Democrats had expressed support for banishing both men. They include GOP Reps. Mike Lawler of New York and Byron McDonald of Florida and Democratic Reps. Jared Huffman of California and Pramila Jayapal of Washington state. “Congress must hold itself to the highest ethical standard, regardless of party,” Lawler wrote on X. “Leadership and members in both parties should have moral clarity and recognize some things are more important than vote margins and party loyalty.” Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, a New Mexico Democrat who chairs the Democratic Women’s Caucus, said the expulsion votes were necessary to show it was unacceptable to "sexually abuse staff" and still run for and serve in elected office. “Reps. Gonzales and Swalwell exploited their staffers’ ideals and commitment to public service as a vulnerability,” Fernández wrote in a statement posted to X. “Instead of being treated with respect, they were preyed upon.” On Sunday night, Fernández posted on X: “There’s already been a resolution announced to expel Swalwell that I will support. I will introduce a resolution to expel Rep. Gonzales.” > Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories Rio Grande Guardian - April 13, 2026
Louie Gohmert: Voting for lies and corruption is not a choice Despite Ken Paxton’s claims he essentially had crooks conspiring against him in his office just like President Trump, Paxton admitted in Court to all the facts & law specified against him in the pleadings by the whistleblowers he fired and retaliated against. That wasn’t at all like President Trump’s situation. Judge Catherine Mauzy found on April 4, 2025[Case # D-1-GN-20-006861, TX 250th Judicial District Court] just as Paxton admitted, that he retaliated against and fired his top employees for reporting his corruption despite his long, loud claims to the contrary outside of court. Otherwise he’d have had to give a deposition under oath about specifics. Paxton learned from Bill Clinton that with all Paxton had to hide, he could not afford to allow anyone to ever ask him questions under oath. The trial judge accepted his in-court general admissions and issued judgment based on those admissions for a $6.6 MILLION judgment against Paxton. Right after court, for the benefit of his blind followers who would never read the transcript nor believe media reports, Paxton said publicly it was “a ridiculous judgment that is not based on the facts or the law” and that he would appeal the outrageous judgment. But it was based on facts and law; Paxton had just admitted in front of the judge that day! On May 2, 2025, Paxton appealed the judgment while he continued to publicly protest the unfair judgment he said he would definitely get overturned and supporters and legislators did not need to worry. If he had not appealed in May, the judgment would’ve become final and been presented to the Texas legislature for payment before they recessed at the end of May 2025; and that would’ve made all kinds of news with legislators up in arms against Paxton. Paxton assured them he’d get it reversed on appeal. > Read this article at Rio Grande Guardian - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin American-Statesman - April 13, 2026
Threats, fines and a quorum break: A Texas lawmaker’s fight to stay in office For state Rep. Salman Bhojani, the first Muslim elected to the Texas Legislature, the fines he faces for breaking quorum with fellow Democrats last year pale in comparison to the threats that forced his family from their home. They endured online harassment that included hate speech and threats so severe they had to leave. It was almost enough to drive Bhojani out of politics, he said. The key word is "almost." After returning to Texas, where the Legislature approved the Republican-backed congressional redistricting plan that prompted the quorum break, Bhojani said he felt duty-bound to continue in public service. He is seeking a third term representing his North Texas district in November. "If I'm not going to do it, I don't know who else will do it the way I want to do it and represent my community," he said in an interview Friday alongside his wife, Nima. "Hopefully (the hate speech is) behind us. There is a lot of momentum to change things." The interview, conducted by phone from his suburban home near Fort Worth, came as the House Administration Committee deliberated behind closed doors on how to impose fines totaling $8,354 for Democrats’ unauthorized absence during an August special session. Bhojani left Texas before most members of the House Democratic Caucus boarded a chartered jet to Chicago, denying the chamber a quorum to act on a redistricting plan that aimed to add five Republican-leaning seats. He had traveled to Pakistan, the country where he was born, to be with an aunt he described as a second mother as she faced an illness that would claim her life. Family emergencies, such as illness or death, are typically grounds for an excused absence, but online critics questioned his account. Bhojani released passport and travel records to rebut the claims. Meanwhile, Tarrant County GOP Chairman Bo French escalated the rhetoric.> Read this article at Austin American-Statesman - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin American-Statesman - April 13, 2026
Wives, daughters scramble as ICE deportations spread across Central Texas As an ice storm closed in on Central Texas in late January, Bricia, a 43-year-old mother battling endometrial cancer, moved deliberately through her Elgin home, deciding what to pack before the power went out. Pain radiated from her right shoulder, flaring with stress and aggravating skin already raw from radiation treatment. She wanted to lie down. Instead, she kept moving, preparing to flee the cold and the dark. Three months behind on her power bill, she was losing heat and light at the worst possible moment — just months after federal immigration agents detained her husband, the family’s primary breadwinner. In the months since, Bricia and her 21-year-old U.S. citizen daughter have watched their savings evaporate, their business collapse and their home slip toward foreclosure — part of a widening pattern across Central Texas, where a surge in immigration arrests is quietly destabilizing families and pushing many toward financial ruin. Such stories are becoming increasingly common in Bastrop County, including Elgin, a majority-Hispanic exurb of about 12,000 residents, roughly 30 miles east of downtown Austin. In the “Sausage Capital of Texas,” gravel roads wind past goat and horse pens on properties belonging to immigrant families who commute to the city to work construction or clean homes. Many were drawn to the area decades ago by affordable land and rent. Now, deportations are eroding that stability. Other area residents are also absorbing the financial shock of losing a primary breadwinner. They include a recent college graduate in Camp Swift who is supporting the family after her father’s deportation, and another Elgin mother who is selling pan dulce late into the night, taking on her husband’s work. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Central and South Texas have climbed to an average of 2,000 arrests per month during the Trump administration, according to a New York Times analysis. About 9 in 10 of those arrested locally are men, the American-Statesman found, leaving women and children to shoulder the economic fallout. ICE did not respond to the Statesman’s requests for comment. > Read this article at Austin American-Statesman - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Public Media - April 13, 2026
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo’s office was told to release trade mission documents. Most are redacted Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo's office was instructed by Texas officials to release documents related to a recent trade mission that was conducted to garner business prospects and foreign investments in the county, which includes the fourth-largest city in the United States. But the vast majority of those documents, provided to Houston Public Media in response to a public records request, were heavily redacted. The documents that were released about Hidalgo's trip in October last year — as part of an economic development delegation to Taiwan and Japan — offer little detail about the outgoing county judge's schedule, costs and partnerships secured from the trade mission. Hidalgo has embarked on three trade missions in the past year with local delegations led by the Greater Houston Partnership, an economic development organization, to expand the county’s international relations. And she's been highly scrutinized for the trips, which resulted in extensive absences from Harris County Commissioners Court meetings — raising questions about her ability to lead during important discussions when she's not in attendance. Hidalgo attended a trade mission to Paris last summer before the trip to Taiwan and Japan. More recently, she joined a local delegation for a trip to The Netherlands and Germany in March, which coincided with calls for her resignation in the aftermath of her quarrel with Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo leaders. The documents about her trip to Taiwan and Japan were requested by Houston Public Media in December. Though county lawyers fought to keep the records concealed, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office in March ordered their release, agreeing only to the redaction of personal contact information. > Read this article at Houston Public Media - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KIIITV - April 13, 2026
Corpus Christi water workshop grows heated over Inner Harbor desalination plan A city water workshop meant to clarify progress on a proposed Inner Harbor desalination plant instead devolved into a contentious, nearly two-hour exchange among council members, the mayor and residents. No vote was taken during the meeting, but tensions ran high as officials debated not only the desalination project itself, but also the purpose and timing of the workshop. Council members questioned whether the meeting was necessary, noting the full council is already scheduled to meet in the coming days. “We had to expense staff, time, energy,” District 4 Councilwoman Kaylynn Paxson said. “All of us had to stop our schedules … and we’re not actually anti-desal.” Mayor Paulette Guajardo defended the decision to hold the workshop, saying it was intended to keep the public informed about the status of the project and outstanding issues. “The public knowing where this contract is, what is still missing from it, what we’re waiting on … is important,” Guajardo said. “We address these issues for the public, which is who we work for.” The proposed Inner Harbor desalination plant remains a key part of the city’s long-term water strategy, but major questions persist — including whether city leaders will have enough information to move forward later this month. District 5 Councilman Gil Hernandez expressed skepticism that critical data will be ready in time. > Read this article at KIIITV - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 13, 2026
Former TPPF head, now Heritage Foundation leader, toasted editor of controversial right-wing magazine At a recent dinner, Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts toasted Paul Gottfried, the editor of a magazine that has published writers accused of espousing white supremacism. In his remarks, he spoke against “heritage Americans … [repudiating] their heritage.” He referred to Gottfried as having been “exiled” from conservatism but now being part of an “ascendant” movement. Gottfried is a historian and a self-described paleoconservative who has criticized the mainstream conservative movement for what he says are failures to protect a traditionalist Judeo-Christian view of American life and stop the rise of multiculturalism. Paleoconservatism is a right-wing ideology that seeks to combat internationalism and multiculturalism. He may be most famous for coining the term “alternative right” in a 2008 speech, in which he castigated conservatives who had “become so terrified by those on their left that they pretend not to notice the stark fact of human cognitive disparities.” “The fact that not everyone enjoys the same genetic precondition for learning is irrelevant for this politically motivated experiment in wishful thinking,” Gottfried said at the time. In his remarks at a recent dinner in honor of Gottfried’s magazine, Chronicles, Roberts praised Gottfried for criticizing “the antidiscrimination regime” and called him “one of the sages of our age.” In 2021, Gottfried took over as editor of Chronicles, a monthly magazine with a stated mission of “defending the traditions and history of America and the West.” The magazine has published many far-right figures, including Sam Francis, a former adviser to Pat Buchanan who used the magazine to praise former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke for defending “the American Way of Life,” and Thomas Fleming, a founding member of the neo-Confederate group the League of the South. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KSAT - April 13, 2026
San Antonio police union pauses contract talks after ‘slap in the face’ pay offer from city The president of the San Antonio Police Officers Association (SAPOA) said his union is backing away from the negotiating table after a pay offer he described as a “slap in the face.” The union and City of San Antonio have been negotiating a new contract since late January. Both sides have proposed combinations of hourly-rate and percentage-based raises, meaning different ranks would be affected differently. The city presented an offer today that would raise the base wages for the lowest-ranking San Antonio police officers from $65,431 currently to $74,970 in April 2029 — a more than 14% bump in pay. However, the union has proposed raising the same officers’ pay to $82,164 in the same time frame — a more than 25% increase. In an emailed statement after the negotiation session, SAPOA President Danny Diaz said the city’s counteroffer “devalues our officers and the dangerous work they do every day,” and the union was “pausing further discussions at this time.” In a follow-up phone interview, Diaz told KSAT that officers have been quick to let the union know how they felt. “Our phones have not been quiet,” he said. “They’ve been ringing off the wall. And it’s very loud and clear that that is a slap in the face, what they offered today.” The city said in an emailed statement an “independent survey” of Texas’ largest cities showed the department’s compensation is “already competitive.” “When total compensation — including healthcare, pension, and retiree benefits — is considered, San Antonio ranks in the top three among large Texas cities at all career stages analyzed,” the statement reads. “We are committed to not losing ground and remaining among the top three in total compensation.” > Read this article at KSAT - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Texas Observer - April 13, 2026
School vouchers are what we thought they were What would’ve been school-choice proponents’ triumphant publicity tour after the application period closed on Texas’ shiny new voucher program, in mid-March, was instead consumed by catty finger-pointing between two top state officials over who’s to blame for the state seemingly botching its attempt to religiously discriminate against some program participants. It’s the sort of comedic tragedy that has become all too common in the red empire of Texas: Pass a harmful new policy while prevaricating as to its actual intent, create a pretext to carry out the policy in a clearly discriminatory fashion, invite a costly lawsuit that will ultimately end with the state being forced to comply, muddy the waters over who’s to blame. While pushing the private-school voucher bill through the state House and Senate last year, Republican legislative hands repeatedly insisted, when presented with various theoretical scenarios, that this near-universal “Texas Education Freedom Accounts” program would be open to any and all types of private schools—of all creeds and persuasions. Religious freedom was to reign supreme. How dare thee even question the universality of this venerable program, Republican legislators inveighed. In predictable fashion, the Texas GOP—lately in the throes of another virulent anti-Muslim bender—hasn’t quite lived up to that promise. In the lead-up to the official voucher rollout, acting Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock—who is currently in charge of administering the program and was, at the time, trying to win a primary election to hold onto his appointed post—used the administrative process to effectively block certain Islamic schools from participating by alleging such potential applicants were affiliated with the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a national civil rights group akin to the NAACP or LULAC, and the Egypt-based transnational organization the Muslim Brotherhood, each of which the state has deemed a “foreign terrorist organization.” (The rule also sought to block schools affiliated with the darned Chinese Communist Party.) The conflation of CAIR with the Muslim Brotherhood and Palestine’s Hamas is a theory that’s long brewed in the right’s more feverish swamps. (CAIR is suing the State of Texas over this designation.) In response, a group of Islamic schools and Muslim families went to court over the discriminatory exclusion from the program: “The exclusion is not based on individualized findings of unlawful conduct by any specific school, but rather on categorical presumptions that Islamic schools are suspect and potentially linked to terrorism by virtue of their religious identity and community associations,” the lawsuit read. A federal judge ordered the state to extend its application deadline to allow for these schools to go through the process. > Read this article at Texas Observer - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 13, 2026
Phil Garner, popular former Astros player and manager, dies at 76 Phil Garner, the gritty infielder who played for the Houston Astros and later managed the team to its first World Series appearance, has died. He was 76. Garner, a three-time All-Star who was nicknamed “Scrap Iron,” died Saturday night, according to his family. “Phil Garner passed away peacefully last night, April 11, surrounded by family and love after a two-plus-year battle with pancreatic cancer,” his family said in a statement to MLB.com. “Phil never lost his signature spark of life he was so well known for or his love for baseball which was with him until the end. Special thanks to the Houston Medical Center, MD Anderson, Baylor St. Luke’s and all the Doctors and Nurses for their excellent care and support.” The Astros praised Garner for the “tremendous impact” he had on the franchise as both a player and manager, with owner Jim Crane saying “Phil Garner’s contributions to the Houston Astros, the city of Houston and to the game of baseball will not be forgotten.” Former Astros star Lance Berkman, who played for Garner from 2004-07, called him “a blast to be around and a joy to play for.” “Phil was a players’ manager in that he understood high-level competition and how difficult it is to have success in the major leagues,” Berkman said. “He infused the team with his grit and toughness while holding us to the highest standards of professionalism. … Definitely one of my favorites! He will be missed by his many friends, former players and teammates in the baseball community.” Garner, who spent 16 seasons in the major leagues, played for the Astros from 1981-87. The Jefferson City, Tenn., native also played for the Athletics, Pirates, Dodgers and Giants. He was the No. 3 overall pick by Oakland in the 1971 secondary draft out of the University of Tennessee, which retired his No. 18 in 2009. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Barbed Wire - April 13, 2026
Elon Musk wants to turn 700 acres of Texas wildlife refuge into SpaceX property Elon Musk’s SpaceX is aiming to acquire 712 acres of land in the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge, amid the protests of environmentalists and activist groups. The proposal would exchange the wildlife refuge land for 692 acres of land in Starbase, SpaceX’s headquarters on the southern tip of Texas. Starbase was officially designated a city in May 2025, after workers living near SpaceX’s rocket launch facility there voted in favor of the measure, according to the Texas Tribune. A draft of the proposed land exchange was published on March 2, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which manages the National Wildlife Refuge in question, asked the public to submit feedback on the proposal, according to Valley Central. SpaceX has not said how it intends to use the land, but the proposal acknowledged it is likely they will develop on that land after acquisition. “It is reasonably foreseeable that the lands proposed for divestiture will be used for residential, commercial, industrial, and infrastructure purposes in the near term,” the proposal reads. The South Texas Environmental Justice Network, an environmental advocacy group in the Rio Grande Valley, submitted comments on behalf of 3,392 people opposed to the land exchange, according to their press release. “Rio Grande Valley residents oppose Elon Musk’s colonization of our wildlife, beach, and sacred lands for SpaceX’s dangerous and unnecessary rockets,” said Bekah Hinojosa, the network’s co-founder, in the press release. “We urge the US Fish & Wildlife to listen to our community’s pleas and deny SpaceX’s 712-acre land grab.” The proposal by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the purpose of the land exchange was to “conserve species’ habitats, improve habitat protection, consolidate ownership, and simplify management of refuge lands”. The South Texas Environmental Justice Network also said the 712 acres that SpaceX wants are considered “culturally significant” to the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, a group indigenous to the Rio Grande Valley. > Read this article at The Barbed Wire - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Rio Grande Guardian - April 13, 2026
Officials: Brownsville, Cameron County, are among Texas’ newest commercial hubs The transformation taking place in Cameron County and in the City of Brownsville have turned the region into a new energy, aerospace and advancing manufacturing hub in South Texas. And this is credited to the collaboration of a number of players from the public and private sectors. The labor force is getting more skilled, wages are employment are up and people are choosing to a stay closer to home because of better opportunities. Just two of the newest corporations - NextDecade and SpaceX – employ close to 10,000 people altogether and the two entities are planning to hire more people to work. Other companies like Rich’s, a company that sells a variety of frozen products, employs 600 people and is trying to fill close to 50 openings in all areas of work. During a roundtable discussion held Friday, April 10, at the Texas A&M Engineering and Advance Manufacturing Hub on Texas Highway 48, representatives from the public and private sectors met to hear about today’s educational opportunities and job creation. U.S Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, spoke about the expansion of the Pell Grant program that now includes trade. “We are here to tell you about jobs and about what has been done in Washington, D.C.” he said. “Jobs have been growing by leaps and bounds in the Rio Grande Valley, particularly in Brownsville.” Cornyn said President Donald Trump was exuberant to announce that an oil refinery is going to be built at the Port of Brownsville - the first one in the country in the last 50 years. > Read this article at Rio Grande Guardian - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 13, 2026
Patrick Dumont offers rare interview, talks Cuban tension, Mavs' new arena, future with Flagg and more Foremost in Mavericks governor Patrick Dumont’s thoughts is excitement, hope and what he calls an extraordinary opportunity to build around 19-year-old sensation Cooper Flagg. But as the Mavericks carry a 25-56 record into Sunday’s season finale against Chicago, Dumont also is acutely aware that a state-of-the-franchise discussion is in order – with The Dallas Morning News and by extension, fans. He knows that until earned otherwise, his 27-month tenure as team governor largely will be defined by the night that can’t be erased and the trade that can’t be undone – for which he says fans had every right to hold the franchise and specifically himself accountable. “This team is about the city of Dallas,” he says. “It's about our players doing well and our team winning, and it's about our fans. “I believe in our accountability. We have to work hard to make things right.” Dumont interviews are rare, as fans have learned since the Miriam Adelson-Dumont families purchased the Mavericks' majority interest from Mark Cuban on Dec. 27, 2023. This one is intentionally timed. Sunday’s game concludes a season that began last October with high expectations but quickly crumbled into the franchise’s second 50-loss season in the last 28 years – a mere two seasons after going to the NBA Finals within Dumont’s first six months as governor. “When expectations aren't met, we really have to take a critical look at everything we're doing,” he says. “We have to reflect and say, 'How do we get better?' “I really believe this is an extremely important offseason for this franchise. We're going to work tirelessly to get things right. We have a lot of work to do.” That’s his segue to the other reason behind the interview’s timing: His plan for filling the Mavericks’ president of basketball operations position. That process, which unofficially began after Nico Harrison’s Nov. 11 dismissal, is about to shift to hyperdrive. > Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Inside Higher Ed - April 13, 2026
Texas Tech University to close gender, sexuality programs All majors, minors, certificates and graduate degrees that are “centered on” sexual orientation or gender identity must be phased out and canceled, Texas Tech University system chancellor Brandon Creighton told university presidents in a memo Friday. The decree is an escalation of the course content review policies implemented last year and reflects a trend of academic censorship at Texas public institutions. The memo requires that gender and sexuality content be sorted into one of three groups: content that is “centered on” sexual orientation or gender identity, content that “includes” those topics and content that incidentally references them. Provosts must then review courses and programs that fall into the “centered on” category and recommend them for closure by June 15. Programs earmarked for closure must freeze admissions and begin a teach-out plan for currently enrolled students. Student self-directed study and faculty research are exempt from the rules, though going forward the system will “prioritize recruitment in alignment with this memorandum.” Instruction required for licensures and instruction on “chromosomal variations, Differences of Sex Development (DSDs), and intersex biological conditions” is still allowed; however, professors who teach on those topics may not use them to “advocate for or validate sociological frameworks of fluid gender identities,” the memo said. Creighton’s memo also reinforced rules stating that faculty must recognize a strict gender binary and prohibits the “endorsement of a gender spectrum or fluid gender identities as empirical biological science.” Jen Shelton, an associate professor of English, told The Texas Tribune that the memo feels like a “betrayal.” “The good news is I think the whole university has been betrayed. I think even the provost did not expect it to look like this, because it’s people from the provost’s office who have been coming to us and saying, ‘Don’t worry. This part is all going to be fine,’” Shelton said. > Read this article at Inside Higher Ed - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Guardian - April 12, 2026
Low-tax Texas opens London office to lure jobs and investment The US state of Texas is putting UK businesses in its crosshairs with the launch this month of a dedicated London office to lure jobs and investment to the low-tax Lone Star State. Texas recently secured approval for the new site, adding to a growing list of international offices from which it can try to draw corporate heavyweights across its borders. It is the latest sign that Texas lobbyists, led by the office of the state’s Republican governor, Greg Abbott, are widening their economic ambitions beyond American borders, having already had success luring jobs and investment from rival US states including California, Delaware and New York. Lobbyists working in the London office are likely to court UK bosses with incentives including new, fast-track business courts and multimillion dollar subsidies. Texas charges neither corporation nor income tax. Their targets are expected to include the City’s banks and investment houses, as the state aims to build on Dallas’s financial-sector boom, and continue its promotion of the area now known as Y’all Street. Those ambitions have caught the attention of the City of London Corporation. The City’s mayor, Susan Langley, travelled to Dallas in February and discussed how London could tap into excitement over the launch later this year of the state’s first dedicated stock market, the TXSE. “With the launch of the Texas Stock Exchange, new dual-listing opportunities could connect British and Texan firms to fresh capital,” she said in a post on X after the visit. The news comes as London tries to reverse a trend where businesses have been abandoning the UK stock market, choosing either to go private or shift their listings to hubs overseas, including New York. The London office – which will add to Texas’s offices in Mexico and Taiwan – will be led by James Taylor, one of the founders of the Austin-based lobbying and public relations firm Vianovo. > Read this article at The Guardian - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories New York Times - April 13, 2026
How JD Vance tried and failed to end the war in Iran that he opposed After more than 16 straight hours of closed-door meetings that stretched into early Sunday morning, Vice President JD Vance ambled into an ornate ballroom in Pakistan and let out a sigh. When he arrived at the lectern to speak to the press, he grimaced. He talked about “shortcomings,” “bad news” and not being “able to make headway.” The United States and Iran did not reach any agreement. Exhausted and frustrated after 21 hours on the ground, Mr. Vance provided few details, took three questions and departed. He did not address whether the two-week cease-fire with Iran would hold or what would happen to the Strait of Hormuz or if President Trump would now follow through with his threat to wipe Iranian civilization off the map. It was a remarkable conclusion to a high-stakes diplomatic trip for Mr. Vance, who made his opposition known to a full-scale war in Iran. America’s allies and adversaries alike were pinning their hopes on Mr. Vance to find a way out of a conflict that has upended the global economy, frayed alliances and expanded to the wider region. Instead, he left with nothing. He blamed Iran for the failed talks, saying the United States sought a commitment that Iran would not seek a nuclear weapon, and it refused. That it was Mr. Vance who found himself in this position was extraordinary in itself. The man inside Mr. Trump’s inner circle most opposed to the war was tasked with leading the highest-level talks between the United States and Iran in nearly 50 years. Mr. Trump, for his part, was thousands of miles away at the Kaseya Center in Miami, watching a U.F.C. fight alongside Marco Rubio, his secretary of state and national security adviser. For Mr. Vance, the trip represented the highest-profile assignment of his tenure, which has largely been marked by domestic politics. White House officials had hoped he would be spending the months leading up to the midterms traveling the country to boost the Republican Party. Instead, he spent the early part of the week in Hungary campaigning for Prime Minister Viktor Orban and concluded it in Pakistan trying to negotiate the end of a messy and complicated war. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 13, 2026
‘Dark money’ kingpin Leonard Leo revamps operation ahead of midterms Conservative legal activist Leonard Leo’s “dark money” operation is getting a makeover. The Concord Fund quietly filed articles of termination on Jan. 6 of this year, according to previously unreported Virginia business records. Leo’s Concord Fund, which was previously known as the Judicial Crisis Network, has for years been a key node in a network of nonprofits used to steer tens of millions of dollars each year to conservative political committees and causes. A branch of The Concord Fund remains active in Missouri, where it’s spent millions trying to influence state elections in recent years. It’s unclear why The Concord Fund otherwise terminated its operations. Gary Marx, The Concord Fund’s president, did not respond to emails requesting comment on the organization’s status, and a phone number listed on the group’s latest annual report to the IRS was disconnected. Leo, a lawyer and businessman, is co-chair of the board of directors for the Federalist Society, which has — until recently — had close ties to President Donald Trump and many prominent Republicans. Other dark money groups with ties to Leo are taking up activities previously undertaken by The Concord Fund. The ultimate source of the money, funneled through nonprofits or donor-advised funds that do not have to disclose their donors, remains obscured. “Because the names change, I think most Americans have no idea what’s going on or how many of these differently named groups are the same through line with Leonard Leo at the sort of center of the spider web,” Lisa Graves, founder and executive director of the left-leaning watchdog group True North Research, told NOTUS. The Concord Fund’s demise — and apparent reimagining — appears to have begun late last year. In December 2025, a few days before The Concord Fund dissolved, another Leo-linked nonprofit called The Lexington Fund registered several alternative names including Judicial Crisis Network and Honest Election Project Action, according to Texas business records. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 13, 2026
Hungary’s Viktor Orban, ally of Trump and Putin, concedes election defeat Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban conceded defeat Sunday in a major election loss that will reverberate in Washington and Moscow and bring an end to the 16-year rule of a self-proclaimed champion of illiberal Christian democracy who is a darling of MAGA-aligned American conservatives, an ally of the Kremlin and a proud antagonist of European Union leaders in Brussels. Orban, 62, who has governed Hungary with increasing authoritarianism since 2010, and his Fidesz party were ousted by Peter Magyar, 45, a center-right, socially conservative member of the European Parliament, and his Tisza Party — in what was arguably the country’s most consequential vote since the end of the communist era. Vice President JD Vance visited Hungary last week to campaign for Orban. Orban quickly conceded defeat, delivering a short speech at his campaign headquarters in which he called the election result “clear.” With more than 96 percent of the vote counted, Magyar’s party looked set for a landslide victory, on course to claim 138 seats in the 199-seat parliament, five more than the 133 needed for a two-thirds constitutional majority. Orban’s party was on track to win 55. “Today we have worked a miracle, Hungary has written history,” Magyar said, addressing thousands of supporters. “Today truth triumphed over lies. Today Hungarians didn’t ask the question what can the country do for them but what can they do for the country.” Magyar also hailed the projections of a strong majority, which he said “will allow us to have a smooth and peaceful transition.” In his concession speech, Orban thanked voters who backed Fidesz and said the party now needs to focus on rebuilding their communities. “We never give up,” he said. On the bank of the Danube river, a crowd of Tisza supporters erupted in joy as Orban acknowledged what he called a painful defeat. Hungarians turned out in record numbers for the historic vote, which Magyar declared would lead to cardinal change. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Catholic Reporter - April 13, 2026
Trump attacks Pope Leo in incendiary social media post President Donald J. Trump published a lengthy attack on Pope Leo XIV on Sunday night, calling the first U.S.-born pope "terrible on Foreign Policy," citing Leo's opposition to the ongoing war in Iran and U.S. military action in Venezuela and stating that his pontificate is hurting the church. "I don't want a Pope who thinks it's OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon," Trump posted to Truth Social on Sunday night. "I don't want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I'm doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do, setting Record Low Numbers in Crime, and creating the Greatest Stock Market in History." Trump made similar comments to reporters on Sunday gathered at Joint Base Andrews. Trump's post came shortly after "60 Minutes" aired an interview featuring three U.S. Cardinals – Blase Cupich of Chicago, Joseph Tobin of Newark and Robert McElroy of Washington – who were critical of Trump's foreign policy objectives and his deportation strategies at home. In introducing the "60 Minutes" segment, CBS News journalist Norah O'Donnell said that Leo had become "increasingly outspoken" against the Trump administration's policies, and that the pope has emerged as a voice of moral opposition to the war in Iran and the administration's mass deportation campaign. O'Donnell asked the three cardinals whether they would like to see Leo be even more outspoken on issues that he disagrees with. Tobin said that the pope is "the pastor of the world, he's not a pundit." > Read this article at National Catholic Reporter - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 13, 2026
Eric Swalwell ends bid for California governor after sexual misconduct allegations Rep. Eric Swalwell said Sunday he would withdraw from the California governor’s race in the wake of allegations of sexual misconduct that led to a nearly immediate campaign collapse, as staffers quit and prominent Democratic supporters urged him to drop out. “I am suspending my campaign for Governor,” he posted on X. “To my family, staff, friends, and supporters, I am deeply sorry for mistakes in judgment I’ve made in my past. I will fight the serious, false allegations that have been made — but that’s my fight, not a campaign’s.” Swalwell was long considered a top contender in a wide-open field with several prominent Democrats and two Republicans ahead of the state’s June 2 nonpartisan primary. But on Friday, his campaign was roiled when CNN and the San Francisco Chronicle published reports in which women accused Swalwell of sexual misconduct. A former Swalwell staffer told CNN the congressman raped her when she was heavily intoxicated and left her bruised and bleeding. Swalwell has strongly denied the allegations. “I was pushing him off of me, saying no,” the woman told CNN of the incident, which she said happened in 2024 in New York City after she had stopped working in Swalwell’s office. “He didn’t stop.” The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office said Saturday it is investigating the allegation of sexual assault the woman said took place in New York. The Alameda County District Attorney’s Office told CNN in a statement Saturday it is “evaluating whether any alleged criminal conduct occurred within” the Bay Area county, where the same woman accused Swalwell of a separate act of sexual misconduct she said took place in 2019. Three other women who spoke with CNN also alleged various kinds of sexual misconduct by the Democratic congressman — including Swalwell sending them unsolicited explicit messages or nude photos. Swalwell has denied the women’s allegations. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 13, 2026
What the ‘Real Housewives’ think About Congress’s reality TV drama On a recent Wednesday at the Capitol, while seven reality television stars with a penchant for explosive confrontations and theatrics paid a visit, one Republican senator angrily confronted another about what he had been saying behind his back. In front of the cameras and with other lawmakers seated around him in a stately hearing room, Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky looked Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, now the homeland security secretary, in the eye and dared him to repeat his insult that Mr. Paul was “a snake.” “Today, I’ll give you that chance to clear the record,” Mr. Paul said. “Tell it to my face. If that’s what you believe, tell it to me today.” The women, all current or former “Real Housewives” from various cities who specialize in such antics, were elsewhere, lobbying lawmakers to increase funding for H.I.V. and AIDS research and care. But when Erika Girardi, a 10-year veteran of the “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” learned of the exchange, she cackled. “Oh my god,” she said, her eyes widening. “That’s — it’s just like a reunion.” Then, Ms. Girardi, a sometime singer and actress known as Erika Jayne, leaned forward eagerly, like a television viewer on the edge of her seat. “So? What’d he say?” Such is the way of things in the hallowed halls of Congress, where the austere and grave business of legislating has given way to intense tribal politics and made-for-camera clashes. With a reality TV star in the White House and an increasingly bitter fight for control of Congress underway, the blend ofhostility, showmanship and drama President Trump cultivated has made its way to the Capitol. Lawmakers less accustomed to courting television ratings now chase viral moments, test pithy catchphrases and eagerly seek out confrontations to win over would-be donors. “I think Congress isn’t too different from the Bravo universe,” said Representative Debbie Dingell, a Michigan Democrat who went to meet the “Housewives” cast members despite, she admitted, having no idea who any of them were. Many congressional hearings remain dry affairs. Some even contain serious discussions of legislative issues. But Mr. Paul’s hostility at the Senate hearing last month was not an outlier, even on that same day. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Inside Higher Ed - April 13, 2026
Experts: New accreditation rules threaten academic freedom Stakes are high as the Trump administration looks to rewrite the rules governing accreditation in the first of two week-long rule-making sessions starting today. The overhaul could dramatically change who is in charge of academic oversight and what they evaluate when determining whether an institution should have access to federal aid. Right-leaning think tanks applaud the changes, released last week in a 151-page draft, calling them an overdue means to ensure campus civil rights compliance, address college costs and ensure institutions are held accountable for their students’ outcomes. But accreditation experts, left-leaning policy analysts and student advocacy groups say the lengthy regulations, while vague and abstruse, pose a major threat to the future of institutional autonomy and America’s status as the crown jewel of global higher education. Little of what’s included in the draft surprised either side. President Trump and other conservatives have long seen overhauling the accreditation system as a way to reform higher ed more broadly. The draft regulations fulfill their pledges to make it easier for new accreditors to join the market and mandate what standards accreditors must and must not assess. Under Secretary Nicholas Kent has described the upcoming overhaul as “a revolution.” Robert Shireman—a longtime accreditation expert and Democratic appointee on the Education Department’s accreditation advisory committee—said at an Accreditation 101 panel Wednesday that the most important aspect of America’s higher ed oversight system has been the autonomy it provides to colleges and universities, which is “obliterated by these draft regulations.” “With the administration’s release of their draft rules earlier this week, I would characterize those as a cluster bomb being dropped on American higher education,” he said. > Read this article at Inside Higher Ed - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories Associated Press - April 12, 2026
Trump threatens Strait of Hormuz blockade after US-Iran ceasefire talks end without agreement President Donald Trump on Sunday said the U.S. Navy would “immediately” begin a blockade to stop ships from entering or leaving the Strait of Hormuz, after U.S.-Iran peace talks in Pakistan ended without an agreement. Trump sought to exert strategic control over the waterway responsible for the transportation of 20% of global oil supplies before the war, hoping to take away Iran’s key source of economic leverage in the fighting. The president added that he has “instructed our Navy to seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran. No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas.” Trump also said the U.S. was ready to “finish up” Iran at the “appropriate moment,” stressing that Tehran’s nuclear ambitions were at the core of the failure to end the war. Face-to-face talks ended earlier Sunday after 21 hours, leaving a fragile two-week ceasefire in doubt. U.S. officials said the negotiations collapsed over what they described as Iran’s refusal to commit to abandoning a path to a nuclear weapon, while Iranian officials blamed the U.S. for the breakdown of the talks without specifying the sticking points. Neither side indicated what will happen after the 14-day ceasefire expires on April 22. Pakistani mediators urged all parties to maintain it. Both said their positions were clear and put the onus on the other side, underscoring how little the gap had narrowed throughout the talks. “We need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon, and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon,” Vice President JD Vance said after the talks. > Read this article at Associated Press - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Public Media - April 12, 2026
Texas House committee slaps Democrats with nearly $422K in penalties for 2025 quorum break A committee of the Texas House of Representatives voted late Friday afternoon to impose financial penalties totaling nearly $422,000 on Democratic House members who broke quorum last August to try to prevent the Republican-led Legislature from passing a controversial mid-decade congressional redistricting plan. The GOP-led Committee on House Administration imposed $303,000 in fines on the 50-plus Democratic members for being absent without leave during the first and second special sessions of the 89th Legislature. The committee assessed an additional $118,889.81 penalty to reimburse the Texas Department of Public Safety for expenses incurred in trying to compel those members to return to the chamber. Under House rules, the members being penalized may not use political fundraising in order to pay the fines or reimbursement expenses — in this case more than $8,000 per member. The committee voted 6-5 along party lines, under a motion by state Rep. Charlie Geren, R-Fort Worth, the committee chair, after taking testimony in executive session for more than six hours. Geren made no statement other than to read out the terms of the motion. Several Democrats on the committee gave closing statements before the final vote. State Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso, pointed to Republican rhetoric against Democrats during the quorum break — including threats by Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to force the expulsion from office of Democrats who had fled the state. "Americans just like us from both sides of the aisle have been murdered over politics in the past year,” Moody said. “We can’t play any part in bringing that to Texas. If we do, one day, we’ll be sitting in a room like this, talking about the death of someone we worked with, someone we looked in the eye and broke bread with, and yes, sometimes disagreed with. When that happens, no amount of political points will have been worth it." > Read this article at Houston Public Media - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 12, 2026
‘It’s solid gold’: Some Texas Republicans ramp up criticisms of Muslims to energize primary voters Running in a contentious race to keep his seat, Sen. John Cornyn put out an ad vowing to fight “radical Islam.” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, Cornyn’s opponent in the May 26 runoff, accused his rival of helping “radical Islamic Afghans invade Texas.” Rep. Chip Roy, running to replace Paxton as attorney general in a runoff next month, has alleged without evidence that parts of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, home to thousands of Muslims, have become what some Texas women believe to be “no-go zones” in which they are “increasingly feeling uncomfortable, as if they are somehow immersed in the Middle East.” Certain Republicans in Texas have made anti-Islamic rhetoric part of their primary campaigns, arguing that Muslims have made the state less safe. That’s a notable message in the nation’s largest conservative state and one that’s echoed by a handful of Republicans nationally, including members of Congress. Border issues have long animated conservatives – particularly in Texas, which has the longest section of US-Mexico border of any state – and were seen as critical to President Donald Trump’s 2024 victory. Vinny Minchillo, a Republican strategist based in Plano, Texas, said that with illegal immigration hitting lows during Trump’s presidency, it made sense for GOP candidates to drive at another immigration-related concern and that opposition to Sharia law, or Islamic religious law, in particular was a winner in primaries. “It is playing as well as anything I have ever seen with Texas Republican voters,” said Minchillo, who worked on the media team for Bush’s 2004 reelection campaign and Mitt Romney’s 2012 bid.“It’s solid gold.” Muslim leaders living in Texas argue that the ramp-up of rhetoric endangers their communities and spreads misconceptions about Sharia law and about Islam in general. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 12, 2026
Hungarian election tests Trump’s global reach as Orban fights for survival In an election that has President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin rooting for the same outcome, Hungarians on Sunday will decide the fate of Prime Minister Viktor Orban, the self-proclaimed champion of illiberal Christian democracy who is a darling of MAGA-aligned American conservatives, an ally of the Kremlin and a proud antagonist of European Union leaders in Brussels. Orban, 62, who has governed Hungary with increasing authoritarianism since 2010, and his Fidesz party are facing a stiff challenge from Peter Magyar, 45, a center-right, socially conservative member of the European Parliament, and his party Tisza — in what is arguably the country’s most consequential vote since the end of the communist era. Vice President JD Vance visited Hungary last week to campaign for Orban. On a sunny Sunday morning, the turnout in the first hours of voting reached record levels, with more than 16 percent Hungarians having cast their ballots, up from 10 percent in the previous election. This year’s race is viewed as one of the dirtiest in Hungarian history. Budapest is plastered with posters depicting Magyar as a two-faced puppet of Brussels and Kyiv, while damaging material about the Orban government’s ties to Russia has filled the independent press in recent weeks, culminating in a leak of recorded conversations between Orban and Putin. Orban’s xenophobic nationalism made him a leading critic of immigration in Europe and other leaders followed, making the E.U. far less welcoming of migrants and refugees. He has also been a vocal critic of military and economic aid to Ukraine and often sought to block E.U. sanctions against Russia and thwart efforts to cut reliance on Russian gas and oil. In the election, Orban has tried to stoke fears that Magyar would pull Hungary into Russia’s war in support of Ukraine. Magyar has run on a platform largely focused on domestic issues, accusing Orban of mismanaging Hungary’s weak economy and railing against corruption and cronyism, and lambasting a government procurement system that he says has enriched Orban’s family members and political allies. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Votebeat - April 12, 2026
Texas counties receive subpoenas for voters’ records from Department of Homeland Security At least three Texas counties this week either received or were told they would soon receive administrative subpoenas from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The department is seeking detailed records about some individual voters, including their registration applications and voter history, though counties don’t yet know which ones. The subpoenas appear to be linked to a series of efforts by the Trump administration to verify the citizenship of registered voters. In December, Texas turned over the state’s voter roll to the Justice Department. The transfer included voters’ identifiable information such as dates of birth, driver’s license numbers, and partial social security numbers. It did not include, however, voters’ registration applications or signatures — the state does not have access to that information, which is kept by county voter registrars. Lubbock County’s elections administrator, Roxzine Stinson, said she met with a Homeland Security representative who informed her she would soon receive a subpoena seeking additional information for at least 10 voters, and potentially up to 30. Stinson said she’ll seek guidance from the county’s legal department on how to respond. The Homeland Security representative told Stinson “all 254 counties will be contacted,” she said. Election officials in Brazos County received a subpoena by email this week, Trudy Hancock, the county’s elections administrator, confirmed to Votebeat. Hancock said the subpoena specifically requests voter registration records, including voter registration applications, signatures, and voter history, but doesn’t list the names of individual voters. She said she’s asking for legal advice on how to respond “because the request is open-ended.” Suzie Harvey, the election administrator in Montgomery County confirmed she has also received a subpoena that was delivered in person, but similarly to Hancock, it isn’t specific about which voters’ records it’s seeking. The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the subpoenas Friday. The Texas Secretary of State’s Office declined to comment on whether it has received a subpoena from DHS but Alicia Pierce, a spokesperson, said the office is aware that some counties are receiving them. > Read this article at Votebeat - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories KUT - April 12, 2026
Judge blocks new state rules that ban sale of smokable hemp Smokable hemp products can be sold in Texas again — at least for now. A Travis County judge granted a temporary restraining order on Friday that blocks enforcement of some of the state's sweeping hemp regulations that took effect March 31. The Department of State Health Services (DSHS) rules changed how THC levels are calculated in a way that effectively prohibited the sale of smokable hemp products like flower and concentrate. Those products accounted for the vast majority of the hemp products sold in Texas, according to the industry and economists who study the hemp market. The DSHS regulations also introduced sharply higher annual fees for hemp retailers of $5,000 per location, which had increased from $150. Manufacturers saw their annual fees rise from $250 to $10,000 per facility. A group of businesses and industry groups including the Texas Hemp Business Council filed a lawsuit Tuesday, claiming DSHS exceeded its authority and adopted rules that would force hundreds of businesses to close. Travis County Judge Maya Guerra Gamble blocked the new rules that prohibit the sale of smokable hemp. She declined to block implementation of the higher fees. More than 13,000 stores are registered to sell hemp products in Texas, according to data posted on the DSHS website. Almost 800 companies are licensed to manufacture hemp products. During a virtual hearing Friday afternoon, attorneys for the plaintiffs argued the rules were already forcing some businesses to close. "This is actually irreparable harm that is already occurring and is exponentially multiplying like a wave rolling into a beach that gets bigger," attorney Jason Snell said. > Read this article at KUT - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KHOU - April 12, 2026
Memorial Hermann reaches deal with BCBSTX to return to in-network The Memorial Hermann Health System's facilities and physicians are once again in-network for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, according to statements from the two parties. This comes after a stalled-out contract dispute dropped the system from BCBSTX's network at the start of April. "We are pleased that Memorial Hermann Health System and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas (BCBSTX) have reached a new agreement that enables BCBSTX Commercial and Blue Advantage Marketplace members to have in-network access once again to Memorial Hermann facilities and trusted providers for their care," Memorial Hermann said in a statement. Prior to reaching an agreement, both sides said they had worked for months to reach a deal, but couldn't settle on terms. Read Memorial Hermann's full statement, released on April 11, below: "We are pleased that Memorial Hermann Health System and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas (BCBSTX) have reached a new agreement that enables BCBSTX Commercial and Blue Advantage Marketplace members to have in-network access once again to Memorial Hermann facilities and trusted providers for their care. Throughout these negotiations, our priority has been to secure a fair agreement that supports the long-term sustainability of the high-quality care we provide and recognizes the value of our physician network. As always, we stand ready to serve and encourage patients to reach out to their trusted providers to schedule needed care. We remain committed to the Greater Houston community and our mission to improve health through high-quality, accessible and personalized care." Read BCBCTX's full statement, released on April 11, below: "Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas?and Memorial Hermann Health System have come to a mutual agreement?that?protects?our members’ access to quality?care at cost-effective prices.? "All BCBSTX members will continue to have access to Memorial Hermann Health System facilities?and hospitals at in-network rates. > Read this article at KHOU - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 12, 2026
Judge balks at $68M Colony Ridge deal. Did officials do enough to aid residents? A federal district judge declined to sign off Friday on a settlement between Colony Ridge and the state and federal governments after raising concerns about the lack of relief for customers who were allegedly harmed by the developers. Judge Alfred Bennett repeatedly asked why the $68 million settlement doesn’t include financial compensation for landowners forced into foreclosure after purchasing property in the sprawling community in Liberty County outside Houston. Bennett pointed out that the settlement includes $20 million for law enforcement and immigration enforcement — yet the government’s original lawsuit never mentioned residents’ request for more police activity. “How did we get from 45 pages of financial transactions that rise to the level of reverse redlining to, ‘Let's spend $20 million to increase immigration enforcement,’” Bennett said, referring to the federal government’s original complaint that contained allegations of predatory lending practices. “How did we get here?” Colony Ridge, the Trump administration and the state of Texas previously agreed to a proposed $68 million settlement in February following a lawsuit initiated by former President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice. The 2023 lawsuit alleged Colony Ridge used unscrupulous and illegal tactics to target Hispanic customers with high-interest loans and misled buyers about infrastructure, including water, sewer and electrical connections. Critics of the settlement say government officials are prioritizing immigration enforcement and politics over restitution. GOP lawmakers have falsely claimed that Colony Ridge is a hotbed of cartel activity, and immigration agents conducted a raid in the community last year after Trump was elected to office.> Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KHOU - April 12, 2026
Artemis II astronauts reflect on journey to the moon and back during Houston homecoming The four astronauts of Artemis II mission are back on Earth after a successful journey around the Moon, returning to Houston on Saturday to a warm welcome and emotional reflections. Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen landed at Ellington Field, where they spoke publicly for the first time since splashdown. They were greeted with a standing ovation, smiling and embracing the moment after completing a mission that took them farther into space than any humans before. “Twenty-four hours ago, the Earth was that big out the window,” Wiseman said, gesturing to emphasize the distance. “And here we are back at Ellington, at home.” The crew balanced humor with heartfelt emotion. Hansen joked about finally being separated from his commander after the long journey, drawing laughter from the crowd. But the tone shifted as Wiseman reflected on the personal sacrifices behind the mission, particularly time spent away from loved ones. “Before you launch, it feels like the greatest dream on Earth,” he said. “And when you’re out there, you just want to get back to your family and friends. It’s a special thing to be human, and it’s a special thing to be on planet Earth.” The mission marks a major milestone for NASA, as the crew completed a lunar flyby that officials say will help pave the way for future missions to land astronauts on the Moon. “We are fortunate to be in this agency, at this time, together,” Glover said. Outside the gates, crowds gathered to welcome the astronauts home, underscoring the mission’s impact beyond science and exploration. Koch emphasized the sense of unity the journey inspired. “There is one thing I know,” she said. “Planet Earth — you are a crew.” Hansen closed with a message about shared purpose, telling the audience the astronauts’ journey reflects something larger. “When you look up here, you are not looking at us,” he said. “We are a mirror reflecting you.” The Artemis II crew’s return signals a renewed step toward humanity’s next chapter in lunar exploration — and a reminder of the people behind the mission. > Read this article at KHOU - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Barbed Wire - April 12, 2026
How Texas college students are helping thousands of undocumented classmates Obed Valencia wasted no time in his first two years of college. He joined several clubs, made friends, got an internship — he even won a “Most Involved” student award in his first year at Texas A&M San Antonio, he said. “I made the most of it just because I wasn’t sure when would be the last day I would get to experience,” Valencia told The Barbed Wire. That uncertainty stemmed from being a “dreamer,” a term used to describe immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as a child, including those who received protections under the program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — or DACA. Valencia moved to the U.S. from Mexico when he was just 4 years old, he told The Barbed Wire. Alongside his friend and fellow student María Andrade, Valencia founded the Dreamer Student Organization on the San Antonio campus in the fall of 2023, which provided support and a safe space to other immigrant students like them. “We wanted to build a community for students who were undocumented immigrants, or if they were just allies, wanting to help,” Andrade said. With Valencia as president, the Dreamer Student Organization focused on building community, social events, and education on issues facing immigrants in its first year. But things changed in 2025. Since President Trump took office in his second term, the largest immigration crackdown in U.S. history has disappeared parents, killed dozens of people — including American citizens – and spread fear across communities in Texas. In Austin, a mother called police only to find herself and her 5-year-old child, a U.S. citizen, deported to Honduras. A Palestinian woman who protested at Columbia University was held in a Texas ICE detention center for a year, despite being granted bond multiple times. A two-month old baby was deported, along with his family, after being hospitalized for bronchitis in a Texas detention center just hours earlier. Immigrants have also faced financial barriers as the crackdown has swept across the country, where Texas has the most undocumented higher ed students in the country — second only to California. As of June 2025, Inside Higher Edreported there were 57,000 undocumented students enrolled in Texas colleges and universities. > Read this article at The Barbed Wire - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Texas Observer - April 12, 2026
Matthew Chesnut: How Teach for America helped set up James Talarico’s political rise (Matthew Chesnut is a high school social studies teacher and journalism adviser from San Antonio and a Teach for America alum. He holds degrees in political science from Texas State University and UT-San Antonio.) Fifteen years ago, in May 2011, dozens of newly inducted Teach for America (TFA) corps members gathered at Trinity University in San Antonio to prepare for a five-week summer training institute, which would be hosted at Rice University in Houston. It was the first time I had ever been selected for anything exclusive—TFA’s acceptance rate was around 15 percent at the time—and I had all the attendant feelings of imposter syndrome. You can briefly see this much thinner, less-hot version of me teaching summer school at Madison High School in Houston in this promotional video that TFA San Antonio still has on their YouTube page. By my account, everyone here dressed well, maintained straight posture, and had impeccable hair. It appeared more like a casting call than teachers’ professional development. I was one of a few born, raised, and educated San Antonians present in a group that represented every corner of the country, many recently credentialed from the nation’s most prestigious institutions. In meeting my new colleagues, I felt compelled to be my city’s ambassador, but as a functional shut-in during leisure hours I was an imperfect one at best. One of those new colleagues I met that week was a University of Texas grad who, like me, studied government and would be teaching on San Antonio’s West Side. His name was James Talarico. My impression of him from the TFA training sessions was that he was serious but not humorless, carrying himself with a firm, gentle confidence uncommon for a 22-year-old. For the next two years of our corps member commitment, these TFA professional development sessions would be the extent of our acquaintanceship as he and most others would eventually leave San Antonio for greener pastures. It came as little surprise to me that, five years after the conclusion of our time in TFA, we’d see one of our own reach the Texas Legislature. TFA’s recruitment, with its many rounds of interviews and an ostensible audition, promises to field an annual crop of future leaders in education. For most participants, their plans involve this short stint in the classroom before heading off to work in law, campus administration, policymaking, business, or the sprawling tentacles of the nonprofit industrial complex. TFA is less a teacher preparation program than it is a finishing school for future decision-makers in the multilayered technocracy of education policy, one dominated by elites who have historically boosted charter-school expansion. I am a rarity in that I still teach in the city and campus where I did my TFA stint. TFA’s mission is to ensure that its members are among that elite. That includes those in the upper echelons of elected office. > Read this article at Texas Observer - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 12, 2026
PGA looks to have tamed its biggest international threat No, cherished readers, your eyes do not deceive. We here at The Dallas Morning News are devoting yet another cover story to golf — but for very good reasons. Aside from the fact that the Masters tournament takes place today, it may have escaped the notice of North Texans that next year, Frisco will play host to the Professional Golf Association’s Championship. The unstoppable force of professional golf is running headfirst into the unmovable object that is the Dallas-Fort Worth region, which is attracting a growing number of large companies. Just a couple of weeks ago, Eric Prisbell took us inside Arcis’ freshly renovated Cowboys Golf Club, the tip of recreational golf’s multibillion-dollar spear, which is embedding itself in the D-FW economy in multiple ways. And on Masters Sunday, Prisbell’s deftly-written cover story explores how the PGA is prepping for 2027’s confab — the first men’s major in the region in over 60 years. It’s a given that when it comes to pro sports, economic impact studies should always be taken with a grain of salt. But the PGA’s 660-acre Frisco property is expected to draw 200,000 visitors that are poised to infuse the region with $100 million of activity — demonstrating what Arcis Golf CEO Blake Walker boasts is how “Dallas is to golf as New York is to finance.” Meanwhile, Frisco is part of the booming Collin County story that's seen businesses and individuals flock to the D-FW suburbs. And like recreational golf, the PGA is leaning into the idea that it’s not just stuffy old businessmen hitting the links. As Prisbell explains, the organization’s local district is a combination of golf, dining and retail. The resulting alchemy will produce “direct tax revenues that will benefit not just Frisco, but the state of Texas that come from our hospitality sales and ticket sales and merchandise sales on site — all those are significant in the millions of dollars each,” according to Jason Mengel, the event’s director. > Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Denton Record-Chronicle - April 12, 2026
ACLU and anti-censorship group target UNT over art exhibit removal with mobile billboard The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and the National Coalition Against Censorship sent a mobile billboard to the University of North Texas campus Tuesday. The billboard on a truck shows a simple message: “UNT admin censored Marka27’s art.” The billboard is a partnership between the two nonprofits and former Dallas resident turned Brooklyn-based street artist Victor Quiñonez, better known by his street art signature Marka27. Both sides of the billboard include a QR code, which leads to a post penned by Quiñonez on the ACLU Texas website. The mobile billboard is the latest move on the part of Quiñonez and the two advocacy groups in an ongoing critique of the university’s decision to remove Quiñonez’s exhibit “Ni de Aquí, Ni de Allá” (“Neither From Here, Nor From There”). The exhibit might sting a little with its references to incarceration and deportation, but Quiñonez said its bright colors, glowing LED lights and humor are tributes, not condemnations, of America. “I’d decided on the name ‘Ni de Aquí, Ni de Allá’ for my exhibition to honor my heritage,” Quiñonez says in his blog. “As immigrants, as Latinos, we are not from here, and we are not from there, because we are from both. “To me, this is a form of empowerment,” he writes. “We can speak authentically to finding a home in the United States as well as maintaining our connections to where we were born or where our ancestors are from. I believe it’s completely possible to love two homelands at the same time.” UNT administrators hadn’t replied to a Denton Record-Chronicle request for an interview or a statement by Tuesday evening. > Read this article at Denton Record-Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KIIITV - April 12, 2026
Mayor’s attorney urges halt to Corpus Christi removal hearing process A legal letter submitted on behalf of Corpus Christi Mayor Paulette Guajardo is urging the City Council to reconsider moving forward with removal hearing procedures under the city charter. The letter, dated April 8, was sent by attorney John Flood to members of the City Council and references Article II, Section 11 of the city charter, which outlines the process for removal or suspension actions. Flood said prior investigations conducted with outside legal counsel and investigators found insufficient evidence of wrongdoing related to earlier allegations raised in a Petition for Removal filed in August 2025. The letter also addresses additional claims filed in March 2026, described as “Articles of Impeachment,” stating those allegations are based on speculation and can be rebutted by existing facts, according to the mayor’s legal team. Flood is now urging the council to pause the process, warning that moving forward could expose the city to unnecessary litigation and may not meet legal requirements under state law and U.S. constitutional standards. “Over the last couple of months, the city council has taken some steps that really threaten some of the constitutional rights that she holds, that we all hold,” Flood said. Flood also questioned the reasoning behind the council’s decision to advance the petition. “Multiple law enforcement agencies, the FBI, the Texas Rangers, Police Department, District Attorney's office have all concluded that there was no wrongdoing by anyone, much less the mayor,” Flood said. “And so you have to ask yourself, well, then why is this happening? And so it's happening for political reasons, which is an unconstitutional reason.” The letter further states that continuing the proceedings could divert attention from other city priorities, including water planning and municipal operations. > Read this article at KIIITV - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 9, 2026
Dionna Deardorff and Zach Leonard: Families questioning Fort Worth ISD takeover want change, accountability (Dionna Deardorff is communications director of Families Organized Resisting Takeover, or FORT, a Fort Worth ISD parent advocacy organization. Zach Leonard is president.) Our group, Families Organized Resisting Takeover, or FORT, mobilized when the Texas Education Agency announced its intervention in Fort Worth ISD. Our name is direct, but our mission is not simply resistance. We are parents, educators and community members who believe that real improvement in our schools cannot happen without us. Research from the Harvard Graduate School of Education shows that schools with strong family engagement produce stronger student outcomes. We have stepped up because we are invested. We started FORT to advocate for our children, not to fight others who are also trying to improve student outcomes. Now that the TEA has taken over our district, we are squarely outside of the democratic process. The newly appointed Board of Managers and Superintendent Peter B. Licata do not represent us; they were chosen by and serve at the discretion of the TEA. Voters cannot remove managers if they take extreme actions that run counter to our community’s interests. The TEA, however, could remove managers who do not vote in accordance with the agency’s directives, as happened in Houston, where four managers who voted against the hand-picked superintendent on some matters were replaced. Therefore, we must demand transparency and accountability from the appointed leadership. FWISD has underperformed academically for decades. We know that, and we want change. Our community has a clear vision for what great schools look like, and it is broader than a test score. We want schools that care about fine arts, libraries, recess and the social and emotional well-being of our children. We want kids who are prepared for life, not just for a standardized test. Literacy is at the center of it all. We cannot ignore that far too many FWISD students are not reading at grade level and that dyslexia often goes unidentified and unsupported. We need leadership that understands the science of reading, invests in real dyslexia intervention and treats literacy as the foundation of quality education. A child who cannot read proficiently by third grade faces a steeper climb in the rest of education and life. We cannot accept that as inevitable. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin Business Journal - April 12, 2026
'Taylor, Texas is now in the space business': Melagen Labs picks Austin-area city after multi-state search A New York-based aerospace and defense company has picked Taylor for what is said to be the region's first commercial radiation testing and qualification center. It's another example of Central Texas growing into a hub for the space industry. Melagen Labs on April 8 was approved by the Taylor Economic Development Corp. board for a somewhat unique $4.5 million economic development performance agreement that will help the company cover startup costs here — but there's a plan to pay the money back. It's all with a goal of addressing a shortage of commercial-grade gamma irradiation facilities throughout the country – especially in Texas. The new facility is slated to create a minimum of 16 jobs, according to the deal, but businesses that strike such agreements often handily surpass headcount requirements. Officials declined to say where the facility will be located because a lease has not yet been finalized. But sources said the facility will be housed at a 51,000-square-foot office-warehouse building at 1901 Industrial Drive that was developed by Houston-based SGRE Capital. Construction on the tenant finish out is expected to begin this year, and the facility is expected to be operational next year, according to an April 10 announcement. It will service aerospace, defense and advanced electronics industries. Melagen is already opening its waitlist to commercial, defense and government customers. "This facility is about more than testing. It's about building the infrastructure layer that enables the next generation of American space and defense programs," Melagen Labs founder and CEO Muhammad Hunain said in a statement. "Taylor, Texas, gave us the partnership and the platform to move fast. We're building one of the most important pieces of national technology infrastructure to come online in years, which will enable commercial and defense partners to accelerate their development for lunar infrastructure, and this is just the beginning of the network we're building." > Read this article at Austin Business Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin Business Journal - April 12, 2026
Austin warming back up to incentives as economy cools Incentives such as tax breaks or cash for jobs for expanding companies could play a bigger role in Austin's future as city hall faces budget shortfalls and sobering statistics that show a slowdown. Dangling such carrots in front of Corporate America is a reversal of attitude. In recent years, as Austin boomed despite anything city hall did or didn't do, city leaders believed they didn't need to offer incentives for big companies to grow here. Adjoining counties — especially Williamson County to the north, which has done major incentives deals with Apple, Samsung and others recently — have had a heyday raking in the business investments since. But things have slowed in Austin due to factors such as relatively higher costs and a lack of easily developable land. In 2023, for instance, the Census indicated that more people moved out of Austin than moved in — albeit babies born have kept the city's population total inching forward. So lately, city leaders have been harkening back to strategies that partly fueled the stout growth of the early 2000s — and that puts incentives for big businesses back into Austin's secret sauce. City leaders have approved three deals in recent months with major corporations. Mayor Kirk Watson recently pointed out to real estate leaders that the city was giving a relative cold shoulder to incentive deals in many recent years. That changed in December when Austin struck a deal with Southwest Airlines to help it bring a crew base to Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. The deal will award $2,750 to Southwest for every job added in the city over a five-year period, which could result in an estimated maximum incentive payment of $5.5 million. About 2,000 crew members are expected to work and live in Austin by mid-2027. "If we want to be able to fund all the things that this city needs ... we're going to have to grow our economy," Watson said during a luncheon hosted by the Real Estate Council of Austin on March 6. "My theory of watching this over a long time is it used to be OK and a luxury to say we don't need that economic economic development growth. We don't need that growth because it was happening. ... That tax base was growing even as you stood in a political podium and said, 'We don't need that.'" He noted that other cities in Central Texas have been more active in recent years in incentives and striking economic development deals. "I also worry about when the jobs are going someplace else, people are going to go to those jobs," Watson said. "They're not going to just live in downtown Austin and drive to Round Rock." > Read this article at Austin Business Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Bloomberg Law - April 12, 2026
Dallas Mavs withdraw claim over Stars’ partnership before trial The Dallas Mavericks have abandoned their most significant claim to be contested at trial next month in a fight with the Dallas Stars over their shared partnership in the American Airlines Center sports arena. The NBA team Thursday nonsuited a tortious interference claim that remained undecided after a Texas Business Court judge ruled in their favor in seven other issues this month. By abandoning the claim, the Mavs’ lawyer, Chip Babcock of Jackson Walker LLP, said there’s no need to proceed to trial as planned on May 11. A dispute over attorneys’ fees was also to be decided at the trial. “The team just wants to move forward and not have this be more of a distraction than it already has been,” Babcock said Friday. The Stars’ lawyer, Joshua Sandler of Winstead PC, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the impact of the Mavs’ nonsuit on the upcoming trial. On April 2, Judge Bill Whitehill ruled the Mavs can redeem the interest of the Stars for a cash tender of $110 because the hockey team maintained its office outside the city in violation of a 1999 lease agreement. The Stars are represented by Winstead PC. > Read this article at Bloomberg Law - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories Wall Street Journal - April 12, 2026
Gas prices turn the gig worker economy upside down Jonathan Meyers sat in his Prius on a Wednesday morning and had about three seconds to make a decision on every Lyft and Uber fare that flashed across his phone before another driver snapped it up. He could make $7.02 for a 1.2-mile trip. But the drive to pick up his fare would take around seven minutes. There was also a drive across town for $23.15. The money was better, but he would be on the road for an hour. And there was a 13.2-mile, 53-minute ride to LAX for $35.59. He took it. These days, Meyers’s daily calculus on whether to take a fare includes the rising cost of gasoline—which in Los Angeles can run upward of $6 a gallon. Gig drivers, food-delivery workers and independent drivers are being hit especially hard at the pump and making split-second calculations and adjustments to their lives and livelihoods. “It changes the way I’ve been selecting rides,” said Meyers, a 61-year-old writer who earns between $1,000 and $1,500 driving up to 60 hours a week for Uber and Lyft. He has stopped taking rides that require him to drive “superlong distances.” He has taken on extra hours driving to make up for what he estimates is a 25% drop in earnings from rides he now turns down, trading off longer drives for shorter ones to save gas. “It’s about conserving gas and also trying to make sure I end up in a neighborhood where I can gas up for a sane price,” he said. Some drivers are turning down longer fares that aren’t worth the gas cost. Others are driving longer hours or sticking to areas where gas prices are cheaper. A few said they are thinking about changing occupations altogether. Joe Davis, an 81-year-old former Uber driver, now runs his own car service in Santa Fe, N.M. He charges $80 to take people to or from the Albuquerque airport, between 60 and 80 miles away, depending on where he is.> Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 12, 2026
Data centers are spreading around the country. Now, data-center bans are, too Maine lawmaker Melanie Sachs, a Democrat, thought her state was one of the few places in the nation where data centers weren’t interested in setting up shop. The northeastern-most state in the US — known for its rocky coastline, lobsters and L.L. Bean boots — isn’t exactly Silicon Valley. So when she sponsored a bill earlier this year that would put a temporary ban on new, large data centers, she figured it wouldn’t make a splash. It was only then that they learned about two data centers projects already proposed in different Maine communities. “Once I put the bill in, they started coming out of the woodwork,” Sachs said. “The communities didn’t know anything about it at all. In rural communities, whether it’s Maine or somewhere else, local permitting for these projects is nonexistent.” In the coming weeks, Maine could be the first state in the nation to pass a temporary moratorium on new data centers — giving it time to study how much electricity and water they use, and how they might impact jobs and the local economy. Similar temporary bans are being proposed in deeply red and blue states alike, including New York, South Carolina, Oklahoma and Vermont. And there are dozens of local bans at the county and municipal level, often in response to a new data center coming into a community. Proponents say these bills are a response to an industry that has been strikingly fast-moving and secretive, providing little opportunity for substantive public input. “It’s really a nonpartisan issue, and I think a lot of it just goes back to how rapidly things have been changing in recent years,” said South Carolina Rep. Steven Long, a Republican who cosponsored a moratorium proposal in his state. “The public policy hasn’t been able to keep up with it.” As big tech companies and the Trump administration pursue an aggressive bid to make the US a leader in artificial intelligence, massive ‘hyperscale’ data centers needed to operate those technologies have proliferated. There are over 4,000 data centers around the US, according to the Data Center Map. Virginia has the largest data center cluster in the world, and there’s a proliferation in Texas and California as well. As data centers expand their footprint, a groundswell of local opposition is following. The Data Center Coalition, a trade group representing big tech companies and data center developers, said in a statement that the industry “provides significant benefits to states and local communities” in the form of local jobs, investment and tax revenue. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Guardian - April 12, 2026
Calls mount for California governor candidate Eric Swalwell to quit after multiple women accuse him of sexual assault – as it happened Congressman Jimmy Gomez, a Los Angeles Democrat who was the chair of Eric Swalwell’s campaign for the governship of California, resigned from that role on Friday and called on Swalwell to drop out. “Today I learned shocking information about Eric Swalwell containing the ugliest and most serious accusations imaginable,” Gomez said in a statement responding to the San Francisco Chronicle report that a former staffer had accused Swalwell of sexual assault. “My involvement in any campaign begins and ends with trust. I cannot in good conscience remain in any role with this campaign, and I am stepping down from it effective immediately,” Gomez wrote. “The congressman should leave the race now so there can be full accountability without doubt, distraction, or delay.” Antonio Villaraigosa, a Democratic former mayor of Los Angeles who has failed to gain traction in the race for the governor’s office, went further in his statement, calling for Swalwell to also resign from Congress. “Today’s reporting on the horrific allegations that Eric Swalwell abused his position and repeatedly sexually assaulted a staffer is shocking and reprehensible,” Villaraigosa said. “Further, Eric Swalwell’s attempt to silence victims to save his campaign for Governor – a campaign he was unfit to enter given these allegations – is a shameful disgrace to our democracy.” “Now that victims are finally being heard, it has become abundantly clear that Eric Swalwell must withdraw from the governor’s race and immediately resign from Congress,” the former mayor added. “In California, we believe women and no one is above the law.” > Read this article at The Guardian - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Politico - April 12, 2026
Trump is still trying to DOGE the NIH. Republicans are tired. White House budget director Russ Vought isn’t done trying to cut the National Institutes of Health’s funding, but Congress isn’t taking him seriously anymore. Vought released a proposal last week to slash the 2027 budget for the world’s largest funder of health research by 10 percent, down from 40 percent last year. It’s unlikely Congress or the agency’s head will listen to him. Lawmakers rejected Vought’s first big cut in the spending bill they passed in February and already promised to reject the smaller one this year. While Vought has succeeded in trimming spending at some other agencies, the NIH has proven a hard target because lawmakers have a symbiotic relationship with the agency. Most of the money they dole out is returned to their states for disease research, clinical trials and other medical advances — plus photo-ops with researchers boasting about their breakthroughs are a win with voters. The health research agency’s director, Jay Bhattacharya, is expected to defend the budget to Congress, but it’s unclear whether he stands behind cuts to his agency any more than Congress does. While other agencies, like the State Department, defied Congress and implemented Vought’s cost-cutting vision by not spending their budgets last year, Bhattacharya spent every dollar Congress gave him. Vought, considered one of the most powerful budget directors in recent history, held the same position during Trump’s first term. He’s used his second go-around to aggressively wield his budget tools to act as a chokepoint on government spending. But the NIH is likely to illustrate the limits on his power. Bhattacharya’s vision for the agency “doesn’t align” with the budget put forward by Vought, said Sudip Parikh, president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the world’s largest professional society for scientists. > Read this article at Politico - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Politico - April 12, 2026
The Trump ally cracking down on immigration in Washington — and bringing in foreign workers back home On Capitol Hill, Rep. Andy Harris is one of the most uncompromising advocates of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown. On the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay, the Maryland Republican is seen as a hero for securing foreign labor to power his state’s commercial seafood industry. The 69-year-old lawmaker, who chairs the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus and the subcommittee that funds the Department of Agriculture, has leveraged his influence as one of Washington’s most prominent hard-liners to lobby the White House in favor of a robust influx of temporary foreign workers. That meant convincing the Trump administration earlier this year to max out the number of guest workers allowed for the season, helping businesses throughout the country — including seafood producers in his district, who bring in workers from Mexico to hand-pick meat from the region’s blue crabs. “I’ve been in long enough to know how to get things done, and we got it done,” Harris told Jack Brooks, owner of the J.M. Clayton crab company, on a recent afternoon outside his facility along the Choptank River. It’s not just a parochial priority for Harris, who has grander ambitions to increase the number of seasonal workers who flow in and out of the country. He’s driving a debate within the Republican party about whether the president’s “America First” agenda means aggressively stemming the number of foreigners who enter the United States — both legally and illegally — or helping the U.S. economy with regulated foreign labor. Harris told Brooks he plans to build on his success by working to guarantee longtime H-2B employers get the positions they seek regardless of their luck in a yearly lottery. “We appreciate you out there battling on our behalf, for sure,” Brooks said to Harris. “I know you’re just one guy.” > Read this article at Politico - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NBC News - April 12, 2026
Cuba's president says 'we would die' to defend against U.S. invasion President Miguel Díaz-Canel stood by Cuba’s leadership and didn’t concede a need for any changes to its government amid President Donald Trump’s pressure campaign against the communist country. In a wide-ranging interview with NBC News’ “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker in Havana on Thursday, Díaz-Canel said there’s no “justification for the United States to launch a military aggression against Cuba.” “An invasion to Cuba would have costs. ... It would affect the security of Cuba, the United States and of the region,” he saidthrough a translator in his first American broadcast interview. “If that happens, there will be fighting, and there will be a struggle, and we will defend ourselves, and if we need to die, we’ll die, because as our national anthem says, ‘Dying for the homeland is to live,’” the Cuban president said. “Before making that decision, which is so irrational, there is a logic, that is, the logic of dialogue, to engage in discussions, to debate and try to reach agreements that would move us away from confrontation,” Díaz-Canel said. Welker asked Díaz-Canel whether he was willing to commit to responding to “key demands” from the U.S., including releasing political prisoners, scheduling multiparty elections and recognizing unions and a free press. “Nobody has made those demands to us, and we have established that in respect to our political system or constitutional order, these are issues that are not under negotiations with the United States,” Díaz-Canel answered, adding that those issues are “extensively manipulated.” Welker then pressed Díaz-Canel on the issue of political prisoners, asking whether Cuba would commit to their release and specifically naming Cuban rapper Maykel Osorbo, a Latin Grammy winner who has been in prison since 2021 for writing a protest song after thousands of Cubans took to the streets to protest conditions and shortages during the Covid pandemic.> Read this article at NBC News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fox News - April 10, 2026
Philadelphians aren't taking kindly to sharing sidewalks with delivery robots Philadelphia residents have been sharing sidewalks with robot delivery drivers for about a month, and they're not thrilled with the change. Uber Eats held a demo March 10 showing off Avride autonomous delivery robots, which officially launched in the city of brotherly love that same week. The robots were described as "the future of delivery," but the humans around them quickly began resenting the automated couriers. In late March, an Uber Eats delivery robot in Philadelphia's Center City neighborhood was kicked multiple times. The second time the autonomous delivery bot was kicked it toppled over, according to WPVI-TV, which noted that the people who attacked the robot put it on its wheels. The kicking incident occurred just after another viral incident in which someone sat on one of the robots. "When delivery robots are introduced in a new area, it’s quite common to see heightened curiosity from people around them. Some may try to ‘test’ how the robot reacts — for example, by stepping in front of it or attempting to interact with it directly," Avride, the company that makes the robots, said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. "This is a known and expected phase as people get used to the technology. These few cases of vandalism in Philadelphia did not affect our service area expansion plans. "The robots are designed to respond conservatively. In most cases, they will simply stop and wait if someone approaches or interferes, resuming their route only once the interaction has ended. In practice, these moments are usually brief — people tend to satisfy their curiosity within a minute or so and then move on. At the same time, we do not condone intentional damage or unsafe behavior toward the robots." > Read this article at Fox News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 12, 2026
Trump was watching a U.F.C. fight in Miami while Iran talks collapsed On Saturday evening, as Vice President JD Vance took a podium in Pakistan and said no deal had been reached to end the war in Iran, President Trump was in Miami watching a mixed martial arts fight. Mr. Trump spent several hours orbited by Secretary of State Marco Rubio; a few of his children; some Ultimate Fighting Championship officials; Sergio Gor, the U.S. ambassador to India; the recording artist Vanilla Ice; Dan Bongino, the former deputy director of the F.B.I.; and the manosphere shepherd Joe Rogan. He was surrounded by people, but Mr. Trump was somehow an isolated figure. People mostly circulated around him, checking in with updates and then leaving again. For the most part, Mr. Trump sat and impassively watched blood and saliva sprayed out from the fighters beating each other silly in front of him. It was unclear whether the president knew that negotiations had failed by the time he entered the arena for the U.F.C. event to a Kid Rock song and thunderous applause. He wasn’t tapping away on his phone — he left that to Mr. Rubio, who at one point leaned over to show the president his screen — and he didn’t betray disappointment or anger. He offered tight smiles for the cameras instead, and a thumbs-up for the winners. In fact, on his way to Florida, Mr. Trump had told reporters that it did not matter to him if a deal with Iran was reached or not: “We win, regardless,” he said. “We’ve defeated them militarily.” Which sounded a lot like everything he had said before negotiations began. The political reality facing Mr. Trump is grim, just as the economic reality facing Americans appears to be getting worse. Inflation is rising. Gas prices are eating into American paychecks, a direct result of a war Mr. Trump ordered. The president has responded to the pressure by attacking his critics and threatening his adversaries. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories San Antonio Current - April 10, 2026
Texas House Republicans struggling to go after quorum-busting Democrats for unpaid fines Republicans in the Texas House will meet to determine how to shake down Texas Democrats who still haven’t paid fines levied against them for breaking quorum to delay the summer’s redistricting vote. The GOP-controlled House Administration Committee will gather for a public hearing Friday morning, according to a meeting notice. Fort Worth Republican Charlie Geren, who chairs the panel, notified the Democrats of the fines they owe in January. The penalties are for their absence in House chambers during the August special session, which was scheduled at the behest of Texas Governor Greg Abbott to pass a mid-decade redistricting map favoring Republicans ahead of the midterms. More than 50 of the 62 House Democrats owe $9,200 each in fines or other penalties for fleeing the capital while the session was in progress. The charges include a $7,000 fee for being absent, plus another $2,000 to cover the $125,000 the state spent allegedly staking out Democrats’ homes with Department of Public Safety officers and tracking their movements in order to bring them back to Austin. San Antonio Rep. Josey Garcia even took to wearing disguises to evade DPS. After they returned to the capital, Democrats were placed under constant surveillance to ensure they wouldn’t depart again before the vote was passed. The fines faced by Texas Dems can’t be paid with campaign dollars, meaning members must dig into their own personal funds — all on a $7,200 annual paycheck. Democrats dispute how the penalties were calculated and are exploring legal options for resisting or reducing the fines, according to Democratic State Rep. Ramon Romero, who chairs the Mexican American Legislative Caucus. > Read this article at San Antonio Current - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNBC - April 10, 2026
U.S. oil climbs above $100 as U.S.-Iran ceasefire fails to boost tanker traffic via Strait of Hormuz Oil prices were higher on Friday amid persistent tensions around the Strait of Hormuz, with the vital shipping lane still largely closed despite a ceasefire deal between the U.S. and Iran. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures for May delivery gained 2.2% to $100.04 per barrel at around 5:25 a.m. ET, while international benchmark Brent crude futures for June delivery were up 1.7% at $97.59 per barrel. U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday warned Iran to "stop now" if it was charging tankers to transit the strait, a move that risks undermining a two-week ceasefire agreement that was contingent on reopening the waterway. Shipping flows through the chokepoint, which handled about 20% of global oil supply before the war, remained severely restricted, keeping markets on edge. "Iran is doing a very poor job, dishonorable some would say, of allowing Oil to go through the Strait of Hormuz," Trump said in a Truth Social post. Trump's top economic advisor Kevin Hassett said Thursday that getting even one oil tanker across the strait would provide a "huge chunk of what's missing." Adrian Beciri, CEO of DUCAT Maritime, a Cyprus-based logistics firm specializing in dry bulk, said the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed and the behavioural attitudes of shipowners and operators are "exactly the same today" as they had been at the peak of the conflict. "Quite frankly speaking, the situation is extremely chaotic. There is no known or established way to transit the Straits of Hormuz. There is even not a clear way to contact the Iranians on how to do it, which seems to be the only way at the moment," Beciri told CNBC's "Europe Early Edition" on Friday. > Read this article at CNBC - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 10, 2026
Developers pitch data centers’ benefits to Texas lawmakers in committee hearing Data center developers pitched state lawmakers on the benefits of the industry during the Texas House’s first data center-focused hearing. The Thursday meeting was the House State Affairs Committee’s first on the subject since receiving the interim charge late last month from House Speaker Dustin Burrows. It’s one of several data center-related topics being studied by lawmakers ahead of January, when the elected officials return to Austin for the next legislative session. The committee heard from several data center developers and energy industry officials about the current and projected data center landscape. Speakers, including developers with North Texas data center projects and representatives from electric companies Oncor and Vistra, touched on subjects such as connecting to the ERCOT power grid, water consumption, workforce development and community involvement during the roughly five-hour meeting. “I think we can see this as the next iteration of, kind of, the oil boom that happened in Texas,” said Haynes Strader, chief development officer at Dallas-based Skybox Datacenters, which has a project in Wichita Falls. As projects across Texas face pushback from residents, the data center industry professionals assured the lawmakers that they were working to be good community partners and would be beneficial to the economy. Lawmakers asked developers and industry representatives about how much water and power the centers require and what types of systems they use to cool their facilities. Many Texans have raised questions about the amount of power and water it takes to keep large data centers up and running. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 10, 2026
Democrats are sticking with embattled ActBlue but exploring other fundraising options Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue is under fire from Republicans — the subject of inquiries from both the Department of Justice and Congress — and fraught with internal drama in part chronicled this month in the New York Times. The thousands of left-leaning campaigns, party committees and political action committees that use ActBlue’s digital fundraising services are mostly sticking with the company — for now. But some argue that ActBlue’s legal and operational issues necessitate a more diverse digital fundraising strategy. ActBlue, after all, has a de facto monopoly on Democratic digital fundraising: The platform processes billions of dollars in donations every year from millions of individual donors and it’s become the default way left-of-center campaigns raise money online. “ActBlue has done a tremendous job, and I hope they continue to and I hope this is a blip for them, but I still think we should have a fallback for sure,” said Betsy Hoover, founder of Higher Ground Labs, a venture fund for progressive political technology, and President Barack Obama’s 2012 online organizing director. “In this moment it’s important to not have a single fail point anywhere in our infrastructure, particularly because the Trump administration is running a vengeance campaign and so no one is safe from that.” President Donald Trump singled out ActBlue in an April 2025 presidential memorandum regarding illegal donors and foreign contributions in elections. In Trump’s second term, ActBlue has also faced scrutiny from the Justice Department and Republicans in Congress. Even President Joe Biden’s 2024 presidential campaign reportedly considered ditching ActBlue. (It didn’t.) More recently, a New York Times report indicated ActBlue may have misled Congress in its responses to inquiries in 2023. “We knew ActBlue’s fraud prevention measures were wholly inadequate,” Rep. Jim Jordan, chair of the House Judiciary Committee, wrote on X. “Now we know ActBlue likely misled Congress.”ActBlue declined to comment on questions about competition and the investigations. Democratic campaign operative Jack Yao said while he believes the Republican investigations are “blatantly partisan,” he advises his clients to utilize multiple fundraising platforms in part because of the Trump administration’s scrutiny of ActBlue. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories Fox News - April 10, 2026
Rising Dem Talarico denies anti-cop label after 'culture of violence' comments exposed Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico is pushing back on the idea that he supports defunding the police, calling it a "flat-out lie." Republicans are confronting Talarico with resurfaced comments from a 2019 episode of the Trey Blocker Show, in which he suggests that a heavy police presence in schools without sufficient mental health professionals contributes to a "culture of violence." Democrats believe they have a shot at flipping the critical Senate seat blue for the first time in decades. But the GOP hopes to defend its Senate majority by highlighting Talarico's more controversial stances to undermine his moderate appeal. The latest to be unearthed is from the 2019 interview, in which Talarico decried plans to increase police officer presence in schools without also placing more emphasis on mental health. "We’re all concerned about school safety and recent school shootings, and that concern, in some ways, has been channeled unproductively toward militarizing schools and toward kind of leaning into a culture of violence and adding more law enforcement officials into campuses," he posited. As a solution, Talarico, a former middle school teacher,touted the first bill he introduced as a member of the Texas House of Representatives, which would have mandated a set ratio of mental health workers for every police officer placed in a school. He stressed that "if a crime has been committed, a law has been broken or there’s an immediate danger to students, of course, we want our law enforcement officials to address it," but emphasized that "law enforcement officials shouldn’t be conducting behavior interventions." Republican National Committee spokesman Zach Kraft called the bill "a scary combination of two of James Talarico's favorite things," which he said are "defunding the police and pushing his woke agenda on kids." Kraft told Fox News Digital that "Texans will have the same answer for Talarico at the ballot box that he had for police: 'We don't want you here.'" However, JT Ennis, a spokesperson for Talarico’s campaign, characterized the GOP criticisms as a falsehood. "James opposes defunding the police and has a proven track record voting to send billions of dollars to support law enforcement," Ennis told Fox News Digital.> Read this article at Fox News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 10, 2026
Democrats push to halt social studies overhaul, citing expert's outside funding Democrats are raising concerns about one of the outside experts helping overhaul the state’s social studies standards after it was revealed this week that he was paid to consult for a conservative think tank that is trying to influence the outcome. Donald Frazier, a history professor who runs the Texas Center at Schreiner University, received a $70,000 grant for the center from the group, the Texas Public Policy Foundation, in 2024. The next year, Frazier was reappointed by the GOP-led State Board of Education as one of nine content advisers for the overhaul. Democrats on the SBOE called for an investigation this week into whether the foundation was directly imposing its views into the process by paying or influencing an advisor. It said the rewrite process should be halted in the meantime. “The failure to disclose this funding to the entire SBOE is deeply troubling, raises serious ethical concerns, and casts doubt over the integrity of the entire review process,” the five members wrote in a letter to their colleagues. The incident highlights what appears to be a lack of ethics rules for the panel of content advisers, who have taken on a bigger role in the process this year that will determine what the state's 5.5 million public school students learn about history and major events. The state pays advisers a flat $10,000 stipend for their work, and does not require them to make any financial disclosures. It’s unclear whether others on the panel have received outside funding from groups or individuals with a stake in the outcome. Frazier described the grant as a one-time payment and part of a “consulting” project that his center provided to the foundation’s lobbying strategy on the overhaul. He denied that TPPF has played a role in his own involvement in the overhaul process, and said his work has drawn from his independent thinking and a 250-video series known as “E Pluribus Texas” that he developed prior to the consulting work. “We helped them get some of their Texas thinking fine-tuned,” Frazier said in an interview on Wednesday. “That’s the relationship, it was work-for-hire.”> Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 10, 2026
Lisa Falkenberg: For this renowned Houston lawyer, beating Meta and Google was a family affair All great trial lawyers have their thing: sharp elbows and sharper tongues, Shakespearean theatrics, homespun storytelling, superhuman powers of synthesis and, sometimes, a darn-near clairvoyant ability to read the furrows and fidgets in the jury box. Renowned Houston trial lawyer Mark Lanier has nearly all of these. After his epic performance against Meta and Google in a Los Angeles courtroom secured a $6 million verdict last month, news reports credited Lanier’s winning track record, his deft use of props and his pastor’s prowess with parables. (A recent Sunday school class he taught drew about 900 virtually and in person.) The 65-year-old Lubbock native with a bright, toothy smile has something else that few in his profession can boast: two lawyer daughters doing battle with him at the counsel table. Rachel Lanier, 35, based in Los Angeles, handled the casework and trial prep, and started the case before persuading her father to try it before a jury. Sarah Lanier, 27, who wanted to be a lawyer since the first grade and finally earned her license a little over a year ago, had interned for her father in the past and came on board to handle the five bankers’ boxes of documents and exhibits. “They see things I don’t,” Lanier, 65, says of his daughters. “They bring a value that I’d be a fool to ignore.” About a month into the high-stakes trial testing whether Silicon Valley goliaths can be held liable for harmful social media addiction on their platforms, Mark says his daughter Rachel picked up on something in a psychiatrist’s testimony. The Laniers’ 20-year-old plaintiff, referred to by her initials or her first name, Kaley, to protect her privacy, started using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9 for hours on end, often in the middle of the night when her mother was unaware. She blamed habitual use during childhood for her symptoms of depression, anxiety, social withdrawal and diagnosis of body dysmorphia. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 10, 2026
Bud Kennedy: Dan Patrick blames Republicans for Fort Worth loss. Will that work this fall? Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick thinks he knows why Fort Worth elected a Democrat to the Texas Senate. He knows exactly whom to blame: Republicans. To Patrick, you are a Bad Republican if you don’t vote for any hardline MAGA candidate chosen by the party poobahs or backed by the two West Texas guys who spend their oil billions trying to impose Christian theocracy. On the other hand, if you march to the polls in November and vote for every Republican, even the ones who want the government to round up and deport one-third of the U.S. or prosecute in vitro fertilization as if it’s mass murder, then you are an Official Dan Patrick Good Republican. In recent speeches, including a major appearance in Austin, Patrick has repeatedly blamed Republican voters and a third-place Republican candidate for the party’s Jan. 31 loss in a special election runoff to fill the Fort Worth state Senate seat. If you’re one of the 21,699 voters who chose one of two Republican candidates in the Nov. 4 special election but then either didn’t show up in the runoff — or, like 1 out of 5 Republicans, outright rejected the party’s candidate — then to Patrick, YOU are the problem. YOU are what’s wrong with the Republican Party, Dan says. Not the party’s choice of flawed candidates. Not its ongoing MAGA lurch. Not its insistence on teaching Bible scripture in public schools and hanging Ten Commandments posters as political force-fields, but not showing living witness for love, grace or Christian faith. Patrick continues to single out Southlake Republican Leigh Wambsganss’ loss to Fort Worth Democrat Taylor Rehmet on Jan. 31 in a Senate district dominated in 2024 by President Donald Trump. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Border Report - April 10, 2026
US withheld Big Bend border barrier plans, lawsuit alleges Two nonprofits are suing U.S. Customs and Border Protection for information on border wall construction through Texas’ Big Bend region. The Center for Biological Diversity, and Texas Civil Rights Project on Tuesday announced the federal lawsuit that alleges the government withheld public records on construction plans for border barriers through Big Bend National Park and Big Bend State Park, as well as the surrounding region. “The records at issue document the planning, proposed construction, and stated justifications for a project that will build hundreds of miles of border wall through irreplaceable wilderness along the Rio Grande River,” the 14-page lawsuit says. “This lawsuit seeks to expose the federal government’s plans to rip away the livelihoods of rural Texas families with a wall that no one here wants,” said Laiken Jordahl, national public lands advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity. The Big Bend Border Patrol Sector encompasses over a quarter of the entire 1,954-mile Southwest border with Mexico and is an area that draws eco tourism for its rugged natural beauty, trail hiking, water rapids and outdoor sports. In 2024, Big Bend National Park had over 561,000 visitors and generated $57 million to the local economy, and $63 million in economic output to the region, according to a March 12 letter by the Center for Biological Diversity and 131 other organizations and nonprofits sent to several lawmakers to garner their support for putting a stop to the wall Jordahl appeared on an episode of Border Report Live last month in which he said even if the government amends its original plans and converts to installing technology, instead of physical steel wall barriers, that it would likely hurt eco-tourism because outfitters and sports enthusiasts won’t want to be recorded while enjoying nature. And he says wildlife will still be affected. > Read this article at Border Report - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Covering Katy News - April 10, 2026
Erica Kouros: What people get wrong about virtual school — and why it matters (Erica Kouros is the Executive Director of the Digital Academy of Texas and a former brick-and-mortar classroom teacher based in Katy, Texas.) When Katy ISD announced plans to launch a virtual high school this fall, I wasn't shocked. I was gratified — because it confirmed what those of us already working in virtual education have known for years: this is not a trend. This is a transformation. I spent years teaching in traditional brick-and-mortar classrooms in Texas. I loved it. I also watched students fall through the cracks — kids whose talents, circumstances, or schedules simply didn't fit the structure we put them in. When I joined the Digital Academy of Texas, a tuition-free, fully accredited online public school serving students in grades 3–12 statewide, I wasn't walking away from teaching. I was finding students whose potential just needed a different environment to thrive. Katy ISD's entry into full-time virtual education is part of a much larger shift happening across Texas, accelerated by the legislature's passage of Senate Bill 569, which opened the door for districts to expand virtual learning options statewide. More families are choosing virtual school every year. And with that growth comes a surge of misunderstanding about what virtual school actually is — and isn't. As someone who lives in this community and works in this field every day, I want to address a few of them directly. Claim: Virtual school is a COVID invention. No. Virtual schools have operated in Texas for a quarter century. COVID didn't create them — it introduced millions of families to them for the first time. Many of those families never went back. That's not inertia. That's a preference worth respecting. Claim: Virtual school is not academically serious. Virtual schools offer AP courses, dual enrollment, honors classes, and career and technical education pathways. Our students at the Digital Academy of Texas win national competitions, earn college credits, and enroll in four-year universities. Academic rigor doesn't require a physical building. It requires great teachers and high expectations. We have both. Our curriculum is TEKS-aligned, and students still take the STAAR in person — the same assessment as every other Texas public school student. And as funding has shifted from completion-based to Average Daily Attendance (ADA), virtual schools are now accountable for consistent, day-to-day participation, not just whether a student finishes a course. > Read this article at Covering Katy News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 10, 2026
Thomas Graham: Texas is now a national leader in biosciences. Here’s how we keep winning (Thomas Graham is the CEO of Crosswind Media & Public Relations. He facilitated a discussion with economic development leaders from Texas’s major cities during the recent Texas Healthcare & Bioscience Institute Life Sciences Summit.) Just over three years ago, Texas did something few thought possible. In securing a national investment from the newly launched federal Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, or ARPA-H, our state outmaneuvered competitors not just with assets, but with something far more rare: alignment. As The Dallas Morning News reported at the time, Texas “licked partisan politics and regional rivalries” to land one of the most coveted bioscience hubs in the country, which now calls Pegasus Park home. That moment should not be viewed as an exception. It should be understood as a model. Earlier this month, at the Texas Healthcare & Bioscience Institute Life Sciences Summit in Austin, the state’s rising stature as a biosciences powerhouse was on full display. And notably, Dallas continues to lead the way. When asked to highlight recent developments in the Dallas economic development landscape, the Dallas Regional Chamber’s Kelly Cloud paused and responded with a telling question: “How much time do I have?” It was not a throwaway line. It was a reflection of momentum. From advanced pharmaceutical logistics and cold-chain infrastructure to major expansions from global companies and a deep bench of research institutions, North Texas has become one of the most dynamic life sciences markets in the country. According to the latest statewide data, Texas now ranks among the top states in bioscience investment, with North Texas playing a central role in that rise. But what stood out most in Austin was not any single announcement or statistic. It was the tone of the conversation. Across Houston, Dallas, Austin and San Antonio, there was a clear recognition that Texas wins when it acts as one. “We compete, but we also collaborate,” Cloud said, noting that major projects like Eli Lilly’s $6.5 billion investment were pursued by multiple regions but ultimately represent a win for the entire state. > Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Defender - April 10, 2026
Texas school district CFOs sound alarm on funding crisis The numbers coming out of the Texas School Districts’ Perspectives at this year’s Houston Investor Conference were stark. Across four of Texas’s largest school districts, Houston, Dallas, Austin, and Cypress-Fairbanks ISDs, chief financial officers gathered at the event organized by City Controller Chris Hollins’ office. They described a system under financial strain, underfunded by the state and forced into increasingly hard choices about staffing and the future of public education. For HISD, the infrastructure crisis is waiting to be resolved. Dr. James Terry, Chief Finance and Business Services Officer at HISD, said the district is on track to balance its budget this year, a significant turnaround after facing a deficit that once reached $528 million. The progress, however, comes with difficult decisions, including school consolidations tied directly to financial realities. Additionally, HISD’s $4.4 billion bond proposal failed at the ballot in November 2024. But if HISD were to seek another bond, public support would be crucial to pass one, Terry added. “The bond’s going to have to rise from the people,” Terry told the Defender. “That’s the only way. Somebody’s got to become kind of the hero and say, ‘the school district needs a bond.’” In reality, he added, HISD’s needs far exceed that bond amount. “We have $10 billion worth of need,” he said. “We use duct tape to keep our HVAC systems together. And we’ve got portables. The need truly is there.” Per Terry, most school districts seek a bond every five years. But HISD has not had one since 2012. In a similar move, Eduardo Ramos, Deputy Superintendent of Business Services for Dallas ISD, said his district has also proposed a $6.2 billion bond package for voter approval on the May 2 ballot. This measure, if passed, would become the largest school bond request in Texas history. He said Dallas ISD had spent a year building a facility scoring system that evaluated every building on physical condition and educational relevance, then structured the program across phases to minimize tax rate impact. The bond funds would be used to upgrade safety systems, expand physical education and athletic facilities, and purchase new school buses, among other things.> Read this article at Houston Defender - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 10, 2026
Granbury hid data center details, residents’ lawsuit alleges Four Granbury and Hood County residents are taking legal action over the city’s handling of a data center proposal that has ripped at the fabric of public trust in the idyllic North Texas town along the Brazos River. The lawsuit was filed Monday in Hood County in Texas’ 355th District Court against Granbury Mayor Jim Jarratt, City Manager Chris Coffman, Mayor Pro Tem Bruce Wadley and the members of the Granbury City Council. The suit claims the city violated the Texas Open Meetings Act after Granbury leaders took a tour of a data center in Dallas days before a contentious meeting Jan. 6, where the city council approved the annexation of nearly 2,000 acres that straddle Meadow Wood Road, south of U.S. 377 and north of Paluxy Highway. On Tuesday, the Granbury City Council voted to rezone the acreage for a data center power plant. At that meeting, Jarratt and Coffman denied that the City Council knew about Dallas-based developer Bilateral Energy LLC’s plans before the annexation request went to the council. Coffman told the Star-Telegram this week that although the city was interested in a data center development he dubbed “Project Patriot” and had spoken with representatives from Bilateral, he said he did not know what company they were with, and the city didn’t formally cinch a deal. The lawsuit, filed by attorney Steven Dias with the firm Dias Hall, seeks a permanent injunction, a temporary restraining order, and a jury trial, in addition to reversing the annexation of the acreage and compensating residents for the loss of property values and the “enjoyment of their homes.” > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 10, 2026
Dallas investigating two IT officials who were also employed in Austin at the same time Two Dallas officials are under investigation for moonlighting at Austin City Hall, according to the inspector general’s office. Employeesfrom the city’s IT department also held jobs in Austin, the office said. Dallas officials began investigating the case in November after the city’s inspector general office received a tip through its whistleblower line. Interim Inspector General Baron Eliason had also notified Austin about the allegations. “City Manager Tolbert directed the IT department to take appropriate action. Officials have found no breach of the Dallas IT system or loss of data, and an outside firm performed an inspection to ensure the system is secure,” a statement from the inspector general’s office said. The case is now with the Dallas Police Department’s public integrity unit, since the current state law does not give the inspector general the regulatory power to go after criminal cases. The city did not disclose the names of the officials implicated. Austin officials told The News they were still reviewing the case. “This was not related to any known cybersecurity threats or issues with information security,” said Erik Johnson, a city of Austin spokesperson. Deputy Mayor Pro Tem Gay Donnell Willis, chair of the ad hoc committee on general investigating and ethics, said while the investigation was still underway, the revelation was “a win for voters.” In November 2024, a year before the inspector general began investigating the issue, residents overwhelmingly voted to separate the inspector general’s office from the city attorney’s supervision and make it independent. The city was also searching for a new inspector general, but officials ended up hiring a former federal official who did not have a background as an attorney, a requirement in the ballot measure voters approved. The executive was later let go. Since then, the former inspector general, Bart Bevers, sued the city for wrongful termination and the city is still looking for a permanent head.> Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Click2Houston - April 10, 2026
Attorneys rally at Harris County courthouse as viral judge backs down All eyes were on a Harris County courtroom Thursday after a judge who recently went viral for his courtroom behavior ordered an attorney to appear before him — but ultimately took no action when that attorney didn’t show up. The controversy centers around Harris County Civil Court Judge Nathan Milliron, who drew widespread attention after videos surfaced showing a tense exchange with an IT worker and attorneys inside his courtroom. Following that incident, attorney James Stafford emailed the judge, urging him to apologize. In response, Milliron ordered Stafford to appear in court at 8 a.m. on April 9. Stafford refused, saying the order was not legally valid. “The email is not a valid order, it has no legal enforcement,” Stafford previously told KPRC 2. While Stafford did not attend Thursday’s hearing, more than a dozen attorneys — including members of the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) — showed up in support and to monitor the situation. KPRC 2’s Jaewon Jung was at the courthouse as events unfolded. At 8:09 a.m., the courtroom doors remained locked, despite the judge’s directive for an 8 a.m. appearance. The courtroom eventually opened around 8:30 a.m. Attorneys said their presence was intentional. “If the judge wanted to do something because Mr. Stafford didn’t show up, we wanted to be here because there are certain procedures that would have to be followed,” said Brent Mayr, president of the HCCLA. No action was taken against Stafford. “It appears that no action is going to be taken, no further action anyway,” said Wade Smith, chair of the organization’s Strike Force Committee. “I think our purpose is largely done.” > Read this article at Click2Houston - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KIIITV - April 10, 2026
Eyes on the election: Corpus Christi could see entirely new City Council next year As drought conditions continue to dominate state and local headlines, attention is turning to the Corpus Christi City Council and how it is handling the city’s worsening water situation. “Incumbents are going to have a case that they're going to have to make as to why they should be kept in office with the situation being so dire,” said political analyst Dr. Bill Chriss. Chriss says that for those running for City Council in the upcoming general election, industry experience will play a major role in determining who wins a seat. “Prior connections to city operations and can demonstrate some credibility -- with respect to solving problems. (That person) is going to have a leg up,” he said. With mounting pressure from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and a recent drop in the city’s credit rating from stable to negative, there is uncertainty surrounding Corpus Christi’s ability to secure water resources in a timely manner. Chriss says voters are looking for stability. “I think we're going to have a relatively high turnout this year because I think people are motivated to vote,” he said. Former Corpus Christi Fire Chief Robert Rocha has officially announced his run for the District 3 seat. With 12 years leading one of the city’s largest departments, Rocha says his experience sets him apart. “I was the Fire Chief during Hurricane Harvey, during the ice storm, during the water shortages before, during the water boils -- I was part of the executive team making decisions," he said. "I've got experience making decisions, I don't have any problem doing that." Chriss says it is still too early to determine who may have a solid advantage in the general election. He also expects the mayoral race to be a close one. > Read this article at KIIITV - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin Business Journal - April 10, 2026
California or Texas? Drone shipbuilder narrows field for $3B factory search A big defense-tech startup that develops autonomous ships for the military is zeroing in on a location to build a shipyard for its naval drones. Austin-based Saronic Technologies Inc. had been looking across the nation for a site to build its primary factory, Port Alpha, which could bring thousands of jobs and an economic impact greater than $3 billion. Sources told the San Francisco Business Times it is seriously considering both Texas and California. The startup met with senior leaders at California Forever, county officials, the Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development and other regional stakeholders Monday to discuss potentially establishing Port Alpha in Solano County. The site in question is near Collinsville, part of the 1,400-acre stretch of land along the Sacramento River delta’s industrial waterfront where California Forever wants to build the nation’s largest shipyard. "We did meet with Saronic, we are in contention for Port Alpha,” Chris Rico, CEO of the Solano Economic Development Corporation, told the Business Times. “It's been reported that it’s down between us and Brownsville, Texas, and it's a potential $3 to $5 billion investment.” Saronic said in a statement to the Business Times that its nationwide search for a location to build Port Alpha “remains active and ongoing." A California Forever spokesperson confirmed that it had met with a “major shipbuilder” to discuss a major new project in Solano County alongside the governor’s office, Cal Poly Maritime Academy, Napa-Solano Building Trades Council and the Solano Economic Development Corporation. “While the details remain part of an active RFP process, the level of engagement reflects growing momentum around a significant economic development opportunity for Solano,” the spokesperson said. Saronic in February filed economic incentive applications in Texas, where it is also looking at the Port of Brownsville in South Texas, near Elon Musk’s SpaceX launch site, Starbase. Those applications detail potential plans for a $3.2 billion project that would create 10,000 jobs in four phases over a 10-year period. > Read this article at Austin Business Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 10, 2026
Cowboys extending lease with City of Arlington to 2055, mayor says In a meeting with the Star-Telegram editorial board on Thursday, Arlington mayor Jim Ross announced that the city is finalizing a lease extension for the Dallas Cowboys and AT&T Stadium to 2055. The original lease signed in 2009 was set to expire in 2039, but that has now been extended out by 16 years. Here is the quote from Mayor Jim Ross to the Star-Telegram: “A huge project that will hit the agenda next week is we’re extending the Cowboys’ lease here in Arlington to 2055. That is a phenomenal deal, because that means the small business around the entertainment district, and everybody else, has now 30 more years of having the Cowboys here in Tarrant County and the Cowboys here in Arlington. We are super stoked about what’s going on, and we have tremendous momentum.” “We are always working with the city to make great things happen,” Dallas Cowboys senior vice president of communications Tad Carper said. He declined to comment any further citing respect for the review process that is still taking place regarding the extension plan. Effectively, this extension gives AT&T Stadium a lifespan that will last at least 46 years, as long as the Cowboys decide not to tear down and rebuild on the same site. However, the stadium has stood up to the test of time over its first 17 years of existence and is still viewed as one of the marquee venues around the NFL and in the United States. This summer, the venue will host nine matches in the FIFA World Cup, more than any other venue in the tournament. It has also hosted a Super Bowl in 2011, NBA All-Star Weekend in 2010, the NCAA Men’s Final Four in 2014, a College Football Playoff National Championship in 2015 and has become the new permanent home of the Cotton Bowl since 2010. In anticipation of the World Cup, the Cowboys made a nine-figure renovation to the stadium to upgrade suite areas and to enhance video boards. The facelift has allowed the venue to bring the high-dollar standard of newer stadiums around the league back to AT&T Stadium. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
WFAA - April 10, 2026
Mavericks CEO: Decision on new Dallas stadium site expected by July The CEO of the Dallas Mavericks confirmed Thursday that the looming deadline is the month of July for the team and the City of Dallas to come to terms on a new home and entertainment complex site for the team. But the NBA Hall of Fame inductee did not tip his hand, which site his bosses prefer. Mavs CEO Rick Welts was the guest of honor at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the North Dallas Chamber of Commerce at the Hilton Anatole. In a Q&A session with Ollie Chandhok, president and publisher of the Dallas Business Journal, Welts agreed to talk about the future of the organization in limited detail. "We want to be the team that actually wears Dallas on the jersey and is in Dallas somewhere, right," Chandhok asked as the crowd of business leaders and Dallas-area politicians applauded the question. Welts who, among his 40-plus years of NBA accolades, guided the Golden State Warriors ownership in the development of the Chase Center in San Francisco, confirmed again that the site of the former Valley View Center property in North Dallas (Preston Road and LBJ Freeway) that the Adelson/Dumont families already own, is a potential location for a new 50-acre stadium and entertainment complex. So is the current site of Dallas City Hall, a location he prefers to call the "downtown site." "We love the idea of a downtown site," Welts said. "And, you know, we are on the clock. And whether or not that's going to come to fruition is really going to be where we can get with the city between now and July, and trying to figure out if there's a path forward there." July because the Mavs ownership needs five years to have a new stadium built by 2031, the year their lease ends at the American Airlines Center. They want the Mavs to play in a sports complex the company owns and operates, along with hotels, restaurants, retail space, and an additional performance venue. > Read this article at WFAA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories Wall Street Journal - April 10, 2026
White House warns staff not to place bets on prediction markets amid Iran War The day after President Trump announced a sudden pause of strikes against Iran last month, the White House warned staff against improperly leveraging their positions to place well-timed bets in futures markets. The warning came in a staff-wide email from the White House Management Office on March 24, according to people familiar with the matter. The day before, Trump had announced the pause via Truth Social. About 15 minutes before the sudden shift in policy, a mysterious flurry of activity kicked off in the futures markets. More than $760 million worth of oil futures contracts changed hands in less than two minutes, according to Dow Jones Market Data. More recently, three accounts on Polymarket earned more than $600,000 by correctly betting on the timing of this week’s Iranian cease-fire. Critics of the president, including many Democrats, promptly inferred that someone was profiting from advance knowledge of the policy shift. The White House confirmed the authenticity of the warning, with Trump spokesman Davis Ingle telling The Wall Street Journal that “the only special interest that will ever guide President Trump is the best interest of the American people.” There is no evidence of leaks or that anyone within the administration is using inside information for well-timed bets. But federal employees and the politically connected now face a new temptation in the form of crypto-based prediction markets. Prediction markets allow users to bet on everything from sports to world events, and cash out, anonymously. Ethics rules already prohibit executive workers from gambling while on federal property, and there are rules on the books barring the use of government information for private gain. A senior administration official who received the email described the warning as a timely “refresher” given the fact that suspicious monster bets in futures markets are “hot in the news.” > Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Hill - April 10, 2026
DNC panel rejects AIPAC-specific resolution, advances broader measure condemning dark money A Democratic National Committee (DNC) panel voted on Thursday to reject a resolution condemning “the growing influence” of dark money and corporate-backed outside spending in Democratic races, particularly the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). At the DNC’s spring meeting in New Orleans this week, the resolutions committee voted to kill the push, which would have been nonbinding, as scrutiny over the pro-Israel lobby grows amid the midterms. “The use of massive outside spending to support or oppose candidates based on their positions regarding international conflicts or foreign governments raises concerns about undue influence over democratic debate and policymaking, potentially constraining elected officials’ ability to represent the views of their constituents,” reads the resolution, submitted by Florida DNC member Allison Minnerly, pointing out AIPAC in particular for spending some $14 million in the Illinois Democratic primaries last month. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D), who was once an AIPAC donor, condemned the group after the primaries — joining a growing number of Democrats once supportive of AIPAC who have turned on the political powerhouse over its involvement in elections this year. While the panel on Thursday voted to recommend a broader resolution condemning the influence of dark money in the 2026 Democratic primary elections, it did not specifically call for AIPAC contributions to be rejected, though the attitude was largely implied. The resolution calls for “robust” campaign finance transparency and says the DNC “reaffirms its commitment to campaign finance practices that align with the Party’s core values.” It further adds that the aspects of the resolution “shall inform the development of the 2028 Democratic Party Platform.” > Read this article at The Hill - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 10, 2026
Trump attacks Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly over Iran War criticism President Trump on Thursday assailed Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly and two other leading conservative podcasters who oppose the war in Iran in a blistering 482-word Truth Social post that insulted his critics in starkly personal terms. The president reserved some of his sharpest attacks for Candace Owens and Alex Jones, two conspiracy-minded conservatives who in recent days have called for Mr. Trump to be removed from office. The president had faced weeks of criticism from all four media figures, but had largely ignored them until Thursday. “They have one thing in common, Low IQs,” the president said of the four media figures. “They’re stupid people, they know it, their families know it, and everyone else knows it, too!” Mr. Trump set off a fresh round of criticism from the group with a profane post on Easter Sunday in which he declared that Iran would be “living in Hell” if it did not move to open the Strait of Hormuz, the vital shipping route that has been shut down during the war. Mr. Carlson, who appeared particularly bothered by the Easter statement, described Mr. Trump’s threats to Iran as “evil” and called on members of the Trump administration to stand up to him. “Now is time to say no, absolutely not, and say it directly to the president: No,” Mr. Carlson said on his podcast. On Tuesday, after Mr. Trump threatened to wipe out the Iranian civilization, Mr. Jones posted that Mr. Trump sounded “like an unhinged super villain from a Marvel comic movie.” Ms. Kelly asked: “Can’t he just behave like a normal human?” In his post on Thursday, Mr. Trump described Mr. Carlson as a “broken man,” saying he has “never been the same” since his dismissal from Fox News in 2023. He revived a long-running feud with Ms. Kelly over a question she asked during a debate in 2015 regarding statements he had made about women, writing that she had treated him “nastily.” > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 10, 2026
Trump once talked tough with China. Now he’s playing nice. When Pentagon officials last fall briefed President Trump on a draft of a bureaucratic defense strategy document, it framed China the same way it had for a decade: as the top security threat facing the U.S. Trump balked and ordered his Pentagon deputy to rewrite it, according to three officials familiar with the exchange. When the administration’s revised National Defense Strategy published in January, it offered instead a conciliatory tone toward Beijing. “President Trump seeks a stable peace, fair trade, and respectful relations with China,” an unclassified version of the document declares. While every administration crafts its own defense strategy, Trump’s second is making the unusual move of discarding a policy that was formulated by his first. That bipartisan approach sanctioned by Trump 1.0 characterized China as the most consequential U.S. adversary. The Trump 2.0 framework is instead a seismic shift in U.S. policy, trade practices and rhetoric toward Beijing driven by a new mantra: Don’t rock the boat. Since Trump met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in the South Korean city of Busan in October, the administration has paused hefty tariffs planned on Beijing’s most prized industries; abandoned plans to penalize Chinese companies determined to be security risks to the U.S.; curbed investigations into Beijing-linked hackers; waved through Chinese investment in the U.S. with little scrutiny; and told officials to tone down their comments on China, current and former U.S. officials familiar with the changes said. > Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 9, 2026
Red states are pausing their gas taxes to blunt the impact of Trump’s Iran war Indiana Gov. Mike Braun announced Wednesday that he would temporarily suspend his state’s gas tax, making it the latest red state to take action to lower prices at the pump after oil costs skyrocketed amid the war in Iran. “I am declaring a gas tax holiday to give Hoosiers relief from the pain at the pump from high gas prices. Affordability is my top priority,” Braun said in a press release. Gas prices in Indiana hit an average of $4.14 per gallon on Wednesday. Braun said his emergency declaration to suspend the 7% usage tax on fuel for 30 days is expected to save residents a combined $50 million, according to IndyStar. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a state House bill into law March 20 that suspended the collection of motor fuel excise tax until May 19. “Hardworking Georgians know best how to spend their money, not the government,” Kemp said in a press release. “That’s why I’m proud to sign these bills and, along with the General Assembly, deliver meaningful tax relief on top of the other measures we’ve taken in recent years. Because we budget conservatively, we can take steps like these that actually deliver on affordability issues for families in our state.” Utah also reduced the state’s gas tax by 6 cents per gallon, lowering it from 38 cents to 32 cents starting July 1 until the end of this year. “Utah is choosing an abundance mindset,” Gov. Spencer Cox said prior to signing the tax cut into law. “That means we don’t wait for problems to hit families at the pump or communities in a dry year. We build the partnerships and the infrastructure that keep life affordable and our state resilient. We owe our kids a future that is reliable, affordable, and firmly in our hands.” > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 10, 2026
Trump posts graphic video of deadly hammer attack in Florida, putting renewed focus on immigration debate An undocumented Haitian man has been charged with murder after repeatedly striking a woman with a hammer outside a convenience store in Florida last week, the latest immigration case thrust into the national spotlight by President Donald Trump. Rolbert Joachin, 40, is in custody and accused by authorities of killing the woman, who has not been publicly identified, during an interaction at a gas station in Fort Myers on April 2, according to court documents. The victim was working as a store clerk at the gas station, according to the documents. A man who knew the victim told CNN affiliate WBBH she was a member of the Bangladeshi community in Fort Myers. In a post on Truth Social Thursday evening, Trump shared shocking surveillance footage of the killing, calling it the result of immigration policies under former President Joe Biden and reiterated inflammatory rhetoric associating immigrants with crime. Trump’s amplification of the video is the latest in a yearslong campaign to use certain killings as apparent evidence for stricter border enforcement. “The video of her brutal slaying is one of the most vicious things you will ever see,” Trump said in his post, referring to the suspect as an “animal” and criticizing humanitarian protections previously granted for Haitians. Gruesome video of the interaction, also shared online by the Department of Homeland Security, shows a man repeatedly hitting the hood and sides of a car parked in the gas station’s parking lot with an object – an apparent hammer – in his hand. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Hollywood Reporter - April 10, 2026
David Zaslav’s $886 million Warner sale pay day under fire from proxy advisor suggesting shareholders vote “no” The influential shareholder proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services recommended that Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders reject the golden parachute pay packages for CEO David Zaslav and other top executives at the company, noting the “extraordinary” nature of the agreements. But ISS also urged shareholders to approve WBD’s sale to Paramount Skydance, writing that “the proposed transaction is the result of a competitive sales process and public bidding war between NFLX and PSKY, which provides shareholders comfort that the proposed deal is the best available.” With regard to the golden parachutes, shareholders have an advisory vote, meaning that even if they reject it, the payments may still go through. That said, companies are often responsive to shareholder concerns around pay. ISS notes that the cash severance for top executives other than Zaslav are “reasonable,” in both their size and in the fact that they are “double trigger,” meaning that two things have to happen in order for them to receive the payments: a sale triggering a change in control, and the executive leaving for “good reason” or terminated without cause. Instead, ISS focuses on Zaslav’s potential $886 million payout, a big chunk of which is composed of what ISS calls a “problematic” excise tax gross-up approved by the board last month. “Excise tax gross-ups represent an extraordinary cost that are inconsistent with common market practice, and most companies have eliminated such entitlements as a matter of good governance,” ISS writes in its recommendation. “The value disclosed in the golden parachute table for CEO Zaslav at over $886 million represents one of the highest golden parachute estimates ever observed,” though the proxy notes that this value may decline depending on merger timing. > Read this article at Hollywood Reporter - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 10, 2026
‘Hard to not feel scammed’: World Cup fans say FIFA misled them with ticket allocations, seat maps World Cup ticket buyers are accusing FIFA of “misleading” them with stadium maps that misrepresented the potential location of seats they were purchasing. Throughout the fall and winter, FIFA sold more than 3 million tickets to the 2026 World Cup. It priced the tickets in four categories, with each category corresponding to a range of sections at each stadium, per color-coded maps embedded in the ticketing portal and published online. The maps appeared to suggest that Category 1 tickets, the most expensive, could yield seats anywhere in a stadium’s lower bowl or, at some venues, in prime 200-level sections. But last week, when FIFA converted tickets to specific seats in specific sections, many fans received unfavorable placements, in corners or behind a goal. Some Category 1 ticket holders were placed in sections that, at one point, were color-coded as Category 2. And seat-selection maps on FIFA’s ticketing portal and resale site show nothing available in the most coveted sections — a strong indication, fans suspect, that no seats in those sections have actually been assigned to Category 1 buyers for at least some of the World Cup’s 104 games. Separate maps, meanwhile, suggest that many of those lower-level sideline sections supposedly within Category 1 are actually being reserved for hospitality packages. “A lot of people feel misled, or confused, or maybe just generally let down about the way seats were assigned,” Jordan Likover, one of the many aggrieved fans, told The Athletic. He said he scored Category 1 tickets in FIFA’s third lottery phase, but the seat assignments he received last week for two matches at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, were in sections assigned to Category 2 at the time of his purchase. “You can’t change the rules of the game after someone’s played,” he said. “Like, people paid expecting to be seated in one place. And then when they were assigned [seats], it’s changed.” FIFA, in an emailed response to a variety of questions, told The Athletic that its “indicative category maps” were “to help fans understand where their seats could be located within a stadium. These maps were designed to provide guidance rather than the exact seat layout, and reflect the general extent of each ticket category within the stadium.” It did not say why those maps did not reflect the hospitality allocations.> Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories San Antonio Express-News - April 8, 2026
Data center opponents put Ken Paxton in bind ahead of Senate runoff Last month, county commissioners in Fayette County, a deeply Republican area between Houston and Austin, approved a resolution opposing the development of data centers after word spread that tech companies were targeting the area. The push from cities and counties across Texas to slow the flood of data center development comes as Texas Republican leaders are heralding their arrival as another economic boom, putting pressure on Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to weigh in ahead of his runoff next month with U.S. Sen. John Cornyn. As the state's top lawyer, Paxton has been asked to weigh in on whether municipalities have the power to hold up data projects, pitting the Republican between top tech companies and their GOP supporters, including Gov. Greg Abbott and President Donald Trump, and the rural Texans who have long supported him. In conservative Hood County in North Texas, close to Paxton's home base, a flood of applications for the construction of data centers has drawn opposition among residents who worry the facilities, which require large volumes of water and electricity and often stretch across thousands of acres, will deplete the region's water supplies and drive up power prices. "The concern most people have is this new type of development is going faster than the speed of information coming to the public," said state Rep. David Cook, a Mansfield Republican. "People are looking for assurances that our water and power supplies are not going to be wiped out here." Hood County commissioners narrowly voted down a moratorium on data center construction in February but have, alongside other counties, sought Paxton's opinion on whether they can take such action. That followed a request from state Sen. Paul Bettencourt, a Houston Republican, for Paxton to uphold state law he says denies municipalities the ability to block data centers. Paxton declined to comment for this story.> Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 9, 2026
Patrick to Cornyn, Paxton: Unite after GOP runoff or risk November win by Talarico for Senate Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Wednesday that Sen. John Cornyn and Attorney General Ken Paxton must unite behind the winner of their runoff or risk handing the prize to Democrat James Talarico. “I'm making this challenge today,” Patrick said. “John Cornyn, if you lose, you need to endorse Ken Paxton and get your voters to support Ken Paxton. And Ken Paxton, if you lose, you need to endorse John Cornyn and get your voters to support John Cornyn.” His blunt warning: “Get over it, and come together as one.” If Republicans stay home in November, Patrick said, Talarico will win the general election for Senate. His remarks came during a keynote speech at the Texas Public Policy Foundation Summit, a gathering of conservative leaders organized by the influential think tank. It underscores the stakes of the May 26 runoff that has grown increasingly personal and divisive, with Cornyn and Paxton trading attacks that risk splintering Republican voters. Patrick’s message reflects a broader concern among GOP leaders that even a small drop in turnout or lingering resentment from the losing side could open a path for Democrats, making a typically safe Republican seat more competitive. “It troubles me,” Patrick said of the intraparty barrage, especially on TV and in social media. “I've run tough campaigns on policy, but I've never run a campaign on personally attacking anyone. And I'm not blaming Cornyn, I'm not blaming Paxton.” Patrick cited January’s special election for a Tarrant County state Senate seat as evidence of what happens when Republicans don’t back their nominee after campaigning against each other. Democrat Taylor Rehmet won the seat that had been held by Republicans for decades after Republican John Huffman did not endorse fellow Republican Leigh Wambsganss in the runoff. > Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 9, 2026
Trump allies, U.S. officials fear Iran victory lap is premature President Trump’s declaration of “total victory” in Iran left some close allies and several senior aides worried Wednesday that he is overstating what is a fragile cease-fire with Tehran, which remains capable of blocking ships in the Strait of Hormuz and attacking U.S. forces in the region. The president has been advised on the risks that could cause the cease-fire to crater and warned that Iran still retains dangerous military capabilities, according to multiple officials. More than half of Iran’s missile launchers have been destroyed, but a substantial number remain mostly buried deep underground, according to another U.S. official. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps also retains dozens of small boats that can threaten ships in the Strait of Hormuz, the official said, even as strikes have sunk more than 90% of Iran’s regular Navy. So far, those warnings haven’t tempered the administration’s insistence that it has the upper hand ahead of talks, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at a press conference calling the five-week operation a “military triumph.” Leavitt told reporters on Wednesday that Iran’s ability to build ballistic missiles and long-range drones had been set back by years, its naval mines mostly destroyed and its air forces “operationally irrelevant.” In a separate press conference, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. military achieved “every single objective, on plan, on schedule, exactly as laid out from day one.” Officials and military experts say Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities are indeed battered. But, they noted, Tehran still has significant capability. “It’s a variant of the “d” word,” said Behnam Ben Taleblu, senior director of the Iran program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “Iran has certainly been defanged, the regime’s capabilities have been degraded, but there’s a smaller group of things that have been fully destroyed.” White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said: “Iran’s ballistic missiles are destroyed, their production facilities are demolished, their navy is underwater, their proxies are weakened, and their dreams of possessing a nuclear weapon are gone.”> Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Observer - April 9, 2026
Does a swirl of vouchers and closures represent a spiral for Texas schools? As financial pressures force North Texas school districts to consider closing schools, public education advocates are sounding the alarm that vouchers could exacerbate the issue. Keller would join a growing number of North Texas ISDs planning to close schools, as well as those that have already shuttered campuses. Fort Worth ISD will close 18 schools through 2028, while inner-ring suburbs like Richardson have already closed several campuses. Ahead of the 2025-2026 school year, Frisco ISD closed John Staley Middle School, and McKinney ISD plans to close three elementary schools ahead of the 2026-2027 school year. With Keller joining the fray, it’s clear that once-fast-growing outer-ring suburban school districts are now facing the same financial issues as the urban schools many of their families moved to avoid. During the 89th Texas Legislative Session, lawmakers advanced a $8.5 billion funding package for public schools with the passage of House Bill 2. The legislation included the first per-student funding increase — an additional $55 per student — since 2019. But Texas still trails the national per-pupil funding average by roughly $4,000, according to the Texas State Teachers’ Association, and the bill includes strict requirements on how the funds can be spent. “Despite what the state says, we got an increase in the basic allotment of $55, and that nowhere covers the inflationary costs that not only KISD has incurred, but virtually every other school district in Texas,” Birt said. Districts’ financial woes largely come down to a single factor: enrollment. In the 2026 school year, statewide enrollment fell below five million students, the first decline since the COVID-19 pandemic, translating to the year-over-year (YOY) loss of over 76,000 students, according to TEA data analyzed by Texas 2036. According to another analysis of TEA data led by the Texas A&M Private Enterprise Center, more than half of Texas’ 1,000 school districts have seen enrollment declines in the last decade. Districts’ financial woes largely come down to a single factor: enrollment. In the 2026 school year, statewide enrollment fell below five million students, the first decline since the COVID-19 pandemic, translating to the year-over-year (YOY) loss of over 76,000 students, according to TEA data analyzed by Texas 2036. According to another analysis of TEA data led by the Texas A&M Private Enterprise Center, more than half of Texas’ 1,000 school districts have seen enrollment declines in the last decade. > Read this article at Dallas Observer - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories Galveston County News - April 9, 2026
Vic Fertitta, patriarch of Fertitta hospitality legacy, dies at 90 Joseph Victor “Vic” Fertitta Jr., a longtime Galveston restaurateur and an influential figure in the island’s tourism industry, died Wednesday morning, his family said. He was 90. “On behalf of the Fertitta family, it is with profound sadness that I share the passing of my father, Vic Fertitta,” Tilman Fertitta, the CEO of Landry’s and U.S. Ambassador to Italy and San Marino, said in a statement. “Vic was larger than life — not just in stature, but in his heart and welcoming spirit. He never met a person he didn’t greet warmly.” To many on the island, Fertitta wasn’t just a businessman. He was a fixture — the kind of man who could hold court with a story, make a stranger feel like family and, in the process, help shape the modern identity of Galveston’s tourism economy. Fertitta’s legacy was defined not only by business success, but by the way he treated people — a trait that shaped both his family and the generations who followed him into the hospitality industry, Tilman Fertitta said. Vic Fertitta spent his entire life on Galveston Island, building a reputation rooted in service, relationships and an unwavering commitment to the community he loved, Tilman Fertitta said. Tilman Fertitta described his father as the foundation of the family — a steady presence whose influence extended far beyond business ventures and into the lives of those around him. “He was a great father, a wonderful grandfather, a loving husband,” Fertitta said. “He will be deeply missed — not only by me and my brothers, Jay and Todd, but by our entire family and his many friends on the Island and beyond.” Those who knew him best say his greatest pride was never the success that followed, but the foundation he laid. “He was a family man,” said Steve Greenberg, a friend of more than 60 years. “He was loved by his family and by everyone that knew him. He loved Galveston. That was his biggest legacy.”> Read this article at Galveston County News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Examiner - April 9, 2026
John Cornyn: President Trump’s resolve is on display in Operation Epic Fury Iran has been the world’s No. 1 state sponsor of terror for decades. If we want to have fewer wars and a more peaceful, less dangerous world, a defanged Iranian regime is in everyone’s interest. Building on Operation Midnight Hammer last summer, President Donald Trump is serving America and the world with his actions toward Iran in Operation Epic Fury, and he deserves our support in this endeavor. Trump understands the art of the deal better than any modern head of state. Iran has prevented most shipping vessels from traveling through the Strait of Hormuz, precipitating a global energy crisis and proving its ambitions to undermine the economic security of all Western nations. In response, Trump has applied his resolute techniques to address the impact of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz while negotiating an end to the operation on terms that put America first. Legacy news outlets unfairly and prematurely decried some of Trump’s public posturing. But our president was doing what any shrewd businessman would do to bring a deal together: Apply credible pressure. By issuing a dramatic threat to the Islamic Republic of Iran, Trump was displaying masterful deal-making skills. He understands that the way to win over a bully is not to give in, but to stand up to him. Now, after largely decimating Iran’s military capabilities, President Trump has secured a two-week ceasefire that will allow oil tankers to once again pass through the Strait of Hormuz while he continues to negotiate to eliminate the threat Iran poses to the West. Operation Epic Fury has been extremely successful at mitigating the threat Iran poses to the security of the U.S. and our allies. More than 13,000 targets have been struck, including Iranian ballistic missile sites, ballistic missile and drone manufacturing facilities, weapons production and storage bunkers, and surface-to-air missile facilities. Iran has lost many of its missile launchers, and missile attacks have fallen by 90%. Iran’s navy is largely decimated, with more than 155 vessels have been damaged or destroyed. Operation Epic Fury is not a solution in search of a problem, or a benevolent undertaking for the sake of democracy-building around the world. Rather, this operation aims to ensure safety and stability for Americans and our allies by neutralizing one of the most significant threats to global security. The Islamic Republic of Iran supports proxy terrorist organizations like Hezbollah, Al Qaeda, Hamas, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as well as the Houthis in Yemen, who have been active in attacking shipping vessels in the Red Sea.> Read this article at Washington Examiner - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Dallas Morning News - April 9, 2026
Nearly $1 billion in data center construction slated south of Dallas Two data center firms are expected to spend nearly a billion dollars to add to their growing presence south of Dallas, according to state filings. Kansas-based QTS Realty Trust plans to build a two-story data center with an office at 1341 Sunrise Road in southern Dallas County. The estimated construction costs are $290 million. Work is expected to start in September and finish in December 2027, according to a filing with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. The project will add to QTS’ holdings in the area. The firm announced plans last year for two new data centers near the border of Wilmer and Lancaster. Construction costs for the project were an estimated $650 million. QTS’ new project would be right next door to Stream Data Centers’ 77-acre hyperscale campus in Lancaster. “QTS is invested in Texas, with data center campuses in Dallas-Ft. Worth, Irving, San Antonio and now Wilmer. We look forward to expanding our footprint to meet growing demand from our customers in the market,” the firm said in a statement. DataBank is expected to begin interior work on its DFW 10 and DFW 11 data centers on Stainback Road in Red Oak. The firm plans to fill out both two-story buildings with data rack containment, tenant storage and office space. The Dallas-based firm is expected to spend $301 million on the DFW 10 interior build-out. The project was registered with state officials in mid-March. The estimated completion date is January 2027. DataBank will spend an estimated $315 million on the DFW 11 additions. The project was registered March 30 and construction is expected to finish March 2027. The work is part of DataBank’s previously announced 480-megawatt campus on nearly 300 acres in Ellis County. > Read this article at Dallas Morning News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
12 News Now - April 9, 2026
Offshore drilling royalties deliver historic funding boost to Jefferson County coastline projects Jefferson County this year received more offshore oil revenue than ever before, money earmarked for coastal restoration projects to protect wetlands, reduce erosion and strengthen hurricane defenses. County Judge Jeff Branick spoke with 12News Tuesday afternoon. He said the county will receive about $1.6 million from federal offshore oil and gas royalties for 2025 under the Gulf of America Energy Security Act. That’s the county’s part of a record $460.9 million distributed to Gulf Coast states and local governments. Judge Branick said the money can only be used for coastal conservation and plays a critical role in protecting one of Texas’ most environmentally and economically important regions. “This is a huge shot in the arm,” Branick said. “It allows us to do more than we could with property taxes alone.” Over the past decade, the county has received more than $9.5 million through the program and used it to fund large-scale coastal protection efforts. Among the most significant is the McFaddin Beach and dune restoration project, a 17-mile effort designed to prevent saltwater intrusion into sensitive wetlands. Those wetlands serve as vital habitat for fish, shrimp and crabs and act as a natural buffer against hurricane storm surge. Branick said the county’s 138,000 acres of marshland also support one of the most productive seafood industries on the Texas coast. Funds from offshore royalties are typically combined with grants and partnerships with state and federal agencies, as well as conservation groups, to finance projects such as rebuilding dunes, restoring marshes, constructing oyster reefs and improving water flow to sustain vegetation. Branick said the county still has about $160 million in coastal projects awaiting funding, including efforts to restore the Texas Point National Wildlife Refuge and expand shoreline protection along key waterways. The amount of revenue counties receive each year depends largely on offshore lease sales and energy prices, with higher prices generating larger royalty payments. While offshore drilling remains controversial among environmental advocates, Branick said the funding helps offset its impacts by investing directly in conservation and resilience projects. “We rely on this to protect our coast,” he said. “It’s about making sure our natural resources and our economy can continue to thrive.” > Read this article at 12 News Now - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 9, 2026
Texas lawmakers hold hearing on ‘epidemic' of social services fraud as state increases scrutiny Texas policymakers spent almost eight hours discussing how to reduce fraud in social services programs, as state and federal pressure grow. The Senate Health and Human Services Committee heard from several state officials and more than 50 members of the public during an interim committee hearing Wednesday. The committee was tasked by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in January to “explore and recommend ways to prevent fraud and abuse” in programs like Medicaid. “We are dealing today with a health care epidemic, but not from a disease or virus,” said committee chair Sen. Lois Kolkhorst. “We’re examining [a] nationwide epidemic of fraud in health care.” She said with fraud “scandals” in Minnesota and California drawing national attention, Texas needs to examine its own system and see how it “measures up to other states.” Texas has one of the lowest Medicaid error rates in the country, according to Kolkhorst. “We’re better,” she said. “But do we need to improve? Absolutely.” Sen. Molly Cook, a committee member and an emergency room nurse, said she’s concerned about focusing on something the state is already doing well at. “Rather than focusing on things that we seem to be struggling with as a state,” Cook said. “Issues we should be tackling, like corporate health insurance holding Texans hostage, big pharma cartels driving up the prices for everyday Texans, and the lack of mental health services that we desperately need across the state.” Cook said the Texas Medicaid program mainly serves pregnant people, children and people with disabilities who have complex medical needs. That’s because Texas is one of the few states that have chosen not to expand Medicaid. “The effects will be devastating,” she said. “If [people with severe disabilities] do not have home assistance, their options are homelessness or jail.” > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KUT - April 9, 2026
Travis County votes to withhold 9% of Tesla's tax rebate for insufficient documentation The Travis County Commissioners Court voted Tuesday to withhold 9% of Tesla's tax rebate for 2020-2022 for “partial noncompliance with certain provisions” in the company's economic incentive deal with the county. “The big takeaway is we are holding Tesla accountable,” Travis County Commissioner Brigid Shea said at the meeting. The deal, which was finalized in 2020, offers Tesla up to 80% off the largest portion of its county tax bill in exchange for spurring economic growth in the region. The agreement requires Tesla to create at least 5,001 total new jobs, ensure at least half of all Gigafactory employees are Travis County residents and pay employees a living wage, among other stipulations. In 2020, the county estimated the deal would result in $14 million in savings for Tesla over the first 10 years of the agreement. Travis County Judge Andy Brown said while Tesla fulfilled many requirements of the contract, the company did not provide sufficient documentation to show it was complying with the “Green Building Program” section of the contract, which required Tesla to build the Gigafactory in an “environmentally conscientious manner” and strive to achieve zero emission energy ratings. Brown said the company also didn’t provide sufficient documentation to prove it followed certain construction site safety rules or paid minimum wages for contracted food and janitorial workers. > Read this article at KUT - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 9, 2026
Son of U.S. agriculture secretary named Texas A&M Head Yell Leader Luke Rollins, son of U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, will serve as the Texas A&M Head Yell Leader for the 2026-27 academic year, according to the university. He will lead a five-man Yell team, which serves as the school's top spirit leaders and lead crowds of Aggie fans in "yells," or chants, during athletic games and other events. Luke Rollins, a junior studying mechanical engineering, is a fourth-generation Texas A&M student, following in the footsteps of his mother, who served as the school's first female student body president in 1994, according to the university. She previously served under President Donald Trump in 2018 before co-founding the America First Policy Institute, a group that helped lay the groundwork for his second term in office, The Associated Press reported. Her office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Head Yell Leaders are selected through an application process that includes a resume review, essay and an interview panel with former Yell Leaders, according to a release from the university.> Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KXAN - April 9, 2026
Rabies cases rise in Hays County as CDC pauses some testing nationwide A spike in rabies cases continues to climb in Hays County with a total of 12 confirmed rabies cases just this year — the most in Central Texas. At the same time, a recent pause on certain rabies testing by the Centers For Disease Control And Prevention (CDC) raised questions about whether local testing could be impacted. “The CDC has paused testing for rabies and some other viruses as of late March early April. However, our state and local health departments have picked up the void and there will be no changes in testing in the state of Texas,” said Lauren Foye, Executive Director of Prevent A Litter of Central Texas or ‘PALS’. The spike is something that raises concerns for local pet owners. “I’ve heard about it. I just didn’t really know about the extent about how bad it’s been getting lately,” said Hays County resident and pet owner Danielle Deegan. The Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) tells KXAN the federal pause only applies to human rabies testing — and should not affect animal testing conducted through state labs. But local veterinarians say even without testing disruptions the rise in cases is a reminder for pet owners to stay proactive. “Even if we’re still testing, we want to prevent the exposure in the first place. We’re trying to slow down the cases of rabies in Hays County and surrounding areas. So the first offense, as always, is vaccinate your pets so that you’re not exposed to them,” said Foye. > Read this article at KXAN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Baptist News Global - April 9, 2026
Texas interfaith coalition speaks up for Muslims’ religious freedom As Republican elected leaders in Texas seek to limit the activities of Muslim organizations, an interfaith coalition has issued a plea to defend Muslim neighbors and their religious freedom. The open letter was created by George A. Mason and Nancy Kasten of Faith Commons, along with the Clergy League for Emergency Action and Response of Dallas/Fort Worth, also known as CLEAR DFW. What prompted the letter is escalating attacks on Muslims and Muslim organizations, including an April 6 demand from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton that a Dallas-based Islamic mediation group provide his office with documentation to prove they are not unlawfully acting as a court and imposing Sharia Law. Fighting the alleged imposition of Muslim judicial practices — which are not applicable in any U.S. court — is a key talking point of Republican politicians this year. Paxton and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott are among the key perpetrators of this warning. In a press release Monday, Paxton alleged the Islamic Tribunal — which issues mediations in internal disputes involving Texas Muslims — is operating a court system outside state and federal law. Many religious bodies — from Methodists to Mormons — offer services to mediate or even adjudicate internal disputes and disciplinary matters. Paxton’s declaration only targets Muslims. “Anyone or any entity that seeks to subvert the codified state and federal laws of this country will be stopped dead in their tracks,” Paxton said. “If the Islamic Tribunal is undermining the rule of law or misleading Texans about the legal authority it claims to hold, my office will ensure its operation is shut down. This is America, and we will not be governed by Sharia Law.” Earlier, Gov. Abbott instructed local and state officials in Dallas and Collin counties to investigate the Islamic Tribunal and other Islamic mediation groups.> Read this article at Baptist News Global - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CBS News - April 9, 2026
Fort Worth City Council discusses first responders workers' comp issues Just months after injured Fort Worth firefighter Caleb Halvorson's workers' compensation battle sparked outrage and questions about how North Texas cities treat first responders, the City of Fort Worth addressed concerns at a council meeting. Halvorson was part of a crew responding to a two-alarm house fire on the city's historic Southside last September, when the home's garage collapsed around him, leaving him crushed beneath debris and his body covered in burns. Halvorson is home now, recovering, still in therapy, and facing additional surgeries. But his case drew widespread attention after his family took to social media, alleging that workers' compensation had denied and delayed parts of his care. He said that while he's getting the care he needs now, it's been a "horrible, agonizing" process. After Halvorson's story became public, more than two dozen first responders came forward with similar accounts. On Tuesday morning, Fort Worth's director of human resources presented a 20-page overview of how the system is supposed to work, saying the goal is to treat employees with dignity and respect, and to provide high-quality medical care when first responders are injured in the line of duty. "Workers' compensation is in place to ensure employees who are, injured or become ill as a result of their work, that they receive treatment on timely care and in some situations, compensation, for their situations," said Director of Human Resources Kristen Smith. Fort Worth City Councilmember Charlie Lauersdorf said he doesn't believe there is ill intent when it comes to the workers' comp system, but that it's become clear to him that something has to change. "There's been more and more and more stories," Lauersdorf said at the meeting. "Thirty plus first responders have come directly to me."> Read this article at CBS News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
D Magazine - April 9, 2026
Stephens Greth Foundation gifts $100 million to UT Southwestern and Children’s Health The Stephens Greth Foundation has gifted $100 million to UT Southwestern Medical Center, Southwestern Medical Foundation, and Children’s Health to support the construction of the $5 billion pediatric joint-campus between the two systems. The facility is slated to open in 2031. “The Stephens Greth Foundation’s extraordinary generosity will have a profound and lasting impact on the future of pediatric health care in Texas,” UT Southwestern President Daniel K. Podolsky said. “This commitment will shape the future of pediatric care in Texas, advance innovative research, and enable us to train the next generation of caregivers—all to deliver the highest standard of care for children and families of all communities of North Texas and beyond.” The new campus, set to be across from UT Southwestern’s William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital in the Medical District, will feature a tower at the new Moody Children’s Hospital that is currently under construction. “Building a brand new, state-of-the-art pediatric hospital from the ground up in Dallas, where we’ve lived for over 30 years, to benefit the children of our community is a once-in-a-generation opportunity,” said Lyndal Stephens Greth, director and executive chairman of the foundation. “For our family, there was never really a question. We felt called to be a part of it—to be a part of helping every child have access to the level of care and support that can truly change their life.” The Stephens Greth Tower will connect to Clements University Hospital via a skybridge. This bridge will link the expanding Maternal Fetal Health Center to Moody Children’s Hospital on the new campus. The integration will enable immediate access to pediatric specialists and the NICU. Formed in 2024, the Stephens Greth Foundation originated out of the sale of Endeavor Energy Resources, founded by the late Autry Stephens. “My father had a sincere compassion and a strong sense of responsibility to others,” his daughter Lyndel said. “He cared deeply about community and creating opportunities that could make a lasting difference. Those values continue to guide our work today.” The new campus between UT Southwestern and Children’s will span more than 4.9 million square feet, including 552 beds across the three towers at Moody Children’s Hospital. The commitment from the Stephens Greth Foundation is the fourth record-setting gift of $100 million or more. > Read this article at D Magazine - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lone Star Standard - April 9, 2026
Kevin Lawrence: License plate readers help law enforcement save lives (Kevin has served as the Executive Director since 2010 and the Deputy Executive Director from 2000 to 2010 of Texas Municipal Police Association.) In 2025, 28,229 Texas children were reported missing. Among them, 62 were confirmed serious abductions that required AMBER alerts. For law enforcement, these cases turn a routine day into a race against time. When a child is missing, a human trafficking victim is moved across county lines, or a suspect flees the scene of a deadly hit and run, every minute matters. That’s why Texas law enforcement must have access to every responsible, effective tool available to protect our communities, including one of the most valuable resources in recent years - License Plate Reader (LPR) technology. LPR systems use cameras to capture license plates on public roadways, helping officers identify vehicles associated with reported crimes in real time. When a detected license plate corresponds with an entry in a wanted vehicle database, including stolen vehicles or AMBER Alert suspects, officers receive an immediate notification, allowing them to act quickly when it matters most. In human trafficking or kidnapping cases, victims can be quickly transported through countless jurisdictions. Traditional investigative methods can quickly become obsolete, reliant entirely on interviews and witness accounts. With LPR technology, law enforcement officers can identify suspect vehicles, track routes, and ultimately find and recover victims far faster than they could without this modern tool. Across the country, license plate readers are being used in thousands of communities to solve serious crimes from sex trafficking to fatal DWI incidents. And while Texas is a tough-on-crime state committed to seeking justice for victims and punishing criminals, some state and municipal leaders are questioning the need for law enforcement to use LPRs. > Read this article at Lone Star Standard - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The Courier - April 9, 2026
Conroe ISD cuts some programs as dropping enrollment creates $8M budget shortfall Conroe ISD is working to mitigate an $8 million budget deficit as the district faces its first decline in enrollment in almost 10 years. The district isn't reducing staff but is making cuts to programs such as Communities in Schools, its Japanese language program and its instructional coaches model to save money, Conroe ISD officials said this week. Other districts across the Houston region are facing similar shortfalls, forcing school closures and layoffs. Superintendent David Vinson said while Conroe ISD remains strong, it is not “immune to these statewide trends" in a February email to staff obtained by the Chronicle. “This year, we have seen a slight dip in enrollment, and our projections for the Fall of 2026 suggest static growth. In the Texas funding model, our resources are tied directly to the number of students in our classrooms. As a result, we are proactively planning to work our way out of a potential financial deficit budget,” Vinson said in the email. Vinson told staff in his email that the plan to cut costs does not include layoffs or school closures, adding that the district isn’t just looking to “reduce” but rather to “rethink” how it operates. “Above all else, I want to reassure you that your position with us is secure,” the email states. The district is eliminating its instruction coaches model, moving those employees to other positions, said Andrew Stewart, the district's public information officer. Instructional coaches are specialized campus- and district-level educators who enhance teaching quality and student achievement by mentoring teachers, modeling best practices and providing curriculum support. > Read this article at The Courier - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories NOTUS - April 9, 2026
Inside the ‘crisis of confidence’ at the Investment Company Institute Eric Pan, the CEO of the Investment Company Institute, has created a “toxic” work environment and stoked a “crisis of confidence” within the organization, according to anonymous letters sent to the organization’s board of directors and NOTUS interviews with five sources with direct knowledge of the workplace. The sources say these accusations, which the Investment Company Institute denies, have roiled the Washington lobbying powerhouse that represents the interests of the asset management industry and whose member companies include financial giants such as Fidelity, Vanguard, Morgan Stanley and BlackRock. Investment Company Institute members collectively manage more than $37.7 trillion in assets. “The environment at ICI has become toxic due to Eric’s personal behavior and overall management. Staff across ICI report that he is arrogant, condescending, prone to lashing out, and routinely conducts combative interrogations of employees at all levels of the organizations,” one of the previously unreported letters, dated February 2026, reads. The letter goes on to say that “[Pan’s] behavior is irreparably harming the reputation and effectiveness of ICI at a time of historic opportunity in Washington for the industry” and urges the board “to review Eric’s leadership, including interviews with Washington ICI constituents at member companies and law firms.” Erica Richardson, Pan’s chief of staff and chief strategic communications officer at the Investment Company Institute, denied the allegations. “Attacks from anonymous sources on ICI management and our company culture are patently false and not supported by facts or any on the record sources. There is no basis for these spurious claims,” Richardson told NOTUS. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 9, 2026
Trump vents at NATO but avoids rupture after meeting with alliance’s leader President Donald Trump appeared to hold back on Wednesday from taking dramatic action to reshape the U.S. relationship with NATO after a high-stakes meeting with its top leader, postponing for now the reckoning he has promised over Europe’s cautious approach to his war on Iran. The White House said in advance of the meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte that Trumpwas planning to discuss the possibility of the United States exiting the alliance, a threat to the organization that for generations has been at the core of how the U.S. protects itself and its partners. But a Trump post on social media hours after the meeting made no mention of a pullout and simply repeated the president’s complaints about the alliance. “NATO WASN’T THERE WHEN WE NEEDED THEM, AND THEY WON’T BE THERE IF WE NEED THEM AGAIN. REMEMBER GREENLAND, THAT BIG, POORLY RUN, PIECE OF ICE!!!” Trump wrote. Trump, long a NATO skeptic, has been especially angry at alliance members in recent weeks for declining to take part in his attack on Iran, saying they had flunked his test of whether they would support the U.S. in a time of military need. He has said repeatedly that Europeans would soon find out his response. Rutte, a former Dutch prime minister who has pursued such a deferential approach to Trump that last year he called the president “daddy,” has cheered the Iran war. But the campaign has strained Trump’s relations with European members of the alliance, who say the attack on Iran was both a violation of international law and bad strategy. Rising anti-American sentiment among their own voters is further limiting their appetite to defer to Washington. “He is clearly disappointed with many NATO allies, and I can see his point,” Rutte told CNN after the meeting. “But at the same time, I was also able to point to the fact that the large majority of European nations has been helpful with basing, with logistics, with overflights, with making sure that they live up to the commitments.” > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 9, 2026
At David Sacks’s behest, White House barrels forward on industry-friendly AI policy At a recent gathering of tech executives and lawmakers, David Sacks pitched artificial intelligence as a driving force of the U.S. economy. Building data centers that run AI models is creating thousands of jobs, lifting wages for blue-collar workers and boosting gross domestic product, said Sacks, the face of the Trump administration’s AI strategy. Addressing a proposal from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) to ban new data centers that run AI models, Sacks told the audience at the Hill & Valley Forum: “Just think about all the damage that would do to our economic growth.” The comments from the venture capitalist help explain President Trump’s company-friendly AI approach. Sacks and other advisers have brushed aside mounting concerns about AI, arguing that the economic benefits of the technology will make it more popular. Last year, Sacks said, “we’ve got to let the private sector cook.” Some advisers to the president have acknowledged the unpopularity of AI, but the administration plans to continue emphasizing ahead of the midterms the importance of winning the tech race with China rather than address concerns about issues including job losses, White House officials said. The administration’s discussions about AI haven’t focused on job losses due to a belief that the technology will contribute to a booming economy with plentiful opportunities, the officials said. That approach is stoking concern among some Trump allies, such as former adviser Steve Bannon, who warned it risks political blowback in November. Nearly 75% of Americans think the government isn’t doing enough to regulate AI, according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll. “They’re totally out of touch with the American people on this issue,” Bannon said in an interview. He said AI has risen to be a top priority, along with immigration, for listeners of his “War Room” podcast. The White House referenced issues linked to some voter concerns in a recent framework it published to guide AI legislation in Congress, but didn’t mention job loss. Few lawmakers and lobbyists expect a potential bill based on the framework to impose meaningful guardrails on companies, many of which donated to Trump’s inauguration and White House ballroom and promised sizable domestic investments.> Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Religion News Service - April 9, 2026
Pentagon-Vatican meeting latest flash point in Trump's clash with religious leaders On Wednesday (April 8), Vice President JD Vance stood in front of Air Force Two in Budapest and was confronted with the latest chapter in an emerging, global drama: rising tensions between the U.S. military and religious leaders. Standing on the tarmac in Hungary, where the vice president spoke at an electoral rally for that country’s president, Viktor Orbán, Vance was asked by a reporter about a Free Press article that had been rapidly spreading online. The report, which cites unnamed Vatican officials, alleges military leaders invited then-Apostolic Nuncio to the U.S. Cardinal Christophe Pierre to the Pentagon for a meeting in January. The cleric was, according to The Free Press, reportedly dressed down by officials, who insisted the Catholic Church take the U.S. government’s side in military matters. In response, Vance initially said he did not know who Pierre was, before reversing course after being reminded of the cleric’s former role as nuncio. The vice president then explained he had not seen the report, and wanted to speak with Pierre — who resigned his nuncio post in March — and administration officials to discern “what actually happened” before commenting further. Religion News Service has been unable to independently confirm many of the details of the story, including the claim that a military official invoked the Avignon Papacy during the Pentagon meeting — a bleak era of church history when the 14th-century French monarchy exerted significant power over the papacy. But in a statement sent to RNS on Wednesday afternoon, a Department of Defense official confirmed the meeting occurred, while disputing The Free Press’ assessment. “The Free Press’s characterization of the meeting is highly exaggerated and distorted,” the statement read. “The meeting between Pentagon and Vatican officials was a respectful and reasonable discussion. We have nothing but the highest regard and welcome continued dialogue with the Holy See.” > Read this article at Religion News Service - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The City - April 9, 2026
With 100 days under his belt, how’s Mamdani doing? Mayor Zohran Mamdani won City Hall on a pledge to make New York City more livable and affordable. His promises of a rent freeze for stabilized tenants, no-cost universal childcare, and fast and free buses resonated with more than a million voters — and created giant expectations in a city hungry for change. It’ll take more than 100 days to transform New York City’s housing, transit and public safety, but the democratic socialist has found unlikely allies. Mamdani met with President Donald Trump — who has called him “my little Communist” — for the second time in February, where Trump was receptive to the mayor’s pitch for federal money for a massive, previously abandoned housing development plan for the Sunnyside Yards in Queens. (He also persuaded the president to release students and others detained by ICE.) In Albany, Gov. Kathy Hochul provided state money for a free childcare pilot — but has refused Mamdani’s push to raise taxes on the wealthy. The new mayor has faced challenges in his pivot from campaign to governing, from a gaping budget hole that threatens his affordability agenda to subzero temperatures that left 19 New Yorkers dead of hypothermia. In a city that can swiftly turn on its mayors, Mamdani’s popularity appears to have dipped since a late February poll from Siena University had his approval rating at 63%. A Marist Poll released this week found the mayor’s approval at 48% — although 60% of polled New Yorkers felt he was fulfilling his campaign promises, and 56% said the city was moving in the right direction. “I will always leave the grades to New Yorkers themselves,” the mayor said when asked about the most recent poll. The first few months of the Mamdani’s mayoralty were a crucial answer to critics who said the 34-year-old was all flash and no substance, said Tess McCrae, chief operating officer for political consultants The Parkside Group. “I think he has a lot of goodwill from most New Yorkers and I don’t think he’s abused that good will,” McCrae said. “He hasn’t gotten the free buses or the tent poles that were so much a part of his campaign, but I think most people understand that takes time.” > Read this article at The City - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 9, 2026
U.S. cadets were stuck in the Persian Gulf after Trump bombed Iran When the United States dropped its first bomb on Iran in the early morning of Feb. 28, approximately half a dozen American cadets were in the Persian Gulf, working on U.S.-flagged ships, unaware their home country had started a war that would put them in immediate danger. Five privately owned vessels flying American flags that work closely with the U.S. military were in the Persian Gulf the day the conflict began in the Middle East. Aboard two of them were students from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, a federal service academy that trains officers to serve in the U.S. armed forces, the U.S. Merchant Marine and the transportation industry, NOTUS has learned. Breaking from past precedent, the Department of Defense did not give any kind of warning or hint to the vessels, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy or the Department of Transportation that the U.S. was going to strike the region, three sources close to the situation told NOTUS. The Department of Transportation oversees the academy and the privately owned vessels enrolled in the Maritime Security Program and the Tanker Security Program, which allow the U.S. military to use private vessels in times of emergency. “Nobody told them. They were caught unawares,” one source close to the situation told NOTUS, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the matter. “It was very strange that [officials] weren’t even given a whiff, weren’t even given an indication.” These five U.S.-flagged private vessels are ships that work with the U.S. military and are usually given some kind of preparatory warning in the event of a major conflict, the sources familiar with the situation said. The Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz became a central tension point from the moment the war with Iran began, and U.S. flagged vessels quickly became potential military targets, with one taking a hit in the early days of the conflict. The Pentagon’s lack of communication has frustrated both Transportation Department officials and the private companies that own the vessels. The Defense Department did not respond to NOTUS’ request for comment. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 9, 2026
GOP ads using Klan imagery target Black voters in crucial redistricting contest Nearly everyone in the sanctuary at Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Temple raised a hand when Gaylene Kanoyton asked who had seen “the mailers.” The primarily Black audience at a town hall this week knew what she was referring to — ads using images of Klansmen in white hoods to warn against voting for Virginia’s redistricting amendment and others falsely suggesting that former president Barack Obama and Gov. Abigail Spanberger (D) want them to vote “no” on redrawing the state’s political map to favor Democrats. “It’s a lot of confusion,” Kanoyton, president of the Hampton branch of the NAACP, said in an interview. “It’s no different than when I was coming up and they tried to scare people out of voting.” Democrats, redistricting advocates and the NAACP are working to dispel what they call a disinformation campaign targeting African American and elderly voters ahead of Virginia’s April 21 referendum. Polling and early voting so far suggest a close contest — prompting both sides of the redistricting campaign to pour in tens of millions of dollars. The state’s maps are pivotal in Democrats’ national efforts to push back against a Republican-initiated gerrymandering fight that could influence which party controls Congress. If voters reject the new maps, Republicans at the national level would probably see a net increase in favorable seats ahead of this year’s midterms. A Republican-aligned political action committee in Virginia called Democracy and Justice has used images and language from the civil rights movement to raise fears of gerrymandering, long wielded to marginalize Black political power. And the group’s ads recycle old statements against gerrymandering from both Spanberger and Obama, the nation’s first Black president, to suggest that they oppose the referendum. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories CNN - April 8, 2026
The US and Iran have agreed to a ceasefire, with talks ahead to bridge the gulf between them. Here’s what to know After a month and a half of spiraling conflict in the Middle East, the United States and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire on Tuesday – less than two hours before US President Donald Trump’s deadline, after which he had promised to wipe out a “whole civilization.” That threat, which critics warned could be a war crime if carried out, appears to have been staved off for now at the 11th hour. But there remains a gulf between the two countries, who each portrayed the temporary truce as a victory for their nations. The ceasefire is a starting point for further negotiations, and it remains to be seen what final terms may be included in a proposal to definitively end a war that has upended the Middle East and caused a historic global oil disruption. Trump announced the ceasefire in a Truth Social post, saying it was made on the condition that Iran agree to reopen the critical Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil flows. The ceasefire had been mediated by Pakistan’s prime minister and its military chief, he said. Iran had put forth a 10-point proposal, which the US views as “a workable basis on which to negotiate,” Trump added. The next two weeks will allow a final agreement to be drawn up, he said. In an interview with AFP news agency Tuesday, Trump described the deal as “total and complete victory.” But he would not say whether he would fulfill his prior threats to destroy Iran’s civilian infrastructure if Tehran reneged on the agreement, only saying: “You’re going to have to see.” And in a later Truth Social post just past midnight, he said the US would be “helping with the traffic buildup in the Strait of Hormuz,” adding: “Big money will be made.”> Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 8, 2026
Analysis: Democrats lost in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s old district. They still had one of their best election nights in recent memory At this point, it’s not really news that Democrats are doing very well in special elections and other races held since the 2024 presidential contest. Their recent track record is abundantly clear. But even by their recent standards, Tuesday was a very good night – one of their best of the Trump era, in fact. In one swing state, Georgia, they notched their best Trump-era overperformance in a special congressional election, across more than three dozen races. And in Wisconsin, arguably the nation’s top swing state, the Democratic-aligned state Supreme Court candidate sailed to victory by a huge margin. Perhaps Tuesday’s most-watched contest was the special election for former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s 14th District in Georgia. Greene, after all, has refashioned herself as a Trump critic of late, and there was some question whether the Iran war might hurt Republicans. While it’s difficult to isolate the causes, the results certainly weren’t encouraging for the GOP. Republican Clay Fuller won the race, as expected, in a district that President Donald Trump won by 37 points in 2024. But with nearly all the vote in, Fuller was winning by less than 12 points. That’s a 25-point overperformance for the Democratic candidate, Shawn Harris. That would make it Democrats’ biggest special election overperformance since Trump first took office in 2017, according to data compiled by CNN. Their previous best was a 23-point overperformance in Florida’s 1st District last year. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Politico - April 8, 2026
Wisconsin city passes nation’s first anti-data center referendum A small Wisconsin city home to a data center project backed by President Donald Trump voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to restrict future data centers, in a first-of-its-kind referendum that backers said could offer a blueprint for AI infrastructure opponents around the country. Voters in the Milwaukee suburb of Port Washington approved the measure by a roughly 2-to-1 margin, according to unofficial results. City residents who sponsored the voter initiative said it marks an escalation of tactics to oppose the massive facilities needed to power artificial intelligence and could inspire activists in other towns to follow suit. “This is really setting a precedent,” Christine Le Jeune, founder of the nonprofit Great Lakes Neighbors United, said in an interview Tuesday evening. “This is something that other communities can look to.” At least three other communities around the country are set to vote on similar ballot measures targeting data center projects later this year. And in Ohio, data center opponents are seeking to place an initiative on the statewide ballot that would ban new construction of certain large data centers. The Port Washington referendum doesn’t actually derail the city’s controversial data center campus — a $15 billion, 1.3-gigawatt facility from tech giants OpenAI and Oracle that’s one of multiple “Stargate” AI megaprojects the companies are planning with the Trump administration’s support. Instead, it takes aim at future projects by requiring city leaders to obtain voter approval before awarding developers lucrative tax incentives. > Read this article at Politico - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 8, 2026
What spending probes at DHS reveal about Kristi Noem’s time in office On a Monday in mid-March, a group of Department of Homeland Security investigators entered the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s headquarters and headed up to the eighth floor, past two access-controlled doors, and to an office near the administrator’s. The agents roped off the area, copied notebooks left on the desk, and put stacks of documents and equipment in boxes. That workspace belonged to an influential figure at DHS who had been integral to overseeing much of FEMA’s day-to-day operations — including decisions on grants and awards that are now part of an Office of Inspector General review of contracts issued under then-Secretary Kristi L. Noem’s leadership, according to several current and former DHS officials, including two with knowledge of the headquarters search. Kara Voorhies joined DHS early in Trump’s second term and worked closely with Noem’s top aide, Corey Lewandowski, as a contractor. Both held unusual roles at DHS that stationed them at the top echelons of the agency and put them at the center of some of its most controversial and consequential moves over the past year. Last June, Noem demanded that DHS headquarters approve all contracts worth more than $100,000, giving top officials significant control over everyday spending and creating major delays. Noem’s successor, Secretary Markwayne Mullin, has swiftly scrapped that rule and said leadership should review contracts valued at more than $25 million, a cap that he called “appropriate.” Among the awards that have come under public scrutiny are a $1 billion contract fast-tracked to a pro-Trump donor last year; a $200 million contract to purchase two private jets for Noem and other top officials to use for travel; and another $200 million contract, for ads that Noem starred in last year. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut) said that the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations is conducting a probe of “potential wrongdoing by Lewandowski and Noem in connection with DHS contracts.” He said he is also aware of information indicating that the DHS Office of Inspector General is investigating the handling of grants and contracts by Noem, Lewandowski and others. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories New York Times - April 8, 2026
Texas considers required reading list for schools, which includes the Bible Texas education officials are considering sweeping changes to English and social studies instruction that would put readings from the Bible on a new state-required reading list for millions of public school students. The changes would also bring a U.S. and Texas centric lens to history, with less emphasis on world history, a shift some historians and progressive groups have opposed. The Texas State Board of Education, an elected board with a 10-to-5 Republican majority, was meeting on Tuesday to consider the proposals, which could shape instruction for a generation of students. Texas is home to 5.4 million public school students, about 11 percent of the total U.S. public school population. The hotly debated reading list drew hours of public testimony, from teachers, students, parents, politicians and religious groups. A draft of the list, proposed by the Texas Education Agency, outlines more than 200 texts, with widely recognized classics such as “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” by Eric Carle for kindergartners, “A Wrinkle in Time” by Madeleine L’Engle for seventh graders and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech for eighth graders. But it also includes passages from the Bible in middle and high school, raising questions about the separation of church and state. A second proposed list, from Will Hickman, a Republican member of the state board, would require fewer books overall and include biblical passages starting in elementary school. Supporters say the Bible excerpts, which include the story of David and Goliath from the Old Testament and a meditation on love from First Corinthians, have important literary value. Critics asked the board to dial back the biblical passages, arguing that they belong in a comparative religion class, or not at all. The board is weighing broader questions about which books — and which authors — qualify as essential reading, and how much flexibility to give to teachers to select additional texts of their choosing. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 8, 2026
Dallas GOP chair could be ousted over return to joint elections Dallas County's Republican Party chair announced Monday in a statement that he could be voted out as the local party leader for agreeing to hold joint elections for upcoming runoffs. Allen West indicated in his weekly newsletter that party members are unhappy that he signed an amended contract with the county election department to hold joint Republican and Democratic voting in May. West decided to abandon separate, precinct-based voting and return to joint, countywide voting after last month's chaotic primary elections that confused thousands of voters, which set off a chain of legal action in local and state courts. "The wise and prudent individual understands when you say, 'Hey, let's just say we did it. We will learn from what happened, and we will move on,' " West said. "You don't go back to the well again, because I think that you could expose yourself to — like I said — some very serious legal ramifications and litigation." He said holding another election that confuses voters from both parties opens up the Republican Party to potential risks, including disenfranchisement accusations. West was reelected as chair one month ago in that messy primary election. "I'm not resigning and I'm not changing my mind about signing the amended contract," he said. "But I don't have any problems if people want to bring a motion to vacate — even though I was just reelected for another two-year term in March. That's fine. But I believe it's the right decision and I'm not going to kowtow to 35 or some odd people that just want to have their way." > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KIIITV - April 8, 2026
Corpus Christi lakefront no more! Property values sink as water disappears Falling water levels at Lake Corpus Christi are reshaping more than the shoreline. They are beginning to drag down property values in surrounding communities. What used to be a short walk to the water from her home is now a much longer distance for Indian Point resident and realtor Sabra Herschap. She says the lack of water is directly impacting demand for lakefront homes. “ The beauty of living on the Lake is the water, and that’s the number one factor why people buy out here, and as you can see, we’re not going to get a lot of buyers with the water. This is considered two water lots, and I’ve seen the water of course, all the way up to our bulkhead right here, and it has not been this low since I believe 1958.” Herschap says the slowdown is already showing up in the numbers, with more listings seeing price reductions and fewer buyers willing to commit. “ I have seen a lot of prices drop. It’s just been incredibly difficult to encourage people that hate the lake is going to be back next summer, because we don’t know when the lake is going to be back.” Homes that once advertised waterfront access are now sitting farther from the shoreline. In nearby Lake City, more properties are hitting the market and staying there longer, signaling a shift toward a buyer’s market. “Back in the day, you would have fiesta Marina with the dances, and they would do their short-term rentals. The lake was up. People were out skiing. And you just can’t sell that package right now.” Just a few miles away in Mathis, Economic Development Corporation Executive Director Sabas Encinia Jr. says the broader economy remains stable despite the lake’s decline. “ Mathis isn’t just about the lake, obviously, we would like the lake full. We would have more visitors. But, overall, in doing some retail numbers, we are still overachieving.” Encinia says the focus is on diversifying beyond lake-driven tourism to maintain growth even as water levels remain low. > Read this article at KIIITV - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 8, 2026
Texas AG to ‘leverage’ DOGE data to investigate ‘dozens’ of Medicaid providers for potential fraud Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is investigating “dozens” of Medicaid providers for alleged fraud – based on data released by the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. A DOGE team recently released U.S. Department of Health and Human Services claims data to “detect Medicaid fraud.” “Based on this data, the Office of the Attorney General has launched numerous new investigations that target Medicaid providers,” Paxton’s office said in a statement Tuesday. “These investigations will leverage DOGE’s newly released data, the OAG’s internal claims data, and other investigative tools, including Civil Investigative Demands where appropriate in anticipation of litigation.” The investigations target home health and occupational therapy providers – as well as “entities that potentially committed fraud related to COVID-19 treatments.” The release does not specify which providers, or how many, the office is investigating. Paxton’s office did not immediately respond to KERA’s request for comment. The investigations continue a growing trend of state officials and agencies focusing on alleged Medicaid fraud and abuse. Paxton’s office recently filed several cases against providers and health care organizations related to potential Medicaid fraud – including a lawsuit filed in February against a Dallas doctor and Children’s Health for allegedly submitting Medicaid claims related to gender-affirming care for minors. The Texas Senate Health and Human Services Committee has a public hearing scheduled Wednesday morning at 9 a.m. to “explore and recommend ways to prevent fraud and abuse” in programs like Medicaid. It’s one of the interim charges Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick assigned to the committee in January. > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Texas Lawbook - April 8, 2026
Susman Godfrey pushes back on Trump's EO push More than a dozen legal groups representing corporate general counsel, smaller law firms, former judges and law professors filed federal court briefs late last week supporting Texas-based Susman Godfrey and three other corporate law firms that are the targets of punishing executive orders issued in the spring by President Donald Trump. The friend-of-the-court briefs signed by 21 law professors at Texas law schools, 23 small law firm lawyers in Texas and at least nine prominent Texas litigation boutiques asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to uphold four lower court rulings that said the presidential executive orders that declared the law firms as threats to national security unconstitutional. General Counsels United, an organization comprised of 800 current and former corporate chief legal officers, told the federal appellate judges that the executive orders against Susman Godfrey, Perkins Coie, WilmerHale and Jenner Block are “inflicting concrete and present harm” to U.S. businesses in their dealings with their own lawyers. Perkins Coie has offices in Dallas and Austin. The brief states that Trump’s executive orders are “impacting their ability to hire or retain the targeted law firms” and impeding “the willingness of other companies and law firms to challenge or defend against federal action.” “Current general counsels face a significant constraint that makes public commentary difficult: speaking publicly about the orders’ impact on their companies risks inviting the very federal retaliation they are describing,” GCs United argues. At least 10 Texas-based law firms — including Aldous Law, Carrington Coleman, Crain Brogdon, Lynn Pinker, Nachawati Law Group, Waters Kraus and Sommerman, McCaffity, Quesada & Geisler, all of Dallas — joined an amicus brief filed on behalf of 842 law firms stating that the executive orders are an “undisguised retaliation for representations that the firms, or former partners of the firms, have undertaken or may be planning to undertake.”> Read this article at Texas Lawbook - Subscribers Only Top of Page
ABC 13 - April 8, 2026
Dr. Peggy Smith continues to serve teen health needs in Houston for more than 50 years As Women's History Month comes to an end, ABC13 introduces a woman who's been passionate about teen health for more than 50 years. She was hired in 1972 to close the first teen health clinic in Houston, but after seeing the need, she's fought not only to keep it open but also to expand it to now seven locations in our area. ABC13 took a tour of one clinic located in the Third Ward on Cullen. It's also where we met Dr. Peggy B. Smith. She's the director of Baylor's Teen Health clinic and knows these walls well, with more than 54 years of experience as a professor in the OBGYN department. She explained how this is where her passion for health care started. "This population has no voice, you know that. So, I immediately started looking at ways to continue the funding, expand the mission, and provide meaningful ways to provide health care to uninsured youth 13 to 24 years of age. For about 30 years, we did a lot of maternity," Smith said. With a lot of preventive health care, Smith said, they're providing access to things like contraception. Dr. Smith said that, over the years, their research has shown that all their services have been working. She said they were able to reduce the teen pregnancy rate, and eventually it led to expansion. They now offer a wide range of health care services, and they've expanded their clinic locations throughout the inner city. "I was looking at the statistic today, and one of our clinic sites, 43% of the population in that neighborhood don't have a medical provider, which translates, they may have been born at a hospital, maybe public or private, but the opportunity to really see a PCP or having a primary care physician does not exist," Smith said. > Read this article at ABC 13 - Subscribers Only Top of Page
12 News Now - April 8, 2026
Rising fuel costs threaten Texas trucking industry and consumer prices The ongoing war in Iran is having economic impacts at home, with gas prices rising more than 30% since the start of the conflict and diesel prices climbing above $5 per gallon, putting pressure on Southeast Texas truckers and the broader supply chain. Despite Southeast Texas sitting below state and national averages at $7.76 per gallon for gasoline, diesel prices remain significantly higher — a concern for the local trucking industry that depends on fuel to keep goods moving. At Lamar State College Orange, instructors say the rising fuel costs are already creating challenges for the next generation of truck drivers and could soon impact consumers’ wallets. The commercial driver’s license, or CDL, course at the college trains students using industry-standard trucks while preparing them for careers in transportation. But program leaders say rising diesel costs are pushing the industry into uncertain territory. “I can remember buying diesel for 99 cents a gallon, and now we're over five dollars a gallon,” said Carl Cormier, CDL program director at Lamar State College Orange, who has more than 30 years of experience in the trucking industry. Cormier said higher fuel costs will likely drive up the price of everyday goods. “Imagine these companies, or these independent owners and operators having to put fuel in their trucks and spending between $5 to $8 a gallon, so that entails it's going to end up bringing the cost of our food, clothing and all these things are starting, the prices can start driving up,” Cormier said. He added that trucking companies will have little choice but to pass the added costs on to consumers. > Read this article at 12 News Now - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Tyler Morning Telegraph - April 8, 2026
Cornyn and Moran: The Working Families Tax Cut Act prescribes real remedies for health care We hear from Texans every day who have rightfully grown weary of our health care system. Wait times are too long, bills are too high, and Congress often seems too little too late on plans to fix it. But last year, President Trump and Congressional Republicans secured meaningful health care reforms through the Working Families Tax Cuts Act that will improve health care access and affordability for Texans and all Americans. First and foremost, the Working Families Tax Cuts Act delivered historic wins for rural communities. This landmark legislation established the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), a $50 billion initiative that represents the single largest investment in rural health care in more than two decades. Texas received $281 million this fiscal year through the RHTP – the most of any state in the nation. The Lone Star State is expected to receive similar amounts annually over the next four years. These resources will provide a vital safety net for rural communities, particularly in places like East Texas, home to multiple health systems that deliver exceptional care. We will visit with health care professionals at the UT Tyler Health Science Center later this week to discuss how RHTP funding would improve operations throughout East Texas. Bold strides are already being made with the establishment of the UT Tyler School of Medicine, and RHTP funding will only accelerate these efforts, whether through modernizing infrastructure or bolstering recruitment and retention. For smaller providers, RHTP funding could mean the difference between closing and staying afloat. The good news is that local providers who know their communities best will have flexibility in determining how funds are spent. The benefits to the Piney Woods don’t stop there. Families who live outside the hustle and bustle of city life can rest assured knowing that the Working Families Tax Cuts Act prioritized telehealth as another cost-saving, convenient option. Working parents with busy schedules, seniors with mobility challenges, and folks with compromised immune systems all benefit from receiving care from home. And rural patients can connect with doctors without driving hours to the nearest hospital. By permanently allowing patients with high-deductible health plans access to telehealth services without first having to meet their deductibles, Republicans ensured remote care remains a lasting option for Texans. > Read this article at Tyler Morning Telegraph - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 8, 2026
Granbury approves data center power plant, despite resident pleas After hearing comments from dozens of concerned residents, and against the advice of the city’s Planning & Zoning Commission, the Granbury City Council at its meeting on April 7 agreed to rezone a roughly 2,000 acre parcel of land so that developers can build a power plant for a future data center. In January, the City Council approved the annexation of that land, which straddles Meadow Wood Road, south of U.S. 377 and north of Paluxy Highway. In July 2025, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality approved an emissions permit submitted by Dallas-based developer Bilateral Energy LLC to build eight simple-cycle power turbines and 87 linear generators at 1225 Meadow Wood Road, which is in the center of that parcel. Bilateral’s website describes the company as “powering data centers, empowering the grid” and advertises “private power infrastructure” for AI data centers. The City Council has maintained that they only learned of the power plant at the meeting in January, but residents say they don’t believe it as questions about transparency and trust have rippled through the idyllic town on the winding banks of the Brazos River. The Granbury City Council chambers was nearly overflowing with people Tuesday evening as residents came out to speak on the agenda items and voice their disapproval and disappointment. The two items up for discussion at Tuesday’s concurrent meeting of the City Council and the Planning & Zoning Commission were additions to two of the city’s zoning ordinance articles to add standards for data centers, and the rezoning request, which asked the city to change allowed future uses at the 2,000 acre site to purely industrial and to change the current zoning at the site to industrial use. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 8, 2026
Taylor Sheridan will create a Battle of the Alamo film for new Texas museum Taylor Sheridan will remember the Alamo for a new museum in San Antonio. The Fort Worth-raised filmmaker is making a film about the Battle of the Alamo for the new Alamo Visitor Center and Museum in the South Texas city. The nearly 160,000-square-foot facility will feature event spaces, a cafe, a rooftop terrace, a gift shop and a 4D theater. It’s the 4D theater where Sheridan comes into play, according to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. “Once I saw the plan for the theater, I knew there was only one screenwriter, film producer, and director in the world to make this film for the Alamo Museum – Taylor Sheridan,” Patrick said in a statement on Tuesday, April 7. “Over the last decade, Taylor has told the story of the American west – the people, the land, the depth, and the history – in a way no other filmmaker has. In addition to his amazing film portfolio, Taylor is a native Texan who knows and loves our state and its history.” Patrick said he contacted Sheridan about the historic project, and “despite his incredible schedule,” was met with an enthusiastic yes. “The Alamo is the very bedrock Texas was founded upon. To chronicle the sacrifice made by the brave men and women who sacrificed their lives defending the Alamo is an honor I eagerly accept,” Sheridan said in a statement. Patrick continued that this is an amazing gift from Sheridan and “a big win for Texas.” “[Sheridan] has agreed to join us in telling the story of the Battle of the Alamo for the millions who will visit the Alamo in the years to come,” Patrick said. “I am reaching out to the Board of the Alamo Trust, who is managing the Alamo restoration plan, and I know they will be as excited as I am about this opportunity.” Originally, the museum was expected to open in late 2027. However, the San Antonio Express-News reported in February that the opening had been pushed to spring 2028. No casting or production information has been released for the new project. But there is already an Alamo connection to a current Sheridan project: “Landman” star Billy Bob Thornton previously starred as Davy Crockett in John Lee Hancock’s 2004 feature film “The Alamo.” > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 8, 2026
Why the SBC hasn’t intervened in Houston megachurch Second Baptist’s civil war The Southern Baptist Convention has spent decades encouraging its participating churches to operate “through democratic processes” while touting the responsibility individuals have in shaping ministry. But the SBC has remained silent as one of the convention’s largest megachurches — Houston’s Second Baptist — faces a crisis over its members’ loss of voting rights. Current and former church members known as the Jeremiah Counsel say a group of members were misled by Second Baptist’s leaders into approving bylaws in 2023 that stripped them of their voice. The bylaws placed the church’s future in the hands of the new “ministry leadership team,” including the senior pastor and his appointees — not the church’s 94,000-member congregation. The Jeremiah Counsel accused Second Baptist of sacrificing its democratic values and filed a lawsuit that is scheduled for trial in Harris County in late July. The dispute highlights a broader tension in the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. with 47,000 churches. While the SBC prides itself on its commitment to democratic principles, it also values church autonomy as a core tenet, giving churches wide leeway in how they handle their internal affairs. What happens when those two philosophies collide at a Southern Baptist megachurch? So far, not much. Second Baptist's new bylaws might not disqualify the church from being part of the convention, but they do stray from centuries of Baptist tradition, said Doug Weaver, a professor of historical studies at Baylor University who teaches Baptist history and Pentecostalism. “What can make the Baptist vision effective is that it allows everybody to have equal voice, equal responsibility,” Weaver said. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Express-News - April 8, 2026
Texas Rangers launch criminal investigation into Camp Mystic Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Tuesday that the Texas Rangers have launched a criminal investigation into Camp Mystic, where 27 campers and counselors were killed during a catastrophic flash flood on July 4. The Texas Department of State Health Services, which also is investigating the Hill Country camp, has received more than 600 complaints and requests to not renew Camp Mystic's state license this year, Patrick said in a letter to the state agency. "You should not renew or approve a camp license for Camp Mystic, or any other camp the same operators intend to run, until your investigation, and all criminal and legislative investigations are complete and necessary corrective actions are taken," he wrote. "With many questions remaining unanswered surrounding the deaths of 27 young girls, parents and Texans deserve to have all issues resolved prior to Camp Mystic and/or their operators being allowed to welcome children back into their care this summer," he added. Camp Mystic submitted a license renewal application to DSHS on March 30 seeking approval to reopen its Cypress Lake camp this summer, a portion of the retreat that did not flood on July 4. The camp's current license expired March 31. Camp Mystic has drawn intense scrutiny and criticism since the July 4 flash flood killed 25 children and two counselors staying at its original Guadalupe River camp on the south fork of the river near Hunt, about 18 miles southwest of Kerrville. Richard "Dick" Eastland, 70, one of Camp Mystic's executive directors, also was killed as he tried to rescue campers from the high waters. His vehicle was carried away by the current and crashed into a tree. The DSHS said it will investigate potential violations of laws and rules governing youth camps. The Texas Rangers, an arm of Texas Department of Public Safety, said it's assisting DSHS "regarding complaints of neglect by Camp Mystic." Patrick said in his letter to DSHS that the Texas Rangers are conducting a criminal investigation, though the DSHS's investigation is administrative. Patrick didn't elaborate.> Read this article at San Antonio Express-News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KXAN - April 8, 2026
Austin ISD to make ‘deeper cuts’ to close projected $180M shortfall Austin school leaders on Tuesday floated “deeper cuts” to close a projected $180 million budget deficit ahead of next school year that could impact campuses. The multi-million-dollar budget shortfall is what district leaders expect next school year if they make no changes to the budget – even with the expected cost-savings from closing 10 campuses. “We have been very thoughtful to protect the classroom. We do our best to fend off the changes that impact budget,” Superintendent Matias Segura said. “We are no longer in a position to protect all things.” District leaders identified more than a dozen potential areas to reduce spending, including staffing cuts. The district estimates it could save $23 million by eliminating funding tied to vacant positions at the department level, $6 million if it adjusts elementary campus staffing and another $16 million if it adjusts secondary campus teacher staffing. The district also discussed reducing employee stipends, including stipends that go to special education teachers (an estimated $5.7 million in cost savings) and potentially reducing or eliminating academic programs. Segura told board members the substantial increase in the district’s budget deficit is due to changes in property values and a drop in enrollment. Segura highlighted changes in federal immigration policy, specifically, as a major factor in enrollment changes. “What is different this time is families are leaving, and no new families are coming,” Segura said. > Read this article at KXAN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories NOTUS - April 8, 2026
Liberal judge cruises to landslide victory in Wisconsin Supreme Court race Chris Taylor, a Wisconsin Court of Appeals judge, won a seat on the state Supreme Court in a quiet election Tuesday she was widely expected to dominate. Taylor, who ran as a liberal candidate, defeated a conservative appeals court judge, Maria Lazar, increasing the court’s liberal majority to 5-2. The Associated Press called the race at 9:36 p.m. Tuesday with Taylor in a clear lead. It was the fourth consecutive victory for Democratic-backed Supreme Court candidates in Wisconsin, just a year after Elon Musk, Turning Point Action and other national donors attempted to flip the court in the most expensive judicial race in U.S. history. Conservative donors spent more than $100 million in 2025 backing candidate Brad Schimel, who lost to now-Justice Susan Crawford. This year’s election drew far fewer dollars and eyeballs. Taylor, a former attorney for Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin who later served as a state assemblymember and as a Dane County Circuit Court judge, raised more than $5.8 million since last year, according to campaign filings, compared to $983,000 by Lazar. Early voting dropped almost 60% from the 2025 race, while absentee ballots decreased by almost 50%. Slipping turnout reflected voters’ limited attention to this year’s election. More than 60% of a sample of registered voters in mid-March told the Marquette Law School Poll that they hadn’t heard enough to have an opinion about either candidate. Voters’ lack of familiarity with Taylor and Lazar led political strategists on both sides to believe the election was anyone’s for the taking, despite Taylor’s large fundraising advantage. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNBC - April 8, 2026
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins sent Easter email to staff touting 'Jesus' and 'God' U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins sent USDA staff an Easter email that emphasized the story of Jesus being crucified and resurrected, a message that some Christians said alienated them for its overt religiosity. “Happy Easter — He is Risen indeed,” Rollins wrote in the email sent on Good Friday, which CNBC has reviewed and was first to report. “From the foot of the Cross on Good Friday to the stone rolled away from the now empty tomb, sin has been destroyed,” Rollins wrote. “Jesus has been raised from the dead. And God has granted each of us victory and new life. And where there is life — risen life — there is hope.” The email included an illustration of a round stone rolled away from the entrance to Jesus’ tomb, with the words “Christ is Risen” written above the image. A USDA staffer who spoke to CNBC said the email was offensive to them as a devout Christian, and as a department employee who works “with people of other faiths, Muslims, Hindus.” The staffer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were worried about retaliation, said other USDA employees also were offended by Rollins’ message. “People are not on board for her sort of brand from a Christian nationalist perspective,” the staffer said. “It misses the mark from a lot of angles.” “I find it blasphemous, actually, because it’s contrasting Jesus’ message,” they said. > Read this article at CNBC - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Vox - April 8, 2026
Did Trump accidentally do something woke for global health? A surprising quirk of the Trump administration is that every so often, it tries so hard to be anti-woke that it accidentally does something woke. See, for example, the efforts of Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who oversaw USAID’s demise — directives that have contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people — and who stood at the White House beside the president of Kenya a few months ago, railing against what he called the “NGO industrial complex.” Now, I don’t know who taught Rubio that progressive catchphrase, but I doubt that he got it from INCITE!, the radical feminist collective that popularized a variation of the term in an anthology that examined the role of nonprofits in undermining social progress. In the two decades that followed, the idea of a nonprofit or — as they’re often known in international contexts — NGO “industrial complex” grew into a snarky self-critique for much of that sector’s left-leaning young workforce. By the time Teen Vogue used the term in 2022, the phrase also hinted at an enduring related criticism of USAID’s tendency to primarily fund Western nonprofits rather than local governments and organizations in recipient countries. In an unexpected twist, this term has found its way into the vocabulary of a very Republican secretary of state, now reflecting a preference for funding foreign governments over non-governmental organizations (NGOs). “If we’re trying to help countries, help the country,” Rubio said in his remarks in December announcing a new $1.6 billion bilateral aid deal between the US State Department and Kenya. “Don’t help the NGO to go in and find a new line of business.” Whatever one thinks of Rubio, he has a point. As part of the “America First Global Health Strategy” announced last year, the Trump administration has embraced an approach to foreign aid that more left-leaning reformists have been talking about for years, a concept known as localization, or the idea that giving aid directly to local governments and organizations — not Western nonprofits — is the best and most cost-effective way to strengthen global aid overall and global health systems especially. In recent months, the US has negotiated dozens of deals between the State Department and African governments, which are set to collectively receive billions of dollars that they can spend as they see fit.> Read this article at Vox - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 8, 2026
The Trump administration is fighting a losing battle against local energy laws The Trump administration’s latest attempt to dismantle a local energy law could test whether President Donald Trump’s energy agenda can endure mounting legal headwinds. The Justice Department asked a federal judge last week to deem Morris Township, New Jersey’s 2022 ban on gas-powered and other nonelectric appliances in new apartments unlawful. The lawsuit is the latest effort by the administration to dismantle state and local environmental laws that it argues are “overly restrictive” — a campaign it started exactly a year ago with an executive order. Over the past year, federal courts have regularly handed the administration and aligned industry groups losses, largely protecting local policy from the president’s oil and gas agenda. Federal judges ruled in two separate cases last week that the Energy Policy and Conservation Act — the federal law Trump’s team is citing to claim that Morris Township’s gas hookup ban is unlawful — does not preclude local and state governments from regulating energy consumption. The law gives the federal government power to regulate energy efficiency and labeling, but local and state governments can set their own standards for energy use, a judge in one of those cases ruled. “The government is making the same arguments that all of these other cases have made using that same reasoning … that’s ultimately not been successful in other jurisdictions,” Vincent Nolette, who works on city-level climate change policies at the Columbia Law School’s Sabin Center for Climate Law, told NOTUS. “There’s good reason to think that a judge would continue to interpret EPCA as not preempting these local building laws.” The Justice Department’s environmental suits have mostly focused on Democratic-leaning cities and states, attacking everything from climate superfund laws to local attempts to file litigation against oil and gas companies. Previous targets have included New York, Vermont, Michigan and Hawaii. The administration filed another lawsuit over a gas ban against two solidly blue California cities. > Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 8, 2026
The Iran war is hitting California harder than any other state The last South Korea-bound oil tanker to sail through the Strait of Hormuz dropped off its cargoes late last month. That is a grim omen for California, which relies on the Asian nation for jet fuel shipped 6,000 miles across the Pacific. The reverberations of the Iran war are poised to hit California harder than other states. That is because California imports roughly 75% of its crude oil, almost one-third of which comes from the Middle East. It also gets jet fuel and gasoline from countries whose refineries depend on the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf. With the Hormuz still closed, South Korea and India—two of California’s biggest fuel suppliers—are dramatically slowing exports, threatening to squeeze the Golden State’s energy supplies. This month, South Korea is set to ship about half the jet fuel it normally sends to California, according to market intelligence firm Vortexa. “If it’s not resolved soon, it’s going to get super tight,” said Andy Walz, who runs Chevron’s oil refining, pipeline and chemicals business. California’s coffers are sufficient to meet demand for refined products like jet fuel and gasoline in April, but a shortfall is likely to emerge over the following months, Walz said. Asian refineries are working through their existing inventories, and some countries including Japan and South Korea are releasing strategic oil reserves as a buffer. “At some point, those things are going to be gone,” Walz added. The price of gasoline is often a political flashpoint in California. Prices at the pump on Tuesday averaged $5.93 a gallon, more than $1.75 above the national average. The state has higher-than-average gasoline taxes and fuel-standard requirements that add about $1.10 to the price of a gallon of gas, estimates Ryan Cummings, a researcher at Stanford University’s Institute for Economic Policy Research. California wasn’t always an island in the energy market. Chevron and other oil companies blame the state’s energy policies and policymakers’ push to spur a transition away from fossil fuels for a huge drop in oil production and refinery shutdowns. > Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NPR - April 8, 2026
Abortion clinics are closing nationwide. Could urgent care help fill the gap? Providing abortions was the last thing Shawn Brown thought she'd be doing when she opened an urgent care clinic in Marquette, a small port town on the remote shores of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. But she also wasn't expecting the Planned Parenthood in Marquette to shut down last spring. Roughly 1,100 patients relied on that clinic each year for cancer screenings, IUD insertions, and medication abortions. Now the area has no other in-person resource for abortions. "It's a 500-mile stretch of no access," Brown said. So the doctor, who describes herself as "individually pro-life," added medication abortions to Marquette Medical Urgent Care's already busy practice, which treats a steady flow of kids with the flu, college students with migraines, and tourists with skiing injuries. At least 38 abortion clinics shut down last year in states where they're still legal, according to data collected by I Need an A, a project supported by a number of nonprofits that helps people find abortion options. Even states that recently passed constitutional amendments protecting abortion rights, such as Michigan, have had clinics close since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. And as rural hospitals shutter labor and delivery units, patients are losing access to pregnancy care. "You cannot have a high-risk pregnancy up here," Brown said. "It's a scary place." Now communities are coming up with alternatives, such as Brown's urgent care clinic. The idea that urgent cares "could be an untapped solution to closures for abortion clinics across the country is really exciting," said Kimi Chernoby, the chief operating and legal officer at FemInEM, a national nonprofit that works to improve professional training and patient outcomes for women in emergency medicine. One patient at the Marquette urgent care on a recent day was a woman who requested NPR identify her by her first initial, A, so she could talk candidly about a sensitive medical decision. She drove more than an hour on snowy backroads while her kids were in day care to get to her appointment. > Read this article at NPR - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New York Times - April 8, 2026
Delta, WestJet and other airlines announce higher baggage fees and fuel surcharges More airlines are tacking extra fees and surcharges onto already rising ticket prices, hoping to recoup costs as the war in Iran causes fuel costs to surge. Delta Air Lines announced on Tuesday it would start charging $10 more to check a bag on U.S. domestic flights, following similar baggage-fee increases last week by United Airlines and JetBlue. WestJet, Canada’s second-largest airline, said on Tuesday that it would add fuel surcharges of up to 60 Canadian dollars, or about $43, to some flights, a day after Air Canada, the country’s largest, rolled out 50 dollar fuel surcharge for flights to warm weather destinations. Porter Airlines, a smaller Canadian carrier, began adding a temporary fuel surcharge of 40 dollars on award flights in late March. “Fuel is the largest contributor to airline operating costs, and a temporary surcharge helps us manage the recent surge in fuel prices,” WestJet said in a statement, noting that fuel typically accounts for about 20 percent of an airline’s costs. The carrier also said it would temporarily cut some lower-demand flight routes. Since the war in Iran began on Feb. 28, U.S. jet fuel costs have climbed more than 87 percent, to $4.69 a gallon on Monday, according to Argus Media. “When fuel prices rise, airlines don’t just absorb the hit — they pass it along, often in ways that are less obvious than a higher ticket price,” said Sara Rathner, a travel and credit card expert at the personal finance website NerdWallet. “Bag fees, seat selection costs and new surcharges can quietly inflate the cost of a trip.” Airfares — both domestic and international — have also jumped since the war started, according to an analysis of economy round-trip tickets by the travel search engine Kayak: On March 30, an average international trip cost $998, compared with $774 on Feb. 23, and a domestic U.S. trip cost $350, compared with $336 on Feb. 23. > Read this article at New York Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Lead Stories Wall Street Journal - April 7, 2026
Hopes fade for deal with Iran ahead of Tuesday-night deadline Negotiators are pessimistic Iran will bend to meet President Trump’s demand to reopen the Strait of Hormuz before his Tuesday-night deadline, paving the way for the U.S. to target Iranian bridges and power plants in a fresh escalation of the war. Twice in his second term, Trump set a deadline for a deal with Iran, said he would bomb the country if its leaders didn’t comply, then followed through with military operations. Now, as everyone from Vice President JD Vance to top Middle Eastern spy chiefs push for a last-ditch cease-fire, Iranian officials are telling mediators they expect the same pattern to play out again, U.S. officials and mediators said. Trump also could extend the deadline, something he has also done multiple times already. Some U.S. officials say there is too large a gap to narrow between the U.S. and Iranian positions before Trump’s 8 p.m. Tuesday deadline. Meanwhile, Iranian officials have told mediators that they expect the U.S. will continue to attack targets in their war-torn country and Israel to keep conducting airstrikes to take out senior Iranian officials—even if negotiations with the U.S. move forward, Arab officials familiar with the matter said. Iran was “negotiating, we think, in good faith,” Trump told reporters Monday at the White House, but if not the U.S. would be “blowing everything up.” Some U.S. officials said Trump has privately been less hopeful that Iran will make a deal, expecting to issue final orders for strikes Tuesday evening—though they note his assessment could change based on how talks play out overnight. “Only President Trump knows what he will do, and the entire world will find out tomorrow night if bridges and electric plants are annihilated,” said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly. Hopes for a deal soured Monday morning after Iran rejected a U.S. cease-fire proposal, claiming Washington sought maximalist concessions, including on its nuclear work. Trump later told reporters Tehran’s counter wasn’t enough to secure an agreement. Both countries were once again in the familiar position of staring down a deal, deadline extension—or more war.> Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Politico - April 7, 2026
A ragtag Wisconsin group is leading America’s first anti-data center referendum A small Wisconsin city upended by a data center backed by President Donald Trump is set to vote Tuesday on a referendum that could reshape grassroots resistance to AI projects nationwide. The vote in Port Washington, a lakeside town of roughly 12,000 people just north of Milwaukee, appears to be the first time any U.S. municipality will go to the ballot to kneecap data center development. It marks an aggressive new tactic in an escalating movement to oppose the hulking artificial intelligence factories — and offers a potential blueprint for other small towns challenging Big Tech. “I’m not aware of another ballot referendum that has been taken directly to the voters yet,” said Brad Tietz, state policy director for the Data Center Coalition, which represents tech companies and developers. “If this trend continues and grows, it’s going to have significant consequences for our economic competitiveness [and] our national security. I don’t think that can be understated.” The vote comes as companies descend on Middle America to build the data centers, which are major priorities for the White House and the U.S. tech sector but the object of scorn for roughly 3 in 10 U.S. voters who, according to a recent POLITICO poll, say they would oppose a facility being built in their area. At least three other U.S. cities are gearing up for referendums of their own this year, in a growing trend that pits grassroots organizers against some of the world’s richest companies. If it passes Tuesday, the referendum won’t actually derail the proposed $15 billion, 1.3-gigawatt data center campus from OpenAI and Oracle, one of multiple “Stargate” AI infrastructure megaprojects that the companies are planning with Trump’s support. Rather, it would allow residents to potentially obstruct future projects by requiring city leaders to obtain voter approval before awarding developers lucrative tax incentives. The backers, a group of roughly a dozen Port Washington residents who formed a nonprofit in October to organize against the project, placed the measure on the ballot after connecting on Facebook and protesting at city council meetings. Organizers said that it took roughly 10 days to collect the approximately 1,000 signatures needed to qualify their measure. > Read this article at Politico - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 7, 2026
Mike Miles' charter network to expand HISD-style reforms to more districts As more Texas school districts face the threat of a state takeover, they are turning to a charter network founded by Houston ISD Superintendent Mike Miles to try to avoid it. At least seven school districts — Edgewood, Everman, Hempstead, Killeen, San Antonio, Texarkana and Waco ISDs — are moving to partner with Third Future Schools to turn around 12 schools, according to school district board documents and announcements. Wichita Falls ISD is expanding its existing partnership to two additional schools and Midland ISD to one more school. Those partnerships would add 15 schools to the charter network’s portfolio, doubling its national footprint. The growth comes as districts across Texas face pressure to improve struggling campuses or risk a state takeover that strips elected school boards of control. Third Future Schools, based in Colorado, was founded by Miles before Texas appointed him in 2023 to lead Houston ISD following the state’s takeover of the district for low performance at one high school. Now, as more districts face similar consequences tied to repeated low ratings, they are turning to the charter network he built. At the center of those partnerships is an instructional model Miles has said mirrors the New Education System he implemented in HISD. "The NES model (and the model used by Third Future Schools) developed by Mike Miles is the only proven instructional methodology that has been able to consistently turn around failing campuses quickly," Miles co-wrote in a July proposal to improve instruction at International Leadership of Texas, a charter school network. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Inside Climate News - April 7, 2026
Corpus Christi water crisis spurs stampede on South Texas aquifers Dwindling levels in this region’s main reservoirs have triggered a rush on local aquifers as cities, towns, chemical plants and ranchers drill for water. The nearby city of Corpus Christi faces a looming catastrophe from the imminent depletion of water supplies that sustain 500,000 people and one of Texas’s main industrial complexes. Recent emergency groundwater projects have pushed off the timeline to disaster by months, officials said last week. But locals fear they may threaten the water supplies of rural towns and residents who have historically relied on their own small wells. “People like me are probably gonna be running out of water,” said Bruce Mumme, a retired chemical plant worker who lives on family land in rural Jim Wells County, about 40 miles outside Corpus Christi. “Then this property and house is useless.” Last fall, after the city of Corpus Christi first began pumping millions of gallons per day from the Evangeline Aquifer, towns and landowners across this area saw water levels in their wells drop. Mumme lost access to water for three days while he waited for workers to come lower his pump, which he said cost thousands of dollars. After that experience, he paid $30,000 to add another well on his property, for backup. He’s not the only one. The region’s largest industrial water users are also drilling wells, according to officials. In Nueces County, where Corpus Christi is located, newly planned pumping projects alone could add up to over 1,000 percent of what the state water plan considers a sustainable rate of withdrawal from aquifers. In March, Corpus Christi began pumping millions more gallons per day from its wellfield on the western banks of the Nueces River, about 15 miles outside the city, after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott waived permitting processes for the project in a bid to avert a water shortage. Across the river, drill rigs are turning at the city’s eastern wellfield. “I’ve done a lot of big projects in my career,” said Rik Allbritton, an operations manager for Weisinger Inc. with 40 years drilling experience, as a rig roared behind him at the eastern wellfield last Tuesday. “This is on the bigger side.” > Read this article at Inside Climate News - Subscribers Only Top of Page
State Stories Fort Worth Star-Telegram - April 7, 2026
Fort Worth asks landowner to remove data center use from zoning request Developers hoping to get 184 acres of land in west Fort Worth rezoned for industrial and multifamily residential use will not be able to use the land for a data center, as growing concern from residents has prompted the city to pump the brakes on several data center developments. A zoning application filed by Fort Worth-based construction company Westwood Professional Services, for land owned by the John Henry Dean & Shirley Lawson Foundation and the Dallas-based developer Standridge Companies, requests that the Fort Worth Zoning Commission rezone two parcels of land at the northwest corner of FM 1187 and Interstate 20. The land is in Fort Worth’s extraterritorial jurisdiction, with the developer hoping to get the land annexed by the City Council after the Zoning Commission decides on the zoning case. The Fort Worth Zoning Commission at its meeting on Wednesday will decide whether to recommend that those two parcels be zoned for intensive commercial development on one parcel and a planned development with intensive commercial, light industrial and dense residential use on the other. Data centers are included in the usage types for the second parcel of land, but according to Fort Worth District 3 council member Michael Crain — who represents the land developers want to rezone — they have agreed to remove that classification from their zoning request. “I asked the owners’ representative to formally request removal of all data center uses from this site,” Crain wrote in an April 3 Facebook post that includes a letter written by Westwood to the Zoning Commission. Crain told the Star-Telegram that the request came directly from him. In that letter, Westwood says that the landowners are requesting for the item to be continued to the May 13 Zoning Commission meeting and that data centers be removed from allowed uses on the site. The move comes as a cluster of data center developments in North Texas are causing concern and anger among residents. On March 31, the Fort Worth City Council decided to hold off on voting on a major tax agreement for a data center that would be built in the fast-growing suburbs of West Fort Worth near Benbrook. Before that, the City Council postponed votes on another data center that would be built on the other side of town, near Forest Hill and Everman. Residents and city leaders say developers and the city of Fort Worth have not been forthcoming about how the data center would impact them. Following these delays, and increasing questions from other council members, Crain has asked city staff to complete an informal report on data centers. > Read this article at Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 7, 2026
Nurses may no longer qualify for higher student loan limits. It could worsen Texas’ nursing shortage A potential change to federal policy could limit how much students can borrow for different degree programs – a KERA listener wants to know how that could affect health disparities in Texas. The U.S. Department of Education’s proposed rule going into effect in July would narrow which programs can be considered “professional degrees,” which come with a higher student loan borrowing limit of $200,000. Under the proposed rule, which hasn’t been finalized, nurses aren’t eligible – meaning they can only borrow $100,000, or up to $20,500 per year. Teneisha Howard, president of the Metroplex Black Nurses Association and a nursing professional development specialist, said the rule is misaligned with the “reality of our health care needs” given the looming nursing shortage in Texas. “We’re going to see the gap we have been working so hard to close open back up tremendously at a rate that we might never be able to close it,” she said. The concept of “professional degrees” was introduced as part of the Higher Education Act of 1965. The definition is used by DOE to determine which programs should qualify for higher loan limits because the requirements for practice require more than a typical bachelor’s degree. “It’s important to acknowledge that nurses were never on the list to begin with,” said Serena Bumpus, the CEO of the Texas Nurses Association. “[DOE] just didn’t have any controls essentially around who was getting the higher limits.” Prior regulation treated the list of professional degrees as non-exhaustive, leaning on the phrase “including, but not limited to.” However, the federal tax and spending bill passed last year required DOE to identify which programs will be eligible for higher federal student loan limits. Under the draft rule, there would be 11 fields that could receive a professional degree – including medicine, law and theology. Ten of the fields were part of the Higher Education Act definition from the 1960s – but clinical psychology was added to the list during the negotiation process which concluded late last year. In a statement to KERA, a DOE spokesperson said the change is “currently subject to ongoing rulemaking.” > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Current - April 7, 2026
'ShamWow Guy' spent $300,000 of his own cash in Texas congressional race for just 3,000 votes An ill-fated run for Congress in Texas’ 31st District cost long-shot candidate Offer Vince Shlomi — better known as the “ShamWow Guy” — more than $300,000 of his own money. What’s worse, for all the cash he poured in, the former TV pitchman landed less than 3,000 votes. Not only did Shlomi end his Republican primary bid in sixth place, but federal finance reports show that of the campaign’s $326,589 total receipts, $300,700 came from personal loans obtained by Shlomi, while another $22,270 were drawn from his personal savings. Indeed, the campaign raked in just $1,284 in donations from people who weren’t Shlomi himself. $300,000 for 3,000 votes? He might as well have gone door-to-door and paid people $100 to vote for him (which is illegal, but still). Further, it appears Shlomi may incur additional expense from suing the Texas Republican Party for dropping his “ShamWow” nickname from the ballot. In social media posts, he attributed his paltry 2,791-vote total to the nickname being left off the ballot in an attempt by unnamed Republicans in Name Only, or RINOS, to rig the contest. (Shlomi calls them “rhinos” but give him a break, he specializes in absorbent towels.) In his defense, we all know him as the “ShamWow Guy.” That is, if we’ve even heard of him at all. Some might also remember Shlomi from an infomercial for another product called the Slap Chop, for which his tag line was, “You’re gonna love my nuts.” That kind of pedigree doesn’t exactly scream “congressional material,” but in this topsy-turvy Idiocracy world, sure why not? However, the ShamWow was Shlomi’s magnum opus, his Mona Lisa, his Sistine Chapel. > Read this article at San Antonio Current - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KERA - April 7, 2026
Paxton probes Dallas Islamic mediation group, accuses it of imposing ‘sharia law’ Attorney General Ken Paxton is demanding documents from a Dallas-based Islamic mediation group he accused of unlawfully acting as a court and imposing “sharia law.” In a press release Monday, Paxton alleged the religious organization — which issues rulings in disputes involving Texas Muslims — implies it has governmental authority, acting outside of First Amendment protections that allow religious institutions to govern themselves. The attorney general announced his office has sent the Islamic Tribunal a request to examine documents, to determine if the organization is engaged in illegal activity. “Anyone or any entity that seeks to subvert the codified state and federal laws of this country will be stopped dead in their tracks,” Paxton said. “If the Islamic Tribunal is undermining the rule of law or misleading Texans about the legal authority it claims to hold, my office will ensure its operation is shut down. This is America, and we will not be governed by sharia law.” Paxton's legal action comes after Gov. Greg Abbott instructed local and state officials in Dallas and Collin counties to investigate the Islamic Tribunal and other Islamic mediation groups in November. Abbott called them "Sharia courts" trying to supersede Texas law. A spokesperson with the Dallas County District Attorney's Office told KERA News at the time neither the governor nor any law enforcement agency had contacted the DA's office about Islamic mediation groups. The Islamic Tribunal has since updated its website to emphasize that its practices are strictly spiritual — it does not practice law, function as a court, issue legally binding decisions or provide legal advice. The group describes itself as providing voluntary, faith-based religious guidance for individuals and families for divorces and other issues. > Read this article at KERA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
The 19th - April 7, 2026
Is fracking in Texas endangering a day care's children? In early December, drilling resumed near Mother’s Heart Learning Center. Newly installed gas wells dot property at 2020 S. Watson Road, less than one mile from the day care. One day in December, the sound of fracking machinery was so cacophonous that children couldn’t play outdoors. For gas companies and stakeholders, the project is poised to be an economic windfall. But many Arlington residents and experts say it could come at the expense of the community — especially its children. In January 2025, the Arlington City Council unanimously approved a permit allowing French oil and gas company TotalEnergies to install 10 new gas wells in East Arlington, which has a heavy concentration of Black and Latinx residents. It marked the first time in over a decade that the city council approved a permit for a new drill site after years of community opposition. Named Maverick, the new site also lies near three schools — Johns Elementary, Adams Elementary and Thornton Elementary. Five wells owned by the same company already occupy the plot of land near the new drilling site, which the company has owned since 2008. Hydraulic fracturing — or fracking — is used to extract gas by pumping pressurized water, sand and chemicals into bedrock. Texas policymakers have lauded the activity as a boon to local communities, garnering $2.48 billion in state tax revenue in 2025, according to the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. Arlington is choked with hundreds of these gas wells. The city, which sits atop the Barnett Shale, is a modern-day Golconda. But fracking has drawn sharp criticism from health experts, who say it could be linked to severe conditions like preterm births, congenital anomalies, lung diseases and childhood cancers. Ingrid Kelley, 69, has grown tired of the gas wells sprouting throughout North Texas. Several sit less than a mile from her house in East Arlington, and a pungent lingering scent of sulfur and something else that she can only describe as “rotten” has settled into her neighborhood. She fears what might happen to her 4-year-old grandson, who lives with her and attends Mother’s Heart Learning Center. “I can’t project and trace what all is going to affect him and all those that live around there and all those that are around these sites,” she said. “It’s very hard to project what’s going to happen, how many people are going to have increased cancer risk, respiratory disease, cardiac disease — all the things that go along with being premature or having congenital heart disease that affect you the rest of your life.” > Read this article at The 19th - Subscribers Only Top of Page
New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung - April 7, 2026
Holley Digby: The power of showing up (Holley Digby is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and the Director of Mental Health and Wellness for Communities In Schools of South Central Texas.) All three of my children had an incredible fifth-grade teacher, Mr. Kaufman. For many students, the impact of having him lasted well beyond fifth grade. He’s even invited former students back as seniors to speak to his class. This is something both the seniors and current students seem to find incredibly meaningful. When my now-teenagers see him around town, he always stops and asks about school. And without fail, he’ll throw in a sarcastic comment about whichever sibling isn’t there. Maybe something like, “So...is your brother still out making trouble?” Recently, he sent an email inviting families to participate in a celebration for Carl Schurz Elementary’s 100th birthday. And because it was Mr. Kaufman, there were far more teenagers back at their elementary school than I would have expected. It’s become a bit of a joke in our house to refer to “a Mr. Kaufman sighting,” which really just means someone saw him out in the wild, and we’re all waiting to hear what sarcastic for funny thing he said. Yes, he’s funny. But the real impact was the relationship. He knew his students. He paid attention. He made school feel a little less heavy. I’m always impressed that he remembers names and the small details. For my oldest, the running joke was pencils. When Jack was little, he just never seemed to have one, and every time Mr. Kaufman found a pencil on the floor, he’d point and call out, “Jack! Get it! A pencil!” Motivating students doesn’t start with a curriculum or counseling goals; it starts with the relationship. And while not every student will have a Mr. Kaufman, every student benefits from having adults who take the time to truly know them. One of the things I’m most proud of in my work in schools is how much relationships with students and their families are prioritized. That’s really at the core of Communities In Schools. It shows up in everyday moments, like asking a student about their day, asking about their grades, or simply taking the time to truly know them.> Read this article at New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Houston Chronicle - April 7, 2026
Golden Pass launches in East Texas at ‘right time’ for Iran war Terry Fritz bought her light blue lakefront house more than two years ago, as the now-hulking liquefied natural gas facility took shape across the street. Golden Pass LNG, owned by QatarEnergy and Houston oil behemoth Exxon Mobil, started commercial production last week and expects to ship its first cargo in the coming months. The water that laps against it is the same that added real estate appeal to the line of neighboring pillar-raised homes and vacation rentals. Fritz, 70, said she didn’t mind Golden Pass. The gas processing and export facility was relatively quiet, she said. Unlike the refineries down the road in Port Arthur, she couldn’t smell the gas being piped in and, at night, the flares and lights made it look like she lived near a little city. “They do what they need to do,” Fritz said of companies operating nearby, like Exxon. “And if it keeps the gas lower than it is in California, then it’s nice.” The facility’s launch, under construction since 2019, marks a critical moment for both the U.S. and global industry. It is the latest project along the Gulf Coast to come online and strengthen America’s role as lead exporter while natural gas markets elsewhere reel from the Iran war. “Golden Pass is hitting the market at the right time,” said James West, head of energy and power at Melius Research. Demand for U.S. LNG has skyrocketed as a result of the war in Iran. An Iranian airstrike to a QatarEnergy LNG facility at the Ras Laffan industrial hub in Qatar in March knocked out as much as 17% of the country’s current supply for the next five years, according to the company. LNG is considered one of the cleanest fuel sources on the market. It is the supercooled liquid form of natural gas, which makes it easier to pipe into ships to send to gas-favoring markets in Europe and Asia. The U.S. is the world’s largest exporter of LNG, and a favorite of the Trump administration, which restarted export permitting after a yearlong pause to the process during the Biden administration. The war in Iran showed that U.S. LNG is safe from a vulnerable choke point — the Strait of Hormuz — that cargoes from Qatar LNG are not, West said. > Read this article at Houston Chronicle - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Austin American-Statesman - April 7, 2026
Austin City Council wants a say in the future of 10 closing Austin ISD schools Austincity council leaders want more say in the future of parks and public spaces at the campuses Austin Independent School District plans to close this year. Two resolutions that Austin City Council approved in March seek to shore up a consistent parkland condemnation process and to start discussions on partnership or acquisition opportunities to find new use for closed school campuses. The city and Austin ISD have jointly owned several parcels of land on campuses for decades. The partnership formally allows the public to use the park space outside school hours and splits maintenance costs between the two entities. The imminent closure this summer of 10 Austin ISD campuses — and the district’s ongoing efforts to find new uses for the properties — prompted city council’s interest in creating more defined rules for city and school district joint property agreements. Superintendent Matias Segura said Friday he welcomed a more defined process for working with the city but AISD needs to take the lead indetermining how closeddistrict properties will be used in the future. “Which property lends itself to community hub, which lends itself to a repurpose for early childhood center, which lends itself to workforce housing — that’s the process that we need to own,” Segura said. One city council resolution directed the city manager to develop a standard process for when the city would give up its rights to property it jointly owns with other public entities, like AISD, and how the city would be compensated. In the past, council members haven’t always been made aware of when the city was being asked to give up its stake in a park that it jointly owned with Austin ISD, said Councilman Ryan Alter. This is important to Alter who hopes to increase the number of Austinites with a park in walking distance.About 70% of city residents can walk to a park, but Alter hopes100% of residents eventually will be able to. Austin ISD parks play a role in that number, but there’s a not a defined process for what factors the city should consider during condemnation procedures, he said. > Read this article at Austin American-Statesman - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Ars Technica - April 7, 2026
Elon Musk insists banks working on SpaceX IPO must buy Grok subscriptions Banks and other firms that want to work on SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) are being required to buy subscriptions to the Grok AI service, The New York Times reported today. Elon Musk “is requiring banks, law firms, auditors and other advisers working on the IPO to buy subscriptions to Grok, his artificial intelligence chatbot that is part of SpaceX,” the NYT wrote, citing anonymous sources who are familiar with the confidential negotiations. “Some of the banks have agreed to spend tens of millions on the chatbot and they have already started integrating Grok into their IT systems.” SpaceX reportedly filed IPO paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission this week. The IPO filing came two months after SpaceX purchased xAI, the Musk company that produces Grok. xAI purchased the X social network in March 2025. While Grok is known to individual Internet users because of the chatbot’s integration with X, the AI technology also comes in business and enterprise versions offered by xAI. Grok could benefit from the SpaceX IPO process at a time when it is the subject of investigations and lawsuits for generating nude images of real people and child sexual abuse material. According to the NYT sources, “Mr. Musk insisted that [banks] purchase the chatbot services,” and “asked the banks to advertise on X, his social media site that is also owned by SpaceX, but was less adamant about that request.” “For now, five banks are expected to work on the [SpaceX initial public] offering—Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley. The law firms Gibson Dunn and Davis Polk are also advising on the deal,” the NYT wrote. We contacted SpaceX today and will update this article if it provides any comment.> Read this article at Ars Technica - Subscribers Only Top of Page
San Antonio Report - April 7, 2026
UTRGV secures seats for students in St. Mary‘s law program A new partnership between St. Mary’s University and the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley has secured a long-awaited Legal Education Hub in the Rio Grande Valley. St. Mary’s President Winston Erevelles visited the Valley last week to sign a memorandum of understanding alongside UTRGV President Guy Bailey. The agreement secures at least five spots for students in the region in St. Mary’s School of Law’s Online Doctor of Jurisprudence and Master of Legal Studies programs. The move answers a decades-long plea by state Rep. Armando “Mando” Martinez, D-Weslaco, who filed legislation for at least the last eight years asking for the creation of a public law school in the Rio Grande Valley, as reported by The Texas Tribune. “So many kids from the Valley who go to law school, go to St. Mary’s,” Bailey said. “But this is going to really help ambitious kids who really can’t afford to leave home for a variety of reasons.” As the only institution with a law school in South Texas, St. Mary’s serves a large number of Rio Grande Valley students, Erevelles said. Each year, about 5% of incoming law students are from the Valley, but many of them might not end up returning home to practice, creating a shortage of lawyers in the region. “In the Rio Grande Valley, you’ve got roughly about one attorney for every 800 residents,” Erevelles said. “Now if you compare that to Bexar County or other Texas metropolitan areas, that number varies between one for every 100 residents or one for every 300 residents.” The St. Mary’s online law program is highly competitive and selective, Erevelles said. It currently welcomes about 2% of all applicants for its available 25 seats. So setting aside a minimum of five spots for Valley residents means allocating 20% of the total space. To qualify, students must be accepted and enrolled in the St. Mary’s online J.D. or M.L.S. program, provide proof of residency in the counties of Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy or Starr and complete the UTRGV Hub student registration process.> Read this article at San Antonio Report - Subscribers Only Top of Page
WFAA - April 7, 2026
Most charges against Millsap ISD, former faculty dismissed in alleged child abuse case A lawsuit filed against Millsap ISD, its former superintendent, an elementary school principal and two former educators regarding the alleged abuse of autistic children has been almost entirely dismissed, court records show. Former Millsap ISD superintendent Edie Martin and two former educators -- Jennifer Dale, 44, and Paxton Kendal Bean, 25 -- were arrested in March 2025 after a video of a February incident showed educators allegedly abusing an autistic child in a classroom. Martin resigned as Millsap ISD's superintendent after her arrest. The lawsuit, filed in June 2025, named Millsap ISD, Martin, Dale, Bean and the principal of Millsap Elementary School, where the alleged abuse happened, Roxie Carter, court documents show. Carter was not criminally charged. Nearly all of the charges against the defendants were dismissed at the request of the defendants, citing legal standards and Texas law against claims of assault, battery and negligent discipline amongst other charges. Additionally, qualified immunity was granted in part for Bean and in full for Dale. However, records show the court found Bean is not entitled to qualified immunity for claims that she pulled one of the victim's by the ear, punched them in the "calm down" room, and struck another child. The document goes onto state that Martin reported both Dale and Bean within two weeks of hearing about the abuse and an investigation followed immediately afterwards, which led to the plaintiffs' allegations that there was a failure to report to be dismissed. All of the dismissed claims were dismissed with prejudice, meaning they can't be brought up in court again, except for the right to bodily integrity claim against Dean, records show. > Read this article at WFAA - Subscribers Only Top of Page
KCEN - April 7, 2026
'Cicada' COVID variant confirmed in 25 states, including Texas A new COVID-19 variant is spreading across the United States — and health experts say it can evade the immunity built up from vaccines and previous infections. The variant, officially known as BA.3.2, has been nicknamed "cicada" because it stayed largely undetected — or underground — since it was first identified in June 2025, much like the insect it's named after. As of Feb. 11, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has confirmed cases in at least 25 states, including Texas. The CDC used nasal swabs, clinical samples and wastewater surveillance samples to track where the variant has spread across the country. According to Dr. Greg Newman, Medical Director at Hillcrest Convenient Care in Waco, the cicada variant has mutated in a way that makes it harder for your body to fight off — even if you've been vaccinated or previously infected. "It's mutated several of the what's called spike proteins, and that kind of helps it avoid some of the initial defenses of our immune system," Dr. Newman said. Experts say the mutation makes cicada highly transmissible and capable of evading immunity built from earlier strains of the virus. Dr. Newman says the symptoms of the cicada variant are similar to what COVID patients have experienced in recent years — and resemble a mix between the flu and a common cold. Symptoms include: Sore throat, headache, body aches, fever, cough, and occasional loss of taste or smell.> Read this article at KCEN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
City Stories San Antonio Report - April 7, 2026
Unions, Democratic groups spend in NEISD school board races Heated races are shaping up for two positions on the North East ISD school board this May, where partisan interests are again spending money to help their chosen candidates. Unlike past years, where conservative groups dominated the conversation, this time candidates backed by labor unions and local Democrats are the ones bringing in big money. Campaign finance reports covering Jan. 1 through March 23 were due last Thursday, offering the only look at money raised and spent before early voting starts on April 20. They indicated that a PAC aligned with teachers’ unions, called the Bexar County Federation of Teachers Committee on Political Education, spent about $2,300 helping forensic accountant Michael Adam Wulczyn and former congressional staffer Caprice Garcia. The PAC received a sizable contribution from the North East Bexar County Democrats, which has also endorsed Wulczyn and Garcia, and kicked off its own campaign to influence local school board races this past weekend. Wulczyn is challenging District 3 trustee Diane Sciba Villarreal — one of two members who got help from the now-dissolved Parents United for Freedom PAC when she first ran in 2022. Sciba Villarreal reported no money raised and spent as of March 23, while Wulczyn brought in a total of about $2,400. Meanwhile, Garcia is one of two candidates running to replace District 7 incumbent Marsha Landry, who also got money from conservative groups in 2022, but isn’t seeking reelection. Last week’s campaign finance reports indicated that Garcia got about $1,800 worth of help from the Bexar County Champions for Public Education PAC, which formed two years ago to oppose conservative influences in NEISD school board races. She brought in a total of $6,000, including $2,500 from a plumbers’ union. Her opponent, real estate agent Cheryl “Cheri” Ann Eltinger, reported raising about $1,400 in the same span, and listed Landry as her campaign treasurer. Of the many Bexar County-area school districts, none has experienced more tension over its approach to parental rights, library materials, health education and other hot-button issues than NEISD. The seven-member board was once divided evenly between those backed by conservative groups and those supported by the teachers’ union and other left-leaning groups, but the latter won races for all five seats on the ballot in 2024.> Read this article at San Antonio Report - Subscribers Only Top of Page
National Stories The Times - April 7, 2026
The man who watches Trump all day, every day The psychological demands of Aaron Rupar’s work are immense. He counts himself lucky to have remained more or less healthy after a decade in his job. “I certainly wouldn’t say that I’m like a model of mental health,” says the father-of-two from Minnesota. “But for the most part, especially considering what I do and how much time I spend doing it, I think I’ve been able to emerge relatively unscathed.” Rupar works from his spare room in his Minneapolis house. His job is to watch President Trump. All day, every day. Spread over two laptop screens, Rupar, 42, follows the frenetic schedule of the president, from the meandering speeches to the impromptu press conferences, the middle-of-the-night social media rants to the sudden interviews on TV. Rupar is a one-man news agency, running accounts with a million followers on X and another 930,000 on BlueSky. He also writes a Substack with 274,000 subscribers. A small fraction of those subscribers pay $50 per year, his main source of income. He sees it as his duty to keep the world informed of almost everything Trump and members of his administration say and do. He clips videos of Trump’s noteworthy remarks and shares them instantly on social media, monitoring 12 different TV channels simultaneously. His clips bounce back and forth across the internet. “I’ve certainly had some days over the years that have been 18-20 hours of pretty much nonstop work,” he says. “I remember he gave some sort of speech to the Korean legislature that started at my time, like four in the morning, that I woke up for. I’d been working till midnight the night previous. So that’s not super uncommon.” Rupar started clipping Trump in 2017. He has a strong claim to have watched more of the president’s appearances than anyone else.> Read this article at The Times - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Wall Street Journal - April 7, 2026
Gulf funds agree to back Paramount’s $81 billion takeover of Warner Paramount has received signed equity commitments of close to $24 billion from three sovereign-wealth funds led by Saudi Arabia to help back its takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery, according to people familiar with the matter. Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has agreed to provide roughly $10 billion of the nearly $24 billion to Paramount, run by David Ellison, the son of billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison. The agreements with investors also include Qatar Investment Authority and Abu Dhabi’s L’imad Holding Co., the people said. The agreements by the Middle East funds coincide with the region’s increased economic and political unrest caused by the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran. In February, Paramount announced its deal to buy Warner Discovery, home to HBO, CNN and Harry Potter, for $81 billion. The deal is pending regulatory review in Europe, and Paramount executives have told employees to prepare to close as soon as the end of July, according to other people familiar with the situation. The commitments by the Gulf investors will help offset the cost for the Ellisons and RedBird Capital Partners, which is also backing the deal. As part of its deal, Paramount has said any equity syndication wouldn’t affect the transaction closing because the Ellison family would cover the entire amount if needed. The Gulf investors won’t have voting rights in the new Paramount-Warner entity, and the deal isn’t expected to trigger a mandatory review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., or Cfius, people familiar with the matter said. Because each entity will own far less than 25% of the combined company, executives don’t expect the funds’ involvement to spark a review by the Federal Communications Commission either, the people said.> Read this article at Wall Street Journal - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Washington Post - April 7, 2026
Trump says God supports U.S. cause in Iran war as he threatens wider bombing As President Donald Trump renews his threats to bomb “the entire country” of Iran, he is offering a new justification for the costly five-week conflict with no clear end in sight: God himself wants the United States to do it. Trump said Monday that he believed God supports the United States’ actions in the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, a widening conflict that has killed thousands in the Middle East,wounded many more and left 13 U.S. service members dead. “I do, because God is good,” Trump said in response to a Washington Post reporter’s question during a White House news briefing. “And God wants to see people taken care of.” Trump’s comments mark a shift in how he is describing the war. After offering conflicting explanations for U.S. involvement — including whether his goal is regime change — he has begun in recent days to cast the conflict in religious terms as he raises the possibility of broader strikes. The president earlier Monday threatened to bomb the country’s power and transportation infrastructure until it resembles the “stone ages.” He claimed that such actions are welcomed by Iranian people who want their government overthrown and who, he said, are begging the U.S. to “please keep bombing.” Trump did not answer a question about whether he has sought God’s direction as the conflict has escalated. But he suggested that the Almighty supports U.S. action, even if God is grieved by the violence. “God doesn’t like what’s happening. I don’t like what’s happening,” Trump continued. “Everyone says I enjoy it. I don’t enjoy this. I don’t enjoy it.” He went on to tout that he “ended eight wars” earlier in his term, a reference he has frequently made to brokering peace deals between India and Pakistan, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and others. “That makes me much happier than what we’re doing right now,” the president said. Trump, who identifies as a Christian but does not claim to regularly pray or read the Bible, has invoked faith at times in his second term, including suggesting that his political return and survival after an assassination attempt carried a larger purpose. The language has echoed that of some of his supporters, who have cast him as a figure protected or chosen by God. > Read this article at Washington Post - Subscribers Only Top of Page
CNN - April 7, 2026
Trump threatens to jail unspecified reporter over airmen rescue leaks President Donald Trump threatened to jail a journalist as part of a hunt for the “leaker” behind initial reports Friday that a second Air Force officer from a downed US fighter jet was missing. The public revelation complicated the administration’s military rescue efforts in Iran, Trump said at a White House press conference on Monday, which officials were trying to keep quiet following the successful recovery of the first airman on Friday. “We’re going to go to the media company that released it, and we’re going to say, ‘National security, give it up or go to jail,’” Trump said, as he detailed the two separate rescues of the crew members shot down over Iran last week. “The person that did the story will go to jail if he doesn’t say.” Trump did not specify which media outlet he was referring to, and the White House official declined to answer questions about his remarks. Iranian media had first reported the downed plane, sparking widespread discussion online about the fate of the crew before any major US outlet had published the news. “An investigation is underway,” a White House official told CNN. Several outlets, including CNN, reported last week on the missing airmen and the US military’s subsequent efforts to find and rescue them. The second Air Force officer was ultimately recovered early Sunday in a high-risk mission that CIA Director John Ratcliffe described Monday as “comparable to hunting for a single grain of sand in the middle of a desert.” During the press conference, Trump said that the revelation of a second missing crew member had alerted the Iranian military and sparked their competing efforts to try to find him first. > Read this article at CNN - Subscribers Only Top of Page
NOTUS - April 7, 2026
Trump’s new DHS secretary floats a plan to punish airports in sanctuary cities Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said Monday that the Trump administration was looking at pulling customs officers from airports in so-called sanctuary cities, a move that would effectively cancel international flights to most of the country’s largest travel hubs. Mullin pitched the move as explicit retaliation for those cities’ decisions to limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, saying, “We need to focus on cities that want to work with us.” “I believe sanctuary cities are not lawful. I don’t think they’re able to do that,” Mullin told Fox News host Bret Baier during a sit-down interview that aired Monday, his first as a Cabinet secretary. “So we’re going to take a hard look at this.” Sanctuary cities limit their cooperation with federal immigration agents in connection to the arrest and deportation of undocumented immigrants. Major cities with these policies include New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco. When asked if he was serious about pulling customs officers from those airports, Mullin responded, “Well, we’re going to have to start prioritizing things at some point.” The threat comes as DHS remains shut down, thanks to a funding lapse that began on Feb. 14 when Democratic lawmakers demanded new restrictions on immigration enforcement in exchange for their votes to fund the department. “Democrats are wanting to defund Customs and Border Patrol,” Mullin said on Fox News. “Who processes those individuals when they walk off the plane? So I’m going to have to be forced to make hard decisions.” The Senate eventually passed a bill that funded most of DHS through September, excluding U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and parts of Customs and Border Protection.> Read this article at NOTUS - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Associated Press - April 7, 2026
AP says it will offer buyouts as part of pivot away from newspaper-focused history The Associated Press, one of the world’s oldest and most influential news organizations, said Monday it is offering buyouts to an unspecified number of its U.S.-based journalists as part of an acceleration away from the focus on newspapers and their print journalism that sustained the company since the mid-1800s. The News Media Guild, the union that represents AP journalists, said more than 120 of the staff members it represents received buyout offers on Monday. The news organization is becoming more focused on visual journalism and developing new revenue sources, particularly through companies investing in artificial intelligence, to cope with the economic collapse of many legacy news outlets. Once the lion’s share of AP’s revenue, big newspaper companies now account for 10% of its income. “We’re not a newspaper company and we haven’t been for quite some time,” Julie Pace, executive editor and senior vice president of the AP, said in an interview. Despite changes – the company has doubled the number of video journalists it employs in the United States since 2022 – remnants of a staffing structure built largely to provide stories to newspapers and broadcasters in individual states have remained. That has its roots well back in American history; the AP was started in the mid-19th century by New York newspapers looking to share the costs of reporting outside their immediate territory. The number of AP journalists who will lose jobs is murky, in part intentionally. The AP does not say how many journalists it employs, though it has a large international presence as well as its U.S. staff. Pace said the AP’s goal is to reduce its global staff by less than 5%. Since buyouts are being offered now to only U.S. journalists, it stands to reason that the cut among that workforce will be more than 5%. Whether there are layoffs depends on how many people take the offer, Pace said. “The AP employs hundreds of talented journalists who are willing and able to adjust to the changing media landscape,” the union said in a statement. “However, the company refuses to offer them appropriate training and tools. Instead, AP continues to get rid of experienced staff and flirt with artificial intelligence — ignoring the opportunity to differentiate AP news stories as ones that are and always will be created by human journalists.” > Read this article at Associated Press - Subscribers Only Top of Page
Inside Higher Ed - April 7, 2026
Trump Administration plans sweeping changes to accreditation The Trump administration wants the agencies that oversee colleges and universities to set minimum standards for student achievement, protect viewpoint diversity and consider cost efficiency in their evaluation of institutions, among other changes unveiled Monday. That last provision would help to “provide relief for students and taxpayers who have suffered from increasing tuition by allowing greater institutional flexibility to control costs,” according to a nine-page summary of the Education Department’s 151-page proposal. An advisory committee will consider the administration’s proposed revisions to the rules that govern accreditors in two rounds of weeklong meetings that begin April 13. Those meetings are the next step in the department’s rule-making process. Any changes still will be subject to public comment. Trump officials have signaled for the last year that they see overhauling accreditation as key to their plans to reform higher education over all. The draft changes released Monday outline how exactly they plan to rework the system, which is critical to how colleges access billions in federal student aid. As expected, the department wants to make it easier for new accreditors to gain federal recognition and to require accreditors to ensure colleges and universities are complying with federal laws, “including the prohibition of preferential treatment based on protected characteristics, such as race-based scholarships or programs, and preferential hiring or promotion practices.” The administration also would “direct accrediting agencies to refrain from interfering with institutional governance decisions that fall within the rightful purview of state governments, boards of trustees, or similar governing bodies, limiting their role to advisory purposes only.” > Read this article at Inside Higher Ed - Subscribers Only Top of Page
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