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Newsclips - January 30, 2026

Lead Stories

New York Times - January 30, 2026

Trump picks Kevin M. Warsh, a former Fed official, as the central bank’s chair.

President Trump has selected Kevin M. Warsh to serve as the next chair of the Federal Reserve, giving the former central bank governor a pivotal role in steering an institution that has faced a barrage of attacks from the administration over its reluctance to more aggressively lower interest rates. In a post on Truth Social, Mr. Trump praised Mr. Warsh, saying “he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best. On top of everything else, he is ‘central casting’ and will never let you down.” Friday’s announcement capped a drawn-out search process to replace Jerome H. Powell, whose term as chair of the central bank ends in May.

Mr. Warsh, who served as a Fed governor between 2006 and 2011, edged out other contenders including Kevin A. Hassett, one of the president’s top economic advisers, and Christopher J. Waller, a current governor. Rick Rieder, a top executive at BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, was also a finalist. Mr. Warsh, a conservative economist who was a front-runner to be Fed chair during Mr. Trump’s first term, will need to be confirmed by the Senate. The selection comes at a critical moment for the Fed, whose officials are facing relentless pressure from the Trump administration to provide relief to borrowers while grappling with a weakening labor market and persistent inflation. That dynamic has put the Fed’s primary goals of stable prices and low unemployment in tension with one another, stoking internal divisions about what to do about rates. Mr. Trump’s top criteria for Fed chair was someone who supported significantly lower borrowing costs, which has been the biggest source of tension between Mr. Trump and Mr. Powell, who is now the subject of a criminal investigation by the Justice Department stemming from his handling of renovations at the central bank’s headquarters in Washington.

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KHOU - January 30, 2026

How Gov. Abbott's H-1B visa freeze could impact the Texas Medical Center

Governor Greg Abbott has ordered a freeze on some H-1B visas as Texas launches an investigation into alleged visa abuse. One of the biggest impacts locally could be in Houston's Texas Medical Center, which heavily relies on international doctors and researchers. For many international workers, the H-1B approval is just one step in a long process. Some have already signed contracts, some are finishing training, and others are preparing to move to Houston this year. Now, with the freeze in place for state agencies and public universities, some of those start dates could be delayed.

The H-1B program is for highly-specialized workers, common in healthcare and research, and it requires employer sponsorship. Even after receiving federal approval, workers still have to clear final paperwork and employer start-date requirements before they can begin to work in the U.S. Government data shows that last year, MD Anderson, Baylor College of Medicine, UT Health Houston, and the University of Houston received dozens of new H-1B approvals. These represent doctors, medical residents, and researchers who were expected to fill positions this year. This mostly impacts medical residents, specialty physicians, and research staff, roles that are already difficult to fill at teaching hospitals, like Ben Taub. For hospitals in the Texas Medical Center, that could mean some positions will take longer to fill and put more strain on existing staff. Questions remain whether Texas can pause participation that's created and regulated by the federal government. Legally, states can control their own agencies and hiring decisions, but immigration and visa eligibility are federal matters. That's why some university systems and hospital networks are expected to closely review this order before making long-term changes. In a two-page letter, the directive says that institutions can't file for new H-1B visa petitions without permission from the Texas Workforce Commission. Abbott also asked for agencies and higher education institutions to submit detailed reports of the petitions being filed. It's set to be in place until the next Legislative session in May 2027.

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Washington Post - January 30, 2026

Senate aims to vote on funding deal before shutdown deadline

The Senate will aim to vote on Friday on an agreement to fund most of the federal government and buy more time to debate new accountability measures for immigration agents, as a midnight deadline looms for a partial shutdown. Senate Democrats said Thursday that Republicans had agreed to their demand to break off funding for the Department of Homeland Security from a larger spending bill after federal immigration authorities killed Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. The agreement would fund DHS at existing levels for two more weeks to give the two parties time to try to hash out a deal to impose new restrictions on immigration enforcement that Democrats are seeking. President Donald Trump said in a social media post that Republicans and Democrats had “come together to get the vast majority of the Government funded until September, while at the same time providing an extension to the Department of Homeland Security.”

“Hopefully, both Republicans and Democrats will give a very much needed Bipartisan ‘YES’ Vote,” he added. But the Senate did not begin voting on the agreement on Thursday night. At least one senator, Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), put a hold on the process. Graham has said he wants to protect a measure that allows senators — but not House members — to sue over having their phone records obtained without their knowledge. The current appropriations package would reverse that measure, which was drafted in response to an investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Unanimous consent is necessary in the Senate for the chamber to bypass its rules and vote quickly, allowing any one senator to hold up the process. “If you were abused, you think you were abused, your phone were illegally seized, you should have your day in court,” Graham told reporters Thursday. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-New York) blamed Republicans for the impasse as he left the Capitol Thursday night. “Republicans need to get their act together,” Schumer told reporters.

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Associated Press - January 29, 2026

In some states, a push to end all property taxes for homeowners

It is a goal spreading among anti-tax crusaders — eliminate all property taxes on homeowners. Rising property values have inflated tax bills in many states, but ending all homeowner taxes would cost billions or even tens of billions in most states. It is unclear if lawmakers can pull it off without harming schools and local governments that rely on the taxes to provide services. Officials in North Dakota say they are on their way, using state oil money. Wednesday, Republicans in the Georgia House unveiled a complex effort to phase out homeowner property taxes by 2032. In Florida, GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis says that is his goal, with lawmakers currently considering phasing out nonschool property taxes on homeowners over 10 years. And in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott says he wants to eliminate property taxes for schools.

Republicans are echoing those who say taxes, especially when the taxman can seize a house for nonpayment, mean no one truly owns property. “No one should ever face the loss of their home because they can’t pay rent to the government,” Georgia Republican House Speaker Jon Burns of Newington said Wednesday. These audacious election-year efforts could be joined by ballot initiatives in Oklahoma and Ohio to eliminate all property taxes. Such initiatives were defeated in North Dakota in 2024 and failed to make the ballot in Nebraska that year, although organizers there are trying again. Another initiative in Michigan may also fail to make the ballot. “We’re very much in this property tax revolt era, which is not unique, it’s not new. We’ve seen these revolts in the past,” said Manish Bhatt, vice president of state tax policy at the Tax Foundation, a Washington D.C., group that is generally skeptical of new taxes. Previous backlashes led to laws like California’s Proposition 13, a 1978 initiative that limited property tax rates and how much local governments could increase property valuations for tax purposes.

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State Stories

Texas Public Radio - January 30, 2026

Reps. Castro and Crockett describe conditions at ICE Dilley detention center

U.S. Reps. Joaquin Castro of San Antonio and Jasmine Crockett of Dallas said conditions they observed Wednesday inside the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley amount to “inhumanity,” as the two Democrats urged Immigration and Customs Enforcement to release five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and other children being held after recent immigration detainments in Minnesota. Speaking at an afternoon news conference on the steps of San Antonio City Hall, Castro said he and Crockett toured the facility earlier in the day and met for about 30 minutes with Liam and his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias.

Castro described the boy as “lethargic,” saying Liam’s father told them the child “has been very depressed,” “hasn’t been eating well,” and has been “asking about his family … and saying that he "wants to go be back in school with his classmates.” Crockett echoed that account, telling reporters that Liam has “gotten depressed … to the extent that he’s stopped eating,” and that his father has been washing the child’s only set of clothes daily and hanging them to dry overnight. She added that Liam’s mother is “currently four months pregnant” and not detained with them. Crockett described in vivid detail what Liam had experienced. “Imagine being a free-willed, loving kiddo. And all of a sudden, one day, you're thrown on a plane. You're sent 1,500 miles away from home. And you don't understand what's going on. All you know is that your friends are gone. You don't have your mom,” she said. “This is the story of Liam. The sad reality of what we found when we went to Dilley was that Liam was not the only one,” Crockett said.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 30, 2026

ICE raids are sparking labor shortages in South Texas, business leaders say

Last month, a concrete company on the Texas-Mexico border filed for bankruptcy, claiming its business had been disrupted by federal immigration raids on South Texas construction sites that were “resulting in acute labor shortages.” The filing by 57 Concrete, which is based in Mission and reports a fleet of more than 220 vehicles and almost 100 employees, comes amid a nationwide crackdown by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that has drawn warnings of economic repercussions for Texas and other border states. The fear among Texas business leader is the raids will leave the state, which has the second highest percentage of migrant workers in the country, without enough labor to build houses, serve meals and pick crops at harvest time.

In the Rio Grande Valley, where undocumented workers have gone back and forth across the border for generations, construction projects began grinding to a halt last summer as ICE raids ramped up, said Paul Rodriguez, the owner of a large real estate firm there and a former top executive at Lone Star National Bank. “I’m talking to individual bankers and they were saying, ‘We have builders having to extend their loans because they can’t complete their projects,’” he said. “I had one individual say ICE showed up at one of their construction sites and took 18 of his guys.” The situation has begun to draw the attention of politicians of both parties in Washington, with U.S. Reps. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, and Monica De La Cruz, R-McAllen, both holding meetings with the construction sector in recent weeks.

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Fox News - January 30, 2026

Gov Abbott issues disaster declaration to prevent screwworm fly infestation from spreading into Texas

exas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a statewide disaster declaration on Thursday to prevent the potential spread of the New World screwworm fly into the Lone Star State, as he seeks to better protect livestock and wildlife. The governor's declaration allows the Texas New World Screwworm Response Team to use all state government prevention and response resources to prevent the spread of the parasite into Texas. The New World screwworm fly is spreading north from Mexico toward the border it shares with the U.S.

"Although the New World screwworm fly is not yet present in Texas or the U.S., its northward spread from Mexico toward the U.S. southern border poses a serious threat to Texas' livestock industry and wildlife," Abbott said in a statement. "State law authorizes me to act to prevent a threat of infestation that could cause severe damage to Texas property, and I will not wait for such harm to reach our livestock and wildlife," he continued. With his statewide disaster declaration, the governor said the Texas New World Screwworm Response Team "can fully utilize all state government prevention and response resources to prevent the re-emergence of this destructive parasite." Texas officials are prepared to fully eradicate the pest if need be, the governor said. Abbott has taken preemptive action against the New World screwworm threat by directing the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and the Texas Animal Health Commission to establish a joint Texas New World Screwworm Response Team. The governor also highlighted a partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to create a new $750 million domestic sterile New World Screwworm production facility near Edinburg, Texas.

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Community Impact Newspapers - January 30, 2026

Austin-Bergstrom expands direct flights to include Cayman Islands

Austin travelers will soon have access to nonstop flights to the Cayman Islands. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport is partnering with Cayman Airways to offer a seasonal summer service. What you need to know Flights will depart weekly on Sundays, May 24 through Aug. 9. Austin to Grand Cayman: departs at 12:45 p.m. and arrives in Grand Cayman at 3:45 p.m. Grand Cayman to Austin: departs at 8:15 a.m. and arrives in Austin at 11:45 a.m.

Cayman Airways flights will contain 160 seats and an exclusive business-class cabin. The company will provide a variety of free offerings, including in-flight entertainment, standard seat selection, charging ports, a complimentary meal and Seven Fathoms Rum punch for passengers 18 and older. Additionally, the ticket includes a carry-on and one personal item for no additional charge. “By launching nonstop service to the Grand Cayman Islands, we are answering the call from our passengers for more diverse international travel options and easier access to top leisure destinations,” ABIA CEO Ghizlane Badawi said in a news release.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 30, 2026

San Antonio Express-News Editorial: In Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, Goodwin has vision, experience

It can be argued lieutenant governor is the most powerful office in Texas. The lieutenant governor sets the legislative agenda by running the Texas Senate, and since 2014 Dan Patrick has flexed the power of this office in extraordinary ways. We expect Patrick to cruise to victory in the Republican Party primary. His influence, fundraising and connection to GOP primary voters are unmatched. The question for Democratic voters is which candidate can pose the strongest challenge to Patrick? Our recommendation goes to state Rep. Vikki Goodwin, who has sharp policy ideas, a compelling vision for Texas and the legislative connections to be an effective lieutenant governor.

Goodwin is running against Marcos Vélez, an organizer and labor contract negotiator for the United Steelworkers union, and Courtney Head, a contracts and privacy manager, for the Democratic nomination. We were impressed with Vélez, whose chief focus would be raising wages for Texans and improving living conditions. He spoke eloquently about why the Democratic Party has struggled to gain traction with many Texas voters, and we can see why his candidacy is garnering so much attention. We were equally impressed with Goodwin, a real estate broker out of Austin, and we put a premium on her legislative experience and broader policy vision. She was forceful about ending private school vouchers, improving women’s health, restoring abortion rights and ensuring precious water resources serve people, as opposed to, say, data centers. We appreciate her call to expand Medicaid, support of the cannabis industry with commonsense regulations, and push to let voters decide whether Texas should legalize gambling. Her campaign website is flush with policy positions and priorities — most such candidate sites are vapid and vague — and this was reflected in our candidate meeting. For those voters who are tired of state leadership that has failed to invest in people — be it in flood mitigation, public education, access to health care, broadband infrastructure, the list goes on — Goodwin offers a compelling vision for what Texas could be under new leadership.

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WFAA - January 30, 2026

Dallas-Fort Worth's FIFA base camps remain open as top-ranked nations seemingly look elsewhere

With just over four months until the World Cup kicks off, North Texas' base camps have yet to be publicly declared as any nation's home away from home during the tournament. We learned which nations will play their matches at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, being rebranded "Dallas Stadium" for the World Cup, back in December. Both Argentina and Japan will play two matches apiece in North Texas. Netherlands, England, Jordan and Austria all play one match. Yet, to date, none of them have picked DFW as their base camp, and some have already planted their flags elsewhere in the U.S., according to reports. Japan plans to stay in Nashville, according to our partners at the Dallas Business Journal.

Argentina, England and Netherlands are all eying Kansas City for their base camps, according to ABC affiliate KMBC. FIFA has yet to make an official announcement for base camp designations, but it is expected within the next few weeks, sources have told WFAA. DFW has four team base camps paired with hotels live on its website: Toyota Stadium and the Westin Stonebriar Golf Resort & Spa in Frisco; Texas Christian University and the Sheraton Fort Worth Downtown Hotel in Fort Worth; the University of North Texas and Embassy Suites by Hilton Denton Convention Center in Denton; and the new Mansfield Stadium with the Hilton Garden Inn Dallas/Arlington South. The Cotton Bowl and SMU are venue specific training sites where teams will be required to train at in the lead up the week of their matches at AT&T Stadium, FIFA Dallas officials told. A report from the Miami Herald says teams are free to secure their own training sites and lodging facilities. There have not been any national teams to announce their selection for a DFW-based site, but sources told WFAA there have been numerous national team visits to these North Texas venues. A handful of the top-ranked nations in the world have already publicly announced their base camp selections: Germany in North Carolina, France in Boston, Uruguay in Playa Del Carmen, Mexico, Norway in North Carolina, and Croatia in Virginia. With FIFA's base camp designation seemingly around the corner, the interest in the World Cup continues to build. FIFA announced it received 500 million ticket requests in the latest ticket draw. Fans will be notified of the outcome of their ticket applications by email no earlier than Feb. 5. Less than 1% of the applications submitted will be accepted, WFAA analysis showed. The FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11, where host nation Mexico takes on South Africa. The first match in DFW will be the Netherlands vs. Japan on June 14.

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Dallas Voice - January 30, 2026

Cruezot, Garza join newly formed national coalition of DAs and prosecutors pushing back against federal overreach

Dallas County Criminal District Attorney John Creuzot is a member of a national coalition of locally-elected top prosecutors who announced today (Wednesday, Jan. 28) the formation of the Project for the Fight Against Federal Overreach, “an effort to hold federal officials accountable when they exceed their lawful authority, especially in states around the country where federal agents are being surged,” according to a press release announcing the project. “The coalition launches amid growing concerns about warrantless entries, unlawful detentions and coercive enforcement tactics by federal agents, and it’s intended to ensure that constitutional limits on federal power are actively enforced through lawful institutions,” the press release explained.

Founding participants include district attorneys from places such as Mary Moriarty from Minneapolis, Larry Krasner from Philadelphia; Jose Garza from Austin; Steve Descano from Fairfax, Va.; Parisa Dehghani-Tafti from Falls Church and Arlington, Va.; Stephanie Morales from Portsmouth, Va.; Ramin Fatehi from Norfolk, Va., and Laura Conover froma Pima County, Ariz. The coalition will share strategies and best practices among prosecutors, provide regular public updates on efforts to rein in unlawful federal conduct and educate the public on what paths are legally available, and coordinate on accountability efforts across jurisdictions, the press release explained. Project participants emphasized that accountability is critical to keeping trust in the legal system, with Creuzot commenting, “Violent crime in this community and others — regardless of who commits it — must be addressed. When a person’s death appears to have been caused unjustifiably, it demands a thorough investigation and, when warranted, prosecution.”

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Texas Public Radio - January 30, 2026

Bexar County Judge Rosie Speedlin Gonzalez arrested in rare criminal case over alleged courtroom misconduct, vows to fight charges

Bexar County Court at Law Judge Rosie Speedlin Gonzalez has been arrested and booked on charges of official oppression and unlawful restraint stemming from an incident in her courtroom. Speedlin Gonzalez turned herself in Thursday and was booked into the Bexar County Jail. She later posted a $40,000 bond and was released. Through her attorney, she has denied wrongdoing and said she intends to vigorously defend herself. The indictment stems from a December 2024 hearing in which prosecutors say Speedlin Gonzalez ordered defense attorney Elizabeth Russell to be handcuffed and seated in the jury box during a dispute over courtroom procedure.

According to court records, the conflict began after Russell challenged the judge’s handling of the hearing and refused to comply with her instructions. Prosecutors argue Speedlin Gonzalez exceeded her authority by ordering the attorney restrained. Russell later filed a complaint related to the incident, prompting the investigation. Unlawful restraint by a judicial officer is a second-degree felony, which can carry prison time and a fine. Official oppression is a misdemeanor. Special Prosecutor Brian Cromeens was appointed to handle the case after the Bexar County District Attorney’s Office recused itself, citing a conflict of interest. Speedlin Gonzalez has served on the bench since 2019, when she became the first openly LGBTQ judge elected in Bexar County. She oversees the county’s Reflejo Court for first-time domestic violence offenders.

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Houston Chronicle - January 30, 2026

Parent company of Texas-based Twin Peaks files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

Twin Hospitality Group, the parent company of the Twin Peaks restaurant chain, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas. The filing came on Monday, almost exactly one year after the company went public in a spinoff from the restaurant group Fat Brands, which acquired Twin Peaks in 2021. Twin Hospitality is still a subsidiary of Fat Brands, which owns chains including Fazoli's and Marble Slab Creamery and also filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Monday. Court filings shed light on how Twin Peaks got over its skis.

John DiDonato of Huron Consulting Services, which is serving as financial advisor to Fat Brands and Twin Hospitality for the Chapter 11 process, said in a motion that Fat Brands' acquisitions had left the companies with "increasingly unsustainable" debt obligations. The companies then struggled to raise money in the markets, he continued, "due to the unfavorable market for restaurant stocks generally and Fat Brands and Twin Hospitality’s stocks specifically." The situation was further complicated, DiDonato added, by legal issues, inflation and "industry headwinds." Similar issues have also taken a toll on one of Twin Peaks' closest competitors. The restaurant chain Hooters, which is also known for its distinctive uniforms as well as its chicken wings, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in March 2025 and soon thereafter closed 30 locations. The company emerged from Chapter 11 status after it was reacquired by its original owners, who promised "a renewed commitment to family" as part of the brand's "re-Hooterization."

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KXAN - January 30, 2026

TEA approves 22 of 24 AISD turnaround plans

The Austin Independent School District released new information about turnaround plans it submitted a few months ago. In November, the district had to submit turnaround plans to the Texas Education Agency (TEA) for schools that received multiple unacceptable accountability ratings. The plans are designed to prevent the state from taking over and managing the district.

On Thursday, AISD Superintendent Matias Segura addressed the plans in the board meeting, saying that TEA has approved 22 of 24 plans without requiring adjustments. The two schools that were not approved were Widén and Winn elementary schools; they were not rejected, but TEA requested additional details from the schools. The TEA is looking for Austin ISD to provide more details around the plan to support reassigned students and how the district will fund extra supports. The district listed a number of ways it’s offering support, which include: Strengthening classroom instruction, teacher development, active leadership and expanded student support. For both Widén and Winn, AISD will resubmit the revised plans by March 24.

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KHOU - January 30, 2026

Bible verses could soon be required reading in Texas public school classrooms

A major effort to bring religious texts back into Texas classrooms has hit a pause, but it is far from over. State education leaders delayed a final vote on a controversial proposal to add Bible passages and other religious readings to English classes from kindergarten through 12th grade. According to reporting from the Houston Chronicle, the proposed law would dramatically reshape reading lists for many students. The plan calls for dozens of new books in some grade levels and would require ten passages drawn directly from various versions of the Bible to be included in the English curriculum for all K-12 grades. Supporters frame the move as a way to expose students to foundational religious and cultural texts, while critics have raised concerns about church-state separation and the potential for religious favoritism.

The Chronicle also reports that parents would likely have the option to opt their children out of reading the religious texts. That could give families some flexibility if they object to the material on faith or personal grounds. However, there is a significant catch: even if students skip those readings in class, the religious passages are expected to be folded into the state’s standardized tests if the plan goes through. That means the material could still influence what appears on high-stakes exams that affect students, teachers and campuses. The timeline for any changes remains several years away. If approved, the mandatory readings would not appear in classrooms immediately. Under the current proposal, the new requirements would take effect in the 2030–31 school year, giving districts time to adjust lesson plans, order materials and train teachers. For now, the delay pushes the final decision into the spring, ensuring the debate over faith, literature and public education in Texas will continue.

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Lab Report Dallas - January 30, 2026

It's more costly than ever to live in Dallas. Can faith-based solutions help make housing more affordable?

What can Dallas learn from Charlotte, a city two-thirds its size, a thousand miles east? The Lab Report’s last twostories examined how churches in North Carolina’s largest municipality are adding rooftops to chip away at its housing shortage. Dallas churches have for years, in fits and starts, talked about developing land they own but don’t need; those in Charlotte are already turning dirt every year. They are putting up apartments and condominiums and single-family homes that are affordable to everyone from restaurant workers to schoolteachers and first responders. Since 2019, the faith-based initiative there has delivered at least 1,500 new units of housing and attracted interest from over 100 places of worship. (And counting.) It’s also helped these congregations find a future beyond the collection plate, literally saving some churches from running out of money as their memberships decline.

It is important that Dallas recognize its challenges—in this case, housing—are not unique. Solving the affordability issue, which includes ensuring that even the poorest Dallasites have dignified access to a quality home, will require many strategies that swim hard against the current. And a good way to identify new paths is by finding them in similar markets where they’ve led to results, like how Charlotte’s faith community mobilized into becoming small-scale housing developers. “Whether you’re a Christian or a Muslim or whoever, it’s a moral imperative that you care about the community and your people in it,” says Linda McMahon, CEO of the Dallas Economic Development Corporation, whose former job leading The Real Estate Council involved advising partners on housing.“The churches, they have the ability to do this. But they don’t really have the support system or the tools to do it.” Locally, housing affordability grows more dire each year. Dallas is rapidly losing stock that is affordable to people considered low-income, who, using the federal government’s definition, make up about 60 percent of our renters. “Affordable” generally means that someone isn’t spending more than one-third of their income on housing. “We’re losing affordable housing faster than we can produce it,” says James Armstrong, the deputy director of Housing and Homelessness for the city of Dallas.

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National Catholic Reporter - January 29, 2026

El Paso Bishop Seitz: Immigration crackdown shows 'total disregard' for human rights

In this city that sits along the U.S. southern border with Mexico, immigrant families are being torn apart by the Trump administration's mass deportation campaign, said El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz. "People are suffering, and the effects of that suffering will have an impact on our country too, for many years to come," Seitz told the National Catholic Reporter during a Jan. 21 interview at his office in El Paso. Seitz, 72, addressed the federal government's ongoing immigration crackdown, which in recent weeks has prompted widespread protests across the country, especially in Minneapolis, where federal immigration agents have shot and killed two people in the last three weeks.

"I'm horrified by what I see" in Minneapolis, said Seitz, who was appointed bishop of El Paso in 2013 and has been an outspoken advocate for immigrants and a vocal proponent of the Catholic Church's teachings on migration. During his interview, Seitz commented on the Trump administration's hardline immigration policies and their effects on the border community in El Paso. He described his local church's efforts to accompany migrants during difficult times, shared his thoughts on the recent immigration statement from the U.S. bishops' conference and offered a solution for overcoming "a fear of the person we don't know." "I didn't think that the government would even be allowed to go as far as it's gone with all of this. I really thought that the limits on governmental power would prevent this kind of response. And it's very, very concerning. Sometimes it's hard for me to recognize my country," he said. It's hard for him to pick one thing that bothered him about this crackdown. "But, in a general sense, it's the total disregard for fundamental human rights. You know, when we talk about human rights, we're not just talking about the position of some activist. We're talking about something that's very fundamental to the teaching of the church, to the belief of not only the Catholic Church, but Christianity in general, and to people of faith even well beyond Christianity, and that is that human beings have a particular dignity because they are created by God," he said.

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National Stories

CNBC - January 30, 2026

Trump, two sons, Trump Org sue IRS, Treasury for $10 billion over tax records leak

President Donald Trump, his two eldest sons, and his family business sued the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Treasury Department over alleged leaks of their confidential tax information, court records showed Thursday. The plaintiffs seek at least $10 billion in damages, according to the lawsuit in Miami federal court. The civil complaint alleges that the IRS and Treasury failed in their obligation to prevent the leak of those tax records by former IRS employee Charles “Chaz” Littlejohn in 2019 and 2020. In addition to Trump, the plaintiffs are his sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, and the Trump Organization, which the sons run. A spokesman for Trump’s legal team told CNBC in a statement, “The IRS wrongly allowed a rogue, politically-motivated employee to leak private and confidential information about President Trump, his family, and the Trump Organization to the New York Times, ProPublica and other left-wing news outlets, which was then illegally released to millions of people.”

“President Trump continues to hold those who wrong America and Americans accountable,” the spokesman said. The suit was filed three days after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he had cancelled all of his department’s contracts with the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton in connection with the company’s contractor, Littlejohn, stealing and leaking confidential tax returns. Littlejohn, 40, is serving a five-year prison sentence after having pleaded guilty in October 2023 to one count of disclosure of tax return information. He admitted to leaking Trump’s tax records to The New York Times, and also admitted to leaking records about wealthy individuals to the news outlet ProPublica. The news lawsuit says that Littlejohn, in a 2024 deposition, admitted disclosing “Trump information [that] included all businesses that he had owned” to the investigative news outlet ProPublica. The suit asserts that ProPublica’s subsequent reporting on Trump’s tax documents falsely claimed that the records contained “versions of fraud.” While that quote does appear in ProPublica’s October 2019 report, it comes from Nancy Wallace, a finance and real estate professor at the University of California-Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.

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Los Angeles Times - January 30, 2026

'Melania' documentary, helmed by controversial filmmaker, arrives amid national turmoil

When Melania Trump showed up on movie screens in 2001, it was a joke. The former fashion model and her spouse, Donald Trump, then only a real estate mogul, played themselves in the Ben Stiller comedy "Zoolander," about a dimwitted male supermodel. She silently looked on as her husband gushed at an awards show red carpet: "Without Derek Zoolander, male modeling would not be where it is today." The cameo offers a glimpse of the couple, who in 2017 would enter the White House as president and first lady. As they move past the first anniversary of their second stint in Washington, D.C., Melania has largely stayed away from the spotlight.

But this week the first lady is preparing for her close-up. She is center stage as star and executive producer in the documentary "Melania" hitting theaters Friday. Positioned as a companion to her best-selling memoir, "Melania" has been shadowed by controversy since its announcement several months ago. The project marks a comeback attempt by Hollywood filmmaker Brett Ratner, the director of the documentary, who was exiled from Hollywood in 2017 following charges of sexual misconduct by multiple women, including actor Olivia Munn. He continues to deny the accusations. Amazon MGM Studios paid $40 million to license the project, and sources said it is spending around $35 million for marketing and promotion. Melania is skipping the traditional TV talk show circuit, opting for an appearance on Fox News, which featured an exclusive interview with her on Tuesday — her first since returning to the White House. The following day, she rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange.

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Washington Post - January 30, 2026

Tulsi Gabbard’s appearance at Fulton County FBI raid raises questions

At a televised Cabinet meeting last August, President Donald Trump turned to his top intelligence official, noting that she had evidence of “how corrupt the 2020 election was,” and asked when she’d produce it. “I will be the first to brief you once we have that information collected,” Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard replied. Gabbard, who coordinates the nation’s 18 spy agencies, has put “election integrity” and holding former government officials accountable for alleged election interference among her priorities. Trump has long maintained that the 2020 election, which he lost to Joe Biden, was rigged. U.S. nationalsecurity officials at the time said they found no evidence of widespread fraud and numerous courts rejected claims of election irregularities as unfounded.

Though her office traditionally focuses on foreign intelligence and adversaries, Gabbard’s unexplained appearance at a warehouse in Fulton County, Georgia, on Wednesday while the FBI was executing a search warrant revealed the extent to which her office has been involved in a domestic criminal investigation. Photographs confirming her presence stunned lawmakers, who on Thursday called for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to urgently brief them on the matter. “My constituents in Georgia, and I think much of the American public, are quite reasonably alarmed in asking questions after the director of national intelligence was spotted bizarrely and personally lurking in an FBI evidence truck in Fulton County, Georgia, yesterday,” Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Georgia) said Thursday at an intelligence committee hearing for Trump’s nominee to head the National Security Agency, Lt. Gen. Joshua Rudd. Ossoff questioned whether ODNI “is straying far outside of its lane.’’ “Director Gabbard recognizes that election security is essential for the integrity of our republic and our nation’s security. As DNI, she has a vital role in identifying vulnerabilities in our critical infrastructure and protecting against exploitation. … President Trump’s directive to secure our elections was clear, and DNI Gabbard has and will continue to take actions within her authorities, alongside our interagency partners, to support ensuring the integrity of our elections,” said ODNI press secretary Olivia Coleman.

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Wall Street Journal - January 30, 2026

Trump threatens to ground Canadian aircraft and apply tariffs to imports

President Trump threatened to decertify Canadian aircraft and apply tariffs on imports in retaliation for what he described as the country’s refusal to certify U.S.-made Gulfstream jets. In a Thursday Truth Social post, Trump targeted to ground Bombardier Global jets as well as “all Aircraft made in Canada.” He wrote that Canada needed to approve Gulfstream’s G500, G600, G700 and G800 models. Without the approval, he said the U.S. could apply a 50% tariff on imports of Canadian aircraft. A spokesperson for the White House didn’t respond to a request for comment. A Canadian government representative didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The Federal Aviation Administration is responsible for certifying civil aircraft in the U.S., including planes used for commercial flights. An FAA spokesperson referred questions to the White House. Bombardier, based near Montreal, is considered a crown jewel of Canada’s aerospace industry. The company has benefited from decades of government financial support, given Bombardier’s operations and the political heft that the province of Quebec plays in Canadian politics. The company designs, builds and sells two families of business jets, under the Challenger and Global brands. Bombardier said late Thursday it is in contact with the Canadian government, and is seeking a quick resolution “to avoid a significant impact to air traffic and the flying public.” General Dynamics, which owns Gulfstream, declined to comment.

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Inside Higher Ed - January 30, 2026

Florida now accepting public comment on H-1B visa hiring ban

Florida took another step Thursday toward banning all its public universities from hiring foreign workers on H-1B visas. The state university system’s Board of Governors will now take public comments for two weeks on a proposed prohibition on hiring any new employees on H-1Bs through Jan. 5 of next year. The vote from a committee to further the proposal was a voice vote, with no nays heard from any committee member. The proposal will come back to the full board for a vote after the public comment period ends. If enacted, Florida would become the second state to ban the use of H-1B visas at public universities. Texas governor Greg Abbott announced a one-year freeze earlier this week—a move that prompted pushback from faculty.

The state bans come after President Trump placed a $100,000 fee on new H-1B visa applications in September (international workers who are already legal residents aren’t required to pay the fee). The next month, Florida governor Ron DeSantis ordered the state’s universities to “pull the plug on the use of these H-1B visas.” Fourteen of the Board of Governors’ 17 members are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate. DeSantis complained about professors coming from China, “supposed Palestine” and elsewhere. He added that “we need to make sure our citizens here in Florida are first in line for job opportunities.” Universities use the program to hire faculty, doctors and researchers and argue it’s required to meet needs in health care, engineering and other specialized occupations. Some conservatives contend that the program is being abused.

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Newsclips - January 29, 2026

Lead Stories

KERA - January 29, 2026

At least 9 dead, mostly children, in Texas as winter storm grips state

At least nine people have died in Texas as a winter storm continued to grip the state Wednesday, with a majority of the victims being children. Among the dead are three young brothers in North Texas who drowned after falling through ice on a private pond near Bonham, about 60 miles northeast of Dallas. The boys, all under 10 years old, were not publicly named by the Fannin County Sheriff’s Office. Police in the Dallas suburb of Frisco also confirmed two teenagers died after a sledding accident linked to the storm. Investigators said the teens, Elizabeth Angle and Gracie Brito, were riding on a sled being pulled by a vehicle when it struck a curb and a tree on Sunday. In Central Texas, Austin Mayor Kirk Watson said at least one person died from exposure to the cold over the weekend. A man was found dead in the parking lot of a permanently closed Shell gas station, and officials said the death appeared to be related to the extreme cold.

A Houston police spokesperson told The Texas Newsroom on Wednesday that at least three people were found dead during the cold snap — two under a bridge and another in a park — though investigators have not yet confirmed whether cold exposure was a factor in each case. Beyond the winter storm’s direct effects on Texas, six people tied to a Houston law firm were killed Sunday in a private business jet crash in Maine during snowy conditions. Federal investigators are still working to determine what caused the aircraft to go down during takeoff. Nationally, the storm system has killed at least 50 people, according to reporting from the Associated Press. Fatalities have been linked to hypothermia, traffic crashes and other weather-related incidents. The storm has disrupted daily life for millions across Texas and the country, closing roads, delaying travel and forcing cities to open warming centers as officials urged residents to limit travel and check on vulnerable neighbors. According to FlightAware, nearly 2,400 flights have been canceled at major Texas airport hubs in Dallas, Houston and Austin since Sunday.

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NBC News - January 29, 2026

Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady as a defiant Powell resists White House pressure

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady Wednesday, taking a measured, wait-and-see approach to the economy. Sometimes doing nothing is an act of defiance. President Donald Trump has put the Fed and its chairman, Jerome Powell, under intense pressure to lower borrowing costs, despite concerns about inflation. By refusing to cut rates, the central bank’s leaders asserted their independence from the White House. Wednesday’s move comes as Powell and the Fed face a criminal investigation launched by Trump’s close ally Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Powell has accused the White House of using the probe as a pretext to push the central bank to back Trump’s long-sought-after interest rate cuts.

At the same time, the future of the Fed’s independence hangs in the balance at the Supreme Court. Justices are weighing whether Trump exceeded his authority when he moved to fire Fed governor Lisa Cook last summer. As Powell holds the line against the White House’s multi-pronged pressure campaign, Trump is actively preparing to unveil his successor. Powell’s term as chair ends in May, and Trump says he has whittled a list of potential nominees to just a few names. So while there was little suspense around what the Fed would do with interest rates, there is still plenty of drama around the next few hours. In its statement, the Fed said governors Waller and Stephen Miran, both appointed by Trump, dissented. Both governors were in favor of a 0.25% cut. But with no changes to rates, investors were looking for any signs of Powell’s attitude toward cuts later this year.

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Politico - January 29, 2026

Julie Johnson’s flip-flop on congressional stock trading

The debate about banning members of Congress from trading stocks has jumped to the campaign trail. Former Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas), who is in a heated primary against Rep. Julie Johnson, has bragged about how he never traded any stocks during his six years in Congress, Daniel L. reports. — His spokesperson said Johnson’s more of a Johnny-come-lately on the issue. “Colin Allred never traded a single stock while serving in Congress — not because anyone required it, but because he believes public service demands putting the people’s interests ahead of personal gain,” Sandhya Raghavan said in a statement. “Meanwhile, Julie Johnson has actively traded stocks throughout her six years in the Texas Legislature and continued to do so as a member of Congress.” At a Jan. 14 House Administration Committee markup for congressional stock trading legislation, Johnson said she chose to divest, “not because the law required it, but because earning the trust of my constituents demands it.”

But Johnson, who was a successful small business owner and attorney before entering Congress last year, only fully started divesting her holdings in September after a bipartisan group of House lawmakers, including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Chip Roy (R-Texas), introduced the Restore Trust in Congress Act, which would ban congressional stock trading. Ocasio-Cortez recently endorsed Johnson. Johnson also gained attention last spring for making dozens of stock sales the day before President Donald Trump’s tariff “Liberation Day” which sent stock markets temporarily reeling. Her office didn’t respond to questions at the time about the sales. Her new vocal stance against stock trading in September was a reversal from Johnson’s practice of buying individual stocks the previous month; a spokesperson at the time called it an “ongoing process” to get rid of her holdings. She made almost 350 purchases, sales or exchanges of stock last year, which gave the lawmaker the unwanted distinction of being in the top 2 percent of all congressional traders. Johnson said in a statement to PI that her stock holdings are managed by independent third parties and that her divestment began last March and that she fully divested at the end of last year. “I came to Congress after years as a small business owner and attorney with complex, pre-existing financial holdings,” she added. “The law did not require me to divest—but I chose to do so because earning the trust of my constituents matters more than personal convenience. Divestment is a process, not a moment, and I completed it fully.”

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CNN - January 29, 2026

Talks intensify to avert shutdown as White House and Senate leaders eye last-ditch deal

The White House and Senate leaders are moving closer to a deal to avert a government shutdown but are seeking to resolve final sticking points in eleventh-hour negotiations ahead of Friday’s deadline, according to several sources familiar with the talks. The sources indicated that the White House was moving closer to the Democrats’ demands to split funding from the Department of Homeland Security from a larger funding package in order to give them time to negotiate new policy measures on the deployment of ICE agents across the country. The deal in the works would provide funding for the rest of the agencies in the package through the end of September — including the departments of Defense, Labor, State, Transportation and Health and Human Services.

But it would only temporarily extend funding for DHS. That would allow time for the two sides to negotiate over ICE, after Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer laid out a list of demands that he says must be included in final legislation. The two sides are still trying to sort out the timeline for extending funding for DHS, the sources said, underscoring that a deal has not yet been reached. But the fast-moving talks are a clear sign that President Donald Trump and GOP leaders recognize that they need to respond to the public outcry over ICE agents’ harsh tactics following the deadly shootings of two US citizens in Minneapolis this month. Plus, it’s a sign that Trump is eager to avoid the second government shutdown of his second term, after the 43-day shutdown from last fall left him upset about the fallout. CNN has reached out to the White House for comment. Earlier Wednesday, Schumer laid out a list of new restraints on immigration enforcement as a condition for Democratic support, including to restrict roving patrols, tighten parameters around warrants for searches and arrests, toughen use-of-force policies and require ICE agents to wear body cameras and remove their masks. Democrats, who have enough votes to sustain a filibuster in the 53-47 GOP-led Senate, say such changes must be in legislation — and that promises of executive action are not enough.

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State Stories

San Antonio Report - January 29, 2026

AFL-CIO endorses challengers over incumbents in San Antonio primaries

One of the state’s largest labor groups — typically a formidable ally in Democratic primary races — endorsed challengers over longtime incumbents in three San Antonio-area Texas House races. The move comes as the leaders of the AFL-CIO say their members want change in the candidates they’re sending to a conservative-dominated legislature where Democrats continue to be marginalized from the legislative process. “We heard loud and clear from our delegates was that they want to see their electeds on the front lines with them right now, because working people are under such attack,” said Alejandra Lopez, president of the San Antonio AFL-CIO Central Labor Council. The long list of endorsements nominated local chapters and confirmed over the weekend at the AFL-CIO’s statewide gathering in Georgetown includes:

Robert Mihara, an attorney and U.S. Army veteran running against state Rep. Philip Cortez (D-San Antonio) in Texas House District 117. Attorney Ryan Ayala, a political newcomer who is running against state Rep. Liz Campos (D-San Antonio) in Texas House District 119. And special education teacher Jordan Brown, one of two candidates challenging state Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins (D-San Antonio) in Texas House District 120. “The big unions [under the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations] are the teachers, Communications Workers of America and the firefighters. The teachers have a lot of votes there,” said local Democratic strategist Laura Barberena, who isn’t working on any of those races, but stressed the value of the endorsement. “It comes often with money, which of course is a critical component to doing these campaigns,” Barberena said. “And then also other types of resources, like reaching out to their union members across all of the different trades to be able to get them to mobilize in the particular areas that the person is running in.”

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Houston Chronicle - January 29, 2026

Feds close civil rights investigation into Harvey relief fund distribution

U.S. Department of Housing and Development officials on Wednesday closed what they called a "politically motivated" and "baseless" civil rights investigation into how the Texas General Land Office distributed around $1 billion for flood mitigation. After Hurricane Harvey decimated the region in 2017, HUD sent the GLO $4.3 billion to give to Texas cities for flood mitigation projects. The GLO later created a program that required applicants to compete for funding. Even though the Houston region sustained the majority of the damage, the GLO's process resulted in less-populated areas receiving more money because those projects helped a higher percentage of their residents. Houston and Harris County got $0 from the $1 billion program.

Northeast Action Collective, an advocacy group that works to mitigate flooding issues in north Houston, and Texas Housers, an advocacy group for low-income residents, filed a Fair Housing Complaint that was sent up the chain to the Department of Justice in January 2025. HUD initially found the land office had violated the Fair Housing Act by discriminating against Houston's Black and Brown residents, adding that the funding process led the agency to participate in “discriminatory actions based on race and national origin" and compounded harm in minority communities. In a news release Wednesday, HUD officials wrote that the claims made by the agency were "baseless and unfounded," and that an investigation revealed the GLO complied with federal standards to create a "race-neutral" fund competition. "President Trump is ending weaponization of the federal government against the American people,” HUD Secretary Scott Turner wrote in a statement. “But the Biden administration politicized enforcement of federal civil rights law and deprived rural communities of essential disaster mitigation funds. This was an affront to all Americans. At HUD, we have a duty to provide all communities, whether urban, rural, or tribal, with timely support in times of need. I am proud to remedy a grievous wrong against the great people of Texas.”

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San Antonio Report - January 29, 2026

After tour, Democrats say Liam Ramos languishes in Dilley facility

Hours after touring the Dilley detention center housing 5-year-old Minnesota boy Liam Ramos on Wednesday, San Antonio’s state and federal lawmakers gathered outside City Hall to update the public on his status — and to lay out their limited leverage for stopping such arrests under a Republican-controlled government. Ramos, who was photographed looking tearful in a blue bunny hat and Spider-Man backpack as his father was being detained earlier this month, has quickly become the face of aggressive expulsion efforts that many Republican officials said would only apply to criminals. The child’s family immigrated from Ecuador by claiming asylum at a U.S. port of entry, but he and his father are now being held in a family detention center roughly 80 miles southwest of San Antonio.

“We met with he and his father for about 30 minutes,” U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro told reporters. “His father said that Liam has been very depressed since he’s been at Dilley, that he hasn’t been eating well …. [he] has been sleeping a lot, he’s been asking about his family, his mom and his classmates, and saying that he wants to go be back in school.” A federal judge said this week that Ramos and his father can’t be deported because they have a pending immigration case that still needs to be adjudicated. But Democratic lawmakers who recently toured the facility said it’s full of children and families who have legal authority to be in the country, and yet are being held for months while the U.S. government tries to make its case against them. They have no idea how long they’ll be there, the lawmakers said, and some report having been offered cash bribes to self-deport.

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San Antonio Current - January 29, 2026

Texas DPS troopers teargas protesters outside Dilley migrant detention center

Texas Department of Public Safety troopers in riot gear used teargas to disperse a group of protesters demonstrating in front of the South Texas Family Detention Center immigrant detention center to demand the release of a 5-year-old taken into ICE custody. Members of the San Antonio media along with several elderly demonstrators were affected by the gas, which was used to clear the group of roughly 70 protesters who drove in from other Texas cities. Community organizer Tori Ramierez, who also came into contact with the gas, said she saw DPS personnel arrest at least two protesters during the chaos. Even so, Ramirez told the Current that she’s undeterred and will continue to protest against the Trump White House’s anti-immigrant crackdown.

“Nothing has changed from before we were pepper-sprayed and tear-gassed,” she said between coughs to clear her throat of the chemical irritant. “I’m even more motivated to fight and organize.” The group of roughly 40 DPS troopers deployed the gas after tensions with protesters flared, Texas Public Radio reports. A haze lingered over the area outside the detention center, and protesters helped each other flush their eyes with water, according to the news outlet. The protesters were at the detention center to demand the release of Liam Conejo Ramos, a Minneapolis 5-year-old who’s being held there along with his father. ICE agents detained the pair last week, sparking a national outcry and street protests. On Wednesday morning, U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, met with Ramos and his father for about 30 minutes. The congressman also said he spoke with some of the other 1,000 or so migrants being held at the center — the only U.S. detention site for migrant families caught up in the White House’s enforcement actions. “His dad said [Liam] hasn’t been himself and that he’s been sleeping a lot because he’s been depressed and sad,” Castro said in a clip posted to social media after the visit. Castro said other parents in the lockup said their children are experiencing anxiety and depression. Some are losing weight due to their deteriorating mental health, the congressman added.

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KHOU - January 29, 2026

Charles Victor Thompson had message for victims' families just before he was executed in Huntsville Wednesday

A Texas man who once escaped custody and spent three days on the run after being sentenced to death for fatally shooting his ex-girlfriend and her new boyfriend was put to death Wednesday, becoming the first person executed in the United States this year. Charles Victor Thompson, 55, was pronounced dead at 6:50 p.m. CST following a lethal injection at the state penitentiary in Huntsville. He was condemned for the April 1998 shooting deaths of his ex-girlfriend, Glenda Dennise Hayslip, 39, and her new boyfriend, Darren Keith Cain, 30, at the woman's suburban Houston apartment. In his final words, Thompson asked the families of his victims find it in their hearts to forgive him, adding “that you can begin to heal and move past this.”

“There are no winners in this situation,” he said after a spiritual adviser prayed over him for about 3 minutes and shortly before a lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered. He said his execution “creates more victims and traumatizes more people 28 years later.” “I’m sorry for what I did. I’m sorry for what happened, and I want to tell all of y’all, I love you and that keep Jesus in your life, keep Jesus first,” he added. As the injection began taking effect, Thompson gasped loudly, then took about a dozen breaths that evolved into three snores. Then all movement ceased and he was pronounced dead 22 minutes later. Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said the execution brought long-awaited closure to the victims’ families. “This is an incredibly solemn moment when the state takes a life,” Teare said. “But the relief that this is over for them was palpable.” Prosecutors had said Thompson and Hayslip had been romantically involved for a year but split after Thompson “became increasingly possessive, jealous and abusive.” According to court records, Hayslip and Cain were dating when Thompson came to Hayslip’s apartment and began arguing with Cain around 3 a.m. the night of the killings. Police were called and told Thompson to leave the apartment complex. He returned three hours later and shot both Hayslip and Cain.

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KERA - January 29, 2026

DART still considering proposals to stave off withdrawal elections

Dallas Area Rapid Transit board members are still considering how to respond to requests from cities looking to leave the system as a sixth member plans to hold a withdrawal election. Nearly half of DART’s member cities – Farmers Branch, Highland Park, Irving, Plano University Park, and now Addison – could soon vote whether to withdraw from the agency. Some have put forward proposals under which they would cancel the elections. On Tuesday, DART CEO Nadine Lee briefed a board committee on those requests. “The issues around service and funding equity have been around for a long time, but I think what's really striking here is that there are different perspectives on why all of these issues have arisen,” Lee said.

At issue are how the agency will provide funding for each city in the system, and how much money each city needs to contribute to the agency. All 13 currently pay one cent from every sales tax dollar they collect. Lee said pressure on cities’ financial resources is “one of the reasons why we are having a lot of conversations about funding.” one of the reasons why we are having a lot conversations about funding.” DART and city leaders have been in negotiations since September over funding and governance disagreements. Anthony Ricciardelli, who represents Plano on the board, said the city’s proposal is fair to all 13 members and opens the door to new cities joining the agency. “That's what needs to happen for DART to be viable into the future,” he said. “I just hope we don’t write off these negotiations.” Each city has until late February finalize ballots and until March 18 to rescind the withdrawal elections scheduled for May 2. DART will hold a public hearing on March 24 over potential service changes if the elections are successful.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 29, 2026

Former Cowboys coach curses out Hall of Fame voters after Bill Belichick snub

The NFL world was shocked to find out that former New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick was not elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on his first opportunity. Former Dallas Cowboys head coach Jimmy Johnson went on a tirade on X, decrying the situation. Johnson fired of a series of posts saying Hall of Fame voters should reveal their selections publicly, and called Belichick one of the greatest coaches in NFL history. “I would like to know the names of the [expletives] who did not vote for him .. they are too cowardly to identify themselves,” Johnson posted. Johnson was receptive to creating a new Hall of Fame when propositioned by Barstool founder Dave Portnoy.

Johnson continued tweeting into Wednesday afternoon, saying anyone who voted against Belichick should be purged from the voter rolls. Johnson also pushed back on the idea that Belichick should be punished for Spygate, when the Patriots were penalized for illegally filming New York Jets defensive signals from the sidelines in 2007. Johnson said many teams did it, and it shouldn’t impact Belichick’s Hall of Fame chances. One of Johnson’s former Cowboys superstars, Colorado head coach Deion Sanders, called voters who ignored Belichick ignorant. Voices from around the league also denounced Belichick’s snub. Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes said he was shocked Belichick wasn’t selected.

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Dallas Morning News - January 29, 2026

Texas AG probes North Texas school district over Islamic Games event

State Attorney General Ken Paxton wants two Texas school districts — including Grapevine-Colleyville ISD — to turn over documents related to plans to rent facilities to the Islamic Games of North America for an athletic competition. The information demands are part of “an ongoing investigation regarding the schools’ ties to the athletic group Islamic Games of North America, which hosts events sponsored by a chapter of a designated foreign terrorist organization — the Council on American-Islamic Relations,” Paxton’s office said in a news release Wednesday.

The Dallas-area Islamic Games were scheduled to be held at Colleyville Heritage High School in May, but district officials canceled rental negotiations with organizers. Grapevine-Colleyville ISD said it was made aware of potential ties between Islamic Games and CAIR on Jan. 19. That led to a “severing” of the negotiations over using the facilities. Grapevine-Colleyville ISD spokesperson said the district will “respond accordingly” with the law, regarding Paxton’s request. Paxton is also probing for communications, contracts and documents from Cypress-Fairbanks ISD, located outside of Houston. One of its schools was set to host the event in October. Paxton said that the Islamic Games hosts events sponsored by the CAIR — a claim that the sports festival’s organizers have pushed back on. Gov. Greg Abbott declared CAIR, the country’s largest organization focused on advocating for the civil rights of Muslims, to be a “foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organization” in November. “If school districts are continuing to promote or partner with organizations tied to an [foreign terrorist organization], that ends now,” said Paxton in the news release.

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KTVT - January 29, 2026

Coffee chain faces backlash after staff walkout tied to ICE discount debate

A Dallas-based coffee chain is facing backlash after an employee walkout over a first responder discount they believed included U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. White Rhino Coffee has been steadily growing with 200 employees, promoting its 11 Dallas-Fort Worth locations as a welcoming environment for everyone, but Sara Escamilla, the company’s CEO, says the coffee chain is now facing severe online backlash and threats of boycotts. A handful of now-former employees walked off the job in a debate over whether ICE agents were entitled to first responder discounts. “Our first responder discount for a long time has been something very broad, and our shop managers have had autonomy to determine who receives it or not,” Escamilla said.

Margot Stacy, the manager at White Rhino’s downtown Dallas location, quit last week during the furor over the discount. She posted a message about the decision on Facebook: “I was told that these murderous mercenaries are not only welcome at our table but encouraged to patron[ize] our shops by offering them a first responder discount. This put me in a position to either compromise everything I believe in or abandon my team. Considering this call from leadership, I gladly exit my position as shop manager.” However, White Rhino’s leadership insists that ICE agents were never formally included in the first responder discount, and they have now clarified the policy to not include any federal officers. Escamilla says the discount is intended to “reward local heroes, local police officers, firefighters, EMTs.” White Rhino believes the controversy and online backlash will negatively affect its business on top of the winter storm, which forced its cafes to close for nearly a week. “It’s been really difficult. To see so much hate spewed at us has been painful,” Escamilla said. “We want to be a place where everyone gets a seat at the table.”

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Houston Public Media - January 29, 2026

New state committee begins work to develop nutrition guidelines, education requirements for Texans

A new state committee has less than a year to produce a report that could have an effect on continuing education requirements for medical providers. The Texas Nutrition Advisory Committee is required to submit a report by September that includes its nutritional guidelines and recommendations. During the 2025 session, the state legislature established the TNAC to examine how nutrition affects health and how “ultra-processed foods” are connected to chronic diseases. The committee’s report would also establish educational requirements around nutrition across all stages of education, from kindergarten to medical education.

“Texas is going to be setting a national momentum around addressing these issues with intention,” Dr. Jaclyn Albin, associate program director for UT Southwestern’s Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Residency and TNAC chair said Wednesday. “We want to engage as many fellow Texans who are passionate about this work as possible.” The committee’s first meeting this week highlighted the significant tasks they’ve been asked to complete. In addition to developing dietary and nutritional guidelines, it also has to provide education and an “independent review of scientific studies” analyzing the effects of ultra-processed foods on human health. Federal health agencies announced an effort to “address the health risks” of ultra-processed foods last year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and Department of Health and Human Services released new dietary guidelines earlier this month that encourage people to “eat real food” and avoid processed food.

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Houston Chronicle - January 29, 2026

Abbott calls for nation's largest Muslim rights group to be shut down in Texas

Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday demanded that Attorney General Ken Paxton move to shutter the Council on American-Islamic Relations' Texas branch, escalating his campaign against the country's largest Muslim civil rights organization. The Republican governor wrote in a letter to Paxton that CAIR, which he last year declared a foreign terrorist organization, is "masquerading" as a nonprofit, and that only the attorney general has the power to police it. "Regardless of the façade CAIR attempts to portray in press releases, CAIR cannot be allowed to use its 'nonprofit' status as a shield for sponsoring terror, advancing radical Islamism in Texas," Abbott said. "Under Texas law, ‘the Texas Attorney General is the only elected official charged with regulating’ nonprofits that may be violating the law, including by examining their records and stripping their corporate charters. You have used these tools before; I urge you to use them now to combat CAIR."

The attorney general's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Muslim rights group has said it is anything but a terror organization and has actually helped federal officials thwart attacks, including alerting the FBI to a potential threat against President Donald Trump during his first term. CAIR is suing Abbott over the designation, calling it “unconstitutional” and “defamatory.” CAIR's Texas branch said in a statement that it sees Abbott's drive against them as an effort to "silence critics of Israel's genocide." CAIR is a vocal critic of Israel, accusing the Israeli government of human rights abuses against the Palestinian people, including occupation, ethnic cleansing and genocide. It has also sued Abbott and other state officials, including challenging the governor’s executive order directing universities to institute rules punishing students for criticism of Israel.

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The Atlantic - January 29, 2026

The Texas program closing the gap in American schools

On a chilly day before Christmas, Teresa Rivas helped a tween boy pick out a new winter coat. “Get the bigger one, the one with the waterproof layer, mijo,” she said, before helping him pull it onto his string-bean frame. Rivas provides guidance counseling at Owen Goodnight Middle School in San Marcos, Texas. She talks with students about their goals and helps if they’re struggling in class. She’s also a trained navigator placed there by a nonprofit called Communities in Schools. The idea behind CIS and other “community school” programs is that students can’t succeed academically if they’re struggling at home. “Between kindergarten and 12th grade, kids spend only 20 percent of their time” in a classroom, Rob Watson, the executive director of the EdRedesign Lab at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, told me. If America wants kids to thrive, he said, it has to consider the 80 percent. Educators and school administrators in San Marcos, a low-income community south of Austin, agreed. “Tests and academics are very important,” Joe Mitchell, the principal of Goodnight Middle School, told me. “But they are secondary sometimes, given what these kids’ lives are like away from here.” Along with mediating conflicts and doing test prep, Rivas helps kids’ families sign up for public benefits. She arranges for the nonprofit to cover rent payments. She sets up medical appointments, and keeps refrigerators and gas tanks full.

A new study demonstrates that such efforts have long-term effects. Benjamin Goldman, an assistant professor of economics at Cornell, and Jamie Gracie, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard, evaluated data on more than 16 million Texas students over two decades, examining data from the Census Bureau and IRS, as well as state records on academic outcomes. They found that the introduction of CIS led to higher test scores, lower truancy rates, and fewer suspensions in Texas schools. The program bumped up high-school graduation rates by 5.2 percent and matriculation rates at two-year colleges by 9.1 percent. At age 27, students who had attended a CIS school earned $1,140 more a year than students who had not. The program’s impact is “quite big,” Gracie told me: Spending $1,000 on CIS increased student earnings at age 27 by $400, whereas spending $1,000 on smaller class sizes increased student earnings by $40. The researchers estimated that every $3,000 in CIS investment would increase income-tax revenue by $7,000. Although contemporary education policy has focused intently on standardized tests, student and teacher tracking, and other accountability measures, the CIS study suggests that the United States could bolster achievement by providing more social support too. “You could have the world’s greatest teacher,” Goldman told me. “It’s only going to matter so much if you’re not actually showing up to school.” Watson said he hoped the study would lead policy makers to finance community-school programs in every low-income neighborhood. “If you care about morals and social justice, there’s something here for you,” he said. “If you care about good fiscal and economic policy, there’s something here for you.”

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KERA - January 29, 2026

Dallas community leader faces final immigration hearing on Friday

A Dallas community leader who was taken into immigration custody last September will learn this week whether he'll be allowed to stay in the country. For five months, Southern Methodist University graduate and Hunt Scholar Omar Salazar has been waiting for his release from the Bluebonnet Detention Facility in Anson, 200 miles west of Dallas. During a news conference Tuesday morning news conference, Salazar’s family members, attorney, friends and lawmakers called for his release ahead of a final immigration hearing on Friday.

Salazar was brought to the U.S. from Mexico when he was 11 years old. He has no criminal history. "He has made the best of his life behind bars by volunteering, and helping other inmates, but it's been hard on him, and it's very hard on Ella, all because of a routine traffic stop,” said his attorney Jacob Monty, referring to Salazar’s wife, who is a U.S. citizen. Omar Salazar was taken into ICE custody after a traffic stop while visiting her in Lubbock. The two married in November. Monty said he expects the judge to rule at Friday’s hearing that deporting Omar to Mexico would cause undue hardship to Ella, a law student. "Imagine what Ella would have to face if she were to have to leave and go with her husband to Mexico. It would devastate her career,” Jacob said. “We believe that's why the judge will find that Omar deserves to stay in the U.S. as a permanent resident, and that's what we're anticipating, but certainly it's within the power of the judge to rule that way.”

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National Stories

San Antonio Express-News - January 29, 2026

Musk's Grok generated 3M sexualized images in just 11 days, analysis finds

Grok, an artificial intelligence tool created by Elon Musk’s xAI, generated an estimated 3 million sexualized images in just days this month, including 23,000 of children, a new analysis found. Conducted by the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate, the study focused on images generated from Dec. 29 to Jan. 8, the day before X claimed access to the image editing feature had been restricted to paid users. In fact, non-subscribers are still able to edit images and digitally undress people without their consent. Center founder and CEO Imran Ahmed, said Musk has “enabled” creation of such images.

“The data is clear: Elon Musk’s Grok is a factory for the production of sexual abuse material,” he said in a statement to the Austin American-Statesman. “Belated fixes cannot undo this harm. We must hold Big Tech accountable for giving abusers the power to victimize women and girls at the click of a button.” The new report comes with Grok facing condemnation over inappropriate images made without subjects’ consent and investigation and regulatory action under way in the U.S. and around the world. In Texas, House Democrats have called on Attorney General Ken Paxton to investigate the issue. Last week, a bipartisan group of 35 attorneys general sent a letter demanding that xAI take additional action to prevent Grok from generating such nonconsensual images. On Monday, the European Union opened a formal investigation to examine whether Texas-based X is fulfilling its obligations under the Digital Services Act, the bloc’s rules for keeping internet users safe from harmful content and products. UK regulator Ofcom had earlier launched an investigation. Several other countries are also investigating. Researchers at the Center for Countering Digital Hate said it reached its conclusions by analyzing a random sample of 20,000 images from the total of 4.6 million produced by Grok’s image-generation feature during the time studied. Researchers analyzed each of the sampled posts using an OpenAI model to assess sexualized imagery and age. The model was instructed to score the likelihood that the post’s image contained sexualized depictions, photorealistic depictions and minors. Images flagged by the tool as likely depicting a child were reviewed manually to confirm that the person appeared to clearly be under the age of 18. All sexualized images of children were reported to the Internet Watch Foundation.

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Deadline - January 29, 2026

Springsteen slams “King Trump’s private army from the DHS” in new anti-ICE song “Streets Of Minneapolis”

With a chant of “ICE Out Now!” Bruce Springsteen wasted no time condemning Donald Trump and the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good by federal agents in Minnesota. In classic form from the the card-carrying anti-MAGA rock legend and a little audio addition from actual protests, the 4:35-minute “Streets of Minneapolis” calls out “King Trump and his private army from the DHS.” “I wrote this song on Saturday, recorded it yesterday and released it to you today in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis,” Springsteen said on social media Wednesday morning about “Streets of Minneapolis.” The Boss added in his posting: “It’s dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good. Stay free, Bruce Springsteen.”

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BBC - January 29, 2026

Iran: Trump warns 'time is running out' for nuclear deal as US military builds up in Gulf

Donald Trump has warned Iran that "time is running out" to negotiate a deal on its nuclear programme following the steady build-up of US military forces in the Gulf. The US president said a "massive Armada" was "moving quickly, with great power, enthusiasm, and purpose" towards Iran, referring to a large US naval fleet. In response, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the country's armed forces were ready "with their fingers on the trigger" to "immediately and powerfully respond" to any aggression by land or sea. Iran insists its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful and has repeatedly denied accusations by the US and its allies that it is seeking to develop nuclear weapons

Trump's latest warning follows his promise that Washington will intervene to help those involved in the brutal and unprecedented crackdown on protests in the country earlier this month. Demonstrations began after a sharp fall in the value of the Iranian currency, but swiftly evolved into a crisis of legitimacy for the country's clerical leadership. "Help is on the way," Trump said, before later changing his tune and saying he had been told on good authority that the execution of demonstrators had stopped. The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) says it has confirmed the killing of more than 6,301 people, including 5,925 protesters, since the unrest began at the end of December. HRANA says it is also investigating another 17,000 reported deaths received despite an internet shutdown after nearly three weeks. Another group, the Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR), has warned that the final toll could exceed 25,000.

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Associated Press - January 29, 2026

3 months after rapidly scheduled arguments, the Supreme Court has yet to decide on Trump's tariffs

When the Supreme Court granted an unusually quick hearing over President Donald Trump’s tariffs, a similarly rapid resolution seemed possible. After all, Trump’s lawyers told the court that speed was of the essence on an issue central to the Republican president’s economic agenda. They pointed to a statement from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warning that the “longer a final ruling is delayed, the greater the risk of economic disruption.” But nearly three months have elapsed since arguments in the closely watched case, and the court isn’t scheduled to meet in public for more than three weeks. No one knows for sure what’s going on among the nine justices, several of whom expressed skepticism about the tariffs’ legality at arguments in November.

But the timeline for deciding the case now looks more or less typical and could reflect the normal back-and-forth that occurs not just in the biggest cases but in almost all the disputes the justices hear. Several Supreme Court practitioners and law professors scoffed at the idea the justices are dragging their feet on tariffs, putting off a potentially uncomfortable ruling against Trump. “People suspect this kind of thing from time to time, but I am not aware of instances in which we have more than speculation,” said Jonathan Adler, a law professor at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The timeframe alone also doesn’t point to one outcome or the other. One possible explanation, said Carter Phillips, a lawyer with 91 arguments before the high court, “is that the court is more evenly divided than appeared to be the case at oral argument and the fifth vote is wavering.” Even if the majority opinion has been drafted and more or less agreed to by five or more members of the court, a separate opinion, probably in dissent, could slow things down, Phillips said. Just last week, the court issued two opinions in cases that were argued in October. All nine justices agreed with the outcome, a situation that typically allows decisions to be issued relatively quickly. But a separate opinion in each case probably delayed the decision.

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New York Times - January 29, 2026

Amy Klobuchar announces run for Minnesota governor

Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota formally announced her campaign for governor on Thursday with a call for unity and decency in her troubled state, which has been roiled by political violence, President Trump’s immigration crackdown and widespread protests after two killings of Minnesotans by federal agents. Ms. Klobuchar, a popular Democrat with a history of winning by double-digit margins, has spent nearly two decades in the Senate as a common-sense centrist with a folksy demeanor and a carefully cultivated history of bipartisanship. Now, with her run for governor, the self-proclaimed “senator next door” is gambling that her message of moving past partisan divides can still work even amid one of the most volatile domestic conflicts of the second Trump administration.

In a gauzy, four-minute video introducing her campaign, Ms. Klobuchar praised the “resilience” of her home state, saying that she would not be a “rubber stamp” for the Trump administration but that she would also seek “common ground” to fix problems in the state. “Now is our moment to renew our commitment to the common good,” said Ms. Klobuchar, speaking directly to the camera. “I’m asking you to look to each other. I’m asking you to look up to the North Star and to see that there is a better future before us.” Her message of togetherness marks a striking contrast to the approach of many fellow Democrats, who have focused on demonstrating to their furious base that they are “fighters” ready to take on the president in the courts, the halls of Congress, protest marches and on social media. Ms. Klobuchar’s campaign may offer an early test of whether a message more focused on restoring calm and consensus can drive Democrats to the polls and expand their margins in battleground areas. She will, however, begin the race as the heavy favorite and is unlikely to face a serious primary opponent. Republicans, who have not won a statewide race in Minnesota since 2006, have grown more pessimistic about their chances in the wake of the unrest.

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Bangor Daily News - January 29, 2026

ICE ends its surge in Maine, Susan Collins' office says

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement surge is over. That’s according to U.S. Sen. Susan Collins’ office, which announced the end of the surge in a Thursday morning press release. “While the Department of Homeland Security does not confirm law enforcement operations, I can report that Secretary Noem has informed me that ICE has ended its enhanced activities in the State of Maine,” Collins said in a statement. “There are currently no ongoing or planned large-scale ICE operations here. I have been urging Secretary Noem and others in the Administration to get ICE to reconsider its approach to immigration enforcement in the state. I appreciate the Secretary’s willingness to listen to and consider my recommendations and her personal attention to the situation in Maine. ICE and Customs and Border Patrol will continue their normal operations that have been ongoing here for many years. I will continue to work with the Secretary on efforts to end illegal immigration, drug smuggling, and other transnational criminal activity.”

The withdrawal comes amid the fallout from a fatal shooting by U.S. Border Patrol agents over the weekend in Minnesota that left ICU nurse Alex Pretti dead. The bipartisan backlash has raised the specter of another government shutdown as Democrats call for any funding package to exclude money for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE. ICE agents had been highly visible in Lewiston and Greater Portland since early last week as the Trump administration sought to arrest at least 1,400 immigrants. While the administration has claimed to be going after the “worst of the worst,” there have been numerous instances of immigrations without criminal records and with lawful permission to be in the country getting caught up in the sweeps, including an 18-year-old University of Southern Maine student, a civil engineer working for a Portland firm and a Cumberland County corrections officer recruit. That’s sparked criticism from public officials such as Gov. Janet Mills, who during a press conference last week called the arrest quota “pretty broad” and questioned whether the agency would find that many criminal fugitives here. She also used the press conference to raise concerns about ICE’s tactics and lack of transparency.

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Fox News - January 29, 2026

FBI agents search election hub in Fulton County, Georgia

FBI agents were seen Wednesday carrying out a search at an election hub in Fulton County, Georgia, a location that became ground zero for concerns and complaints about voter fraud beginning in 2020. Agents were seen entering the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center, a new facility that state officials opened in 2023 that was designed to streamline their election processes. It was not immediately clear what the FBI agents were investigating, but Fox News Digital is told the probe is related to the 2020 election. The bureau said in a statement that FBI Atlanta was executing a "court authorized law enforcement action at 5600 [Campbellton] Fairburn Rd." "Our investigation into this matter is ongoing so there are no details that we can provide at the moment," the bureau said.

The Department of Justice did not provide comment. President Donald Trump lost the election in Georgia in 2020 by a wafer-thin margin and claimed various instances of fraud had tainted the results. Those claims did not survive court scrutiny. Fulton, which includes Atlanta and is the state's most populous county, drew significant attention at the time. A machine count and two recounts confirmed that former President Joe Biden had won the state, leading Trump to feud with Georgia's leaders for years. The DOJ sued Fulton County last month seeking access to ballots related to the 2020 election. The county is fighting the lawsuit, saying the DOJ has not made a valid argument for accessing them. Trump's grievances in Georgia were compounded when he and numerous co-conspirators were indicted by a grand jury in Fulton County Superior Court in 2023 over allegations that they engaged in a racketeering scheme involving illegally attempting to overturn the 2020 election results. The case never made it to trial as Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was disqualified from prosecuting it. An independent entity called the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council decided to dismiss the indictment last year, saying it would not be in the interest of the state to continue with the case.

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Wall Street Journal - January 29, 2026

Greg Bovino was Trump’s rising star. Then he arrived in Minneapolis.

For six months, Gregory Bovino was the tip of the Trump administration’s deportation spear, a spiky-haired Border Patrol agent from the John Wayne school of law-and-order who commanded the rolling immigration raids in Los Angeles, Chicago and other Democratic-run cities that netted thousands of arrests. They also prompted public backlash and complaints from terrified immigrant communities. On Monday, nearly a month into Bovino’s Minneapolis campaign, he was pulled from the field less than 48 hours after referring to border agents who killed a 37-year-old nurse as “victims.” “Operation Metro Surge” was supposed to be Bovino’s most ambitious mission yet, a new kind of urban takeover by federal law enforcement. Instead, it descended into scenes of tear gas, pepper spray and civil unrest on the streets of a proudly progressive Midwestern city.

It culminated on Saturday with the shooting death of Alex Pretti that shook much of the nation. It has also provoked a clash in the White House over the future of President Trump’s signature policy. With Bovino’s removal, some are anticipating an end to the maximalist enforcement strategy he championed alongside his boss, Kristi Noem, the Department of Homeland Security chief. Rather than targeted raids on known criminals, they favored a wide net and aggressive tactics to catch and deport as many immigrants in the country illegally as possible. Minneapolitans cheered the departure of a man some top Democrats described as a “cartoon villain.” One indelible image of Metro Surge was of Bovino, emerging from an SUV into a wintry melee, like a general stepping onto a battlefield, and launching a canister that released green smoke at protesters. Bovino didn’t respond to a request to be interviewed for this story. Tricia McLaughlin, a DHS spokeswoman, said Bovino would remain with the government, and called him “a key part of the President’s team and a great American.”

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Newsclips - January 28, 2026

Lead Stories

Houston Chronicle - January 28, 2026

Maine airport officials confirm new details on plane crash tied to Houston firm

A Houston-registered flight had received fuel and "de-icing services" at Bangor International Airport before crashing Sunday night, officials said Tuesday. Four passengers and two crew members were on the plane, officials said, and all are presumed to be dead by authorities. The plane was heading to Paris-Vatry Airport in France from Bangor International Airport, according to officials. It had originally arrived in Maine from Houston, although officials did not specify which airport the flight originated from.

Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board investigations are at the airport and have started their investigation into the crash, officials said. The plane, a Bombardier Challenger 600, has a registered address that is the same as the Houston law firm Arnold & Itkin. Authorities have not yet announced the identities of those in the plane, but Lakewood Church confirmed that one of the victims was employee Shawna Collins. The Federal Aviation Administration first reported the incident Sunday night, saying that the plane crashed around 7:45 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. According to air traffic control audio from LiveATC.net, after a plane was cleared for takeoff Sunday night, someone said, "We have a passenger aircraft upside down." The airport has remained closed since the crash. Officials have said the airport will remain closed until at least 9 a.m. Thursday.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 28, 2026

Texas pauses H-1B visas for high-skilled workers at colleges and state agencies

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is directing state agencies and public universities and colleges to hit pause on new federal H-1B visas — temporary work visas that are reserved for high-skilled immigrant workers. In a Tuesday letter, Abbott said the higher education institutions and state agencies led by governor appointees shouldn’t initiate or sponsor any new H-1B visas until the end of the next year’s Texas legislative session, unless given written permission from the Texas Workforce Commission. State lawmakers from Jan. 12 through May. 31, 2027. The directive includes university-affiliated medical centers, such as UT Southwestern in Dallas and the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Abbott cited “recent reports of abuse” in the federal program, as well as an ongoing federal review of the program “to ensure American jobs are going to American workers,” as the basis for the new directive.

“State government must lead by example and ensure that employment opportunities — particularly those funded with taxpayer dollars — are filled by Texans first,” Abbott said in a Tuesday statement. Abbott also told the state agencies and universities and colleges to collect data about existing H-1B visas, including how many of the visas are sponsored, the countries of origin for the visa holders, the types of jobs held and anticipated expiration dates. The agencies and higher education institutions should identify documentation of efforts to give “qualified Texas candidates with a reasonable opportunity to apply for each position filled by a H-1B visa holder before a new petition was submitted for that position.” The information gathering and pause on new H-1B visas will give the Texas Legislature time to create “guardrails” for future employment practices for federal visa holders in state government, Abbott said. It will also allow Congress and President Donald Trump’s administration time to carry out changes, Abbott said. The governor teased the announcement in a Monday episode of “The Mark Davis Show.” In fiscal year 2025 across all sectors, Texas had about 42,500 recipients of H-1B visas, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services data. Tech-related companies like Cognizant Technology Solutions, Infosys Limited, Oracle and Tesla were among the top employers in the state.

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New York Times - January 28, 2026

D.H.S. review does not say Pretti brandished gun, as Noem claimed

A preliminary review by U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s internal watchdog office found that Alex Pretti was shot by two federal officers after resisting arrest, but did not indicate that he brandished a weapon during the encounter, according to an email sent to Congress and reviewed by The New York Times. The review makes no mention of the Department of Homeland Security’s earlier claims that Mr. Pretti, a U.S. citizen, “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.” Shortly after the shooting, Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, claimed that Mr. Pretti had been “brandishing” a gun. Officials had provided no evidence to back up the claim, which was contradicted by witness videos.

The initial review by C.B.P., which deployed more than 1,000 officers and agents to support the enforcement operation in Minnesota, represents the first official written assessment of Saturday’s shooting since administration officials rushed to blame Mr. Pretti. “These notifications reflect standard Customs and Border Protection protocol and are issued in accordance with existing procedures,” Hilton Beckham, a C.B.P. spokeswoman, said in a statement. “They provide an initial outline of an event that took place and do not convey any definitive conclusion or investigative findings. They are factual reports — not analytical judgments — and are provided to inform Congress and to promote transparency.” The review was done by C.B.P.’s Office of Professional Responsibility, which normally conducts internal misconduct investigations following shootings, and was distributed to members of Congress on Tuesday, as required by law. It presents a detailed timeline of the events based on body camera footage and agency documentation. At approximately 9 a.m. on Saturday, a federal officer was confronted by two female civilians blowing whistles, according to the review. Although the officer ordered them to move out of the road, they did not move.

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Austin American-Statesman - January 28, 2026

ICE raid rumors spark fear in Austin as city denies surge

As a winter storm bore down on Austin late last week, residents braced for an onslaught of ice — and, many feared, ICE enforcement in the city. Rumors that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were preparing a major operation in Austin spread rapidly across social media as the weekend approached. The claims, shared by a prominent Austin immigration attorney who is now a political candidate, along with downtown businesses and food influencers, suggested ICE had booked a large block of rooms at the Hyatt Regency downtown and arrested service workers in the Warehouse District. None included photos, video or other evidence.

“Credible reports on ICE activity,” attorney Kate Lincoln-Goldfinch said in a bilingual video post that was viewed more than 1 million times on Instagram and 250,000 on TikTok. “Watch out, stay safe and avoid downtown.” City officials initially said nothing publicly, even as they worked behind the scenes to figure out if there was anything to the rumors. Police Chief Lisa Davis called ICE. City Council Member José “Chito” Vela called downtown hotels and bar workers, as well as immigration and criminal defense attorneys. They found nothing to corroborate the claims. The situation was the latest test for officials in Austin, a liberal city where distrust of federal immigration agencies runs deep and residents have been rattled by recent events in Minneapolis. Earlier this month, Davis’ department faced backlash after Austin police called ICE on a mother and her young daughter due to an outstanding immigration warrant. The weekend rumors again placed local officials — many of whom oppose the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown — in the difficult position of trying to combat misinformation and calm fears while explaining the complexities of immigration enforcement in Texas and relying on assurances from the same federal agencies residents increasingly distrust.

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State Stories

Dallas Morning News - January 28, 2026

Ted Cruz urges Trump administration to soften tone on shootings

Sen. Ted Cruz has urged the Trump administration to strike a more measured tone after fatal shootings by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, saying tough talk risks alienating key swing voters. After Renee Good was shot and killed in her vehicle, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem suggested Good was trying to run down Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in an “act of domestic terrorism.” Cruz, in his podcast Monday, defended the agent’s actions, saying Good drove her car into him, and “that is a justifiable use of lethal force.” He also said officials should be cautious about casting those killed as terrorists and he said he supports an investigation into the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse in Minneapolis.

“Immediately when an incident like this happens, they come out guns blazing that we took out a violent terrorist, hooray,” Cruz said. “And the problem is, particularly for someone not paying attention, if you’re being told this is a mom of three, and there’s no indication, you know, she’s not waving an ISIS flag or doesn’t have a suicide vest around her, escalating the rhetoric doesn’t help and it actually loses credibility,” he said. After Pretti’s shooting, some Republicans blamed him for carrying a gun while protesting immigration enforcement operations. He had a Minnesota permit to carry a firearm. Trump adviser Stephen Miller described Pretti as an “assassin” trying to murder federal agents. Some Second Amendment rights advocates, generally supportive of President Donald Trump, have said exercising a constitutional right to carry doesn’t automatically give law enforcement cause to shoot someone. Cruz, a Republican, said on his podcast there was “confusion” about what happened with Pretti and “there needs to be an investigation.”

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KUT - January 28, 2026

Paxton files suit against Delaware nurse practitioner for providing abortion pills to Texans

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has sued a Delaware-based nurse practitioner, alleging she broke Texas law by prescribing abortion pills to women in Texas. In the suit filed Tuesday, Paxton said that Debra Lynch, a co-founder of the organization Her Safe Harbor, has sent packages containing the medications mifepristone and misoprostol to women in cities including Beaumont, Fulshear, Tomball, Houston and El Paso. The suit references statements Lynch made to media outlets, including in a profile by the Austin American-Statesman. Abortion is illegal in Texas except for a narrow carveout for medical emergencies.

Her Safe Harbor advertises itself as a telehealth service that offers “safe, private care” to women in all 50 states. In addition to abortion medication, the service offers other kinds of gynecology treatment, such as care for UTIs and sexually transmitted infections, and prescribes birth control and emergency contraception. In the filing, Paxton calls Her Safe Harbor “part of a growing network of out-of-state abortion traffickers that deliberately target Texas residents.” He is seeking a temporary or permanent injunction that prohibits Lynch and her organization from providing abortion medication to Texas residents and prevents her from practicing medicine in the state. The action follows a cease and desist letter the Texas Attorney General’s office sent Lynch last year. After receiving the letter, Lynch told media outlets that Her Safe Harbor did not plan to change its operations, and she had seen an uptick in requests from Texans since news of the cease-and-desist was reported.

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New York Times - January 28, 2026

After Alex Pretti, Kyle Rittenhouse is again a lightning rod online

As Americans vented, grieved and, in some cases, justified the killing of Alex Pretti by federal immigration officers over the weekend, they turned, as they often do, to social media. In the hours after the shooting, as the Trump administration rushed to push a narrative that Mr. Pretti was a “domestic terrorist” who possessed a weapon and an intent to cause harm, the name Kyle Rittenhouse began to circulate online. A young man who arrived armed with an AR-15-style rifle to defend a local business during a Black Lives Matter protest in 2020, Mr. Rittenhouse was once a symbol of patriotism and Second Amendment rights for many on the right. Some of his supporters, among them President Trump, helped fund his legal defense when he was brought up on — and later found not guilty of — charges of intentional homicide for shooting three protesters and killing two.

After the killing of Mr. Pretti, Mr. Rittenhouse has become a prism through which observers across the political spectrum are filtering the actions by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents in Minneapolis. For those on the left, Mr. Rittenhouse is a figure who highlights what they believe is a staggering display of hypocrisy by MAGA conservatives and administration officials who have rushed to paint Mr. Pretti, an I.C.U. nurse, as a violent activist on the streets of Minneapolis. Some liberals have posted images of Mr. Rittenhouse gripping a rifle as a pointed reminder that conservatives, not that long ago, once forcefully defended the right to bear arms on the streets of America. Mr. Pretti was carrying a 9 mm handgun, according to federal officials, when he entered a zone of civil unrest. “Kyle Rittenhouse showed up to a protest like this and Republicans called him a hero,” Isaiah Martin, a former Democratic candidate for Congress in Texas, wrote on X on Saturday. For many on the right, the simple fact that Mr. Pretti had a weapon in his possession justified the actions of the federal agents, who fired at least 10 shots at Mr. Pretti in five seconds after appearing to have disarmed him. (Officials with the Minneapolis Police Department have said that Mr. Pretti had a permit to carry a weapon.)

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KERA - January 28, 2026

Addison joins other North Texas cities considering leaving DART

Pressure is increasing on Dallas Area Rapid Transit as a fifth city is now considering an election to withdraw from the agency. The city of Addison has called a special meeting on Dec. 2 to address concerns from the council over funding for the transit agency. If the council votes to call an election, it would join four other cities — Farmers Branch, Highland Park, Irving and Plano — that will ask voters this spring whether or not to leave DART. “Following the decision of four other cities to call DART withdrawal elections, the Addison City Council has decided to call a special meeting to determine the best path forward for our community,” Addison’s director of marketing and tourism Mary Rosenbleeth said in a written statement.

The city is identified as a “donor” city according to a 2024 report by the consulting firm Ernst & Young that showed the Addison contributed about $16 million while only receiving $9.5 million in services in Fiscal Year 2023. The report does not take into account the recently added Silver Line that began providing service to the city in October. Transportation Plano's new proposal to DART could keep the city from leaving the agency Pablo Arauz Peña , November 19, 2025 Plano's proposal would eliminate regular bus routes in the city but keep rail, including the new Silver Line. The decision to consider a withdrawal election is a blow to DART’s standing with the city, which earlier this year passed a resolution to support full funding for the agency after North Texas legislators filed a bill to reduce the agency’s funding by at least 25%. When that effort in the legislature failed, the DART board of directors voted to approve a General Mobility Program (GMP) to return 5% of sales tax funds to donor cities, including Addison; DART later stipulated cities would need to cease efforts to leave the agency or reduce its funding in order to receive their share of the GMP. According to a presentation prepared by city staff for the Dec. 2 meeting, Addison's legal team advised the council not to approve the GMP "as written and have made our concerns known to DART.” If Addison residents vote to leave the agency, service would end the day after the election. A spokesperson for DART told KERA in a statement the agency is aware of the Dec. 2 meeting. “DART remains committed to negotiating transparently and in good faith to ensure North Texans have access to transit solutions that work best for them,” the statement said. DART CEO Nadine Lee has previously said that cities withdrawing from the agency would have a detrimental impact on the entire system. “What I tell people is, you pay with your time or your money,” Lee said in a recent interview on WFAA’s Y'allitics podcast. “You’re going to sit in congestion and maybe you’ll have the option to work from home but in 20 years, who knows what’s going to happen?” Addison City Council’s special called meeting is at 5:30 on Tuesday, Dec. 2.

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Texas Public Radio - January 28, 2026

Report projects more than 6,000 PTSD cases tied to Kerr County floods without sustained mental health care

The July 4 floods in Kerr County could result in more than 6,000 new cases of post-traumatic stress disorder among adults and about 2,000 cases of serious emotional disturbance in children without sustained access to mental health care, according to a new assessment released this week. The assessment was conducted by the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country in partnership with the Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute. It highlights that the psychological impacts of disasters often surface well after the initial crisis and can persist for years.

“These effects often emerge months after a disaster and persist without sustained care,” the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country said in a statement. “Informed by interviews with 70 local leaders and supported by data modeling, the report identifies where expanded mental health support is most needed.” The findings build on broader recovery efforts already underway following the floods and are intended to guide long-term investment in mental health services across Kerr County. In response, the Community Foundation announced a $1 million grant commitment to partner organizations working to expand mental health services in the area. Those groups include Light on the Hill, Hunt Independent School District, and the Hill Country Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Centers. Priority areas for the funding include expanding trauma and grief-informed care, increasing access to mental health services for children, and providing specialized support for bereaved families and frontline responders. Foundation leaders say the goal is to ensure residents affected by the floods have access to mental health care throughout the long recovery process, not just in the immediate aftermath.

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Architect's Newspaper - January 27, 2026

Edward Mazria: Texas can transform coal infrastructure into clean energy engines for digital age

(Edward Mazria is founder of the nonprofit Architecture 2030 and an internationally recognized architect, author, researcher, and educator. He was awarded the 2021 AIA Gold Medal for his “unwavering voice and leadership” in the fight against climate change.) A dangerous fiction is being promoted in Texas and across the nation: a manufactured energy crisis designed to justify our reliance on polluting coal plants while scapegoating new technologies like AI and data centers. Simultaneously, communities in Texas are grappling with the immense costs and impacts of proposed massive new transmission lines and the construction of large, resource- and land-intensive data center campuses. Citing unsustainable energy and water consumption, more than 230 groups have now urged Congress to pause data center development in the U.S. But these narratives miss the real story. The problem isn’t our digital future; it’s our toxic past. First, let’s be clear: there is no systemic energy crisis in the United States. The facts tell a story of progress showing the U.S. produces more energy than it consumes and remains the world’s top oil and gas producer, with Texas as the nation’s leading net energy supplier.

The hype that new development is causing an energy crisis ignores a crucial fact: the data shows no corresponding increase in energy demand, even with massive growth. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), from 2005 to 2024, the American building sector cut its energy consumption by 8.2 percent and its electricity energy consumption by an impressive 10.7percent, while total U.S. electric power sector use fell 13.0 percent. These figures include America’s massive digital infrastructure—ten times the number in China—with major hubs in Texas. This trend holds in Texas: despite leading the nation in construction, the state’s building sector energy consumption fell 0.6 percent between 2013 and 2023 and the latest 2024 EIA data for Texas shows a 1.5 percent drop in building sector electricity consumption this past year. While the energy and electricity demand from the data center boom has not materialized, the financial risk to Texans is very real: acting on this false narrative and building out infrastructure would cost consumers billions. What is the real motive behind the energy-crisis narrative? It serves as a pretext to prop up fossil fuels and gut federal and local rules that protect our health and well-being. This fiction has been used to weaken clean air and water regulations, limit federal tracking of extreme rainfall and pollution data, and promote so-called “clean” coal-generated electricity in the U.S. and Texas. Promoting these aging, polluting coal plants to power the AI revolution is like trying to run the newest iPhone on a steam engine.

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Austin American-Statesman - January 28, 2026

UT Austin becomes NSF’s top-funded campus, driven by computing and AI

The University of Texas at Austin was the top university for research funded by the National Science Foundation nationally in fiscal year 2024 — a sign of the university’s leadership in scientific research. Federal funding pays for 60% of UT’s research. In 2024, NSF dollars made up $176.4 million of that funding, accounting for roughly one-quarter of UT’s total federal research dollars. The National Science Foundation’s mission is to advance scientific discovery, national prosperity and national security. The federal agency funds thousands of projects at 1,900 universities annually. UT’s top rank means the Texas flagship received more funding than any other institution, according to a Higher Education Research and Development Survey released last month.

Two major UT centers studying artificial intelligence computing power and image processing received significant investment from NSF. The research keeps UT on the forefront of the rapidly growing fields while ensuring the public can access its benefits. “I do think people all over Texas, if they’re not already, will be using tools that were created by NSF researchers,” said Adam Klivans, the director of the AI Institute for Foundations of Machine Learning. The biggest 2024 NSF grant for UT was a multi-year $457 million investment to build a “leadership-class” computing center, with UT receiving $26 million of the grant in 2024. The money will go to creating the largest-ever supercomputer, Horizon, which will have ten times the computing power than the current largest computer, Frontera, which is also at UT. The facility marks a new “major facilities commitment to large scale computing,” said Daniel Stanzione, the executive director of UT’s Texas Advanced Computing Center, which is spearheading the project. About 80% of the center’s funding comes from NSF alone, he said. “We keep sort of upgrading the level of funding we’re getting as they trust us more and more to be the right place to do this,” he said. UT has built four other supercomputers with NSF over the past two decades.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 28, 2026

San Antonio Express-News Editorial: Daniel Betts is our choice in GOP primary to replace Chip Roy

The Republican primary election for Texas’ 21st Congressional District is among the most contested and wide open races on the March 3 ballot. U.S. Rep. Chip Roy — who ran unopposed in the 2024 Republican primary — is not seeking a fifth term. He has chosen instead to run for the office of Texas attorney general, which is being vacated by Ken Paxton, who is seeking to unseat U.S. Sen. John Cornyn in his bid for a fifth term. In Roy’s wake, 12 candidates are vying for the GOP nomination to replace him. Given the historically conservative voting patterns in District 21, which includes parts of northern Bexar County, most of Comal County and all of Kendall, Kerr and Bandera counties, the winner of this primary will have a huge edge in the November general election.

Daniel Betts, an Austin-based criminal defense lawyer and University of Texas School of Law graduate, emerged as our recommendation in this crowded field. Betts, who lives in Dripping Springs and ran for Travis County district attorney during the previous election cycle, is a conservative, but not in the combative and arrogant mold of Roy. Betts’ law degree is interestingly paired with an undergraduate degree in chemistry from the University of Chicago, which speaks to an appreciation of science and validated facts that we hope will serve as a backstop against some of the evidence-be-damned, ideological approaches to federal lawmaking we see in too many ultra-right members of Congress. Betts is keen on finding ways to responsibly do desalination to help meet our needs for water, as well as possibly tapping nuclear power for the energy needed to operate such plants. He considers himself a “small government” conservative who believes many in his party have “fallen down on the job” in that regard. At the same time, he acknowledges that being in Congress means representing and listening to constituents of all parties, and he told us that he would strive to hold town halls at least monthly, as did a few other candidates.

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Austin Chronicle - January 28, 2026

Austin Film Critics Association takes stand against Alamo Drafthouse mobile ordering

The recent announcement that the Alamo Drafthouse is getting rid of its pen-and-paper ordering and in-seat call buttons has been met with an overwhelming backlash from customers. Now the Austin Film Critics Association has joined the chorus by releasing a statement that calls for the Alamo Drafthouse and its owners, Sony Pictures Entertainment, to reverse this decision. [Full disclosure: Chronicle critics including Kimberley Jones, Marjorie Baumgarten, and Richard Whittaker are members of the AFCA.] On January 10, the Drafthouse announced the shift to ordering via QR code. In the statement, management explained that they believed it will reduce distractions during screenings, and that staff will still be available to assist if there are any issues.

However, the consumer response online has been wholly negative, as this is a complete reversal of the Drafthouse’s cornerstone policy that bans phone usage during screenings. Moreover, there have been broad concerns among Drafthouse staff that, when introduced nationwide in February, the immediate result will be a loss of staff. So far, the Drafthouse has not issued any further statement on the change, but every social media post released since has become a forum for protest. Even the company’s LinkedIn page has seen complaints and calls for the old system to be reinstated, and a Change.org petition promoted by workers union Alamo United has already gathered more than 4,000 signatures. Now the AFCA has taken the unprecedented step of issuing a statement in support of the reversal and laying out the reasons for its opposition.

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Minnesota Public Radio - January 28, 2026

‘ICE conveyor belt’ illegally detaining, moving Minnesota children to Texas faster than courts can respond

Shortly after Elvis Joel Tipan Echeverria, a man from Ecuador with an open asylum case, pulled into the driveway of his Minneapolis home on Thursday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents broke a window in his car, pulled him and his 2-year-old daughter out and drove them away. In less than eight hours, Echeverria and his daughter were on a commercial flight to a Texas family detention facility, even though a judge had ordered ICE to return the toddler to her Minnesota home. “The court ordered the release of this child, and 20 minutes later they were put on a flight,” said Irina Vaynerman, an attorney representing the man and his daughter. The 2-year-old’s detention is part of an accelerating trend of what Vaynerman describes as ICE agents sending children and adults with legal immigration status out of state to avoid dealing with accountability from the federal court system.

Vaynerman said she and her colleagues filed an emergency motion in federal court Friday, asking a judge to stop the practice. “Minnesotans are being unlawfully detained and are then being quickly marshalled across state lines by the government,” Vaynerman said. “They’re doing that in order to evade the reach of the federal district court in Minnesota.” “This is an intentional, calculated effort,” Vaynerman added, “Especially where folks are already being denied the access of counsel before they're placed on the planes.” Echeverria’s 2-year-old daughter, identified in court documents only as C.R.T.V., was returned to Minnesota on Friday and is now with her mother. Her father is still in detention. But several lawyers told MPR News the trend of illegally detaining immigrants, including young children and shipping them out of state has been widespread. Early on Thursday morning, Maria Velasco Hurtado was being driven to work by a neighbor when the vehicle she was in was stopped by ICE officers. According to her attorney, Velasco Hurtado tried to show the agents papers proving her legal permission to be in the United States. But the agents removed her from the car, drove to her home in Hopkins and, according to her lawyer, used her as “bait” to detain the rest of the family, including two children in first and fourth grade. q

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KTRE - January 28, 2026

Deep East Texas electric company explains why thousands without power for a week

Following the winter freeze that has been sweeping across East Texas, Deep East Texas Electric Cooperative has reported around 24,000 customers without power. Now, three days later, around 10,000 customers were still waiting for power to be restored, and some residents may face another week without electricity. While the cooperative hopes to restore power for most by Sunday, they definitely recognize the frustration and need. “It’s kind of a situation where you plan for the worst and you hope for the best, so we hope that we can restore it much sooner to most folks by Sunday. But the reality is that it could take by Sunday for us to restore everyone’s power,” Brittney Ford, director of communications for the Deep East Texas Electric Cooperative, said.

The ice storm has been particularly brutal in certain areas. Cities like Garrison, Tenaha, Timpson and Joaquin have borne the brunt of the damage, with higher ice accumulation creating additional challenges for restoration crews. The widespread damage in these communities means they require more time and resources to get back online compared to other affected areas. For residents like Brian Patterson, the outage has taken its toll. “It’s been hard,” he explained. “We got power but the rest of my friends and family don’t have power. We come together and hope for the best—that’s about it.” Ford stressed that the areas hardest hit aren’t necessarily the most difficult to access—they simply sustained more damage. “Those areas in Garrison and Tenaha and Timpson and Joaquin were heavily impacted. They saw higher ice accumulation. It’s not that they’re not as accessible as the other areas, they just have more damages,” she explained. As restoration efforts continue, Ford recommends that those without power report their outages two to three times a day to help keep them updated.

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Fort Worth Report - January 28, 2026

Could ‘Landman’ help Fort Worth’s film industry grow into a $5B production powerhouse? Experts believe so

Cowtown’s two-step with Hollywood is lining up to be a showbiz success. Film and TV productions are booming in Fort Worth, thanks to Taylor Sheridan’s “Landman” series, which features prominent shots of the city in most episodes. In 2025, an estimated $1 billion in economic impact spurred the opening of new production facilities and offices across the Fort Worth area. “It really is a Cinderella story for Fort Worth — and it’s just the beginning,” said Taylor Hardy, film commissioner and director of video content for Visit Fort Worth, the city’s tourism arm. Hardy’s comments came during a 2026 Real Estate Forecast event held Jan. 22 at TCU as experts discussed ways in which Fort Worth can bolster its ties to film and TV productions in North Texas. Until “Landman,” Fort Worth often lost out to Dallas when productions chose filming locations, Hardy said. Since then, with the establishment of a film commission, Visit Fort Worth has kept track of the city’s efforts to secure more film and TV productions for the past decade.

“It was kind of a turning point for our city,” Hardy said. “Before that, we were losing a lot of business to Dallas. They were representing the entire metroplex and they didn’t know our locations and our community.” Despite the initial lack of economic incentives and infrastructure, Fort Worth was still attractive enough to scrape its way into TV and film. Diverse filming locations, including the Stockyards, and talented crew members aided in developing the local industry and attracting new businesses. Fort Worth’s proximity to the middle of the United States was enhanced further by Dallas Fort Worth International Airport, the world’s third-busiest travel hub. “We’re right between New York and Los Angeles, with more direct flights and more availability than cities like Austin or Oklahoma City,” Hardy said. Cowtown’s pride also helped provide positive experiences for filmmakers and directors, who have been welcomed by residents and officials alike. “That pride in our city is something that’s really contagious,” she said. Since filmmaker David Lowery, a former Irving High School student, did a scene in Fort Worth years ago, he has returned to the city for other projects, including “The Old Man & The Gun,” Robert Redford’s final movie, Hardy said. The film commission’s work with Taylor Sheridan began in 2021 when he sought to film a Fort Worth equestrian scene for the TV series “Yellowstone.” He returned to film the “1883” spinoff in the city, followed by a season of “Lawmen: Bass Reeves,” two seasons of “Lioness,” two seasons of “Landman,” and two new shows, “The Madison” and “The Dutton Ranch.”

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National Stories

Washington Post - January 28, 2026

Rep. Ilhan Omar attacked during town hall meeting in Minneapolis

A man attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) while she was speaking during a Tuesday town hall meeting in Minneapolis, according to local police. The man used a syringe to spray an unknown liquid at Omar, the police said. The meeting was being held in the wake of events that have roiled the state, including the fatal shooting of ICU nurse Alex Pretti by federal officers last week. “We must abolish ICE for good. And (Department of Homeland Security) Secretary Kristi Noem must resign or face impeachment,” Omar said just before the man walked up to her. The man was immediately arrested and booked into Hennepin County Jail on suspicion of third-degree assault, the police statement added. The Minneapolis Police Department later identified the attacker as 55-year-old Anthony Kazmierczak.

A live stream of the event shows the man being tackled to the ground and taken away by security. Photos from the scene show the syringe containing a brown liquid. Omar appears unharmed and continues speaking. “We are Minnesota strong. We will stay resilient in the face of whatever they might throw at us,” she says after coming back to the lectern. In a social media post after the attack, Omar said she was all right and thanked her constituents for rallying behind her. “I’m a survivor so this small agitator isn’t going to intimidate me from doing my work,” she wrote on X. In a phone interview late Tuesday, President Donald Trump minimized reports of the incident and called Omar a “fraud,” echoing his frequent barbs against the congresswoman. Trump told ABC News that “she probably had herself sprayed, knowing her,” without providing evidence to substantiate the claim. Speaking to CNN later, Omar said it is important not to get intimidated and to keep fighting for her constituents. “I’ve survived war. And I’m definitely going to survive intimidation and whatever these people think they can throw at me because I’m built that way,” she said.

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Wall Street Journal - January 28, 2026

Trump has four finalists to run the Fed. None of them are exactly what he wants.

President Trump has said for months that he’s made up his mind about who should lead the Federal Reserve. But with each passing week without an announcement, some people close to the process aren’t sure any of his four finalists fully meet his requirements. The difficulty: Trump wants something that may not exist—a new chair who will pursue his demands for lower interest rates while still commanding enough credibility on Wall Street and from his colleagues to deliver them. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been managing the search and, after ruling himself out of contention, has presented Trump with four finalists: Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor; Christopher Waller, a current Fed governor whom Trump appointed to the board in 2020; Rick Rieder, a senior executive at BlackRock; and Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House National Economic Council.

Each represents a different trade-off between the two things Trump says he wants. The tension was on display last week when Trump addressed the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “They’re all respected. They’re all great…. Everyone could do, I think, a fantastic job,” he said of his finalists. Then he telegraphed his core anxiety about the selection—that candidates “say everything I want to hear” during interviews, only to assert their independence once they have been confirmed. “It’s amazing how people change once they have the job,” Trump said. “It’s too bad, sort of disloyalty, but they got to do what they think is right.” In a Dec. 23 post on Truth Social, the president laid out what he called “The Trump Rule”—a demand that the Fed abandon an approach to inflation that has conditioned markets to treat good economic news as bad news, since it means rates won’t come down as fast. He concluded with an unambiguous warning: “Anybody that disagrees with me will never be the Fed Chairman!” The two statements capture the bind Trump has created for himself as he searches for someone to replace Jerome Powell, whose term expires in May.

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The Guardian - January 28, 2026

Bari Weiss tries to win CBS staffers’ trust amid ‘noise’ over 60 Minutes segment

In her first town hall, Weiss expressed some regret over her decision to pull 60 Minutes segment at the last minute During her first address to CBS News employees as editor in chief, Bari Weiss acknowledged that there had been “a lot of noise” about her tumultuous tenure and said that some staffers might decide they don’t support her or want to continue working at the company. “I just want to start by saying: I get it. And I get why, in the face of all this tumult and noise, you might feel uncertain or skeptical about me and about what I’m aiming to do here,” Weiss said on Tuesday morning, according to an audio recording of her comments obtained by the Guardian. “So I’m not going to stand up here today in front of all of you and ask for your trust: I’m going to earn it, just like we have to do with our viewers. What I can give you is what I’ve always tried to give my readers and listeners as a journalist: and that is transparency, clarity and straight talk.”

Weiss, who shared her broader strategy for the network for the first time since joining the network in October after her company The Free Press was acquired by Paramount Skydance for a reported $150m, said that her goal is to “make CBS News fit for purpose in the 21st century”. As part of the new strategy that Weiss laid out, CBS News announced the addition of 18 new on-air contributors, including prominent names from the world of politics, academia and culture – though some have faced controversy. The list includes medical expert Mark Hyman, historian Niall Ferguson, neuroscientist Andrew Huberman and former national security adviser H R McMaster. Ending her opening remarks, Weiss acknowledged that her plans might not be for everyone. “We are the best-capitalized media startup in the world,” she said. “We have the talent, we have the energy, and we have the mandate to transform CBS News. And if everyone here does their jobs right, and together, in a year’s time CBS News is going to look different. But startups aren’t for everybody. … If that’s not your bag, that’s OK. It’s a free country, and I completely respect if you decide I’m not the right leader for you, or this isn’t the right place at the right time.”

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New York Times - January 28, 2026

Amazon to cut 16,000 jobs in latest round of layoffs

Though business has been booming, Amazon said on Wednesday that it was laying off 16,000 more corporate employees as it looked to trim bureaucracy and free up money for plans to spend heavily on artificial intelligence. The cuts were widely expected across Amazon’s corporate work force since late October, when the company laid off 14,000 corporate employees. At the time, The New York Times and other publications reported that another round of layoffs was planned for January, after the holiday shopping season. The company did not rule out more job cuts in the future, although it said it was not planning to create a “new rhythm” of layoffs every few months. “Just as we always have, every team will continue to evaluate the ownership, speed, and capacity to invent for customers, and make adjustments as appropriate,” Beth Galetti, Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, said in a blog post.

Next week, Amazon is scheduled to report its financial results for the fourth quarter, which covered the holiday shopping season. Wall Street analysts expect that sales surpassed $211 billion and that profits were more than $21 billion. In the previous quarter, July through September, the company’s sales totaled $180 billion, and profit topped $21 billion. The pattern echoed a large round of layoffs in late 2022 and early 2023, when the company eliminated almost 30,000 positions to trim costs as the world emerged from the pandemic. The October layoffs ran the gamut. In Amazon’s home state, Washington, about 2,000 employees lost their jobs, including recruiters, analysts and managers. The hardest-hit job category was software engineers. More than 1,500 positions were cut in California. Last summer, Andy Jassy, Amazon’s chief executive, told employees that artificial intelligence meant that, over time, the company would operate with fewer corporate workers. But in the fall, he told investors that the layoffs had less to do with A.I. or finances and more with reducing layers of bureaucracy. Still, the reductions in various divisions were based on targets for trimming operating costs.

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Indiana Capital Chronicle - January 28, 2026

Trump posts more endorsements of GOP challengers to Indiana redistricting foes

President Donald Trump is publicly backing Republican primary challengers to longtime state Sens. Jim Buck and Greg Walker over their opposition to the Indiana congressional redistricting demanded by the president. Trump has vowed political revenge against Republican legislators who helped defeat the redistricting bill — and in separate Monday social media posts he endorsed state Rep. Michelle Davis in her challenge to Walker and Tipton County Commissioner Tracey Powell to defeat Buck. Trump’s posts used nearly identical wording to label Walker and Buck as a “RINO” — for Republican in name only — and “an America Last politician” for voting against the redrawing of Indiana’s U.S. House maps aimed at helping Republicans win all nine seats. Davis, a third-term House member from Whiteland, announced her Senate campaign in August after Walker had said he would not seek reelection to the seat he first won in 2006.

But Walker, R-Columbus, earlier this month filed for the May primary, saying he was “greatly concerned when I see Hoosier politics play a surrogate to those national battles.” Davis voted in favor of the redistricting plan when it passed the House in December. She said after Walker reversed his decision on seeking reelection that she was continuing her Senate campaign. Walker said in a statement that he was “not surprised this issue is following some of us in our primaries.” “I could not support a map creating four new Indianapolis districts that would have greatly undermined the important voices of rural Indiana and my constituents who live in these areas,” Walker said. “I respect the President’s opinion but I have to put Hoosiers first.” Davis is challenging Walker in Senate District 41, which includes all of Bartholomew County and much of Johnson County south of Indianapolis. Powell is a chiropractor who was first elected as a Tipton County commissioner in 2020.

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NOTUS - January 28, 2026

State judge in Virginia blocks Democrats’ redistricting effort

A state judge on Tuesday ruled against Democrats’ redistricting efforts in Virginia, which Democrats quickly said they would appeal. Judge Jack S. Hurley Jr. ruled that the state constitutional amendment passed by Democrats in order to redraw their district maps, which could net Democrats several House seats in this year’s midterm elections, is unconstitutional because the process they used to pass the constitutional amendment is invalid. “The simple fact is that the rules cannot be rewritten on the fly to suit the political ambitions of those in power,” the Republican Party of Virginia’s acting chair, Kristi Way, said in a statement cheering the ruling. “Democrats in Richmond have attempted to jam through a major constitutional change by violating clear-cut procedures, ignoring long-standing statutory requirements, and disregarding the plain text of our Constitution.”

Virginia Democrats, who paved the way to new maps in the Virginia General Assembly along party lines, have yet to publicly say what the maps would look like. After the passage of the constitutional amendment in the General Assembly earlier this month, lawmakers began to plan for an April 21 special election. Republican leaders quickly filed suit in Tazewell County, where they found Hurley in agreement. “We will be appealing this ruling immediately and we expect to prevail,” said a joint statement from Democratic leadership in the Virginia House of Delegates and state Senate. “This was court-shopping, plain and simple. We’re prepared for the next step, and voters - not politicians - will have the final say.” Virginia currently has six Democrats and five Republican representatives in the House. “We always knew this would be a fight— because this has never been about what’s easy. It’s about what’s right: leveling the playing field and protecting the right to vote,” the speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, Don Scott, said on social media. “Today’s ruling won’t deter us. Republicans who can’t win at the ballot box are abusing the courts to sow confusion and block Virginians from voting. We will appeal immediately, and we expect to prevail. Voters—not politicians—will have the final say.”

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NPR - January 28, 2026

Ex-FIFA president Sepp Blatter joins those calling for boycott of World Cup in U.S.

Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Monday backed a proposed fan boycott of World Cup matches in the United States because of the conduct of President Donald Trump and his administration at home and abroad. Blatter was the latest international soccer figure to call into question the suitability of the United States as a host country. He called for the boycott in a post on X that supported Mark Pieth's comments in an interview last week with the Swiss newspaper Der Bund. Pieth, a Swiss attorney specializing in white-collar crime and an anti-corruption expert, chaired the Independent Governance Committee's oversight of FIFA reform a decade ago. Blatter was president of the world's governing body for soccer from 1998-2015; he resigned amid an investigation into corruption.

In his interview with Der Bund, Pieth said, "If we consider everything we've discussed, there's only one piece of advice for fans: Stay away from the USA! You'll see it better on TV anyway. And upon arrival, fans should expect that if they don't please the officials, they'll be put straight on the next flight home. If they're lucky." In his X post, Blatter quoted Pieth and added, "I think Mark Pieth is right to question this World Cup." The United States is co-hosting the World Cup with Canada and Mexico from June 11-July 19. The international soccer community's concerns about the United States stem from Trump's expansionist posture on Greenland, and travel bans and aggressive tactics in dealing with migrants and immigration enforcement protesters in American cities, particularly Minneapolis. Oke Göttlich, one of the vice presidents of the German soccer federation, told the Hamburger Morgenpost newspaper in an interview on Friday that the time had come to seriously consider boycotting the World Cup. Travel plans for fans from two of the top soccer countries in Africa were thrown into disarray in December, when the Trump administration announced an expanded ban that would effectively bar people from Senegal and Ivory Coast following their teams unless they already have visas. Trump cited "screening and vetting deficiencies" as the main reason for the suspensions. Fans from Iran and Haiti, two other countries that have qualified for the World Cup, will be barred from entering the United States as well; they were included in the first iteration of the travel ban announced by the Trump administration.

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Newsclips - January 27, 2026

Lead Stories

ABC 13 - January 27, 2026

Tara Arnold and Shawna Collins among 6 killed on private plane tied to Houston law firm

What was supposed to be a business trip to France ended in tragedy for a prominent Houston law firm and several local families. A private Bombardier Challenger 600 jet that federal aviation records show is owned by Arnold & Itkin Law Firm took off from Hobby Airport Sunday afternoon, with the final destination in France. Employees at Jet Aviation confirmed the corporate jet departed Hobby Airport in Houston, and successfully landed in Maine before attempting to take off again for its final destination in France. During that departure, the plane flipped and crashed.Bangor officials said the incident happened during a snowy, wintry weather event, but other planes were still taking off and landing at that time. Bangor officials say all six people on board died.

Multiple sources have confirmed that the firm's founders, Kurt Arnold and Jason Itkin, were not on the aircraft. However, the same sources say attorney Tara Arnold, who is married to Kurt Arnold, was among the passengers killed. Harris County Commissioner Lesley Briones, a close friend of the family, expressed her grief as she awaited more information. "I'm close friends with Kurt and Tara Arnold, and we're still waiting for additional information," Briones said. "Unfortunately, the plane went down (Sunday) evening in Maine, and my heart hurts for them, for their children, and for their families." The daughter of event planner Shawna Collins also confirmed her mother was on the flight. The daughter told ABC13 she had spoken to her mother on Sunday before the flight, and Collins was excited about the upcoming business trip to Europe. Arnold & Itkin has not released an official statement as of Monday evening. The firm's founders are well known across Texas for their legal work, political and civic involvement, and major philanthropic contributions. The Arnolds and Itkins recently made a $40 million commitment to the University of Texas Athletics, where their names appear on the Longhorns' stadium scoreboard. Briones described Tara Arnold as a deeply committed public servant. "She was a phenomenal person, a bold leader, and someone with a heart of service," Briones said. "She was very involved in Precinct 4 and our nonprofit, Precinct 4 Forward. My heart is with Kurt, their children, and everyone affected." Officials in Maine have not released an official cause of the crash. Aviation experts say icy and wintry conditions may have been a factor, though authorities noted that other aircraft were landing and taking off around the same time. The investigation remains ongoing.

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Wall Street Journal - January 27, 2026

The 48 hours that convinced Trump to change course in Minnesota

The videos were splashed across cable news—and President Trump was paying attention. Working from the Oval Office as a winter storm barreled toward the nation’s capital, Trump watched as footage of a federal immigration agent shooting Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive-care nurse and U.S. citizen, played on repeat from Minneapolis. Within hours of the shooting, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem alleged Pretti had attacked officers and was brandishing a gun, labeling the actions domestic terrorism. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino said Pretti wanted to massacre law enforcement. And Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s aggressive immigration strategy, called Pretti a “would-be assassin.” It wasn’t long before that narrative started to fall apart—and Trump started to get frustrated, according to administration officials.

Roughly 48 hours after the shooting, Trump decided to change course, moving to pull back one of his administration’s most high-profile and divisive immigration-enforcement campaigns. By the end of the day Monday, Tom Homan, Trump’s border czar who advocated for a more targeted approach to deportations, was en route to Minneapolis to take charge. Bovino, the face of the hard-edge approach employed in Minnesota, was leaving the state. Trump’s pivot came after Republican lawmakers and other allies raised concerns that he was squandering public support for his signature campaign issue and senior administration officials increasingly saw the chaotic scenes in Minneapolis as a political liability. Gun rights advocates, normally steadfast allies of Trump, publicly criticized administration officials for criticizing Pretti for carrying a gun during protest activity. State officials said Pretti had a permit to carry the weapon. In the process, Trump appeared to take sides—for now—in a simmering debate that has been playing out quietly in the administration. Over the past year, Trump’s more hard-line aides, including Noem and her top adviser Corey Lewandowski, have pushed for missions that include roving patrols doing street sweeps in large liberal cities. Homan and others have favored a more methodical but slower approach to go after immigrants with criminal histories or final deportation orders, according to people familiar with the matter.

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Bloomberg - January 27, 2026

EU and India clinch ‘mother of all deals’ in rebuff to Trump

The European Union and India concluded a free-trade agreement after almost two decades of negotiations, part of an effort to deepen economic ties that has gained momentum due to the Trump administration’s aggressive tariff policies. “We have concluded the mother of all deals,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Tuesday in a social-media post. The head of the EU executive, who was in New Delhi to mark the moment with European Council President Antonio Costa, added that the accord “created a free trade zone of two billion people, with both sides set to benefit.” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed the agreement as a means of strengthening India’s manufacturing and services sectors while boosting investor confidence in Asia’s third-largest economy.

“India has completed its biggest and most historic free trade agreement,” Modi said at a joint press briefing in New Delhi. “This historic agreement will make it easier for our farmers and small businesses to reach the European markets.” The conclusion of negotiations reflects the rapidly shifting global alignment under US President Donald Trump. The EU, despite long clashing with Indian officials on trade policy, is focused on paring back its economic reliance on the US and China. India is trying to shake its protectionist reputation and offset a 50% Trump tariff, while at the same time balance ties with Russia. The deal is expected to double EU goods exports to India by 2032 after New Delhi agreed to eliminate or cut tariffs on 96.6% of shipments, according to a European Commission press release. The EU, in turn, will eliminate or reduce tariffs on 99.5% of goods imported from India over seven years, India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry said.

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NOTUS - January 27, 2026

FEC to Texas Republican Party: Explain your COVID tax credit math

Some congressional Republicans have long criticized the Employee Retention Credit program — a COVID-era initiative designed to keep Americans employed during the pandemic — saying that it is rife with fraud and abuse. For the Republican Party of Texas, federal regulators are questioning whether committee officials have properly accounted for $600,000 worth of Employee Retention Credit funds the committee itself received. In a letter on Jan. 19, the Federal Election Commission asked the Republican Party of Texas’ federal committee to explain why it appeared to improperly disclose a $600,000 payment in September to the U.S. Treasury to “reverse emp. retention credits to state acct upon audit.”

In its federal disclosure, the Republican Party of Texas reported receiving a -$600,000 contribution from the U.S. Treasury — something that runs contrary to standard campaign-finance accounting practices for federal political committees. It is unclear why the Republican Party of Texas accounted for its Employee Retention Credit funds in this way and appeared to make a large payment to the Treasury Department. Jordan Leighty, communications director for the Republican Party of Texas, acknowledged NOTUS’ inquiry in a brief phone call but did not respond to multiple follow-up calls and emails. A woman who answered the phone at the party’s headquarters said the organization had no comment. Treasury officials also did not answer multiple requests for comment. The FEC gave the Republican Party of Texas until Feb. 23 to respond to its letter and clarify the money mystery, noting that the committee’s response would “be taken into consideration in determining whether audit action will be initiated.” Failure to reply may “result in an enforcement action against the committee.”

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State Stories

San Antonio Express-News - January 26, 2026

San Antonio Express-News Editorial: We recommend Jasmine Crockett for U.S. Senate in Democratic primary

The high-profile Texas Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate is a prelude to what will be a riveting race in the fall. In this contest between two rising stars, we recommend U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Dallas over state Rep. James Talarico of Round Rock. Little separates these candidates on the issues, and both are talented, media-savvy and smart. They possess massive social media followings and have demonstrated a commitment to public service. But Crockett's experience in Congress is a key difference. A former civil rights attorney with two terms in the House of Representatives, Crockett speaks with fluency on a wide range of policies and federal issues. She has proven herself in Washington.

Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn has held this seat for four terms. He is in a tough primary fight with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt of Houston. During her time in Congress, Crockett has emerged as a controversial national figure for some of her comments. We're not down with her "Governor Hot Wheels" comment about Gov. Greg Abbott. But we still see a candidate who can connect with voters and advocate for the best interests of all Texans. Crockett’s career began in rural East Texas as a public defender. While she can spin records as a DJ in a Houston nightclub, she can also talk to farmers about the need for a farm bill. Earlier this month she went on a two-day, 17-stop bus tour in South Texas, from San Antonio to Corpus Christi and the Rio Grande Valley. In Congress, Crockett has worked with Republicans, including Cornyn, with whom she collaborated on legislation on food security and fentanyl. Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian and former schoolteacher, is a fine candidate. But Crockett, authentic as she is engaging, has the experience and policy depth that makes her ready for the U.S. Senate.

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Houston Chronicle and Associated Press - January 26, 2026

Greg Abbott says ICE needs to 'recalibrate' mission after Minnesota shooting

Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday said the White House needs to “recalibrate” Immigration and Customs Enforcement's mission to rebuild public trust after immigration agents shot and killed a second protester in Minnesota over the weekend. Abbott said immigration officials should “get back to what they wanted to do to begin with — and that is to remove people from the country who are here illegally.” “In general, we need to have respect for law enforcement officers in the country. ICE, they are law enforcement officers,” the Texas Republican said on conservative radio host Mark Davis’ show Monday morning. “So they, being the White House, need to recalibrate on what needs to be done to make sure that that respect is going to be reinstilled. And that's not an easy task, especially under the current circumstances.”

He said he believes the administration is working on a “game plan” for immigration agents to “go about their job in a more structured way to make sure that they are going to be able to remove these people, but without causing all the kinds of problems and fighting in communities that they are experiencing right now.” Abbott’s comments come as a growing number of Republicans are pressing for a deeper investigation into federal immigration tactics in Minnesota after a U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse who was protesting in Minneapolis. But Abbott largely blamed Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz for the unrest in the state. He accused Walz, a Democrat, and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey of “literally inciting violence” in their condemnation of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown there. Abbott said the “fights on the streets” are “fomented by the governor up there, by the mayor up there.”

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Houston Public Media - January 27, 2026

Early voting in 18th Congressional District extended following weather interruptions, civil rights lawsuit

Texas civil rights organizations on Monday secured an emergency court order directing Harris County to operate two additional early voting days in the 18th Congressional District special election runoff following weather interruptions. The order comes after polling locations in the Houston congressional district were closed Sunday and Monday due to freezing temperatures. The brief closure over the weekend prompted a lawsuit by two criminal justice organizations and calls for action from Amanda Edwards, a candidate for the position, which has been vacant for almost a year.

The district, which covers swaths of north Harris County and areas surrounding downtown Houston, was left without representation after the death of U.S. Rep. and former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner in March of last year. “I am in full alignment with the extension of the early voting period,” Edwards said during a press conference Monday. “In large part because this community has been without its voice for far too long and needs every opportunity possible to have the ability to exercise its right to vote." Christian Menefee, the other candidate in the Jan. 31 runoff election, said about 11,000 votes have already been cast in the early voting period. His campaign is conducting outreach efforts to ensure voters are aware of the extension. “Folks are tired of not having a representative who will fight back against the harm we're seeing from this administration,” he said in a Monday statement. “Now is our time to be heard in every way we can, including at the ballot box." The early voting period was initially scheduled to end Tuesday, when 17 polling locations in Harris County will be open from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Polling locations in the congressional district will now additionally operate from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 28, and from noon-7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29, according to the order signed in Harris County’s 157th Civil District Court on Monday. Election Day is Jan. 31, when polls will be open from 7 a.m.-7 p.m.

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Midland Reporter-Telegram - January 27, 2026

Abbott widens winter storm disaster to cover 219 Texas counties

Gov. Greg Abbott has amended the state’s original disaster declaration for Winter Storm Fern to include 85 additional counties facing impacts from winter weather conditions. Within the original disaster declaration issued on Thursday, Jan. 22, counties across the Permian Basin, including Midland and Ector, were listed. Additionally, surrounding counties such as Andrews, Borden, Crane, Dawson, Gaines, Glasscock, Howard, Loving, Martin, Reagan, Reeves, Sterling, Upton, Ward and Winkler were part of the original disaster decree. During the weekend, Abbott amended the state’s original disaster declaration for the ongoing winter storm to include Pecos County and others.

“Communities across the state have been impacted by the weekend’s winter weather,” Abbott said in a statement. “I am updating my disaster declaration to include additional counties to help more Texans during these freezing temperatures. Texans should continue to monitor local weather forecasts and road conditions to keep themselves and their families safe.” In all, the disaster declaration includes 219 counties. The governor’s office said Texas has more than 10,900 state responders, over 4,900 vehicles and pieces of equipment and more than 15 state agencies responding to Winter Storm Fern.

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Houston Chronicle - January 27, 2026

Whitmire, Lina Hidalgo host dueling freeze updates

Although the ice brought by this weekend’s winter storm is expected to soon recede, the relationship between County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor John Whitmire shows no signs of thawing. In a series of dueling news conferences, the pair provided separate updates to residents as emergency resources were activated in response to the near-record-low temperatures. Hidalgo said that, despite multiple offers to host a joint event as a show of unity, the mayor’s office repeatedly declined to appear alongside the county judge. Hidalgo said her staff even offered to host the conference at a place and time of Whitmire’s choosing, which was declined. A spokesperson for her office said they reached out ahead of Hidalgo’s Thursday news conference — one day prior to the mayor hosting his own news conference Friday afternoon.

“We invited his office to our press conference. And in fact, we said: ‘You pick the time and we will make it happen at that time,’” Hidalgo said during a Monday news conference at Lincoln Park Community Center. “So I can only speak for my side. But you know what, I'm happy that the community gets information.” The rift appears to exist only between Whitmire and Hidalgo, and does not represent a broader issue between city and county officials. Just 45 minutes after Hidalgo addressed residents, Whitmire and Commissioner Lesley Briones held a joint news conference 18 miles across the city at Bayland Community Center. Whitmire and Hidalgo hit an impasse shortly after he took office, and the pair have not reconciled since. The pair did not hold a news conference together as floods decimated Kingwood, prompting concern about how they could work together during hurricane season. When the May 2024 Derecho swept across the region, the mayor and county judge eventually held their first joint press conference, where they sparred over Whitmire inviting Briones to the lectern to speak.

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Houston Chronicle - January 27, 2026

Jerry Patterson: I carry a handgun. Am I a domestic terrorist?

I carry a 9mm handgun at all times. I have carried since 1996, when the Texas’ concealed handgun law I authored as a Texas state senator took effect. If I brandish my handgun in the presence of a peace officer, I expect to get shot. If it remains untouched in my holster, I don’t expect to get shot. Until Saturday in Minneapolis that was a pretty simple concept. What happened? Therein lies the question. Will we ever know the answer? I don’t think so. Was there a crime scene investigation? No, and federal authorities apparently have no intention of conducting any type of investigation. Did the victim, Alex Pretti, draw or attempt to draw his weapon? As videos indicate, was he already disarmed before a federal border patrol officer fatally shot him multiple times in the back?

The most compelling questions arise after the actual incident and relate to the responses by federal government officials. The day after the shooting, on social media, President Trump praised Saturday’s violence: “LET OUR ICE PATRIOTS DO THEIR JOB!” Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said the victim “came with weapons and ammunition to stop a law enforcement operation” and “committed an act of domestic terrorism.” Noem added, without providing evidence, that Pretti appeared to have arrived at the scene intending “to inflict maximum damage on individuals and to kill law enforcement.” Border Control Commander Greg Bovino falsely claimed it was “unlawful” for protestors to bring a firearm to a demonstration. Bovino also claimed without evidence that Pretti intended to “inflict maximum damage” on law enforcement since he was armed with a loaded firearm and violently resisted. On X.com, Trump adviser Stephen Miller claimed Pretti was a “domestic terrorist,” as well as “a would-be assassin who tried to murder federal law enforcement.” Trump’s comment is simply bizarre, as expected. The other comments are outright lies — lies made even in the face of multiple videos that tell a completely different story. Should the vast number of Texans licensed to carry a handgun be concerned? If you’re dealing with Texas peace officers, I think the answer is almost always no. Dealing with U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement or Customs and Border Patrol might be another matter. ICE is needed, but not this ICE. This ICE and its leadership need to go — now.

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El Paso Matters - January 26, 2026

Planned ‘mega’ ICE detention center in Far East El Paso County has rocky start with tribe-owned businesses

A massive ICE detention center planned in Far East El Paso County – whose early federal contracts with tribal-owned businesses sparked backlash and withdrawals – appears to be part of the Trump administration’s efforts to create mega holding facilities. The new Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility is expected to hold up to 8,500 people – more than the controversial 5,000-capacity East Montana Detention Center that opened on Fort Bliss land in August. “It should not come as news that ICE will be making arrests in states across the U.S. and is actively working to expand detention space,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.

DHS did not respond to specific questions about the facility’s location or timeline, saying it had no new detention centers to announce at this time. However,a logistics park off Gateway Boulevard East in the city of Socorro near Clint has been identified as the likely site of the center by sources with knowledge of the matter. Responding to whether the facilities would be in steel warehouses, DHS said they would be “well-structured detention facilities meeting our regular detention standards.” The Department of Homeland Security is planning seven detention centers for deportation staging to be located near logistics hubs in several states, including Virginia, Texas and Arizona, the Washington Post reported in December, citing a draft contractor solicitation. The centers would be in renovated industrial warehouses and hold up to 10,000 people each, while more than a dozen smaller facilities would serve as processing centers and hold up to 1,500 people each, the Washington Post reported. The facilities are being funded under the One Big Beautiful Bill, which includes about $75 billion in supplemental funding to ICE over four years, with about $45 billion allocated for detention facilities and $30 billion for enforcement.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 26, 2026

SpaceX explosion shook South Texas, sparking oversight and safety concerns

The late-night blast sent a fireball more than 2,000 feet into the South Texas sky and shook a miles-long swath of the Rio Grande Valley with the force of the military’s most powerful bombs. The June 18 rocket-testing explosion triggered dozens of 911 calls, tied up first responders, sparked fires and hurled debris across the Rio Grande into Mexico. It also laid bare a community’s concerns about minimal regulatory oversight of Elon Musk’s commercial space business in Starbase, the rural coastal enclave where SpaceX builds, tests and launches the world’s most powerful rocket.

Several weeks after the explosion, Cameron County Judge Eddie Treviño Jr. was still trying to find out which government agency — if any — would investigate and work to ensure it wouldn’t happen again. In a letter, he reached out to 10 federal and state offices to ask about their roles in probes into such events. None have stepped up in that regard, instead leaving investigations to SpaceX. But while the chaos of that June night has subsided, many of the concerns it raised persist. In the minutes after the 11:05 p.m. blast, more than 40 calls from panicked neighbors flooded Brownsville and Cameron County 911 dispatchers. Some reported the walls of their homes shaking after a “huge explosion.” Others described a “big fireball” and a “crazy orange glow” that lit up the night sky. “Something is exploding,” one caller said. “It exploded four times around Starbase.” Dispatchers scrambled to understand what was happening and told callers they were “trying to figure it out.”

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Houston Chronicle - January 26, 2026

Exxon to offload South Texas assets as costs rise, oil prices soften

XTO Energy, an Exxon Mobil subsidiary, aims to sell its Eagle Ford shale assets in South Texas for nearly $1 billion, according to a report by Reuters. The move would reportedly include over a thousand wells across 168,000 acres. Exxon operates some of the wells directly and holds a financial, non-operating interest in the others. A spokesperson for Exxon confirmed the news, but declined to confirm which assets would be included. Texas oil companies like Exxon are shedding assets as oil prices soften and production costs rise, pressuring producers to cut costs and increase drilling efficiency. Underground resources are also becoming harder to reach in domestic U.S. shale basins, forcing more companies to invest in assets outside the country.

“This marketing decision is consistent with our strategy to continually evaluate and optimize our portfolio,” the Exxon spokesperson said in an email. The global oil giant based in Houston has focused its holdings in the Permian Basin, the top U.S. oil field, as well as in Guyana. The oil fields offshore Guyana, of which Exxon owns the largest stake, are considered among the most prolific oil discoveries of recent decades. The Eagle Ford Shale is a rock formation in South Texas known for its significant oil and natural gas reserves. Other recent sales of Eagle Ford assets include Canadian producer BayTex Energy’s $2.14 billion sale, which closed in December. Houston pipeline giant Kinder Morgan announced last week that it had solidified its own deal selling a $396 million stake in the area. The oil and gas industry has seen a rush of layoffs over the last year, including from Exxon, as companies weather weak oil markets. Exxon said in September it would lay off around 2,000 workers globally, though none of those layoffs are expected to include positions in the United States.

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Houston Chronicle - January 27, 2026

Why Ken Paxton ads aren't spamming the TV airwaves in Texas

With just weeks until early voting begins, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's campaign and the outside groups supporting him have spent virtually nothing advertising his candidacy for U.S. Senate. That's compared to more than $44 million that's gone into promoting U.S. Sen. John Cornyn's reelection campaign and another $8 million on U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt's, according to the research firm AdImpact. Meanwhile Paxton, who is leading in most polls, is seemingly content to wait out a primary where no one candidate is likely to get a majority, triggering a runoff between the two highest vote-getters. "We feel good about where we're at and will spend our resources when it's necessary, and not before," said Greg Keller, a spokesman for the pro-Paxton group Texas Lone Star Liberty PAC.

An Emerson College Polling/Nexstar Media poll released Jan. 15 showed Paxton narrowly leading the trio, with 27% of likely Republican voters saying they planned to vote for him. Cornyn had 26% and Hunt 16%, with 29% undecided. Paxton has also shown signs he is struggling to keep pace on fundraising with Cornyn, who over more than two decades in the U.S. Senate has a long list of corporate donors. On a fundraising call last week, the attorney general complained that the current federal campaign finance rules favor incumbents. "They can have these committees — there are many of them — the leadership fund, the (National Republican Senatorial Committee), and other special committees that people can donate to," he said. "If you want to give to John Cornyn, you can give well over $100,000. Whereas if you’re a challenger, I can only take $7,000 per person." Paxton's supportors still have ways to solicit large checks — Lone Star Liberty PAC, for instance, doesn't have restrictions on donations.

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San Antonio Report - January 26, 2026

TX21 candidates bring conservative heat in San Antonio debate

Republicans running to replace U.S. Rep. Chip Roy (R-Dripping Springs) have spent weeks brandishing their conservative bonafides across the deep-red Hill County district. But at a Bexar County Republican Party debate in San Antonio Thursday night, candidates were quizzed on a different challenge they could soon face as the newest member of the city’s congressional delegation: Representing the party’s values in a landscape dominated by Democrats. Texas’ 21st Congressional District starts near Alamo Heights and stretches northwest past Fredericksburg, making for a deep red seat that gave President Donald Trump more than 60% of its vote in 2024. While that political lean didn’t change much with redistricting, the new maps did expand the district’s reach into blue Bexar County, where even conservatives agree the role of a Republican official is much different than out in more rural territory.

Earlier that day, many of the county’s GOP leaders and candidates were at a San Antonio City Council meeting lobbying for more coordination between local law enforcement and ICE — a perspective met with boos so loud that Bexar County’s lone Republican commissioner Grant Moody (Pct. 3) could hardly make his comments. “Fighting over whether they want to support ICE or not — that’s a metropolitan issue,” former Bexar GOP Vice Chair Kyle Sinclair, who is now among the dozen candidates running for the GOP nomination on the March 3 primary ballot, said during the debate later that night. “It’s hard to go from the Hill Country area to focusing on a metropolitan city and the major issues that you deal with — from the Tren de Aragua gang, to human trafficking, to drug trafficking, to police issues, to crime,” he told the audience of roughly 150 people at Norris Conference Center near the North Star Mall.

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Community Impact Newspapers - January 27, 2026

$700M in city projects recommended for Austin's 2026 bond

A $700 million bond package to fund mobility, watershed protection, parks and public facility projects has been recommended by city staff after months of review. The outline may not represent Austin's final 2026 bond—if an election is even called this year, a decision city officials are now considering—as a public task force will also weigh in with its own project proposals this spring. City Council voted to begin developing a new bond with climate-centered elements back in 2024. That work has been handled by both city departments and the resident-led 2026 Bond Election Advisory Task Force.

Austin hasn't called a comprehensive bond election since 2018, although stand-alone packages were approved for transportation in 2020 and affordable housing in 2022. Given Austin's current debt capacity, staff recommend capping a potential 2026 bond at $700 million. Council members are also weighing whether to push an election to another year, or reduce this year's measure and plan for a larger bond in the near future. City departments previously forwarded lists of all project they'd like to get funded as part of the ongoing bond development process. Their requests from last summer added up to nearly $4 billion, a total that was meant to be refined to a lower amount. That process has now been completed with the $700 million recommendation released Jan. 21. "The 2026 Bond program is being developed with a clear objective: to address Austin’s most pressing infrastructure needs that will deliver the greatest benefit to the community through a predictable six-year bond cycle. This approach ensures alignment with departmental plans, financial stability, and delivery on commitments," Assistant City Manager Mike Rogers said in a memo.

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KXAN - January 27, 2026

Teachers’ union asks court to stop investigations into educators over Charlie Kirk posts

The Texas American Federation of Teachers is asking a judge to order the state to stop investigating educators accused of making inappropriate comments about conservative activist Charlie Kirk. The union filed a lawsuit against the Texas Education Agency and the state’s Education Commissioner, Mike Morath, in early January. The suit accused the agency of retaliating against educators and violating their First Amendment rights. Two days after Kirk was shot and killed on a college campus in Utah, Morath directed school superintendents to report any educators who made inappropriate social media posts about Kirk to the state’s misconduct portal. The agency said since then, it has received more than 350 complaints. As of Jan. 6, the TEA said the agency closed most of those cases, but 95 are still undergoing further investigation.

The lawsuit alleges the agency’s investigations into whether educators’ posts about Kirk incited violence or violated the state’s Educator Code of Ethics are “unlawful.” KXAN reached out to the TEA, but a spokesperson for the agency said they do not comment on ongoing litigation. The agency has not yet responded to the original complaint filed by AFT in federal court. “We are not talking about anything that happened in the classroom,” AFT President Randi Weingarten said on Monday. “We are fighting for the proposition that we believe everybody should fight for, that educators do not lose their first amendment right […] because they are schoolteachers.” Weingarten and the president of the union’s Texas branch, Zeph Capo, also shared two posts the union says are indicative of the threats that were made to their members after making posts on their private social media about the Turning Point USA founder. One message AFT provided to KXAN, and other media outlets stated, “Can only hope your COVID vaccine kills you soon.” A separate Facebook direct message AFT provided said, “I’m only about an hour and a half away. Why don’t you see if you’re brave enough to spew your vile, hateful rhetoric to the face of someone who will do something about it?” AFT did not release the identity of the educators who it said received the messages. The union says it is not clear how quickly the court will set a date for a hearing. Capo said the hearing could happen as early as February.

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StateScoop - January 27, 2026

Texas expands prohibited tech list, citing cyber risks posed by Chinese Communist Party

Texas is tightening its cybersecurity defenses by expanding the list of technologies that state employees are barred from using on government devices, a move aimed at preventing foreign actors from accessing sensitive state data or exploiting government systems. Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday announced the state is adding new restrictions on certain hardware, software and artificial intelligence tools tied to the People’s Republic of China and the Chinese Communist Party. The expanded list includes a range of companies involved in AI, surveillance technology, networking equipment, consumer electronics and e-commerce platforms, including Alibaba, Moonshot AI, Xiaomi and TCL.

Cybersecurity analysts have said these products pose potential risks because some Chinese companies are legally required under foreign law to share data with their government, raising concerns about espionage and data misuse. The move comes after Texas established a “hostile foreign adversaries unit” in September to stop the growing influence of the CCP in the United States. “Rogue actors across the globe who wish harm on Texans should not be allowed to infiltrate our state’s network and devices,” Abbott said in a press release. “Hostile adversaries harvest user data through AI and other applications and hardware to exploit, manipulate, and violate users and put them at extreme risk.” According to the governor’s office, the update was made in consultation with the Texas Cyber Command, a new cybersecurity organization headquartered at the University of Texas at San Antonio. In a letter last week, Abbott named the center as the lead agency responsible for identifying additional technologies that could pose a threat to Texas information systems. Texas is not alone in prohibiting technologies from U.S. adversaries. Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota have restricted the use of some foreign-made apps and devices on their networks, while Indiana and Tennessee have issued guidance limiting procurement of technology linked to foreign adversaries. Many such state actions mirror federal bans.

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National Stories

Associated Press - January 27, 2026

30 people dead from effects of winter storm as more freezing cold pummels US

Many in the U.S. faced another night of below-freezing temperatures and no electricity after a colossal winter storm heaped more snow Monday on the Northeast and kept parts of the South coated in ice. At least 30 deaths were reported in states afflicted with severe cold. Deep snow — over a foot (30 centimeters) extending in a 1,300-mile (2,100-kilometer) swath from Arkansas to New England — halted traffic, canceled flights and triggered wide school closures Monday. The National Weather Service said areas north of Pittsburgh got up to 20 inches (50 centimeters) of snow and faced wind chills as low as minus 25 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 31 degrees Celsius) late Monday into Tuesday.

The bitter cold afflicting two-thirds of the U.S. wasn’t going away. The weather service said Monday that a fresh influx of artic air is expected to sustain freezing temperatures in places already covered in snow and ice. And forecasters said it’s possible another winter storm could hit parts of the East Coast this weekend. A rising death toll included two people run over by snowplows in Massachusetts and Ohio, fatal sledding accidents that killed teenagers in Arkansas and Texas, and a woman whose body was found covered in snow by police with bloodhounds after she was last seen leaving a Kansas bar. In New York City, officials said eight people were found dead outdoors over the frigid weekend. There were still more than 560,000 power outages in the nation Monday evening, according to poweroutage.com. Most of them were in the South, where weekend blasts of freezing rain caused tree limbs and power lines to snap, inflicting crippling outages on northern Mississippi and parts of Tennessee. Officials warned that it could take days for power to be restored. In Mississippi, officials scrambled to get cots, blankets, bottled water and generators to warming stations in hard-hit areas in the aftermath of the state’s worst ice storm since 1994. At least 14 homes, one business and 20 public roads had major damage, Gov. Tate Reeves said Monday evening. The U.S. had more than 12,000 flight delays or cancellations nationwide Monday, according to flight tracker flightaware.com. On Sunday, 45% of U.S. flights got cancelled, making it the highest day for cancellations since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium. The impact extended far beyond the storm’s reach because such major hubs as the Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport were clobbered by the storm, stranding planes and flight crews.

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Fox News - January 27, 2026

Minnesota Republican drops governor bid, blasts party over federal ‘retribution’ after Pretti killing

A Minneapolis lawyer who represented the immigration agent who fatally shot Renee Good is ending his Republican bid for Minnesota governor after a second protester was killed by federal authorities. "I cannot support the national Republicans’ stated retribution on the citizens of our state," Chris Madel said in a message posted on social media Monday, as he announced he was dropping his outsider bid for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. "Nor can I count myself a member of a party that would do so." Madel's move comes two days after a U.S. Border Patrol agent shot and killed Alex Pretti, an intensive care nurse at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center who was filming an immigration operation.

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials initially said Pretti, who was legally armed with a handgun, was threatening agents, who they say fired in self-defense. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem labeled the actions of Pretti as "domestic terrorism" and White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller called him a "would-be assassin." But videos of the shooting seem to indicate Pretti was brandishing a cell phone rather than his handgun, with federal agents appearing to secure Pretti's weapon moments before he was shot multiple times. The fatal shooting has further inflamed political tensions in Minnesota and across the country over aggressive efforts by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Border Patrol and other federal agencies to enforce President Donald Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. "I support the originally stated goals of Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Operation Metro Surge in locating and deporting the worst of the worst from our state," Madel said. But he argued, "Operation Metro Surge has expanded far beyond its stated focus on true public safety threats. United States citizens, particularly those of color, live in fear. United States citizens are carrying papers to prove their citizenship. That’s wrong." While he praised a number of Trump's achievements so far in the president's second term in the White House, Madel claimed that the massive deployment of a couple of thousand federal immigration agents to Minnesota "has been an unmitigated disaster." "At the end of the day, I have to look my daughters in the eye and tell them I believe I did what was right. And I am doing that today," he added. No Republican has won an election for governor in blue-leaning Minnesota in 20 years, and Madel claimed, "The reality is that the national Republicans have made it nearly impossible for a Republican to win a statewide election in Minnesota. It is a simple fact."

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Rolling Stone - January 27, 2026

'Chaos': Behind the scenes of Amazon's Melania Trump doc

On Saturday, the same day that an ICE agent shot and killed ICU nurse Alex Pretti as he was restrained, face first on ground in Minneapolis, a few dozen VIPs — including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Queen Rania of Jordan, and former heavy-weight champion Mike Tyson — gathered at the White House for a lavish party, complete with custom-made popcorn buckets and gift boxes emblazoned with the first lady’s portrait, to celebrate the forthcoming documentary Melania: Twenty Days to History. The private sneak peek screening was held ahead of the Brett Ratner-directed film’s world premiere, slated to take place at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. The fine print along the bottom of an invitation to the premiere reads: “If you are a government employee or a government official, by accepting this invitation you are confirming that you have received approval from your ethics officer or legal department to attend this event and accept any provided items.” The boilerplate language refers to the fact that federal officials and government employees are subject to strict rules on accepting gifts from anyone who does business with the government to avoid conflicts of interest — or even the mere appearance of a conflict.

The irony is thick: A little over a year ago, Melania sparked a bidding war among Hollywood studios eager to curry favor with the incoming Trump administration. Amazon MGM Studios ended up beating out both Disney (which had just donated $15 million to Trump’s future presidential library to settle a dubious defamation claim the soon-to-be president had levied against its subsidiary ABC) and Paramount, which was seeking good relations with the White House ahead of a blockbuster merger that would be subject to FCC approval. A few weeks before Amazon MGM Studios offered an eye-watering $40 million dollars for the film rights — the most the streamer had ever paid for any piece of content — Amazon founder Jeff Bezos dined with Trump and his wife at Mar-a-Lago. According to The Wall Street Journal, the first lady kept roughly 70 percent of the licensing fee, $28 million, herself. And, technically, there is nothing illegal about that. “The First Lady is, for ethical purposes, considered to be a private citizen, and so the conflicts of interest statutes, the regulations for other executive branch employees, simply don’t apply,” says Don Fox, the former acting director of the U.S. office of government ethics, who worked under Presidents George Bush and Barack Obama.

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Washington Post - January 27, 2026

More history exhibits pulled from nationals parks, including Grand Canyon

Trump officials have ordered national parks to remove dozens of signs and displays related to climate change, environmental protection and settlers’ mistreatment of Native Americans in a renewed push to implement President Donald Trump’s executive order on “restoring truth and sanity to American history.” Park staff have interpreted Trump’s directive — which seeks to scrub federal institutions of what it calls “partisan ideology” and remove any content deemed to “disparage Americans past or living” — to include any references to historic racism and sexism, as well as climate change and LGBTQ rights. Last week, that included the removal of an exhibit at Independence National Historical Park that focused on George Washington’s ownership of enslaved people. In a new wave of orders this month, Trump officials instructed staff to remove or edit signs and other informational materials in at least 17 additional parks in Arizona, Texas, Colorado, Utah, Montana and Wyoming, according to documents reviewed by The Washington Post.

The documents also listed some removals ordered in August and September of last year. The Interior Department said in a statement that it was implementing Trump’s executive order. Staff at a Grand Canyon visitor center in Arizona removed part of an exhibit after flagging potentially problematic passages to the national park system’s leadership in D.C., according to documentation reviewed by The Post. The passages included text stating that settlers “exploited land for mining and grazing” and that federal officials “pushed tribes off their land” to establish the park. In response to frequent inquiries from visitors about the potential disappearance of the famous glaciers at Montana’s Glacier National Park, staff created signs and other resources to answer those questions, said Jeff Mow, who retired as superintendent of the park in 2022. The signs slated for removal at Big Bend National Park along the Texas-Mexico border do not reference the topics, such as climate or Native American history, that have typically attracted the attention of Trump officials. Instead, of the nearly 20 signs flagged for not conforming with the new policy, many deal with geology, prehistoric history, fossils and other seemingly uncontroversial scientific or historical topics. The removal orders do not spell out what’s wrong with the signs.

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Variety - January 27, 2026

ICE agents set to have security role during Winter Olympics in Italy, prompting uproar

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents will have a security role during the upcoming Milan Cortina Winter Games in Italy, according to several reports. ICE and the U.S. embassy in Rome have confirmed to the Associated Press and France’s AFP that ICE agents will be traveling to Italy for the upcoming Feb. 6-22 Winter Games, but only in a capacity of supporting diplomatic security details. “At the Olympics, ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations is supporting the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service and host nation to vet and mitigate risks from transnational criminal organizations,” ICE said in a statement, according to AFP.

“All security operations remain under Italian authority,” the statement added, noting that “obviously, ICE does not conduct immigration enforcement operations in foreign countries.” News of the presence of ICE agents at the Winter Olympics had been swirling in Italy over the weekend, with Italian authorities saying they had no knowledge of this or downright denying it. The prospect of ICE agents in Italy following the recent killings of U.S. citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti on the streets of Minneapolis has sparked strong polemics. On Tuesday, Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala said that ICE agents were “not welcome.” “This is a militia that kills … It’s clear that they are not welcome in Milan, there’s no doubt about it. Can’t we just say no to Trump for once?” the mayor said in an interview with Italy’s RTL 102.5 radio. U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are scheduled to attend the opening ceremony in Milan on Feb. 6.

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NOTUS - January 26, 2026

Filming law enforcement is a tool for accountability. It’s also under attack.

Alex Pretti was filming immigration agents in Minneapolis not long before one of them killed him. In the hours since, bystander footage contradicting the official narrative from the Trump administration led to a swell of outrage, even from the president’s allies. The killing showed the dangers of filming law enforcement in America. It also showed how vital it is for accountability. Activists, free speech advocates and fed-up citizens nationwide are grappling with what experts say is a flashpoint for the First Amendment. They say filming law enforcement operations is a clearly established right and is essential for documenting and investigating potential abuses. While the administration has sought to stop observers, arguing that people filming and following immigration agents puts their safety and missions at risk, free speech advocates say documenting what’s happening is as important as ever.

“There’s an element of necessity here for accountability,” Will Creeley, legal director at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said Sunday. “If we didn’t have video footage of what happened to Mr. Pretti yesterday, what would the government tell us? What would we know about it?” Creeley added that “they are taking steps seemingly designed to evade accountability, going after folks filming in public exercising their First Amendment rights, wearing masks, expanding the definition of ‘doxing,’ which is not a legal term of art, to include any discussion of where ICE is and what they’re doing.” Pretti appeared to film on his phone before officers threw him to the ground, took away a gun he was legally authorized to carry and shot him 10 times. Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, was shot and killed by immigration agents earlier this month after she and her wife stopped to observe and verbally confront them. After officers yelled conflicting orders at her, she turned her wheel and attempted to drive away as a federal agent shot her three times.

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Newsclips - January 26, 2026

Lead Stories

Reuters - January 26, 2026

Private jet linked to Houston law firm crashes in flames at Maine airport with eight aboard

A private jet crashed in flames as it was taking off from a Maine airport with eight aboard, the U.S. aviation regulator said, but their fate and identities were not immediately known. Sunday's crash of a twin-engine turbo-fan jet Bombardier Challenger 600 at Bangor International Airport happened at about 7:45 p.m., the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement, adding that it planned to investigate. Make sense of the latest ESG trends affecting companies and governments with the Reuters Sustainable Switch newsletter. Sign up here. Few details were available, but a government official briefed on the matter told Reuters there was a significant fire after the crash.

Light snow had started falling at the airport before the crash, weather reports showed, but authorities gave no immediate indication that weather played a role in the accident. A winter storm warning covered most of Maine, including Bangor, the state's third-largest city. The plane had arrived in Maine from Texas, the government official said. The company listed as its registered owner shares a Houston address with Arnold & Itkin, a personal injury law firm. FAA records show the craft went into service in April 2020. The FAA said it would investigate the crash along with the National Transportation Safety Board.

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Daily Beast - January 26, 2026

Cruz trashed Trump and Vance in secret recordings

Ted Cruz trashed President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance in conversations with GOP donors last year, explosive leaked recordings allege. The Texas senator, expected to run for president in 2028, slammed Trump’s tariff crusade and said he even threatened his staff with immediate firing if they used the phrase “Liberation Day” to refer to the day the sweeping taxes were announced, reports Axios. Cruz, 55, told donors he and other senators expressed their tariff disgust with Trump in a lengthy phone call, warning it would tank the economy and lead to his impeachment. The call pushed past midnight and “did not go well,” Cruz told donors, with Trump “yelling” and “cursing” at the lawmakers.

Cruz claims that he received an especially explicit response from the president that night. “Mr. President, if we get to November of [2026] and people’s 401(k)s are down 30% and prices are up 10–20% at the supermarket, we’re going to go into Election Day, face a bloodbath,” Cruz told Trump, according to the recording. “You’re going to lose the House, you’re going to lose the Senate, you’re going to spend the next two years being impeached every single week.” Trump allegedly responded bluntly: “‘F--- you, Ted.’” The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Cruz’s office did not deny the contents of the recordings in a statement to Axios. Still, Cruz’s office claimed that he is still “the president’s greatest ally in the Senate and battles every day in the trenches to advance his agenda.” Axios reports that the recordings were “nearly 10 minutes in total” and came from conversations in “early and middle 2025.” The site said the recordings were provided by a “Republican source.” It is unclear which donors Cruz was speaking to.

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Associated Press - January 26, 2026

Massive winter storm dumps sleet, freezing rain and snow around much of US

A massive winter storm dumped sleet, freezing rain and snow across much of the U.S. on Sunday, bringing subzero temperatures and halting air and road traffic. Tree branches and power lines snapped under the weight of ice, and hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in the Southeast were left without electricity. The ice and snowfall were expected to continue into Monday followed by very low temperatures which could cause “dangerous travel and infrastructure impacts” for days, the National Weather Service said. Heavy snow was falling from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast, while “catastrophic ice accumulation” threatened from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast.

“It is a unique storm in the sense that it is so widespread,” weather service meteorologist Allison Santorelli said in a phone interview. “It was affecting areas all the way from New Mexico, Texas, all the way into New England, so we’re talking like a 2,000-mile spread.” President Donald Trump approved emergency declarations for at least a dozen states by Saturday. The Federal Emergency Management Agency had rescue teams and supplies in numerous states, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said. In New York, communities near the Canadian border saw record-breaking subzero temperatures, with Watertown registering minus 34 degrees Fahrenheit and Copenhagen minus 49 F, Gov. Kathy Hochul said. As of Sunday morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, Santorelli said. Hundreds of thousands of customers were without power according to poweroutage.us, with Tennessee and Mississippi hit especially hard. Some 12,000 flights were canceled Sunday and nearly 20,000 were delayed, according to the flight tracker flightaware.com. Airports in Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, North Carolina, New York and New Jersey were among those impacted.

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Wall Street Journal - January 25, 2026

Senate Democrats vow to block DHS funding, risking another shutdown

Senate Democrats signaled Saturday that they would be willing to shut down much of the government rather than vote for a package that includes funds for immigration enforcement, following another deadly shooting in Minneapolis. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) said Democrats wouldn’t vote to advance a broader package needed to fund federal agencies if the current measure funding the Department of Homeland Security is included. Democrats are demanding constraints on DHS’s immigration enforcement activities and more oversight. “What’s happening in Minnesota is appalling—and unacceptable in any American city,” Schumer said in a statement. He said the DHS bill “is woefully inadequate” to rein abuses by immigration officials. Republicans control the Senate 53-47, but 60 votes are needed to advance most legislation.

Schumer’s statement came after many Senate Democrats—including some who broke with the majority of their party in November and voted to reopen the government—issued angry statements Saturday saying they wouldn’t support a bill funding DHS, the agency that includes the U.S. Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “Enough is enough,” said Sen. Jacky Rosen (D., Nev.), who last year was one of eight Democrats to join Senate Republicans in voting to end the shutdown. “I have the responsibility to hold the Trump administration accountable when I see abuses of power,” she said in a social-media post. The statement from Schumer raised the prospect of a partial government shutdown when funding for the federal government expires at 12:01 a.m. on Jan. 31, since the Homeland Security funding is wrapped into a broader package covering about $1.3 trillion in annual spending. Senate Democrats are expected to hold a caucuswide call on Sunday. Heading into the weekend, many Senate Democrats had wanted to avoid another shutdown. But the deadly shooting of a 37-year-old man in Minneapolis by a U.S. Border Patrol officer changed the dynamic, aides and lawmakers said, uniting the party in taking a hard line. The Trump administration has surged border-control officers into the city as part of a crackdown on illegal immigration, sparking protests and physical confrontations.

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State Stories

Jewish Insider - January 25, 2026

Talarico, who now disavows AIPAC, attended group’s event in 2019

Texas state Rep. James Talarico, a Democratic candidate for Senate in the state, has disavowed AIPAC and pledged not to take support from the group on the campaign trail. But in late 2019, he attended an AIPAC event alongside a major donor to his campaign, according to a contemporaneous Instagram post about the event posted by an AIPAC supporter. The post has been circulating online in recent days, driving discussion in progressive circles. Since mounting his Senate bid, Talarico has vowed not to accept support from AIPAC or J Street, and has faced criticism from some in the Jewish community who believe he is singling out AIPAC in particular.

“I refuse to be complicit in the death and destruction in Gaza, and I will never use your tax dollars to support the killing in that part of the world, and it makes me sick to my stomach to see what’s happening,” Talarico said at an event last year. “I hope in this campaign here in Texas we can send a crystal-clear message to the rest of the country that we are done being complicit.” Asked for comment on Talarico’s attendance at the AIPAC event, campaign spokesperson JT Ennis said, “James has been clear on his position on what is happening in Israel and Gaza. If anyone has questions on where James stands, they should look at his record, his extensive public comments, and the issues page on his website.” Talarico has vowed to support efforts to ban some weapons sales to Israel and accused Israel of war crimes. The same AIPAC supporter who shared the post with Talarico in 2019 was a major donor to his 2020 campaign; Talarico posted repeatedly on X about the donor offering to match up to $10,000 in donations to his campaign. Talarico has also faced scrutiny on the campaign trail for accepting donations for his statehouse campaigns from a pro-gambling super PAC, Texas Sands PAC, funded by prominent pro-Israel GOP donor Miriam Adelson. The Texas state representative is one a growing number of Democratic candidates who previously affiliated with or sought support from AIPAC but have since disavowed the group on the campaign trail amid increasing progressive hostility toward the pro-Israel organization, including Reps. Seth Moulton (D-MA), Valerie Foushee (D-NC), Deborah Ross (D-NC), Morgan McGarvey (D-KY), former New York Assemblyman Michael Blake and Evanston, Ill., Mayor Daniel Biss.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 26, 2026

Tarrant polls closed Sunday; turnout heavy in Fort Worth area SD 9 runoff

Polling places in Tarrant County will be closed Sunday due to the inclement weather, according to the Tarrant County Elections Department. The runoff between Republican Leigh Wambsganss and Democrat Taylor Rehmet has already brought out thousands of voters. The two are vying to represent much of the county until the winner of a general election in November takes office in 2027. Early voting ends Jan. 27; Election Day is Jan. 31. The winner of the election will fill the seat vacated by Kelly Hancock, who left the state Senate to become acting comptroller.

Over 24,000 voters cast their ballots in the first two days of the early voting period, according to Tarrant County Elections Administration. In contrast, about 12,000 showed up for the first two days back in November. Tarrant County Elections Administrator Clint Ludwig had previously said the county would keep all 22 of the early voting locations open over the weekend, though the individual sites may be closed by the owners. The county will post information about closures on its website or Facebook page.

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Houston Chronicle - January 26, 2026

Lawsuit asks for early voting extension in CD-18 race after freeze closures

A pair of voting rights organizations filed a lawsuit Sunday seeking an emergency court order to extend early voting in Harris County past Tuesday after severe weather forced the closure of polling locations in the runoff election for Texas' 18th Congressional District. The Harris County Elections Department closed all early vote centers for the CD-18 special runoff election on Sunday and Monday, citing hazardous winter weather. In a statement, the department said the closures were a precaution to protect voters and election workers as freezing conditions affected the region. Early voting was slated to end Tuesday, and Election Day is Jan. 31.

"The safety of voters, election workers, and staff must come first," Harris County Clerk Teneshia Hudspeth said in the statement, adding that the decision was made in coordination with state and local emergency management officials. The clerk’s office said it would continue to monitor conditions and provide reopening plans as weather improves. The Harris County Clerk’s Office has not yet responded to a request for comment regarding the lawsuit. The suit was filed by Houston Justice and Pure Justice, two Houston-based advocacy organizations, against Harris County, the Harris County Commissioners Court, the county clerk, and members of Commissioners Court in their official capacities. The plaintiffs are asking a district judge to order additional early voting hours later this week to compensate for the lost voting time. The Texas Civil Rights Project is representing the two organizations.

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Dallas Morning News - January 26, 2026

Mayor Johnson mum as Cornyn fights to hold Senate seat in GOP primary

Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson stood beside Sen. John Cornyn this week to tout World Cup security plans, while remaining neutral as Cornyn heads into a heated Republican primary. The incumbent Texas senator later said he was comfortable with that, arguing public officials in nonpartisan roles like mayors often avoid weighing in on contested primaries to avoid alienating supporters. He’s faced attacks from Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, who have accused him of straying from the GOP’s agenda. Cornyn has argued that his voting record aligns with President Donald Trump’s policies. Johnson previously said he avoids endorsing candidates in partisan races while serving as mayor, though after switching parties in 2023, he took a more overtly political role, founding the Republican Mayors Association and publicly backing Trump during the 2024 campaign.

“Typically, I would say public officials don’t like to get involved in contested primaries because they’re going to disappoint some of their own supporters if they choose sides,” Cornyn told The Dallas Morning News after the FIFA discussion Thursday at Dallas police headquarters. “Mayor Johnson is my friend. I support him, but I’m happy to duke it out with Paxton and Hunt and then we can continue to work together,” he added. Neither Johnson nor his office responded to requests for comment Friday morning. Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker took a different approach, endorsing Cornyn in October. Her predecessor, Betsy Price, who served as mayor from 2011 to 2021, also endorsed him. Thursday’s discussion of FIFA security and public-safety planning came weeks after downtown Dallas — a focal point for visitors during the international tournament’s run — was pulled into a political fight, with Gov. Greg Abbott seizing on AT&T’s planned relocation to Plano to criticize Dallas leaders’ approach to police funding and efforts to address homelessness. Abbott, who is also running for reelection, made the comments at a Jan. 6 political event in Fort Worth alongside Tarrant County elected officials and police union leaders.

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Dallas Morning News - January 26, 2026

Dallas County Judge Clay Lewis Jenkins left for Costa Rica ahead of winter storm

As Dallas County awoke to icy snow on Saturday, County Judge Clay Lewis Jenkins shared National Weather Service warnings to his constituents on X about “life threatening cold” and potential for power outages. By then, Jenkins was much warmer, after he and his family boarded a plane to Costa Rica on Friday before the storm hit back home, according to a photo posted by KDFW-TV (Channel 4) in Dallas. The county judge is the local government’s head of emergency operations during disasters. Gov. Greg Abbott declared Dallas and 133 other counties under a disaster on Thursday as the storm approached. The weather conditions Saturday in San José, the capital of Costa Rica: mostly sunny, with a high of 77 degrees.

Chief of staff Lauren Trimble said in a statement to The Dallas Morning News Jenkins’ trip “was scheduled months ago,” and he ensured emergency operations and coordination were in place during his travel. She declined to say when Jenkins, a Democrat, will return or whether he considered canceling his trip as the storm developed. She said the county’s readiness and emergency operations are fully staffed, and Chief of Emergency Services Scott Forster is overseeing the response. “The county’s full focus is on keeping people safe and services running,” Trimble said. “Dallas County’s experienced teams are ready to respond as conditions change and (Jenkins) will continue to get regular updates.” In Jenkins’ absence, Trimble said, she is empowered to sign emergency orders, but Abbott’s disaster declaration “makes that unnecessary.” Jenkins was not the only Texas official to generate attention over out-of-state travel plans as the winter storm approached. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz drew scrutiny after being photographed on a plane to Laguna Beach, California, ahead of the winter storm. His office called it “pre-planned work travel,” and Cruz posted on social media to say he returned on Friday. Cruz, a Republican, left the state in 2021 during a deadly winter storm to take his family to Cancun, a trip he later called a mistake after intense backlash.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 26, 2026

Son of Arlington man detained by ICE dies from rare disease

The son of an Arlington who was arrested by immigration authorities in October has died from a rare disease, and his family is begging for ICE to release his father so he can attend his son’s funeral. Wael Tarabishi, the son of Maher Tarabishi, died at around 2 p.m. Friday in the intensive care unit at Methodist Mansfield Medical Center, according to a press release. He had Pompe disease. Maher was arrested on Oct. 28 by immigration agents. Before his arrest, Mahel was the primary caretaker for Wael, who had a rare disease that left him unable to move or breathe on his own. Wael was hospitalized on Dec. 24 for a stomach infection, according to his family.

Wael’s family signed a “do not reuscitate” order on Friday, begging ICE to release Maher so he could be with his son in his final hours. According to the family, Maher’s attorney has filed to reopen his client’s asylum case because his previous lawyer was practicing law without a license. Hours before Wael’s death, the family said, the attorney met with an ICE official to ask for Maher’s release, but that request was denied. Maher ‘s family has previously told the Star-Telegram that Maher, a Jordanian national, came to the U.S. in 1994 on a tourist visa that has since expired. Maher has been applying for asylum since then, and he was arrested during a routine check-in at the Dallas immigration field office — a trend that advocates say has increased since President Donald Trump took office last January. “We call on every congressional representative that represents Texas to take action to the fullest extent of their capacity to ensure that Maher gets the opportunity to properly mourn his son and grieve with his family, as is his human right to do,” a representative for the Tarabishi family said in a statement.

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KUT - January 26, 2026

Not long after Prop Q's defeat, Austin leaders could ask voters for a tax increase in bond package

Just a few months after Austin voters rejected a property tax rate increase, city leaders are again considering going to voters for help to pay for city projects including park improvements and public safety needs with a bond package. Austin City Council Member Krista Laine fears it might be too soon to ask voters for more money after Proposition Q's defeat in November. She said the city could benefit from taking more time to get their ducks in a row. “What we need to do as a city is not just talk about but deliver savings that come from increased efficiencies that allow us to fund our priorities," Laine said. "The work has been ongoing. But our voters, it's not enough for them to hear us say that, they have to see it begin to happen.”

Over the next several months, the Austin City Council will be weighing whether to put the bond before voters and how much to ask for. The initial nearly $4 billion project list includes addressing space constraints at the Austin Animal Center, expanding library branches and renovating public safety facilities. Redesigning the Sixth Street entertainment district, parkland improvements and adding more emergency shelter space for people experiencing homelessness could also be part of the deal. But that list will have to be whittled down. City staff are recommending a bond package totaling no more than $750 million to minimize the impact on taxpayers. Kim Olivares, the city’s financial services director, said right now the average homeowner — a resident with a home valued around $495,000 — sends about $450 of their annual tax money toward the city’s debt. That will increase as the city uses more previously approved bond dollars to do projects. A new bond would add to that tax burden.

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Austin American-Statesman - January 25, 2026

This Texas Democrat is running straight at the working class

Someone watching the first 15 seconds of Marcos Vélez's 2-minute video announcing his plans to run for statewide office could be forgiven for assuming the first-time candidate is a Republican. The footage is heavy on industrial Texas — hard hats, work sites and sweat equity — and the narration centers on the bonds of a multigenerational blue-collar family. Vélez also fits the bill for the sort of candidates Texas Republicans like to showcase. He is biracial — Puerto Rican and Black. His formal education ended with a high school diploma. He volunteers in his community, plays ball with his kids in the backyard, and he likes to hunt. But the back end of his video, and the text on his campaign website, flip that assumption on its head.

Vélez is a Texas Democrat running an uphill race for lieutenant governor, launching his first political campaign at age 40. And from the outset, he is aiming his message not only at Republicans, but at his own party. Vélez’s campaign is built around two arguments. One is aimed at working-class voters like him, arguing that Republicans have failed to deliver on promises to tame inflation and jump-start the economy. The other takes direct aim at national Democratic leaders, whom Vélez argues have drifted away from blue-collar voters and ceded that ground to Donald Trump. The one-time refinery worker, who showed up each day in a hard hat, said national Democrats have gone out of their way to alienate people who punch time clocks and take their showers after work. "When I started working in the refinery, this was mid-2000s, most of your guys in their 50s and 60s were Democrats. They were blue-collar, Reagan-esque Democrats," Vélez said in an interview last week. "They voted for Obama, even though the bulk of them were white conservative men. And then you saw them drift to Trump in 2016. And now, they are entrenched with Donald Trump. You can't peel them away."

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Texas Observer - January 26, 2026

Congressman tries to cut pay of ICE prosecutor with racist X account to $1

As a new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill works its way through Congress, Congressman Marc Veasey, a Democrat who represents part of Dallas, introduced an amendment in committee Wednesday aimed to reduce the salary of James Rodden, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) assistant chief counsel who acts as a prosecutor for ICE in immigration court in Dallas, to $1. In February of last year, the Texas Observer reported that Rodden operates a white supremacist X account named GlomarResponder, based on an overwhelming number of biographical details that the Observer matched through publicly available documents, other social media activity, and courtroom observation. Three members of the U.S. House of Representatives, including Veasey, wrote letters to ICE and DHS demanding information and investigation. In response, ICE sent a letter to Veasey stating it would address the matter and that such internal investigations can take up to 120 days, but it has otherwise not provided any information.

Veasey’s amendment came a week after the Observer reported that Rodden, who was apparently pulled from federal immigration court schedules following the Observer’s reporting last February, had returned to immigration court in Dallas. “[Rodden’s] statements are disgusting, and they are dangerous, and regardless of if you are a Democrat or a Republican, they should be disqualifying for anyone entrusted with power in the United States government,” Veasey said during Wednesday’s House Rules Committee hearing. “If Congress does nothing, if the committee does nothing, then we’re sending the message that this type of behavior is tolerable, that accountability is optional, and that white supremacy can continue to be subsidized with taxpayer dollars.” The GlomarResponder account has over 17,000 followers and has routinely posted hateful statements. In addition to posting that “America is a White nation,” that “‘Migrants’ are all criminals,” and that “All blacks are foreign to my people,” plus apparent praise of Adolf Hitler, the account has also made posts that evoke anti-immigrant violence: “Nobody is proposing feeding migrants into tree shredders,” the account posted in March 2024. “Yet. Give it a few more weeks at this level of invasion, and that will be the moderate position.”

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 25, 2026

North Texas immigration attorney says burnout, hate make job harder

For immigration attorneys like Jaime Barron, the work never stops. The 51-year-old North Texas lawyer says he’s been averaging 65 hours a week with very few days off since President Donald Trump took office last year. Barron, who’s originally from Veracruz in Mexico, began practicing immigration law during President Bill Clinton’s administration. He launched his own firm, Jaime Barron PC, in 2000. Barron told the Star-Telegram that the current administration’s focus on deportation and the frequent changes in how laws are interpreted have made the past year “really painful psychologically” for those in his profession. “It’s hard dealing with all this,” he said.

Trump entered his second term in the White House promising “the largest deportation operation in the history of our country.” The Department of Homeland Security announced Sept. 23 that two million undocumented immigrants had been removed or self-deported since Inauguration Day. Officials insist that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents target primarily “criminal illegal aliens,” but Barron says many arrested by ICE have no criminal background. A recent Dallas Morning News analysis shows that 62% of the 12,000 arrested in North Texas and Oklahoma between January and October 2025 have never been convicted of a crime. “As an immigrant, as a lawyer, I have a personal stake,” Barron said. “I get angry every day.” The high-stakes environment is hard on immigration attorneys and paralegals. Many are reporting high levels of stress and burnout, and some are leaving the profession altogether. Barron said everyone expresses the pain they’re going through differently. Staff have access to a therapist if needed, and the firm’s 40 attorneys are all on a WhatsApp group chat where they can talk about their experiences. The firm is also hiring more lawyers to work in deportation defense. “Right now, what’s different is that the relationship with ICE/Homeland Security is soured because the administration just doesn’t want us to communicate,” Barron said. Previously, attorneys could contact the Department of Homeland Security and negotiate the release of immigrants in deportation proceedings who didn’t have a criminal record. It was a help to the government, Barron said, because it lowered the amount of cases and allowed them to focus on individuals they considered a legitimate threat.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 25, 2026

What is a microschool, and why are they expanding in Texas?

A new education model called microschooling is gaining popularity nationally and is expected to gain traction in Texas with the rollout of private school vouchers. Focused on maintaining small class sizes and providing a tailored learning experience, microschools typically enroll fewer than 100 students per campus. Some campus operators turn homes into schools, while others find small spaces in strip malls or former small businesses. There are four kinds of microschools: independent microschools, microschool networks, partnership microschools and public microschools, said Don Soifer, CEO and Founder of the National Microschooling Center. His center is a nonprofit focused on growing the movement across the country.

Independent microschools are typically run by a former educator and, as their name suggests, are operated independently by that educator. Microschool networks include companies like Primer and KaiPod, which run campuses or provide curriculum for local operators across multiple states. Partnership microschools are often operated by a founder or educator in conjunction with another company, such as a city, church or employer. Public microschools are open to the public for free, just like neighborhood schools. As Texas rolls out its Education Freedom Accounts, or TEFAs, which use taxpayer funds to subsidize private school tuition, the number of microschool campuses is likely to grow in the coming years. The program will give up to about $10,500 to qualifying families to cover the cost of private school tuition. Students with disabilities may qualify for closer to $30,000 annually. This funding could help families who have traditionally enrolled in public schools seek other options.

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Dallas Morning News - January 25, 2026

Dallas Mavericks narrow choices for new arena

The Dallas Mavericks have narrowed their focus to two locations in the city of Dallas for their new arena, but a decision may not be made until July 1. In an interview with The Dallas Morning News on Tuesday, Mavericks CEO Rick Welts said, “We have identified, with the city, two city of Dallas locations that we are focusing all our time and attention on now, and hoping to bring one of them to success.” The two locations the Mavericks have zeroed in on are downtown and the Valley View Center property, a sprawling 110-acre site at the corner of Preston Road and Interstate 635. The land where City Hall resides is one possible downtown location, but the city is still having conversations on whether to preserve or demolish the I.M. Pei-designed structure.

No decision on the site for a new arena is imminent for the Mavericks, who plan to move into a new facility when their lease with the American Airlines Center expires in 2031. Welts had previously said the team planned to announce the location of a new arena by the end of March. That timeline has changed. “Right now, our hope is somewhere around July 1, the end of the NBA season, that we are in position to be able to make a decision,” Welts told The News. “But a lot of that is out of our control, out of the city’s control. I’ve been out there saying first quarter [of the year] before. We are not going to make first quarter. Another two or three months after that,” he added. “We want to open in 2031. That means we’re on the clock. Sounds like a long time, but for a 50-acre mixed-use entertainment district, an arena, public gathering places — we’re on the clock.”

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National Stories

Washington Post - January 25, 2026

From Davos to Minneapolis to D.C., Trump is facing sharper pushback

Anders Vistisen, a member of the European Parliament from Denmark, stepped up to the microphone this past week in the Parliament’s vast chamber, where matters of European statecraft and diplomacy are usually debated in solemn and often dry tones. “Let me put this in words you might understand, Mr. President,” Vistisen said. “F--- off.” Vistisen’s sharp language reflected a trend that is increasingly noticeable, from the conference rooms of Davos, Switzerland, to the halls of the Federal Reserve to the streets of Minneapolis: President Donald Trump’s adversaries are pushing back against him with renewed force. The change is partly rhetorical and partly substantive, but underlying it is a sense that seeking to placate Trump has proved ineffective in the first year of his second term and that counterpunching is the better option. That was evident this week in Davos, where the world’s financial and political leaders gathered under the cloud of Trump’s threat to take over Greenland, a Danish territory.

European leaders, who have spent a year seeking to appease Trump in ways large and small, this time sharply criticized his Greenland gambit and threatened an array of aggressive trade moves in response. The president backed off his threat of military action and punitive tariffs — at least for now. The shift has been clear in other venues as well. When the Justice Department served Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell with subpoenas related to a renovation project, Powell responded with a defiant video emphasizing the importance of “standing firm in the face of threats.” Powell’s tone for much of the past year had been far more accommodating. On Thursday, former special counsel Jack Smith vigorously defended his efforts to prosecute Trump, telling a congressional committee that the president “willfully broke the very laws that he took an oath to uphold.” When Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth censured Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Arizona), a retired Navy officer, for appearing in a video saying service members do not have to obey illegal orders, Kelly hit back with a lawsuit. When Rep. James Comer (R-Kentucky), a Trump ally, subpoenaed former president Bill Clinton and his wife, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, in the Jeffrey Epstein case, they refused in a fiery letter, saying: “Every person has to decide when they have seen or had enough and are ready to fight for this country, its people and its principles, no matter the consequences. For us, now is that time.” On Wednesday, Comer’s House Oversight and Government Reform Committee voted to hold the Clintons in contempt of Congress, with several Democrats joining the Republican majority.

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Associated Press - January 26, 2026

Minnesota CEOs issue joint letter urging de-escalation in Minnesota after shooting

More than 60 CEOs of Minnesota-based companies including Target, Best Buy and UnitedHealth signed an open letter posted on the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce website on Sunday calling for state, local and federal officials to work together, as businesses grapple with how to address tensions in the state and across the country following two fatal shootings by federal agents amid a massive immigration enforcement operation that has spurred protests. “With yesterday’s tragic news, we are calling for an immediate deescalation of tensions and for state, local and federal officials to work together to find real solutions,” the open letter reads. CEOs that signed the letter included 3M CEO William Brown, Best Buy CEO Corie Barry, General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening, Target incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke, UnitedHealth Group CEO Stephen Helmsley, and others.

Before the letter, most of the biggest Minnesota-based companies had not issued any public statements about the enforcement surge and unrest. But the issue has become more difficult to avoid. Over the past two weeks protesters have targeted some businesses they see not taking a strong enough stand against federal law enforcement activity, including Minneapolis-based Target. Earlier in January a Minnesota hotel that wouldn’t allow federal immigration agents to stay there apologized and said the refusal violated its own policies after a furor online. Meanwhile, the state of Minnesota and the Twin Cities cited devastating economic impacts in a lawsuit filed this month imploring a federal judge to halt the immigration operations. The lawsuit asserted that some businesses have reported sales drops up to 80%. “In this difficult moment for our community, we call for peace and focused cooperation among local, state and federal leaders to achieve a swift and durable solution that enables families, businesses, our employees, and communities across Minnesota to resume our work to build a bright and prosperous future,” the letter reads.

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CNN - January 25, 2026

NASA is about to send people to the moon — in a spacecraft not everyone thinks is safe to fly

When four astronauts begin a historic trip around the moon as soon as February 6, they’ll climb aboard NASA’s 16.5-foot-wide Orion spacecraft with the understanding that it has a known flaw — one that has some experts urging the space agency not to fly the mission with humans on board. But NASA remains confident it has a handle on the problem and the vehicle can bring the crew home safely. The issue relates to a special coating applied to the bottom partof the spacecraft, called the heat shield. It’s a crucial piece of hardware designed to protect the astronauts from extreme temperatures as they’re descending back to Earth during the final stretch of their moon-bound mission called Artemis II. This vital part of the Orion spacecraft is nearly identical to the heat shield flown on Artemis I, an uncrewed 2022 test flight. That prior mission’s Orion vehicle returned from space with a heat shield pockmarked by unexpected damage — prompting NASA to investigate the issue.

And while NASA is poised to clear the heat shield for flight, even those who believe the mission is safe acknowledge there is unknown risk involved. “This is a deviant heat shield,” said Dr. Danny Olivas, a former NASA astronaut who served on a space agency-appointed independent review team that investigated the incident. “There’s no doubt about it: This is not the heat shield that NASA would want to give its astronauts.” Still, Olivas said he believes after spending years analyzing what went wrong with the heat shield, NASA “has its arms around the problem.” Upon completing the investigation about a year ago, NASA determined it would fly the Artemis II Orion capsule as is, believing it could ensure the crew’s safety by slightly altering the mission’s flight path. In a statement to CNN on Friday, NASA said the agency “considered all aspects” when making that decision, noting there is also “uncertainty that comes with the development and qualification of the processes of changing the manufacturing process of the Avcoat ablator blocks.” Basically, NASA said, there’s uncertainty involved no matter which course of action it takes. “I think in my mind, there’s no flight that ever takes off where you don’t have a lingering doubt,” Olivas said. “But NASA really does understand what they have. They know the importance of the heat shield to crew safety, and I do believe that they’ve done the job.”

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Semafor - January 26, 2026

“We’re not trying to recreate social media”: How Minnesota’s Star Tribune navigates a local crisis

The biggest news organization in Minnesota is trying to serve as the sober counterweight to hysterical social media posts, swarming videos, political conflict, and public statements that contradict observable facts. “There’s lots of rumor and chatter and confusion, and, there’s also just bad and incomplete reporting, that’s flying around lots of outlets,” Minnesota Star Tribune editor and senior vice president Kathleen Hennessey told Semafor. “Not all of it is malicious, and some of it’s just strange. You cannot be an informed person and just sort of scroll through social media, it’s distorting and it doesn’t add clarity, I don’t think. Ultimately, that’s what journalism is in for. You, you need to shed some light and bring true understanding.”

In recent weeks, the 157-year-old newspaper has been the central hub of local information amid a massive immigration enforcement operation that has repeatedly turned deadly. Since the federal government deployed immigration and border patrol agents to Minnesota, the paper has turned to focus much of its journalism on the unfolding enforcement and activism from local citizens. In a telephone call on Saturday, Hennessey estimated that 50 of the paper’s 200 journalists are covering the story daily, doing everything from tracking protests and monitoring immigration enforcement action to covering the significant business impact on the city. A major focus of the paper’s energies has been the details that are left off of viral short form video clips and widely-shared Instagram stories. Hennessey said the paper has spent a lot of time every day chasing “ghosts” and trying to make sense of viral images, sifting through rumors circulating on social media. She also noted that the paper is checking facts and building on video clips from national media and independent content creators who have swarmed Minnesota in recent weeks.

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BBC - January 26, 2026

NFL play-offs: Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots win to reach Super Bowl 60

The Seattle Seahawks will face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl 60 after claiming a thrilling victory over the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday. The NFC Championship game was a shootout in Seattle, with Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold and Rams counterpart Matt Stafford both throwing three touchdown passes before the hosts held on for a 31-27 win. Meanwhile, defences dominated the AFC Championship game as the Patriots ground out a 10-7 win in a blizzard at the Denver Broncos. Quarterback Drake Maye, Stafford's main rival for this season's Most Valuable Player award, ran in New England's only touchdown as they secured a record-extending 12th Super Bowl appearance and their first since Tom Brady led the franchise to its sixth NFL championship in 2019. This year's NFL title decider will be a rematch of 2015, when the Patriots beat the Seahawks 28-24 to deny them back-to-back Super Bowl wins. This is the fourth time Seattle have reached the NFL showpiece, with their solitary championship coming in 2014. Super Bowl 60 takes places on Sunday, 8 February in Santa Clara, California, at the home of the San Francisco 49ers.

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Wall Street Journal - January 26, 2026

Health insurance is now more expensive than the mortgage for these Americans

Millions of Americans are starting to see their monthly health-insurance bills rise, a new pressure point for a nation still frustrated with the high cost of living. Many of those facing the most substantial dollar increases are middle-income Americans who buy health insurance through the marketplaces set up by the government’s Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. Expanded subsidies for those insured under the ACA expired on Dec. 31—the central battle in last year’s record-long government shutdown. That shutdown ended with no resolution on the subsidies, and lawmakers haven’t passed legislation to revive them. Now, the newly calculated insurance bills are coming due, and Americans are having to figure out how to pay up, or go without.

Lenny and Mandee Wilson, who are 47 years old and live in Charleston, W.Va., paid $255 a month last year for a low-end ACA plan. Late last year, they learned their bill would be going up to $2,155 a month, a sum nearly triple their monthly mortgage payment of about $760. The Wilsons each squeezed in one last checkup before the end of 2025 and are now going without insurance. They are planning to put the money they used to spend on their premiums into an emergency fund. They will avoid any preventive care and hope their modest savings can cover any medical costs. Their ACA insurance wasn’t “the greatest plan, but it gave us some coverage and made sure we wouldn’t go bankrupt if something happened,” said Lenny Wilson, who co-owns an IT business. His wife, Mandee Wilson, makes pottery. Living without health insurance feels precarious. “If we step off the ladder wrong and make a trip to the ER or have to spend the night in the hospital for any reason, that would pretty much wipe us out financially,” Lenny said.

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Newsclips - January 25, 2026

Lead Stories

Bloomberg - January 25, 2026

US declares power emergency in Texas as storm boosts demand

The US Energy Department declared a power emergency in Texas Saturday as a massive winter storm was set to test the state’s electric grid with ice, snow and temperatures forecast to be in the teens and single digits. The order, signed by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, authorizes the state’s grid operator to deploy backup generation at data centers and other major facilities, “due to a sudden increase in demand, a shortage of electric energy, a shortage of facilities for the generation of electric energy.” “This extreme level of demand raises a significant risk of emergency conditions that could jeopardize electric reliability and public safety,” the grid operator, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Inc., wrote in requesting the emergency action Saturday.

More than 175 million people will face snow, rain, sleet and ice through the weekend as record-breaking cold across the central and eastern regions fuels the season’s largest winter storm. In Texas, nearly 50,000 customers were out of power as of 11:19 p.m. New York Time, according to tracker PowerOutage.com. The storm is set to be one of the biggest tests of the state’s electric grid since the deadly collapse during a freeze in February 2021 that killed more than 240 people and paralyzed the entire state. The Energy Department warned grid operators on Friday to be prepared to make backup power available ahead of the storm, including from datacenters, an usual move for facilities that do not usually provide power to the grid. The Midcontinent Independent System Operator — which manages a power grid that stretches from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast — lowered its energy-emergency alert level to 1 late Saturday. It was at EEA2 earlier in the day in an effort to shore up reserves as conditions worsened. EEA2 is usually triggered as operating reserves continue to decline and means MISO is facing an energy shortage and needs to reduce demand. PJM Interconnection, another big US grid, asked the Energy Department for an order allowing all generators in its 13-state footprint to operate at maximum capability beyond emissions limits as soon as possible, according to a letter Saturday evening. It said it already provided up to 3 gigawatts during neighboring grid MISO’s emergency level Saturday.

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Reuters - January 25, 2026

US storm leaves 670,000 without power, forces thousands of flight cancellations

More than 670,000 customers in the U.S. as far west as New Mexico were without electricity and almost 10,000 flights were canceled on Sunday ahead of a monster winter storm that threatened to paralyze eastern states with heavy snowfall. Forecasters said snow, sleet, freezing rain and dangerously frigid temperatures would sweep the eastern two-thirds of the nation on Sunday and into the week. Calling the storms "historic," President Donald Trump on Saturday approved federal emergency disaster declarations in South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, Maryland, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Indiana, and West Virginia.

"We will continue to monitor, and stay in touch with all States in the path of this storm. Stay Safe, and Stay Warm," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. Seventeen states and the District of Columbia have declared weather emergencies, the Department of Homeland Security said. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, at a news conference on Saturday, warned Americans to take precautions. "It’s going to be very, very cold," Noem said. "So we'd encourage everybody to stock up on fuel, stock up on food, and we will get through this together." "We have utility crews that are working to restore that as quick as possible," Noem added. The number of outages continued to rise. As of 8:30 a.m. EST (1330 GMT) on Sunday, more than 670,000 U.S. customers were without electricity, according to PowerOutage.us, with more than 100,000 each in Mississippi, Texas, Tennessee and Louisiana. Other states affected included Kentucky, Georgia, Virginia and New Mexico. Major U.S. airlines warned passengers to stay alert for abrupt flight changes and cancellations.

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Democracy Docket - January 25, 2026

AG Bondi demands access to Minnesota voter rolls after fatal Border Patrol shooting

Just hours after federal immigration officers shot and killed a man in Minneapolis, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi seized upon the incident to demand access to Minnesota’s voter rolls, directly tying the Trump administration’s quest for voters’ unredacted personal data to its aggressive immigration raids across the state. In a letter to Gov. Tim Walz (D) Saturday, Bondi blamed state and local leaders for the unrest ignited by the Trump administration’s expansive immigration enforcement operations. She claimed that Walz could “restore the rule of law” by complying with a list of demands, including giving the Department of Justice (DOJ) the state’s voter registration records. “Allow the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice to access voter rolls to confirm that Minnesota’s voter registration practices comply with federal law as authorized by the Civil Rights Act of 1960,” Bondi said in the letter, which was first obtained by Fox News.

The letter adds the state’s unwillingness to share voting data to a litany of grievances the Trump administration has leveled against Minnesota, which range from the local Democratic leaders’ rejection of Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) actions to a longstanding welfare fraud scandal. Bondi’s other demands included sharing Minnesota’s data on Medicaid and supplementary food assistance with the federal government, ending “sanctuary policies” and supporting and collaborating with ICE. This would allow the government to investigate fraud and curb “crime and violence” in the state, the attorney general claimed. In sum, Bondi’s letter represents a major assault on Minnesota’s sovereignty, demanding that it forfeit its ability to make and enforce its own laws and maintain its voter rolls without oversight from the executive branch, which does not have authority over elections. Earlier this week, Minnesota rejected the DOJ’s demand for data on its same-day voter registration and vouching system. Minnesota leaders described the request as an unlawful federal attempt to intrude on sensitive voter information and the state’s authority.

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New York Times - January 25, 2026

Gun activists bridle at suggestion that pistol justified killing

Some high-profile gun rights activists and groups bristled on Saturday at government officials’ claims that federal agents may have been justified in killing a Minneapolis man during a protest because he was carrying a pistol. The right to bear arms in public has been a mainstay of the gun rights movement. On Saturday, a Los Angeles federal prosecutor, Bill Essayli, became a magnet for outrage when he wrote on social media that “If you approach law enforcement with a gun, there is a high likelihood they will be legally justified in shooting you. Don’t do it!” Gun Owners of America, one of the country’s largest gun advocacy groups, said in its own posting that it condemned his “untoward comments.”

The group said that “federal agents are not ‘highly likely’ to be ‘legally justified’ in ‘shooting’ concealed carry licensees who approach while lawfully carrying a firearm. The Second Amendment protects Americans’ right to bear arms while protesting — a right the federal government must not infringe upon.” The gun group also accused “the Left” of “antagonizing” immigration agents. The exchange could point to political fissures between the gun rights movement and President Trump, who is generally seen as an ally. And it already is sparking debate within a movement that has long warned against government overreach. The National Rifle Association referred to federal agents as “jackbooted government thugs” in a 1995 mailer. But in a statement Saturday night, the N.R.A. put blame for the shooting on Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota and other “radical progressive politicians.” It said their “calls to dangerously interject oneself into legitimate law-enforcement activities have ended in violence.”

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KXAN - January 25, 2026

Key takeaways from Crockett vs. Talarico Democratic US Senate debate

Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett and Texas State Representative James Talarico took the stage at the Texas AFL-CIO COPE convention on Saturday afternoon to debate for the first time since they both launched their bids for the U.S. Senate. The Dallas-area civil rights attorney and former San Antonio-area school teacher are the top two contenders for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination. Since the Democratic primary field became set in early December, two different polls have shown a different story. Here are three key takeaways from Saturday’s debate.

Almost the entire debate focused on substance. Both candidates refrained from personal attacks. However, there was an early moment when it could have gone in a different direction. About 10 minutes into the debate, moderators asked Talarico, “you have said that your campaign is shaped by two commandments, ‘Love God.’ ‘Love thy neighbor.’ But a lot of Democrats want a fighter. So why do you think that your approach is the right one to get you to Washington?” Talarico responded by saying he has been a fighter for Texans in the State House. “We need a proven fighter for our schools, for our values, for our constituents in the halls of power in Washington D.C.,” Talarico said. “I think we need a teacher in the United States Senate.” In a response, Crockett painted herself as a fighter. “James and I served in the State House together. He’s actually been elected longer than I have been elected,” Crockett said. “Yet he’s not as known right now because I have engaged in these fights and they have been right there on the front lines where people could see me out front.”

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State Stories

KVUE - January 25, 2026

Austin dispels rumors of ICE presence at warming centers

The city of Austin on Saturday evening addressed online rumors claiming Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents were staging in the area. City officials said they contacted regional ICE representatives, who assured them the agency is not operating at warming centers or cold weather shelters. Officials also said ICE is not bringing in personnel from outside the area or housing them in local hotels.

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Houston Chronicle - January 25, 2026

Schools tied to 'terrorists' or 'enemies' can be denied vouchers, Paxton says

Attorney General Ken Paxton on Saturday partially sided with acting Comptroller Kelly Hancock in his push to ban some private schools from the state's new voucher program over alleged terrorism or foreign ties. Paxton confirmed in a non-binding opinion that the state comptroller “unambiguously” has the authority to block or remove schools from the program if they violate other state laws, including the support of transnational criminal networks or terrorist activity. But he declined to weigh in on the specific schools Hancock is targeting, saying only the comptroller’s office could determine whether a school can be disqualified. "Your inquiry improperly shifts the responsibility of making these factual determinations to the Attorney General," Paxton wrote. "Our office has no greater statutory role in deciding who qualifies for the TEFA program than we do in dictating which private schools are accredited in Texas."

Hancock asked Paxton to weigh in last month, alleging that certain unnamed schools that applied to the tuition-support program have ties to the Chinese government and the Council American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group that Gov. Greg Abbott recently declared a terrorist organization. CAIR has disputed the designation and is suing to overturn it. In a statement Saturday afternoon, Hancock said he appreciated Paxton’s support and that his opinion “makes clear that Texas will not tolerate taxpayer funds being diverted to bad actors.” The opinion is legally nonbinding but could be used to justify barring certain schools. Conservative opponents of school choice have long criticized the voucher program for its potential to direct tax dollars to Islamic schools. Hancock has not said he plans to block all Islamic schools from the program, though none have been publicly admitted so far. The effort to bar the unnamed schools has already created broader ripple effects within the program, as hundreds of other schools, including Christian and Jewish institutions, have also seen their invitations to sign up delayed by over a month. Parents are scheduled to begin signing up for the program on Feb. 4.

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Texas Public Radio - January 25, 2026

Protest breaks out at Dilley immigration detention facility holding 5-year-old Liam Ramos

A protest broke out Saturday at the South Texas family detention complex in Dilley, about 70 miles south of San Antonio, after guards abruptly ordered attorneys to leave while detainees — many of them children — poured into open areas of the facility chanting “Libertad,” or "Freedom," according to an immigration attorney who witnessed the event. Immigration attorney Eric Lee said he was at the Dilley facility for a confidential visit with clients — an immigrant family of six, including five children — when guards began shouting for everyone in the waiting area to leave, citing what they described as “an incident.” As the Michigan-based attorney walked toward his car, he said he heard what sounded like “hundreds of children” shouting, with voices he described as "high-pitched" and "urgent." He said he could see children streaming from dormitory areas behind a chain-link fence and chanting “Libertad."

Lee said clients he later spoke with told him the protest was triggered by concerns over the treatment of Liam Conejo Ramos, a five-year-old who was taken into custody with his father in Minnesota earlier this week and transferred to the Dilley facility. Lawmakers and advocates are calling for the child’s release, while the Department of Homeland Security disputes claims about how the boy was taken into custody and faces criticism over access to the facility. School officials in Columbia Heights, Minnesota, have said federal agents took the child from a running car in the family’s driveway and directed him to knock on the door of the home — an action the superintendent described as “essentially using a 5-year-old as bait.” The Department of Homeland Security has disputed that account, saying agents did not target the child, were focused on apprehending the child’s father—whom DHS said fled on foot—and attempted to have the child’s mother take custody of the boy. Lee described Saturday’s action inside the facility as a peaceful demonstration, not a riot, and said the show of solidarity carried risk for detained families. Lee said the protest unfolded against what he described as harsh day-to-day conditions inside the Dilley detention center. He characterized the facility as “a horrible, horrible place,” alleging that drinking water is “putrid” and often undrinkable, and that meals have contained “bugs,” dirt, and debris.

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KUT - January 25, 2026

Anti-abortion Texans rally at the Capitol despite frigid temperatures

As temperatures inched toward freezing on Saturday afternoon, people in knit caps and raincoats gathered for the Texas Rally for Life in Austin, holding signs that read “Let Life Live” and “Pray to End Abortion.” While turnout appeared lower than in previous years, the annual event still drew a crowd as elected officials, activists and clergy members stood on the Texas Capitol steps to cheer the anti-abortion movement's gains in the state. “I think I've been at this event pretty much every year that I’ve been governor. Never have I seen a weather challenge like this,” said Gov. Greg Abbott to the crowd. “But I'm so proud and heartened to see that it's not dampened your spirit.” Similar events happen across the country each year around the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade.

For decades, these rallies brought together members of a movement that hoped to see that decision reversed. In 2022, it was, and the federal right to abortion ended. Now, events like the Texas Rally for Life celebrate the anti-abortion movement’s political successes. Over the past five years, the state has instituted multiple overlapping abortion bans and pioneered a new civil enforcement mechanism for cracking down on those who “aid or abet” abortion seekers. “Because of your decades of advocating for life, abortion is not legal in our state,” Abbott said Saturday. The governor also touted bills passed during last year’s state legislative session, including a new law that aims to penalize the practice of out-of-state doctors providing abortion pills to women in Texas and a statute that prevents local governments from using taxpayer money to support travel and logistics for women seeking abortions.

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Fortune - January 25, 2026

Debate clips: Talarico on ICE: 'take that money back'

Democrats Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico differed more on style than substance in their first debate for U.S. Senate in heavily Republican Texas, though they distinguished themselves somewhat on the future of ICE and impeachment of President Donald Trump. Crockett, an outspoken second-term U.S. House member, and Talarico, a more soft-spoken four-term state representative, generally echoed each other on economic issues, health care and taxes. Both called for a “fighter” in the role. Crockett, who is Black, said she was better positioned to attract disaffected Black voters, while Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian who often discusses his Christian faith, suggested he could net rural voters unhappy with Republicans.

Both candidates condemned the shooting of a man in Minneapolis by federal immigration officers Saturday, and ICE’s heavy presence in the city, though Talarico was more adamant about cutting funding to the agency. Both said they support bringing impeachment proceedings against Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, under whom ICE serves. But Crockett was less specific about cutting their funding. “We absolutely have to clean house,” she said. “Whatever that looks like, I’m willing to do it.” Talarcio more specifically said of ICE funding, “We should take that money back and put it in our communities where it belongs.”

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 25, 2026

Debate clips: Jasmine Crockett: ICE agents in Minneapolis are ‘turning us into Nazi Germany’

Texas congresswoman Jasmine Crockett compared the actions of federal agents in Minnesota, where an agent shot dead a man Saturday, to “Nazi Germany” during a Democratic debate for the U.S. Senate. Crockett and state Rep. James Talarico are the leading candidates in the Democratic primary, hoping to win in March and be on the ticket in November for Sen. John Cornyn’s seat. The two Democrats took the stage in Georgetown, north of Austin, shortly after federal immigration agents in Minneapolis had shot 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti, an intensive-care nurse for a VA hospital. The shooting came just weeks after Renee Good was shot and killed by an immigration officer in the same city. The Saturday killing was recorded by bystanders from different angles, showing a group of federal officers tackle Pretti as he appeared to be using a phone to record them.

Pretti was legally carrying a handgun, according to Minnesota authorities, and was shot multiple times after he was on the ground. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told reporters that the fact that Pretti carried a weapon “looks like a situation where an individual arrived at the scene to inflict maximum damage on individuals and to kill law enforcement,” contradicting video evidence of the encounter. At one point during Saturday’s debate, the moderators asked Crockett and Talarico about how they’d balance their feelings toward ICE while also representing Texans who support deporting undocumented immigrants. “As it relates to the enforcement that we see right now, let me be clear: They are supposed to do immigration and customs enforcement,” Crockett said. “Not going after U.S. citizens. Not going after people that are documented. That is not what they are supposed to do, but that is what they’re doing. They are turning us into Nazi Germany by saying they’re going to go door to door.” She continued, “They’re going after people because of their accent or the color of their skin, because this Supreme Court gave them carte blanche ability to do so. So all we want ICE to do is to do what ICE was created to do, and unfortunately, that’s not what they are doing.”

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San Antonio Express-News - January 25, 2026

Austin company to forgive $6.9M in debt for disabled vets AG says it scammed

An Austin company has agreed to provide almost $6.9 million in debt relief to disabled veterans the state alleged were deceptively charged for assistance in navigating the disability benefits claims process. VA Claims Insider LLC, also known as VACI, is prohibited from collecting any debts incurred by veterans who were misled into believing its services were free as part of an agreed final judgment entered into with the Texas Attorney General’s Office. The office said Friday the company also will forgo collecting any qualifying debts incurred for the past nine years. The estimated total of the debt forgiveness is just under $6.9 million.

“Disabled veterans are our nation’s heroes who put their lives on the line for our country, and no company will be allowed to pose as a legitimate VA service in order to scam and deceive them,” Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement. “This judgment ensures that disabled veterans are protected from VACI’s fraudulent VA assistance scheme and will not be held responsible for illegitimate debts.” Paxton had sued VA Claims in 2023 in state District Court in San Antonio, alleging the company had engaged in “false, misleading, and deceptive acts.” The company agreed to the judgment “solely for the purpose of settlement” and did not admit any wrongdoing or violation of state consumer protection laws, the court filing says. Judge Cynthia Marie Chapa signed the judgment Jan. 15. Jeff Eller, a VA Claims Insider spokesman, said in an email there “is no fraud” and that the company “will continue to actively fight any accusation of fraud.” He added that the company “welcomes the settlement with the State of Texas and looks forward to continuing its service to U.S. military veterans who are exploring their eligibility for increased disability benefits. As the only VA disability education company focused on educating veterans who seek to prepare and file their own claims, the work that VA Claims Insider does changes veterans’ lives for the better,” he said. VA Claims has entered into a permanent injunction that bars it from committing certain acts, including advertising as “free” any educational or consulting services to veterans when and if those services are not free.

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Rio Grande Guardian - January 25, 2026

HUD Secretary, Gonzalez, clash over ICE raids

Scott Turner, the U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, says there are plenty of Americans willing and able to replace immigrants in the construction industry. Turner clashed with U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez of McAllen during a congressional hearing in Washington, D.C. “We have plenty American people for American jobs, and that's my concentration. I would say that to have migrants to do these jobs, I believe, is a slap in the face for the American people. We need to increase the trades in our country. We need to bring back manufacturing in our country,” Turner said response to a question from Gonzalez. Gonzalez said he agreed with Turner that the U.S. has to bring back manufacturing but said that is not going to happen overnight. “We have a labor shortage,” Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez began the exchange by telling Turner he wanted to address housing affordability in the U.S. “We have to be honest about that, because, while we talk about immigrants, 30% of construction workers in this country are immigrants. And in Texas, about 40% of construction workers are immigrants. And in your city of Dallas, in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Houston, San Antonio, that number goes up to about 60% depending where you are.,” Gonzalez said. Gonzalez said he had met recently with the South Texas Builders Association. “We had a very candid conversation about the labor shortage that we're suffering in Texas and across the country. Just last year, it was shown that we would have had 400,000 homes less built in this country if it had not been for immigrant labor,” Gonzalez said.

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New York Times - January 21, 2026

Sister Norma Pimentel’s shelter in McAllen, Texas looks different now

For as long as Sister Norma Pimentel can remember, the shelter she runs in the border city of McAllen, Texas, has been crowded with thousands of migrants fleeing natural disasters, violence, authoritarian governments and poverty. But ever since President Trump retook the White House and embarked on aggressive immigration enforcement that has all but sealed the U.S. border with Mexico, her shelter, steps away from a bus station, looks quiet. “We have not seen a single migrant in months,” Sister Pimentel said last month. “We are completely empty.” She pointed to a vacant kitchen, a deserted children’s play area and a bare floor that less than two years ago was filled with makeshift beds. At the height of the migrant surge during President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration, shelters along the border quickly became overwhelmed by the flood of migrants, some having received up to 1,000 people a day.

At Sister Pimentel’s shelter, the Humanitarian Respite Center, the emptiness was so palpable recently that the voices of the workers and volunteers and a Christmas song echoed throughout the desolate rooms. The migrant slowdown is happening from Texas to California. The number of individuals seeking to cross the Southwest border has dwindled to an average of 245 a day from a peak of about 10,000 to 12,000 encounters a day during Mr. Biden’s administration, according to government data. Sister Pimentel is well known globally for migrant advocacy and was included in Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in 2020. Her shelter became an epicenter of the immigration debate, and received some backlash for its work. “The question back then was that some people viewed Catholic Charities as inviting people to come over,” said Javier Villalobos, the mayor of McAllen, a registered Republican. “That’s not necessarily true, but some people viewed it this way.” With no migrants to house, the staff and volunteers at Sister Pimentel’s shelter have pivoted to help residents of McAllen, one of the poorest cities in America, with a population of about 150,000.

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Dallas Voice - January 25, 2026

End of an era: David Taffet retiring from host of longest running LGBTQ radio show in country

In era is coming to an end for LGBTQ+ North Texas. After 35 years as a co-host on Lambda Weekly, David Taffet is retiring following a Parkinson’s diagnosis a year-and-a-half-ago. And he’s looking for someone to replace him. Lambda Weekly, the longest-running LGBTQ+ radio show on the air anywhere, airs each Sunday from 1-2 p.m. on KNON 89.3, North Texas’ public radio station. Taffet first joined the show in 1989. “In 1989, I was writing travel articles for Dallas Voice, and Bill Travis — who was the Lambda Weekly host at the time — asked me to come on each week to do a travel spot,” Taffet recalled this week. “Usually, the piece was recorded and then played on the air. So I usually wasn’t even in the studio when it was broadcast.”

Then Alonzo Duralde joined Travis as the show’s cohost until 1992, when both men left the show on the same day — Travis to move to San Francisco and Duralde to move to Los Angeles. Steve Walters stepped in then to take over as host. “Steve had radio experience, but his first day at Lambda Weekly, he was just really nervous,” Taffet said. “I went into the studio to see if he wanted me to keep doing the travel spot, and he was so nervous, I asked him if he wanted me to stay. He said yes, so I sat down and we just spent the hour talking about whatever. “At the end of the hour, I asked if he wanted me to come back the next week, and he said yeah. So I became his cohost,” he added. “That way, he had someone to talk to. We got gay newspapers from all over the country back then, from all over the world. And we would read the articles and find things to talk about. And we would fill in between the segments with music.” Before long, Taffet said, he and Walters started inviting guests to join them on the show each week, either for a short segment or for the whole hour, “and they would just join our conversations about whatever garbage we were talking about that day.” Walters left the show in 1998, and Cathy Tipps stepped up as Taffet’s new cohost. The two started advertising for a third cohost, and that’s when, in about 1999, Lerone Landis joined the show. Shortly after, Tipps left, and “that’s when Patti [Fink] came along. She came on first as a guest. Then Lerone and I asked her to come on as a cohost,” Taffet said.

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Rio Grande Guardian - January 25, 2026

South Texas Builders Association is now getting national media attention

About an hour after the Rio Grande Guardian met with Mario M. Guerrero, CEO of South Texas Builders Association, a national TV news crew with CBS was slated to meet him. Guerrero said the national network showed interest in the group after watching STBA’s livestream on Facebook two days before. The livestream featured STBA’s Immigration Enforcement & Construction Industry Impact Symposium, held at McAllen Convention Center. Watching the livestream, CBS reporters would have heard about the huge concerns South Texas builders have with the current ICE raids at construction sites. So many workers are being rounded up that projects are blowing up, leaving some firms close to bankruptcy. “We have a national CBS news crew that is actually on their way right now. They're about 30 minutes out from McAllen. They're going to be coming in, and they're going to be doing a broadcast on STBA, the South Texas Builders Association, and they're supposed to air it out by the end of the week on a national level,” Guerrero told the Guardian.

“They're going to be speaking to different people in the organization that were at that symposium yesterday. They told me personally that they were actually listening throughout the whole meeting, which is very humbling, because we're not advocating for destruction, we're not advocating for hate, we're advocating for peace, and we're advocating for love, and we're advocating for our community. If anybody says anything different, they obviously don't understand the words I'm saying.” Guerrero acknowledged he has been getting hate mail from across the country, for challenging the actions of the Trump administration when it comes to immigration enforcement. “We keep advocating for peace and love in our community. And unfortunately, the reality is that everything that's happening is already affecting our economy. And it’s going to have a massive effect on our local economy if we're not able to bring some sort of peace to the construction industry.” Another builder that spoke at the symposium was Efrain Gomez, Jr., president of Gomez 3 Construction. Indeed, Gomez served as moderator of the discussion.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 25, 2026

Heartbreak, confusion, prayer: A typical day at ‘the tent’ by Dallas’ ICE office

The air was frigid and windy on a January morning as Sandra Avalos scanned Empress Row in Dallas for cars entering and exiting the Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office. Avalos, who immigrated to the U.S. from Mexico as a child, helps erect two tents each morning outside the parking lot for the field office. A stack of papers listing the rights of detainees sits on tables inside the tents, and boxes of donated stuffed animals and clothes are on the ground nearby. Since President Donald Trump took office for the second time last January, enacting a sweeping immigration agenda and deporting more than 605,000 people, Avalos and about 60 others like her have become a constant presence outside the ICE building. They’re part a nationwide group working to protect the rights of immigrants.

The Dallas field office, where a gunman killed two detainees and injured another in September, serves as a processing center for detained migrants, an administrative office for some Department of Homeland Security and ICE employees, and a location for check-in appointments. These check-ins are meant to give ICE a way to monitor people who have been released during the course of their immigration cases. Volunteers who stand outside each morning try to advise people of their rights, obtain contact information for a loved one in case they are detained, and troubleshoot the myriad problems that come up during these check-ins. These advocates — a mix of church members, seasoned activists and some who have never been a part of any movements — take shifts at the tent throughout the week. Across the Metroplex, many of these advocates who focus their efforts on immigration have reinvented themselves to become de facto scholars of immigration policy and the inner workings of acquiring legal citizenship in the United States. The tent has been part of a larger movement to monitor immigration agents at field offices and courthouses across the country. One of the biggest tasks each day is to keep track of who goes into the field office — and who does not come back out.

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El Paso Times - January 25, 2026

Sen. Cornyn targets Texas AG Paxton. Talarico spotlights insulin costs

Candidates in the U.S. Senate primary in Texas are taking their messages to the airwaves. For incumbent Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, that means taking aim at his biggest threat in the Super Tuesday primary on March 3: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Cornyn's campaign launched on Thursday, Jan. 22, with a digital ad entitled "Same Lawyer. Radical EPIC City. Ken Paxton's Record Exposed." The ad alleges that Paxton "talks tough on radical Islam, but the record shows he's soft on the issue." A voiceover in the ad blasts Paxton over the fact that the attorney in his impeachment proceedings "is the same lawyer defending the radical Islamic (East Plano Islamic Center) City project," which will bring "Sharia Law in Texas." In fact, the EPIC project, situated about 40 miles from Dallas, has nothing to do with "radical" Islam or "Sharia Law." The project is a planned community that will feature more than 1,000 residential units, a K-12 school, a community college and commercial shopping facilities.

The Department of Justice closed its investigation into the project last year after affirming that the developers would comply with the Fair Housing Act. The ad also criticizes Paxton for sending "over two-and-a-half million dollars to organizations resettling Afghan refugees into Texas" after U.S. troops withdrew from the country. It's unclear, however, how such an allegation ties into Cornyn's attacks on radical Islam, as the Afghan nationals who resettled in the United States did so after assisting U.S. troops in their war against the Taliban. While Cornyn lobs largely unsubstantiated allegations against his primary challenger, state Rep. James Talarico, a Democratic candidate in the U.S. Senate race, used his airtime to tackle kitchen-table issues, specifically the cost of the diabetes medication Insulin. In the ad, which launched Friday, Jan. 23, in major markets across the state, Talarico recalls his own Type 1 diabetes diagnosis and how the "how the sky-high cost of insulin motivated him to take on Big Pharma …" "When I was 28, I almost died," Talarico, D-Austin, says in the ad. "I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. When I picked up my first Insulin prescription, it cost me $684. I couldn’t afford that. Most Texans can’t either." Talarico then details how that experience led him to introduce and pass legislation in the Texas House of Representatives to cap Insulin prices at $25 for patients on state-regulated healthcare plans. The law took effect Sept. 1, 2021, and aids approximately 16% of Texans. "I know what it means to fight for my life," he says as the ad concludes. "I approve this message because, in the Senate, I’ll fight for yours."

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Austin American-Statesman - January 25, 2026

NTSB investigating Waymo over robotaxis passing stopped school buses in Austin

The National Transportation Safety Board has launched an investigation into Waymo’s operations in Austin after its robotaxis were found to have illegally passed stopped school buses in the city. The independent U.S. investigative agency said it’s looking into 24 documented instances of the autonomous ride-hailing company’s vehicles failing to stop around Austin ISD buses as required by Texas law. “Investigators will travel to Austin to gather information on a series of incidents in which the automated vehicles failed to stop for loading or unloading students,” an NTSB spokesman said in a statement.

Waymo, the the driverless ride-hailing company owned by Google parent Alphabet Inc., said it welcomed the opportunity to show the NTSB its approach to safety. The investigation comes after the school district this year launched a new school bus safety campaign that’s netted thousands of violators. In January, it approved a contract with AlertBus, an AI-powered program that automatically issues $300 fines based on footage from cameras attached to the stop arm of a bus. The system enforces a state law requiring other vehicles to come to a complete stop when a school bus is stopped with its stop-arm extended and red lights flashing. Other vehicles may not proceed until the bus begins moving again, a requirement intended to protect students getting on or off a bus. Since the start of the school year in August, the district has recorded Waymo’s robotaxis illegally passing a stopped school bus at least 24 times. Several of those incidents came after the company said it had issued a voluntary recall of its vehicles to address the issue with a software update and met with district officials.

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National Stories

Associated Press - January 25, 2026

US airlines and airports brace for a brutal travel day amid massive winter storm

A massive winter storm set the stage for a brutal travel day Sunday, with airlines warning of widespread cancellations and delays at some of the nation’s busiest airports. Widespread snow, sleet and freezing rain threatened nearly 180 million people — more than half the U.S. population — in a path stretching from the southern Rocky Mountains to New England, the National Weather Service said Saturday night. After sweeping through the South, forecasters said the storm was expected to move into the Northeast, dumping about 1 to 2 feet (30 to 60 centimeters) of snow from Washington through New York and Boston. More than 13,500 flights have been canceled across the U.S. since Saturday, according to flight-tracking site FlightAware.

About 9,600 of those were scheduled for Sunday. Aviation analytics company Cirium says its data shows that Sunday will be the highest cancellation event since the pandemic, with over 29% of all U.S. departing flights axed. Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport warned travelers on its website of widespread flight cancellations. Nearly all of its departing flights scheduled for the day — 414 flights, or 97% — have been canceled. Significant disruptions were also expected at major airport hubs in Dallas-Fort Worth, Charlotte, Philadelphia and Atlanta, home to the nation’s busiest airport, as well as New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and LaGuardia Airport. American Airlines had canceled over 1,400 flights for Sunday, according to FlightAware. Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines each reported about 1,000 cancellations for the day, while United Airlines had more than 800. JetBlue had more than 560 canceled flights, accounting for roughly 70% of its schedule for the day.

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Associated Press - January 25, 2026

Protesters demand immigration agents leave Minneapolis after man is shot and killed during crackdown

Democrats demanded that federal immigration officers leave Minnesota after a U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot a man in Minneapolis, drawing hundreds of protesters onto the frigid streets and increasing tensions in a city already shaken by another shooting death weeks earlier. Family members identified the man who was killed as Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse who protested President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in his city. After the shooting, an angry crowd gathered and protesters clashed with federal officers, who wielded batons and deployed flash bangs. A federal judge has already issued an order blocking the Trump administration from “destroying or altering evidence” related to the shooting, after state and county officials sued. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said the suit filed Saturday is meant to preserve evidence collected by federal officials that state authorities have not yet been able to inspect. A court hearing is scheduled for Monday in federal court in St. Paul. “A full, impartial, and transparent investigation into his fatal shooting at the hands of DHS agents is non-negotiable,” Ellison said in a statement.

Spokespersons for the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security, which are named in the lawsuit, didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment Sunday. Another federal judge previously ruled that officers participating in the federal immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota can’t detain or tear gas peaceful protesters who aren’t obstructing authorities, including when these people are observing the agents. The Minnesota National Guard was assisting local police at the direction of Gov. Tim Walz, officials said. Guard troops were sent to both the shooting site and a federal building where officers have squared off with demonstrators daily. Information about what led up to the shooting was limited, Police Chief Brian O’Hara said. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that federal officers were conducting an operation and fired “defensive shots” after a man with a handgun approached them and “violently resisted” when they tried to disarm him.

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Minnesota Public Radio - January 25, 2026

Witnesses say they begged ICE agents not to detain Minnesota 5-year-old after father's arrest

Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents refused to allow 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos to stay at his Columbia Heights home with family after being detained, observers said, despite people in the home, neighbors and school officials begging them to do so. Those who saw the federal agents detain Liam Tuesday pushed back against claims this week by ICE and Vice President JD Vance that the child was abandoned by his family after the boy and his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, were detained on their way home from school. Neighbors and Columbia Heights school officials say they pleaded with agents to let the child enter the home to join his mother or to stay with a neighbor or school leader after agents took the father into custody. They also say that they did not see Conejo Arias flee the scene and leave his son in the cold as ICE officials maintain.

“There was ample opportunity to be able to safely hand that child off to adults,” said Mary Granlund, chair of the Columbia Heights School Board who said she was at the scene and among those who offered to take Liam to his family or back to school. “There was another adult who lived in the home that was there saying, ‘I will take the child. I will take the child.’ Somebody else was yelling … that I was there and said, ‘School is here. They can take the child. You don't have to take them.’ And mom was there. She saw (through) the window, and dad was yelling, ‘Please do not open the door!’” ICE officials say the father and son are together at an ICE residential family facility in Texas. Marc Prokosch, the lawyer representing Liam and his dad, said he had still not had direct contact with them. ICE says the father is in the country illegally but Prokosch says that’s not the case.

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Fox News - January 25, 2026

GOP Sen. Cassidy breaks with Trump over deadly shooting by Border Patrol agent in Minneapolis

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., called for a full investigation after a federal agent fatally shot a man who was allegedly armed in Minneapolis on Saturday, calling the incident "incredibly disturbing." Cassidy joined a chorus of Democratic lawmakers raising questions following the shooting death of 37-year-old Minneapolis resident Alex J. Pretti, who was killed by a Border Patrol agent on Saturday. Pretti allegedly confronted officers during a Department of Homeland Security operation in south Minneapolis and was carrying a gun, according to the agency. "The events in Minneapolis are incredibly disturbing," Cassidy said in a post on X. "The credibility of ICE and DHS are at stake. There must be a full joint federal and state investigation."

Cassidy added that "we can trust the American people with the truth." The Louisiana Republican's comments were seemingly at odds with members of his party, including President Donald Trump, who said in a post on Truth Social following the shooting that federal agents "had to protect themselves" because of the lack of support from local police in Minneapolis. "This is the gunman’s gun, loaded (with two additional full magazines!), and ready to go—What is that all about? Where are the local Police? Why weren’t they allowed to protect ICE Officers?" Trump wrote in the post. "The Mayor and the Governor called them off? It is stated that many of these Police were not allowed to do their job, that ICE had to protect themselves—Not an easy thing to do!" Last week, Trump pledged his endorsement for U.S. Rep. Julia Letlow if she entered the GOP primary in Louisiana, challenging Cassidy, who has served in the U.S. Senate since 2015. Letlow launched her Senate bid days later.

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Washington Examiner - January 25, 2026

Gambling industry found bankrolling swing district congressional members

Vulnerable members of Congress who rely on the gambling industry to fund their campaigns are pushing legislation that the industry wants passed, a Washington Examiner review of campaign finance filings has found. Reps. Susie Lee (D), Steven Horsford (D), Mark Amodei (R), and Diana Titus (D) — all from Nevada — have thrown their support behind legislation that would allow gamblers to deduct 100% of losses from their tax bills, revising a provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that reduced the deduction to 90% of losses. Restoring the full deduction has been a major priority of the gambling industry, which has poured hundreds of thousands of dollars into the campaigns of those representatives since 2020.

Lee took the most from the gambling industry, accepting nearly $400,000 over the past four electoral cycles. She was closely followed by Amodei, who received well over $300,000, then by Horsford, who took almost $300,000, and Titus, who raked in around $200,000, according to a Washington Examiner review of records from the lawmakers’ primary campaign accounts, their victory funds, and their leadership PACs. Top executives from MGM Resorts, Caesars Entertainment, and Wynn Resorts reportedly met with representatives from the American Gaming Association — the trade group responsible for representing the interests of casinos and other parts of the gambling industry — in December to drum up support for a gambler’s tax break. Lee, Horsford, Amodei, and Titus, who ultimately fulfilled their request, have all accepted large donations from executives working for the three casino operators as well as the AGA. Casino executives and PACs representing the three operators that pushed for the legislation contributed roughly $140,000 to Lee, $95,000 to Horsford, $85,000 to Titus, and $83,000 to Amodei since 2020. The AGA, meanwhile, gave Lee $3,000, Titus $5,500, Horsford $6,000, and Amodei $5,000 over the same period. Amodei, Horsford, and Lee all represent swing districts, making campaign dollars even more valuable to them, given the difficulty of retaining their seats.

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CNN - January 25, 2026

Alex Pretti was an ICU nurse dedicated to helping others, friends and family said

Alex Pretti, the 37-year-old man killed by federal immigration agents Saturday, worked as a nurse treating sick veterans, according to family, friends and colleagues – a reflection of his deep desire to help others, they said. Pretti worked as an Intensive Care Unit nurse at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center for around five years, according to a co-worker who asked to speak anonymously. “Alex was a kindhearted soul who cared deeply for his family and friends and also the American veterans whom he cared for as an ICU nurse at the Minneapolis VA hospital. Alex wanted to make a difference in this world,” his parents, Michael and Susan Pretti, said in a statement. “Unfortunately he will not be with us to see his impact.”

Dr. Dimitri Drekonja, Chief of Infectious Diseases Section at the Minneapolis VA, wrote on Bluesky that he was “a good, kind person who lived to help.” Drekonja said Pretti supported critically ill veterans at the hospital. The co-worker said Pretti researched how to prevent veterans from dying from colon cancer. Pretti was fatally shot while immigration agents wrestled him on the ground in Minneapolis; the Department of Homeland Security said officers took a handgun from Pretti at the scene and fired in self-defense. CNN analysis of video shows a federal agent removed the gun just before the shooting. “The officers attempted to disarm the suspect but the armed suspect violently resisted,” the agency said in a statement. Minneapolis police have said Pretti was a lawful gun owner with a permit, and court records show he had no charges in the state, only traffic and parking infractions. His parents, in their statement, disputed DHS claims that he was a threat to agents when he was killed. They said he was seeking to protect a woman near the agents at the time. “The sickening lies told about our son by the administration are reprehensible and disgusting,” the parents said, adding that “he was a good man.”

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Punchbowl News - January 25, 2026

Dems cool to Duffy’s IndyCar Grand Prix

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is pushing to host an IndyCar race on the National Mall in August as part of the America250 celebration, according to multiple sources familiar with the effort. The race would start at the Supreme Court and cover a full lap around the National Mall, including the Lincoln Memorial. “Pit Row” would be by the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. Organizers are targeting Aug. 21 for the event. There’s only one problem: Congress has to approve legislation to make it happen. That seems increasingly unlikely since Democrats aren’t thrilled about the idea.

Congress needs to pass a bill for the race because there’s a ban on advertising on the Capitol grounds. IndyCar vehicles are famously adorned with lots of ads. The Grand Prix idea has made its way to aides of the Big Four — Speaker Mike Johnson, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. Democrats are worried about the strain it would place on both the U.S. Capitol Police and area roads. Plus, Democrats feel as if Republicans haven’t been helpful to them. Why should Democrats assist Republicans with this if the GOP has refused to hang any plaque honoring the victims of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, one aide said to us. Several Democrats told us that it seems absurd for Congress to OK an IndyCar race in D.C. when lawmakers won’t even extend health care subsidies for millions of Americans.

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Newsclips - January 23, 2026

Lead Stories

Community Impact Newspapers - January 23, 2026

5 years after Uri, here’s why Texas leaders say state is better prepared for upcoming freeze

A far-reaching winter storm is expected to bring below-freezing temperatures, wintry precipitation and “dangerous ice” to Texas beginning Jan. 23, according to the National Weather Service. As residents brace for days of potentially hazardous conditions, state leaders said Jan. 22 that the Texas power grid “has never been stronger” and will withstand the storm. Nearly five years earlier, Winter Storm Uri blanketed Texas, devastating a power grid that was unprepared for the historic February 2021 storm. Nearly 250 people died during prolonged power outages across the state, Community Impact reported. State officials said Jan. 22 that they are prepared for the dayslong storm and will ensure issues from 2021 do not occur this year. “The power grid system we have today is completely different than the power grid system we had back then,” Gov. Greg Abbott said during a Jan. 22 news conference in Austin. “We have abundant power [and] the reliability of it has never been better.”

Abbott issued a disaster declaration for 134 of Texas’ 254 counties, telling reporters that the northern two-thirds of the state—from San Antonio to the Panhandle—will be impacted by the storm. The Dallas-Fort Worth area may be the hardest-hit, officials said, with Community Impact reporting that sleet and below-zero wind chills will reach the region as soon as Jan. 23. “This is a severe winter storm that will impact most of the state of Texas,” Abbott said. “The severity of it is not quite as great, and the size of it is not quite as great as Winter Storm Uri. That said, people would be making a mistake if they don't take it serious.” Officials said they do not expect a repeat of the widespread power outages that occurred in 2021, emphasizing that changes have been made in recent years to harden the grid against extreme weather and secure backup power supplies. Some Texans could see “local, isolated” outages due to fallen tree branches or ice on power lines, Abbott said. Local and state agencies are preparing for the freeze by treating roadways, setting up warming centers, monitoring water supplies and making additional power supplies available. Texas Department of Transportation crews began treating roads early in the week to prevent ice from accumulating, with falling temperatures and wintry precipitation—including sleet and freezing rain—expected in parts of the state Jan. 23 through the weekend. TxDOT will be at “peak operations” in the coming days, with approximately 5,000 personnel operating hundreds of vehicles and equipment across Texas, Executive Director Marc Williams said.

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Wall Street Journal - January 23, 2026

Natural gas prices soar as U.S. braces for Arctic blast

Natural-gas prices have jumped 63% this week in response to forecasts calling for some of the coldest, snowiest weather in years to freeze the country from the West Texas desert to the Great Lakes. The forecasts have stoked fears of a repeat of the deadly winter storm that froze Texas in 2021 and left millions of people without electricity for days. Energy producers and utilities are preparing for the worst. The Energy Department late Thursday ordered grid operators to be prepared to take extraordinary steps to tap in to backup power generation. Subzero temperatures are in store for Minneapolis, Chicago and Detroit starting Friday. New York and Washington, D.C., are expecting to be buried in snow by the end of the weekend.

The big concern in energy markets is for Texas and other parts of the southern U.S., where uncommonly cold temperatures threaten to ice some of America’s most prolific oil-and-gas fields and wreak havoc on the power grid. Prices for electricity this weekend are already surging in Texas. The biggest gains in natural-gas prices have been for near-term deliveries. Futures for February delivery of the heating and power-generation fuel had their biggest three-day percentage gain on record. Futures settled Thursday at $5.045 per million British thermal units, up from $3.103 at the end of last week. The arctic blast has the potential to be felt in energy markets for a long time. Traders are anticipating a big chunk of U.S. production will become blocked in frozen wells when heating demand is highest, necessitating a huge drawdown of domestic stockpiles to keep furnaces and boilers running. They are betting the incoming weather will be cold and persistent enough to change the outlook for domestic supply, which a week ago appeared headed for another glut that depressed prices and pinched producers.

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San Antonio Express-News - January 23, 2026

5-year-old boy taken by ICE in Minneapolis being held with father in Texas; used him as ‘bait

A 5-year-old child and his father arrested by federal immigration agents in Minnesota this week are now being held in a South Texas detention facility, their attorney said Thursday. Lawyer Marc Prokosh said the child, Liam Ramos, and his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, were sent from Minneapolis to the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley on Tuesday. The facility, run by private contractor CoreCivic, was closed in 2024 by the Biden administration, but reopened under the Trump administration last March. It can hold up to 2,400 people.

Minnesota school officials have said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained Ramos and his father in their driveway as they were coming home from school on Tuesday. They alleged the child was used as “bait” to lure his mother and others out of the home. News reports about the incident have since gone viral. The Department of Homeland Security has denied that it targeted the child. The agency claimed the father fled on foot as officers tried to arrest him and agents “remained with the child while the other officers apprehended Conejo Arias.” “Parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children, or ICE will place the children with a safe person the parent designates,” said Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the agency, in a public statement. “This is consistent with past administration’s immigration enforcement. Parents can take control of their departure and receive a free flight and $2,600 with the CBP Home app.” At a press conference in Minneapolis Thursday, school officials disputed DHS's account. Mary Granlund, the president of the school board, said she was on her way to get her children from school when she heard a commotion and saw people at the home. "I got out of my car and came around the corner, I heard, 'What are you doing? Don't take the child,'" Granlund said. She said the mother, who was in the house, told officers there were people who could care for Ramos. When they saw Granlund, she said, someone said "school is here, they can take the child. You don't have to take them."

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Houston Chronicle - January 22, 2026

Texas sheriff Martin Cuellar, brother of Rep. Henry Cuellar, indicted on fraud charges

Webb County Sheriff Martin Cuellar was arraigned on federal embezzlement charges in Houston on Thursday morning. The South Texas sheriff, along with his former first deputy, Alex Gutierrez, is accused of theft or bribery related to the use of government-funded cleaning supplies, which were used for COVID-related disinfection work from 2020 to 2022. Cuellar and Gutierrez are accused of using the sheriff office's staff and resources to run a for-profit business, Disinfect Pro Master, according to the Justice Department. The men, along with another former sheriff's office employee, Assistant Chief Ricardo “Rick” Rodriguez, opened a disinfecting business in April 2020 and entered into agreements with local businesses that lacked cleaning services and supplies, authorities said.

Prosecutors allege sheriff's office employees handled the company's day-to-day to operations and conducted some of the disinfecting work on the clock. The company allegedly got a $500,000 contract to clean facilities at United Independent School District, a 40,000-student school district in Laredo. The cleaning was done "almost entirely" with county employees, according to prosecutors. Cuellar and the other men received $175,000 for their part in the business, according to the indictment. Cuellar, 67, and Gutierrez, 47, were indicted in November. The case was ordered unsealed on Thursday. Charging documents weren't immediately available. Both men pleaded not guilty and were released on bond. Officials said during the Thursday hearing that the indictment was connected to a 2023 FBI raid of the sheriff's office. Cuellar said at the time that the raid focused on Rodriguez. Rodriguez has already pleaded guilty for his role scheme, according to the Justice Department. In a written statement, Cuellar's lawyer, Eric Reed, denounced the charges, calling them "baseless and driven by false narratives and assumptions fueled by politics and rivalries." "The whole truth is that Sheriff Cuellar's actions were entirely lawful even if the conduct of other was not," Reed said. "The charges relate to the COVID-19 pandemic and the relentless fight by first responders and others to stop its spread." Reed said Cuellar helped lead an effort to prevent COVID infections in the Webb County jail, as well as in churches, nursing homes, daycare facilities, among other places.

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State Stories

Chron - January 22, 2026

John Whitmire announces he will seek a second term as Houston mayor

Houston Mayor John Whitmire will be running for re-election, or so he indicated during a roughly hour-long conversation with Houston attorney Tony Buzbee. "I will run for another term as mayor, and plan on serving two four-year terms," Whitmire told Buzbee. "I think it takes that long at least to correct some of the mistakes and get us back on the right path and finish some of my reorganization." Whitmire broke the news during the latest episode of Buzbee's podcast, "Swimming with the Sharks," uploaded on Wednesday. The much-anticipated podcast release shines a rare light on Whitmire's roughly first two years sitting at the city's helm. The mayor is notably selective about which media he speaks with, which he himself noted in the conversation.

Chron contacted Whitmire's office for further comment but did not receive a response by publication. Whitmire's office has not responded to Chron since August 2025. Recently, when attempting to contact the mayor's spokesperson at City Hall, a Chron reporter was told the spokesperson and the mayor would remain unavailable to Chron for "a while." Whitmire and Buzbee discussed the controversial Houston Police Department pay raises, Whitmire's attention to rectifying the unhoused "issue," public safety and road and drainage conditions. The mayor reflected on his time in elected leadership, having served in the Texas House and the Texas Senate for nearly four decades before pursuing a mayoral bid. Whitmire's tenure has been characterized as contentious by some Houstonians. He regularly receives backlash for his approach to uprooting road projects, has lost the eligibility to receive future endorsements from his party, and, more recently, was criticized for the lack of transparency regarding HPD's cooperation with ICE, among other issues.

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Houston Chronicle - January 23, 2026

Texas orphaned oil wells hit 20-year high, topping 11,000 statewide

Chronicle The number of orphaned wells across Texas reached over 11,000 at the end of 2025, breaking a 20-year record, according to the latest data from the state. So-called orphaned wells are oil and gas wells that are not actively maintained and have no operator on file with regulators, meaning the responsibility to clean up after and plug them lies with the state. Roughly 2,000 new wells joined the list over the last year, bringing the total of known orphaned wells to 11,123, according to the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates the state’s oil and gas industry.

Because of the continued consolidation of the oil and gas industry, increased production costs, and lower crude prices – the price of oil fell roughly 20% over the last year – companies are more likely to go bankrupt or dissolve, leaving unplugged wells behind for the state to fix. The number of orphaned wells across the state is likely to grow even further as a result. "While there has been a recent increase in these populations due to various external factors such as operator bankruptcies and aging wells, we are in the process of taking significant actions to increase our well plugging efforts," said Bryce Dubee, a spokesman for the Railroad Commission. The Railroad Commission earlier this month opened the "largest solicitation for well plugging and related services in our agency’s history," Dubee said, applying more than $350 million in federal funding and $100 million in state funding toward well plugging projects.

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Texas Public Radio - January 23, 2026

Immigration enforcement debate prompts disruptions at lengthy San Antonio City Council meeting

San Antonio City Council chambers were packed Thursday as residents crowded into a more than seven-hour meeting focused on the city’s cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. The meeting was recessed multiple times after disruptions from the audience. Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones called for order at least three times, urging attendees to allow all speakers to be heard. “We are here to listen,” Jones said. “We also want to make sure every speaker, regardless of their viewpoint on the spectrum, is treated with respect.” The meeting was intended as a public briefing and listening session on how often the San Antonio Police Department works with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. City officials said that cooperation occurs only in limited circumstances required by state or federal law.

According to data provided by SAPD, the department made roughly 51,000 arrests last year. Of those, 111 involved ICE detainer requests — when federal authorities ask local law enforcement to hold someone for pickup by ICE. Police said 49 of those cases involved Class C misdemeanors, while 62 involved Class B or higher offenses. Police Chief William McManus repeatedly emphasized that SAPD does not enforce immigration law. “I want to be very, very clear on this,” McManus told the council. “SAPD does not enforce immigration laws. We do not arrest people for immigration violations. We are not enabled to do that by law, and we do not have that jurisdiction.” Deputy City Manager Maria Villagomez added that out of roughly 1.8 million calls for service last year, only 258 incident reports included the word “immigration,” and most of those involved no federal action. McManus said SAPD participates in joint task forces with state and federal agencies primarily to share resources.

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Fort Worth Star-Telegram - January 23, 2026

Bud Kennedy: One Texas Republican loses Greg Abbott’s support over ‘criminality’

Texas’ political season has been like a slow-developing TV plot so far, but Republicans finally have a cliffhanger. Somewhere way down the March 3 primary ballot, deep beneath races that won’t be decided until the May 26 runoff, cowboy Sid Miller is desperately gripping the reins and at risk of being bucked out of his job as Texas agriculture commissioner. Yes, I know. The race for agriculture commissioner is not must-see TV. Miller, a grinning Texas slickster straight out of a Taylor Sheridan drama, is known for wearing a big western hat, riding in rodeos and flashing a toothy smile as bright as the halogen headlights on a cattle truck. Miller has been agriculture commissioner for 11 years. Seems like 50.

Maybe you remember when he declared war on lab-cultured meat. Or on affirmative action. Or on those crazy little seeds Amazon delivers from China. Gov. Greg Abbott has noticed. Abbott, usually cautious, issued one of his most blunt endorsements, backing Collin County Republican challenger Nate Sheets against Miller. Sheets, a creator of the “I Am Second” evangelical Christian video campaign, is also the beekeeper and founder behind Nature’s Nate Honey. Abbott took Miller behind the barn. Texans deserves an Agriculture Commissioner with “zero tolerance for criminality,” the governor posted. On his X.com campaign account, Abbott called Sheets a “principled leader” focused on promoting Texas agriculture, which is the commissioner’s primary job. That was after Miller told an East Texas campaign forum in Mineola: “Our governor — for 10 years, I’ve been trying to get him on the farm. Hadn’t got him there yet.” The governor’s “criminality” line did not refer directly to Miller. Abbott was talking about Miller’s political consultant, Todd M. Smith. Smith ran Miller’s campaigns for 25 years. He was behind Miller’s often-vulgar social media posts. In 2024, Smith pleaded guilty in a bribery case. He was put on a two-year probation after the Texas Rangers said he solicited $55,000 in exchange for licenses to grow hemp. So what did Miller do? He rehired Smith.

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Community Impact Newspapers - January 23, 2026

Austin council members unanimously back new expense guidelines for their offices

City Council members voted to update policies governing their offices' spending, one of several financial and operational reforms they're pursuing in the wake of last year's failed tax rate election. Officials first suggested revising Austin's council spending policies in the fall, and have since been developing a new outline of allowable expenses and transparency measures. The updated policy unanimously approved Jan. 22 lays out various allowable expenses for council offices, as well as related financial reporting, staff training and enforcement standards. Officials' spending on items like office supplies, travel, hospitality, software, conferences and gifts are now outlined in the city's rulebook. All relevant city employees will now receive annual training on the policy, and public reports on all council office spending will be published online every year going forward.

Mayor Kirk Watson, who first suggested the spending reforms after the November election, said the update consolidates and clarifies past guidelines while moving Austin's rules more in line with other Texas jurisdictions. "This will help safeguard public confidence and offer greater clarity on permissible and impermissible use of funds," he said. "When we reviewed the council spending policies, we found a bunch, a lot, a whole lot of decentralized administrative bulletins and governing policies. So this kind of ... brings those together.” A city analysis of local practices versus others across the state found Austin City Hall to be an outlier in terms of how officials' remaining funds are handled year-to-year. No other Texas cities allow council offices to carry any of their leftover budgets across fiscal years, and state senators are permitted limited office rollover. The draft version of Austin's new expense policy would have capped rollover budgets at $50,000, but that limit was removed through an amendment from council member José Velásquez who said offices need to maintain flexibility to better serve constituents. "While we all receive the same amount of funding, our communities have very different needs. Some examples of those are interpretation and translation services, and meeting with organizations and community leaders that serve monolingual Spanish speakers and immigrants," he said. "With regard to equity, I believe each council office better understands their communities’ individual needs rather than the body as a whole."

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Houston Chronicle - January 23, 2026

Can Texas enforce immigration law on its own? Judges hear legal challenge.

The fate of a Texas law that makes it a state crime to enter the country without authorization could hinge on whether an immigrant advocacy center has a right to challenge the legislation, and if border enforcement is solely the federal government’s responsibility. Texas' Senate Bill 4 was passed in 2023 and makes unauthorized entry into Texas a state crime. The bill also makes unlawful presence in Texas a felony if a person has been denied entry or previously ordered removed. The bill was scheduled to go into effect in March 2024 but has been placed on hold after a federal district judge ruled in February 2024 that it conflicts with federal law and violates the Supremacy Clause of the United States.

The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments Thursday in New Orleans after Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton asked the court to reconsider the pause on the legislation. Most of the arguments centered on whether El Paso-based Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, will face harm and has standing to sue. The law was also challenged by the Biden Justice Department, but the Trump administration’s Department of Justice later dropped the lawsuit against Texas. The state of Texas argued in a court filing that Las Americas relied on a flawed theory to convince the court that it would suffer harm because it would need to divert resources to represent immigrants detained under the provisions of SB4. Texas’ argument focused largely on a 2024 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Food and Drug Administration v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine. In that case, the high court determined that the alliance didn’t have legal standing to sue the FDA. “The alliance argued the … governmental action impaired its ability to provide services and achieve its organizational mission. The Supreme Court held that argument does not work,” Texas Solicitor General William Peterson told the court. “I urge the court to resolve the case on standing grounds.”

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Dallas Morning News - January 23, 2026

Glenn Rogers: Go ahead; close public schools

Gov. Greg Abbott is following up his scorched earth removal of pro-public education Republican legislators with a plan to eliminate school property taxes, a move that could effectively dismantle the public school system as it currently exists. The endgame for the theo-oligarchs who control Texas state politics is complete dominion over what they call the Seven Mountains: family, religion, education, media, entertainment, business and government. Dominion over the education mountain is top priority and requires privatization and elimination of Texas public schools. But I have a few questions. First, if public education is as irredeemably broken, wasteful, ideological, incompetent and dangerous as some politicians insist, why not pull the plug now? Not a slow and gradual death, but overnight closure of every public school. Just shut the doors.

After all, we have heard for years that public schools are failing children, indoctrinating, mismanaging funds and producing poor outcomes. If that is all true, why keep them open one more day? Why subject another child to such a vile system? Then, what happens after schools close? Here’s what: 5.5 million Texas students do not go anywhere. Parents — many of whom work hourly jobs or hold positions that do not come with flexibility — suddenly must answer a basic question: Where does my child go? Employers feel it immediately. Hospitals, construction sites, factories, restaurants, small businesses — everyone feels it. Gone, too, are special education services, speech therapy, behavioral support, school meals, transportation, counselors, dyslexia specialists, nurses and bilingual support. What about structure and predictability? Where will children be expected to show up, learn, interact and receive supervision for the bulk of the day? We received a glimpse of this nightmare during the pandemic. Remember how quickly we decided that school closures were catastrophic for kids? Remember how we said (correctly) that schools are more than buildings, more than instruction, more than test scores? Remember how we watched learning loss grow, mental health concerns skyrocket and parents reach a breaking point?

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Fox Business - January 23, 2026

Wall Street’s Texas move gains steam as NYSE Texas hits 100-company milestone

NYSE President Lynn Martin joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to discuss the launch of a new tokenized securities platform, a potential IPO surge in 2026 and why U.S. capital markets remain unmatched globally. The New York Stock Exchange’s quiet expansion into Texas is gaining rapid traction, with NYSE President Lynn Martin revealing that more than 100 companies have already dual-listed on NYSE Texas in under a year — a milestone that underscores Wall Street’s accelerating pivot toward the Lone Star State’s pro-business climate. "NYSE Texas, which we announced February of last year, brought it live March 31 of last year, and now have more than 100 dual listings on NYSE Texas in less than a year," President Lynn Martin told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo at the World Economic Forum on Thursday. "It’s going great," she continued.

Earlier this week, President Donald Trump blasted plans to expand the New York Stock Exchange to Dallas, calling the move "unbelievably bad" for New York and a failure of city leadership. "Building a New York Stock Exchange in Dallas is an unbelievably bad thing for New York. I can't believe they would let this happen," Trump wrote in a Truth Social post. He added that the move posed a "big test" for New York's newly inaugurated mayor, Zohran Mamdani. The New York Stock Exchange has said the Dallas expansion — a fully electronic equities exchange based in Dallas — is intended to broaden its footprint and better serve companies in the South and Southwest, not to replace its New York operations. NYSE Texas launched in March 2025 and continues to operate alongside the main exchange. Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson predicts big firms will quit working in the Big Apple on 'Maria Bartiromo's Wall Street.'

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San Antonio Express-News - January 23, 2026

How a lawsuit by Ken Paxton gave Beto O'Rourke hope when it comes to politics

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton unwittingly gave Beto O’Rourke hope by suing him. It started over the summer, after O’Rourke donated $1 million to Texas House Democrats who had fled the state to try to stop the Republicans’ redistricting plan. In court documents, Paxton, a Republican from Collin County who is running for the U.S. Senate, argued O’Rourke was "operating a misleading financial-influence scheme" to help Texas House Democrats commit an illegal act. During an exclusive interview on the Texas Take Podcast, recorded live at Stubb’s Bar-B-Q in Austin, O’Rourke said it was a frivolous case that shouldn’t have had a shot. Still, his political action committee shelled out $400,000 to fight it in a legal system with judges appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott, whom O’Rourke ran against in 2022.

Ultimately, O’Rourke and Powered By People won. He said the verdict, delivered in September, shows that some things remain nonpartisan. “Not only did that feel good because it removed us from this frivolous legal jeopardy, but it felt good that regardless of party difference, there's something that still binds us together, and that's the United States Constitution,” O’Rourke said. But Paxton did succeed in one key way. The $400,000 lost to legal expenses became money that Powered By People couldn’t use on voter registration and turnout - the group’s core mission. “It was to bleed us dry of the resources we needed to support our volunteers out in the field,” O’Rourke said. “But lo and behold, we fought him toe to toe.”

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KERA - January 23, 2026

Dallas City Council puts tougher restrictions on proposed bullet train to Fort Worth

The Dallas City Council this week placed more restrictions on where a proposed bullet train connecting the city to Fort Worth can be built. City leaders voted unanimously Wednesday to restrict above-ground rail in parts of West Dallas including Harold Simmons Park. The resolution re-affirms and expands a 2024 resolution opposing “new aboveground passenger rail lines” through the Central Business District, Uptown, and Victory Park. “It is important because it sets parameters for such rail development should it ever come to pass, which at this time seems problematic in light of the Congress just this week reaching a deal to defund $928 million in high-speed rail grants,” said District 14 council member Paul Ridley, referring to a recently passed spending deal.

The council also gave the go-ahead to the North Central Texas Council of Governments executive board to approve a $500,000 grant to study high-speed rail between Fort Worth and Houston. Even with the grant, Ridley said the planning process could have implications for future alignments through Dallas. Speaking to the NCTCOG board Thursday, Dallas City Council member Cara Mendelsohn reiterated the council's opposition to any above-ground rail going through downtown Dallas. "We have to do projects that are a win for everybody, and downtown Fort Worth and Arlington do not get below-grade treatment and Dallas gets seven stories up," she said. As part of the study, the council wants NCTCOG to evaluate upgrades to the existing Trinity Railway Express system “in lieu of a whole separate new high-speed rail right of way at a great additional expense,” Ridley said Wednesday. He said upgrading the Trinity Railway Express would be cheaper for the community heading west to Fort Worth.

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KTRE - January 23, 2026

Former ‘Lone Star Law’ game warden turns himself in after felony indictments

A former Texas game warden, once featured on Animal Planet’s “Lone Star Law,” was back in jail Wednesday after turning himself in following multiple felony indictments. Justin Charles Eddins, 47, of Jasper, was held at the Jasper County Jail on bonds totaling $100,000 for charges of false statement to obtain property or credit, more than $30,000 but less than $100,000; harvesting standing timber, more than $20,000 but less than $100,000; and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence with intent to impair, according to a press release. Eddins was indicted in October 2025 after he was charged with making a false statement to obtain credit, according to indictment documents received by KLTV. The indictment states Eddins made the false documents between March 2022 and November 2023 in an attempt to obtain loans amounting to between $150,000 and $300,000. Eddins was released Wednesday after his lawyer, Bill Morian, posted bail, according to Jasper County Sheriff Chuck Havard.

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San Antonio Current - January 22, 2026

Texas data centers could consume 161 billion gallons of water annually by 2030

Texas data centers could consume up to 161 billion gallons of water annually by 2030, according to a white paper released Wednesday by the Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC). Existing data centers in Texas consume an estimated 25 billion gallons of water each year for electricity generation and cooling systems, and their demand on the Lone Star Stater’s valuable natural resources is only going to grow, the report cautions. Considered the most rapidly growing data center market in the country, Texas is experiencing a boom in construction of the facilities with many more on the way.

“Texas is no stranger to industrial booms, having ridden waves of oil, gas, and manufacturing, but the data center surge presents a unique challenge that requires immediate attention,” HARC President and CEO John Hall said in an emailed statement. “Our analysis makes one fact unavoidable: When we talk about data centers, we must talk about water. We have a rare window to shape how this industry grows and how Texas prospers. We can either plan now with foresight and transparency, or we will be forced to react later with our backs to the wall.” By 2030, data centers could potentially represent up to 2.7% of the state’s total water use. What’s more, HARC’s white paper cites critical planning gaps as bureaucratic blind spots in addressing this new problem of the rapidly accelerating digital age. The Texas State Water Plan, the primary tool for funding water infrastructure, relies heavily on historical data. As such, HARC argues, the plan doesn’t currently account for the future growth of data centers, leaving local communities to manage water security without adequate state-level support.

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Houston Chronicle - January 23, 2026

See who has the edge in CD18 runoff fundraising between Menefee and Edwards

With early voting underway and Election Day approaching in the runoff for Texas’ 18th Congressional District, campaign finance reports show the two campaigns are financially competitive heading into the final days. Through the most recent campaign finance reporting period ending Jan. 11, Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee reported raising $2.23 million for the special election, compared to $1.74 million raised by former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards. Menefee also reported higher overall spending, roughly $1.8 million versus Edwards’ $1.4 million, but still entered the final stretch with $388,739 in cash on hand. Edwards reported $280,566.

The bulk of both candidates’ fundraising came from individual donors. Menefee reported $2.09 million in individual contributions, while Edwards reported $1.66 million. Contributions from political committees made up a relatively small share of each campaign’s total, with Menefee reporting $138,550 from committees and Edwards reporting $55,350. The runoff election is being conducted by the current 18th Congressional District boundaries and caps a special election triggered by the prolonged vacancy of the seat after the death of Sylvester Turner earlier last year. Both runoff candidates, Menefee and Edwards, have also filed to run in the March Democratic primary for the newly redrawn CD 18. That race includes longtime representative Al Green, who previously represented Texas' 9th Congressional District, which now makes up a significant portion of the new 18th.

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National Stories

NOTUS - January 23, 2026

The House passed all 12 spending bills asserting their control

The House of Representatives on Thursday passed its 12th and final funding bill for the fiscal year — a productive pivot showing Congress can govern after months of legislative turmoil in the chamber. The House managed to pass all of its funding bills just months after a stand off on a spending package forced the longest government shutdown in history. Lawmakers are one step closer to avoiding another shutdown by the Jan. 30 funding deadline, pending action by the Senate and president. Lawmakers applauded in the chamber as the final package passed, while the Appropriations Committee’s chair and ranking member, Reps. Tom Cole and Rosa DeLauro, took a photo together on the House floor. The productive few weeks of churning through spending bills and passing them with bipartisan votes came after months of partisan fights that gridlocked Congress.

House leaders couldn’t move forward with their agenda, and Republican leadership faced its own members using procedural maneuvers to force votes on issues they worked to avoid, like releasing the Epstein files and renewing health care subsidies. Even the lawmakers who negotiated the spending bills were surprised. DeLauro posed a rhetorical question to reporters Wednesday night: “I don’t believe that anyone thought that by Jan. 30 we would get to pass all the appropriations bills. Am I right?” she said. “We are.” The House approved the two final sets of appropriations bills Thursday. The first, funding for the Department of Homeland Security, passed 220-207 with help from seven Democrats: Reps. Jared Golden, Henry Cuellar, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, Tom Suozzi, Laura Gillen, Vicente Gonzalez and Don Davis. Rep. Thomas Massie was the sole Republican ‘no.’ A shooting by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis had threatened the bill’s prospects for the last two weeks, though Republicans were confident it would ultimately squeak through. The second package garnered more bipartisan support in a 341-88 vote. It included funding for several departments: Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Defense. Two dozen Republicans, mostly budget hawks, opposed the bill. House appropriators have been deep in negotiations over the past few months trying to come to bipartisan deals that could acquire support from both parties and be signed by the president, with some appropriators and their staff working over the holiday recess. Cole has said that keeping negotiations at the subcommittee level allowed bills to move forward without fights requiring leadership to step in. Many senior Republican appropriators and Speaker Mike Johnson gave Cole credit for getting the bills passed at a news conference Thursday evening.

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CNBC - January 22, 2026

Jamie Dimon issues rare CEO criticism of Trump’s immigration policy: ‘I don’t like what I’m seeing’

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Wednesday that he disagreed with President Donald Trump’s approach to immigration, offering a rare public rebuke by a U.S. corporate leader of one of Trump’s signature policies. Dimon, speaking on a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, initially praised Trump’s moves to secure the borders of the world’s largest economy. Illegal crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border fell to the lowest level in 50 years for the period from October 2024 to September 2025, the BBC reported citing federal data. But Dimon, who has long advocated for immigration reform to boost U.S. economic growth, also made an apparent reference to videos of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers rounding up people alleged to be undocumented immigrants.

?I don’t like what I’m seeing, five grown men beating up a little old lady,” Dimon said. “So I think we should calm down a little bit on the internal anger about immigration.” It’s unclear if Dimon was speaking about a specific incident, or more broadly about ICE confrontations. In the first year of his second term, Trump has overhauled U.S. immigration policy with a focus on mass deportations, tightened asylum access and ramped-up spending for ICE personnel and facilities. Among a torrent of new policies that changed the landscape for seeking American citizenship, the administration also rescinded guidance on where ICE arrests could happen, leading to raids at schools, hospitals and places of worship. Unlike during Trump’s first term, American CEOs have mostly avoided public criticism of his policies. Wall Street analysts have speculated that business leaders fear retribution from the Trump administration, which has sued media companies, universities and law firms, and instead choose to appeal to the president out of the public spotlight.

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New York Post - January 23, 2026

Sharyn Alfonsi, Scott Pelley’s jobs are on the line after pushing back against Bari Weiss’ CBS News shakeups: sources

Call it Game of … Microphones? “60 Minutes” correspondents Sharyn Alfonsi and Scott Pelley’s vocal pushback against CBS News editor in chief Bari Weiss’s moves to shake up the outlet have put the duo at risk of being fired, The Post has learned. Both veteran correspondents could get the boot as Weiss, who has run the network since October, works to revamp “60 Minutes,” said sources with knowledge of the matter — who compared the ongoing intrigue to “Game of Thrones”-style drama. “It’s going to be a war,” a network insider told The Post. “They don’t think their s–t stinks,” the person said of the “60 Minutes” staff.

CBS News is willing to buy out contracts of talent and executives, sources said. Alfonsi’s is up in a few months. It could not immediately be learned when Pelley’s contract is set to expire. The correspondents did not respond to requests for comment. CBS News did not immediately comment. Alfonsi irked Weiss by fighting the boss’ efforts to strengthen a recent report on El Salvador’s notorious CECOT prison, while Pelley has put a target on his back for a drumroll of commentary criticizing CBS News’ new leadership, sources said. Weiss is overseeing all the important political and cultural stories produced by the network — including “60 Minutes,” sources said, noting that the exec now takes part in a new Monday meeting with the show’s executive producer Tanya Simon. That’s a sharp departure from the “60 Minutes” tradition of operating as a kingdom unto itself for decades, when the show’s executive producer was the only person overseeing the show’s journalism. “CBS News is allergic to changes – especially ‘60 Minutes’ people,” said the network insider.

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The Hill - January 23, 2026

Rollins: Viral meal costs remark meant to describe ‘more robust plate’

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Tuesday that comments she made last week suggesting Americans could get a nutritious meal consisting of a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, a corn tortilla, and “one other thing” for just $3 were meant to describe a “more robust plate.” Rollins clarified her remarks after being asked by a reporter whether she was being “a little bit flip” about the cost of groceries. “No, and well, I regret that I didn’t make it sound like a more robust plate because that is what I mean to make it sound like,” Rollins told reporters outside the White House.

“A really big piece of chicken. And when I said a piece of broccoli, I meant like big. … I’m a mom of four, and I cook broccoli a lot. For me, that’s a big head of broccoli, a baked potato, etc., a couple pieces of bread,” she said. Rollins’s remark on meal prices came during an interview on NewsNation last week, where she addressed concerns over whether the White House’s new dietary guidelines meant it would become more expensive to maintain a healthy diet. “We’ve run over 1,000 simulations,” Rollins told anchor Connell McShane last Wednesday, insisting the Trump administration was not asking people to spend more on their diet. “It can cost around $3 a meal for a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, you know, a corn tortilla and one other thing,” she continued. “So, there is a way to do this that actually will save the average American consumer money.”

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The City - January 23, 2026

A judge just ruled a New York City district unconstitutional, possibly handing Democrats another seat

A judge has ruled that the boundaries of one of New York’s Congressional districts is unconstitutional, throwing a wrench into the 2026 midterm elections. Supreme Court Judge Jeffrey Pearlman of Manhattan issued a ruling Wednesday that says the boundaries of New York’s 11th District — which currently covers Staten Island and a small part of Brooklyn — was drawn unlawfully and needs to be redone. He ordered that a special Independent Redistricting Commission convene to complete a new map by Feb. 6, just over two weeks from now. Before becoming a judge, Pearlman has worked for major New York Democrats including Gov. Kathy Hochul and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins.

The 11th Congressional District is currently represented by Republican Nicole Malliotakis, who is the only Republican member of Congress in New York City. A redrawn district could include more blue parts of the city, upsetting what is now a fairly safe seat for the GOP. John Faso, a representative of attorneys representing Rep. Malliotakis in the case, called the decision “judicial lawmaking run amok.” “It is contrary to plain language in both state and federal constitutions. The case will definitely be appealed,” he said. Malliotakis is not named as a plaintiff or defendant in the case, but joined as an intervener in late October arguing to keep the district lines as they are. The Board of Elections and Gov. Kathy Hochul, both named as defendants in the case, did not immediately respond to a request for comment by THE CITY. Neither did attorneys Andrew Celli and Bennet Moskowitz, who are representing Staten Island voters as plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

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Wall Street Journal - January 23, 2026

TikTok finalizes deal to keep operating in the U.S.

TikTok officially established a joint venture that would allow it to keep operating in the U.S., the company said Thursday, resolving a yearslong fight to address Washington’s national-security concerns. Under the terms of the deal negotiated by the Trump administration, the popular video-sharing app will be operated by a new U.S. entity controlled by investors seen as friendly to the U.S. Its data-management and algorithm-training on American users will be overseen by Oracle, the cloud-computing giant that has safeguarded its U.S. data for years and has close ties to the Trump administration. The deal was negotiated to comply with a law passed in 2024. President Trump delayed the implementation of the law a year ago after starting his second term to keep TikTok operating in the U.S. He signed a series of executive orders to extend the deadline for completing a deal until it was met Thursday.

“I am so happy to have helped in saving TikTok!” Trump said in a social-media post Thursday night. He thanked Chinese leader Xi Jinping “for working with us and, ultimately, approving the Deal. He could have gone the other way, but didn’t, and is appreciated for his decision.” Trump and TikTok’s investors and allies pushed the deal through despite lingering concerns among lawmakers and security hawks that China could still influence the new entity through TikTok parent ByteDance, which owns almost 20% of it. “The majority American owned joint venture will operate under defined safeguards that protect national security through comprehensive data protections, algorithm security, content moderation and software assurances for U.S. users,” TikTok CEO Shou Chew said in an internal note to employees announcing the news. Chew’s deputy Adam Presser will lead the new entity, which was created after securing approval from the U.S. and Chinese governments. The board members include Chew, Oracle executive Ken Glueck and several investors. Oracle, private-equity firm Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi-based MGX will each own 15% of the new entity while existing TikTok investors own about 30%. Other notable investors include Vice President JD Vance’s former firm Revolution and tech executive Michael Dell’s family investment office.

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CBS News - January 23, 2026

Judge skeptical of Trump's arguments he has proper authority to build White House ballroom

A federal judge appeared skeptical of the Trump administration's claims that it has the proper authority to continue construction on the East Wing site that was demolished last year. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon heard arguments Thursday on a motion brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation to block the ongoing construction of the East Wing until the Trump administration goes through the appropriate approval processes, which it alleges the Trump administration has ignored. Friday's arguments focused primarily on two issues: whether the president can unilaterally renovate the White House and whether he can do it with private funds that were transferred to an office under his authority, rather than with funds appropriated by Congress.

Tad Heuer, an attorney representing the Trust, argued the law requires express approval from Congress to execute a project as significant as the 90,000 square-foot East Wing renovation. Congress provides the White House with a modest annual budget for the "repair, alteration, and improvement" of the building. The administration contends this authority encompasses the East Wing overhaul. Leon responded that the Trump administration's view is a "very expansive definition," later adding that "there's been an end-run around this oversight from Congress." Leon pressed senior Justice Department official Yaakov Roth, on whether "ripping down the East Wing" is similar to previous White House renovations, like the tennis pavilion added by Mr. Trump in his first term, or the swimming pool added in 1975 by President Gerald Ford. Roth argued it was akin to those projects. "Come on. Be serious," Leon snapped.

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NOTUS - January 22, 2026

Data center lobbying is booming as tech and energy giants face ‘affordability’ backlash

Dozens of Silicon Valley giants, utility providers and other companies stand to earn a fortune from the nation’s artificial intelligence boom. And according to new lobbying disclosures reviewed by NOTUS, these special interests together spent big money late last year to score favorable treatment from federal lawmakers and regulators on what’s fast becoming a central issue of the 2026 midterm elections: the proliferation of data centers that undergird AI’s existence. Energy demand from data centers has increased in recent years, leading to soaring prices and increasing threats of blackouts. Energy experts have raised doubts about whether the nation’s power grid can withstand data center demand — particularly as President Donald Trump attempts to stymie renewable energy development and generation.

Hand-wringing over the proliferation of data centers — which has played a huge role in recent U.S. economic growth — has already hit Congress. Members of both parties are now publicly weighing the economic benefits of the construction boom against the risks to the power grid and costs to energy consumers, with some on the left calling for at least temporary limits on data center construction. Edison Electric Institute was one of the nation’s biggest lobbying spenders last quarter. The investor-owned association of electric companies poured $2.33 million into its lobbying efforts in an attempt to influence “data center issues generally,” among other issues. “EEI engages with policymakers to advance policies that support responsible data center development, protect everyday Americans from cost shifts and strengthen the grid for American families and businesses,” Jeremy White, an Edison Electric Institute spokesperson, wrote to NOTUS. American Electric Power, a large investor-owned utility in the Midwest, spent $360,000 during the fourth quarter of 2025 to lobby Congress, the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, partly on data center matters.

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