Texas
Primary results 2022: Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Texas runoff and Minnesota special election primary results
Incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia is projected to survive a major problem by former Sen. David Perdue, who obtained former President Donald Trump’s greatest endorsement and probably the most monetary assist he is given to any candidate up to now.
Trump-backed candidates seemed to be foundering Tuesday night time in Georgia , though his most popular Senate candidate, Herschel Walker, is projected to win the Republican nomination. However CBS Information projected Legal professional Normal Chris Carr survived the problem from the Trump-backed John Gordon.
And CBS Information projected Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, whom Trump requested in January 2021 to “discover” sufficient votes to overturn the outcomes, will win the Republican nomination over his challenger, Trump-backed U.S. Rep. Jody Hice. He was one of many Home Republicans who challenged the election ends in Pennsylvania and Arizona on Jan. 6, 2021.
“My considering was the overwhelming majority of Georgians are in search of trustworthy individuals for elected workplace. Somebody who would do their job, comply with the legislation, look out for them — whatever the private price to take action,” Raffensperger mentioned. “Standing for you, standing for the rule of legislation and election integrity, and standing for the reality — and never buckling beneath the stress is what individuals need. I used to be elected to serve the individuals and so I shall. And so I’ve.”
Trump had focused Georgia Republicans for not overturning the 2020 election outcomes.
Kemp, in the meantime, will tackle Democrat Stacey Abrams, whom he defeated in 2018.
“I’m absolutely supporting Brian Kemp in his run to beat Stacey Abrams,” Perdue informed supporters in his concession speech. “We’ll do every little thing we are able to to make rattling certain Stacey Abrams does not take over this state.”
With out mentioning Kemp’s victory, Trump referred to as into Walker’s victory occasion, touting his “nice numbers.” Walker famous “the massive sport is in November,” when he faces incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock.
In one of many closely-watched Home primaries, CBS Information projected Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene will win the Republican nomination in Georgia’s conservative 14th District, simply defeating quite a few challengers.
In her victory remarks, Greene issued a stark warning to institution Republicans and “globalist elites.” “Sending me again to Washington will ship a message to the blood-sucking institution. It’s we who will set the political agenda for the subsequent decade, and never them,” she mentioned.
In Georgia’s main Democratic major, two incumbents confronted off within the new seventh District. CBS Information projected Rep. Lucy McBath, who was redistricted out of Georgia’s sixth District, will defeat Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, who represented Georgia’s seventh District.
Alabama and Arkansas are additionally holding primaries Tuesday. Trump has made his preferences identified within the Senate race for the open seat in Alabama twice. He first backed longtime loyalist Mo Brooks, however later modified his thoughts and dropped his endorsement in March, when Brooks was struggling within the polls. After Trump pulled his endorsement, Brooks, who was one of many members of Congress who objected to election outcomes, mentioned the previous president “requested me to rescind the 2020 elections.”
However regardless of dropping Trump’s endorsement, CBS Information projected Brooks and Katie Britt, present Sen. Richard Shelby’s former chief of workers, would advance to a runoff.
In Arkansas, CBS Information projected Trump’s former White Home press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, received the gubernatorial major, after main the pack in fundraising and polling. Her father, Mike Huckabee, was Arkansas governor from 1996 till 2007.
A number of essential runoffs are taking place in Texas, which handled a taking pictures Tuesday close to San Antonio. In Texas’ twenty eighth District, incumbent Rep. Henry Cuellar faces Jessica Cisneros after Cuellar didn’t web 50% of the vote within the March 1 major. As of late Tuesday, fewer than 200 votes separated the 2.
CBS Information projected Texas Legal professional Normal Ken Paxton will win the Republican nomination, simply defeating Land Commissioner George P. Bush. Whereas Paxton is mired in lots of scandals, Bush — the son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, nephew of former President George W. Bush and grandson of former President George H.W. Bush — could not overcome his household title.
In line with an April ballot by the Texas Hispanic Coverage Basis, 40% of Republican major voters mentioned they might by no means vote for Bush. Two-thirds of these voters mentioned that is as a result of he’s a member of the Bush household. Forty-one % mentioned they would not vote for Bush as a result of he isn’t conservative sufficient.
Bush tweeted a concession and referred to as consideration to Tuesday’s taking pictures in Uvalde, Texas, which left at the least 19 kids and two adults lifeless.
“However after the tragic occasions of earlier in the present day, it is vital to maintain life’s non permanent disappointments in perspective,” Bush mentioned. “There are grieving mother and father in South Texas in the present day. My household and I are grieving with them.”
Bo Erickson contributed to this story.
Texas
Texas Democrats say they won't back down from school choice fight | Texas: The Issue Is
When the Texas Legislature gavels in a new session this January, we will see another round in the battle over school vouchers.
Earlier this month, Texas Governor Greg Abbott held a news conference claiming victory on the issue. Abbott says he has the votes to pass vouchers, which has become one of his legislative priorities.
Abbott actively campaigned against rural Republicans who opposed his school voucher plan in the previous legislative session.
“There was a tidal wave of support for those House candidates that I supported,” the governor said. “We will ensure that every parent has the right to choose the school that is best for their child.”
Gov. Abbott says he has 79 solid votes for school vouchers. A bill needs 76 votes to pass the Texas House.
Voucher opponents, like State Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin, are not giving up the fight.
State Rep. James Talarico
Talarico talked with FOX 7’s Rudy Koski about the upcoming debate and if compromise on the issue is possible.
State Rep. James Talarico: “I think the fight to save public education will be the number one issue in the next legislative session. A majority of the counties in the State of Texas don’t have a single private school in them and the cost of the voucher doesn’t even cover the full cost of tuition at most private schools in Texas, so working class families, like the ones in my district, or my former students on the west side of San Antonio, they can’t take advantage of this voucher scam, and so instead the vast majority of the money will end up going to wealthy families who are already sending their kids to private school.”
Rudy Koski: “The governor has spent the last several months doing what some would describe as a revenge tour, going after rural Republicans who were part of this pro-education, bipartisan blocking coalition. They are gone. You have lost them. He says he has the numbers. Are you throwing up the white flag?”
Rep. Talarico: “Not at all. We didn’t lose all of them, despite the onslaught of big money and big lies into these Republican districts you still had pro-public education Republican legislators survive and are coming back to the Capitol this session. I’m thinking about Drew Darby and Stan Lambert and Gary VanDeever, despite the victories that the governor may have scored in this election cycle, this should not be mistaken for a mandate on private school voucher scams. The governor didn’t campaign on vouchers. The majority of Texans, according to the latest polling, reject private school voucher scams.”
Rudy Koski: “Is there ground for compromise in this debate?”
Rep. Talarico: “I think a voucher is bad public policy no matter how you cut it. I will never support a voucher scam, but if my colleagues in the House, Republicans and Democrats, if we can all agree that we need to fully fund our neighborhood public schools, then I will work with anyone to make that a reality.”
You can watch Texas: The Issue Is every Sunday night on TV and anytime on FOX LOCAL.
Texas
North Texas enjoys warm, windy weather for Parade of Lights
Strong winds and humid conditions will make for an unusually warm Sunday in North Texas.
High temperatures are expected to reach 80 degrees in some areas, which is about 15 degrees above normal for this time of year. This warm weather will make for a balmy atmosphere for the Parade of Lights in downtown Fort Worth tonight, starting at 6 p.m.
However, the warm stretch won’t last. A cold front is expected to hit Monday morning.
Morning temperatures on Monday will start near what is typically a daytime high, similar to today. But as the cold front moves in, gusty winds from the north will cause temperatures to drop to the upper 50s by late afternoon – the first of two cold fronts expected this week.
So far, November has been remarkably warm, currently ranking as the fifth warmest on record from 1899 to the present. However, it won’t end that way.
The cold front arriving on Thanksgiving will drop temperatures down enough to require winter coats.
North Texas is anticipating a widespread freeze by Friday morning, with the Dallas-Fort Worth area forecasted to stay just above freezing during what is expected to be the coldest morning of the season. A First Alert Weather Day has been issued in preparation for the cold weather.
Texas
A&M-Texas rivalry is back where it belongs
My Aggie loyalty started in high school, when my future alma mater mailed a poster of Bonfire to a ZIP code at the very top of Texas. That was about all the recruiting I received from Aggieland, but it was enough. That poster hung on my wall (between Michael Jordan and a Porsche) and I memorized the only words on it:
Some may boast of prowess bold,
of the school they think so grand.
But there’s a spirit can ne’er be told.
It’s the Spirit of Aggieland.
My enrollment at what was then the third-largest university in the nation was a sea change for me, and a culture shock. It’s when I stitched the High Plains together with the rest of Texas and started to get perspective about the history, personalities and traditions that shape our state. One of those traditions will be renewed Saturday when maroon and burnt orange take the field together, for the first time in 13 years, below the roar of the 12th Man.
This rivalry started in 1894, and was renewed 97 consecutive times from 1915 to 2011. Altogether, the game has been played 118 times. It used to unite the state, and it used to divide families. In recent years, jokes about tension over Thanksgiving dinner because of the A&M-UT game have been replaced by dread of Thanksgiving dinner over political talk. With the election behind us, it’ll be good for Texans to get back to the old ways.
This rivalry has created our state’s own version of mixed marriages. Kevin Scheible, one of my closest friends from college, married a member of the Longhorn Band. Kevin and Sharon live in San Antonio now. They’ve somehow made it work, though it’s an arrangement I would counsel most young lovers to avoid.
A dozen years ago, right around the time the rivalry was being suspended, my Aggie wife and I found ourselves in a Bible study group that was evenly split between Aggies and Longhorns. It included two mixed marriages. Those people are still some of our closest friends. Only the supernatural bonds of the Holy Spirit could have kept us from cracking in half. That, plus we don’t watch the game together.
College football has changed enormously since this game was played last, let alone since it was played first. The crowds are larger. The record size of the 12th Man is 110,663; this game will almost certainly surpass that.
The payouts are bigger too. The era of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) sponsorships has created a breed that would have been unthinkable in 1894: millionaire college athletes.
Two of the 10 highest paid college athletes in the nation are Longhorn quarterbacks Quinn Ewers and Arch Manning, according to Yahoo! Sports.
In the new Aggie tradition of paying football personalities not to contribute, benched quarterback Conner Weigman will earn his $628,000 NIL valuation from the sideline.
But at least the venue will be simple. The Aggies play at Kyle Field, the state’s largest stadium, named after Texas A&M horticulture professor E.J. Kyle, who created the school’s football field in 1904.
In contrast, the name of the Longhorns’ haunt is something like Campbell-Williams Field at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium presented by Bud Light in association with Hemp-It-Up-America Political Action Committee.
Both schools have storied programs. The Longhorns have Darrell Royal, Earl Campbell, Ricky Williams and four national championships if you include the one in 1970 when they lost to Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl but United Press International writers awarded them the title anyway because the media loves them. Some things never change.
The Aggies have Bear Bryant, Gene Stallings and Jackie Sherrill (for the purposes of this column, please forget the state of Alabama exists), as well as Heisman Trophy winners John David Crow and Johnny Football Manziel. When I was a student, Aggies claimed just one national championship, back in 1939. But then other schools started putting such achievements in big letters on their stadiums and we demanded a recount. Now, Aggies include the undefeated seasons in 1919 and 1927 under Coach D.X. Bible who later coached at, you guessed it, UT.
The rivalry has included its share of pranks. The official story (and by “official” I mean made up by Aggies) of how UT mascot Bevo got its name is that a group of Aggie students snuck over to Austin one night, long ago, after the horns had lost to A&M 13-0, and branded the cow with the score. In a mascot cover-up, UT students converted the 13 to a B, the – to an E and added a V before the 0 to create the name.
It is true that A&M beat UT 13-0 in 1915, and it’s true that some Aggies branded the mascot. But the brand-conversion part remains unconfirmed and Longhorns refuse to admit the obvious: that this is a terrific story that should live long in Texas lore.
For all the differences between these schools, there is still more that unites us than divides us, as it’s popular to say these days. Both institutions are doing important work in research and molding the next generation of Texas leaders. Aggies and Longhorns love their state. We love our schools. And we would love to see our rivals lose. Both school’s songs mention the other.
That poster on my bedroom wall would be as close as I would come to the real Bonfire until I stood on Duncan Drill Field watching it burn in the fall of 1991. My unit in the Corps of Cadets was known for building Bonfire. We had spent thousands of man hours in exhausting manual labor kindling Bonfire’s purpose: the burning desire to beat the hell outta UT.
I remember watching the news just a few years later, heartbroken by the loss of 12 Aggies who were making their own Bonfire memories when tragedy struck. Aggies everywhere remembered them this week.
Longhorns did too. I’ll never forget how Austin dropped the rivalry taunts and stood shoulder-to-shoulder with grieving Aggies in the wake of that tragedy. UT showed its class that year. The school canceled its Hex Rally, the ritual that traditionally preceded the game. The UT Tower went dark and the Aggie War Hymn was played there — the one that derides the “orange and the white.” It’s the only time in UT history that has happened, I’m told. At the game, the Longhorn Band played Taps, a fitting salute at a school with military roots.
Longhorn coach Mack Brown offered to postpone the game and he said he has shed tears over the loss of those 12 Aggies. His staff organized a blood drive. Brown was a great coach whose players would have run through a wall for him. In November 1999, I think a lot of Aggies would have too.
Two weeks ago, Mrs. Aggie and I attended a gathering sponsored by the Coppell Aggie Moms Club where we got to meet the Texana artist Benjamin Knox. Knox was in the Aggie Cadet Corps just a few years before I was. He went on to paint the school spirit at several Texas institutions, including commissions by the State of Texas, and the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum.
Knox showed us a new painting he created to mark the revival of this Texas Thanksgiving tradition. And because I accosted him after the meeting, he agreed to let The Dallas Morning News reproduce it here.
From a folded poster hung with thumbtacks to a work of art by one of Texas’ great painters, this rivalry has produced a lot of memorable images. If the Aggies don’t run out of time, I look forward to treasuring the image of the Kyle Field scoreboard Saturday, and sharing it with a few of my Longhorn friends.
Editor’s note: Over Sanders’ loud objections, this column was edited for a variety of blatant biases and subtle but consistent grammatical slights (such as the use of “tu”) that did not meet our editorial standards.
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