AltWeeklies Wire

The Texas Presidential Delegate Selection Process Works Just Fine ... Without Candidatesnew

My friends from foreign states don't understand why I'm so impressed with a voting system in which you don't know the outcome for a month and a half, and the caucuses end in fights with lawyers getting called (which, in my opinion, is far scarier than calling the police). My answer is that you don't finish a good book in a day, but a blockbuster ending is so worth it.
The Texas Observer  |  Susan DuQuesnay Bankston  |  06-11-2008  |  Commentary

John McCain's Phil Gramm Gamblenew

In Gramm, McCain has chosen for a campaign co-chair and adviser a former senator who espouses free market, conservative principles, but whose actions in public office served wealthy contributors and even himself, leading to economic crises like the credit crunch and skyrocketing fuel costs.
The Texas Observer  |  Patricia Kilday Hart  |  06-03-2008  |  Politics

Choice Words: How We Talk When We Talk About Politicsnew

We asked 2,500 Texas Democratic primary voters participants two open-ended questions about their preferences. By analyzing the words people used to answer the questions, we were able to see how supporters of the different candidates are psychologically different. We also see the similiarities between the rhetoric of the campaigns and the language of their supporters.
The Texas Observer  |  James W. Pennebaker  |  05-30-2008  |  Politics

How McCain Supporters Skewed the Texas Democratic Party Resultsnew

McCain supporters, our poll reveals, made up 9.4 percent of the total vote in the primary. Clinton's margin of victory was only 3.5 percent. We can't say that the McCain ringers in the Democratic primary changed the outcome, because we don't know for whom they actually voted in March. But it is clearly possible.
The Texas Observer  |  Leland Beatty  |  05-30-2008  |  Politics

The U.S. Supreme Court Gives New Life to the Texas GOP's Effort to Pass Voter ID Billnew

Both sides of the debate have reason to tread carefully in the upcoming legislative battles. Although the Court gave Indiana -- and any state wishing to follow its lead -- the go-ahead to enact stringent voter identification laws, the Court left open the possibility of legal challenges to such measures once their actual effect on the voting public can be assessed.
The Texas Observer  |  Anthony Zurcher  |  05-21-2008  |  Politics

Four More Years for Gov. Rick Perry?new

The soon-to-be longest-serving governor in Texas history says he wants to extend his run. If Perry wins again in two years, his administration will be on track to last 14 years -- longer than the lifespan of most dogs. Every dog has its day. Let's hope Perry has had his.
The Texas Observer  |  Editorial  |  05-07-2008  |  Commentary

Texas Democrats Endure Another Round of Caucus Chaosnew

With record-breaking Democratic turnout have come unprecedented headaches. The struggle to manage that surge was once again on display on March 29 at 279 county and senatorial district conventions. It was the second step in Texas' three-part caucus to determine how 67 delegates will be apportioned between Democratic presidential aspirants Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.
The Texas Observer  |  Staff  |  04-23-2008  |  Politics

How Texas' Attorney General Suppresses the Votenew

Greg Abbott prosecutes Democrats who help seniors vote by mail while ignoring Republican ballot-box stuffing.
The Texas Observer  |  Steven Rosenfeld  |  04-23-2008  |  Politics

The Texas Primary is Over, but the Count Goes Onnew

Sen. Hillary Clinton secured a 4-point win in the Texas Democratic primary that rescued her candidacy, and in many states that would have been the end of it. But there is still the matter of the Democratic caucuses -- the second, trickier step in the Texas Democratic Party's unique primary-caucus hybrid system, the so-called Texas Two-Step.
The Texas Observer  |  Staff  |  03-26-2008  |  Politics

Election '08: Could the Age Gap Trump Race & Gender?new

Every exit poll conducted to date in the presidential primary race indicates a generation gap separating the two candidates. The reasons for the split have almost nothing to do with voting records or policy proposals. It's how each candidate packages those positions that makes the difference.
The Texas Observer  |  Forrest Wilder and Dave Mann  |  02-26-2008  |  Politics

What Would a McCain Win Mean for Texas Republicans?new

Probably the longest-lasting impact of the 2008 primaries on the Texas Republican Party will be that our party will become even more conservative, if that's possible.
The Texas Observer  |  Royal Masset  |  02-26-2008  |  Commentary

Standing for Changenew

I don't want to keep playing on the same electoral map where Democrats write off states like Texas, and presidential candidates compete here in the primaries but are nowhere to be found in November.
The Texas Observer  |  Barack Obama  |  02-26-2008  |  Commentary

What Texas Means to Menew

My first job in politics was in Texas, and it remains one of the best I've ever had.
The Texas Observer  |  Hillary Clinton  |  02-26-2008  |  Commentary

Election '08: Why (and How) Texas Will Matter in Marchnew

The Obama and Clinton campaigns, volunteers, and voters are dusting off the rulebooks and learning, or relearning, the peculiar ins and outs of how Texas selects Democratic presidential candidates.
The Texas Observer  |  Forrest Wilder and Dave Mann  |  02-26-2008  |  Politics

Will Texas Latinos Stand Up and Be Counted?new

Both the Clinton and Obama campaigns are convinced that the Latino vote will be the key to Texas.
The Texas Observer  |  Dave Mann  |  02-26-2008  |  Politics

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