Texas
Texas increases migrant buses to Chicago, city says 63 have arrived so far this week
Thursday, October 12, 2023 4:09PM
CHICAGO (WLS) — Every inch of the sidewalk in front of the 18th Police District headquarters is wall-to-wall tents, all used for sheltering migrants. There is so little room left that Adriana Colina and her family were forced to find space under a tree across the street.
Colina has just arrived in Chicago with her three sons, all of whom are under the age of seven.
“I didn’t think there so much population here at the police station, I thought it would be very different, I thought everything was going to be very fast with a shelter,” she said.
According to city data, the 18th Police District on at the corner of Larrabee and Division, has close to 300 migrants living there. Overall there are more than 3,000 new arrivals living at police stations throughout the city.
In a virtual briefing to reporters Thursday, the city said the Texas governor has dramatically increased the fleet of buses he is sending to Chicago.
“He plans on sending 20-25 buses a day, just in the past week we’ve had 63 buses,” said Deputy Chief of Staff Christina Pacione-Zayas.
Pacione-Zayas said the administration’s plan to move people out of police stations to yet-to-be-built base camps is imminent, although she would not say where they would be located. Meanwhile, the city is opening a new shelter every six days, but Pacione-Zayas said it’s not nearly enough and the city needs more help from its own.
“We’ve also received quite a bit of pushback and we really need help from community and alders to assist us in being able to help get people of police station floors,” she said.
In September the Johnson administration asked all 50 city council members to identify available land or buildings in their wards as potential shelter sites. Pacione-Zayas said only 25% of the alders have offered anything.
The plan for Mayor Johnson to visit the border is also still underway, though his deputy chief of staff would not say exactly when he will be going.
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Texas
Marcel Reed, Texas A&M Aggies ‘Not Concerned’ After Win over New Mexico State
After Marcel Reed was officially named the Texas A&M Aggies’ starting quarterback for the remainder of the season following a second-half meltdown against South Carolina, the freshman got another chance at a full game with Conner Weigman backing him up.
The result? A blowout victory at home over New Mexico State.
“I think we came out strong,” Reed said following the contest. “We executed where we were supposed to.”
On the evening, Reed finished with 268 yards, a pair of touchdowns, and an interception. Both Weigman and Aggies third-stringer Miles O’Neil got playing time in the second half as Texas A&M used the game to fine-tune some of its game plan.
Ironically, a 35-point margin of victory wasn’t enough to cover the spread, and all things considered, wasn’t as high as it could have been. Reed was the first to acknowledge that.
“I got sloppy in the second quarter,” he said. “I should have thrown that pick out of bounds, but you have to live with it.”
Between finding Moose Muhammad III and handling business enough to keep New Mexico State at bay, Reed played to his strengths — including a few he’s worked on over the past few weeks.
“Being able to read the defense,” Reed said of what he’s improved on. “Being a vocal leader and being able to command the offense.”
As the Aggies look ahead to their two-week conference stretch, Reed will play a big role in their success and will have to continue to step up in order to keep them tied atop the SEC.
What was on display on Saturday, however, wasn’t anything that worried him, or Mike Elko.
That was perhaps the biggest positive.
“No,” Elko said when asked if he was concerned at the win.” You go into this game wanting to handle business. You do what you have to do.”
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Texas
Despite season lows, Texas’ Jahdae Barron affirms teams’ commitment to Quinn Ewers
The Texas Longhorns squeaked out a somewhat uncomfortable win in Fayetteville over the weekend, even if starting quarterback Quinn Ewers threw for a season-low 176 on 20 out of 32 passes, including two touchdowns. And despite the commendable, albeit at times slow, performance on Ewers’ part, the college football hyper online insist on busting his chops.
Luckily, the team stands firmly behind Ewers.
That much was evidence in starting defensive back Jahdae Barron’s recent comments on Ewers.
Texas DB Jahdae Barron said he went into offensive huddle to hug Quinn Ewers after the fourth-down run: “He has a lot of haters, he has a lot of love. But I love that dude all the way to the fullest. That’s a warrior move.”
— Brian Davis (@byBDavis) November 16, 2024
Emphasis on the love part, at least from Ewers’ teammates, it seems.
Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian backed up his quarterback in his post-game comments.
“Thought he played pretty efficiently,” Sarkisian said, according to Sports Illustrated. “They were going to play it in a manner, in a style, where they were going to try to keep the ball in front of them and make us work the ball down the field. … And what a play for him there on the fourth down to kind of seal the game. So I was proud of him for that.”
Texas
Why Texas Latinos voted for Donald Trump | Texas: The Issue Is
Latinos, long considered a foundational component of the Democratic Party’s prospects in the Lone Star State, abandoned the progressive ship in mass during the 2024 election.
Overall, Republicans saw a 28 percent gain among Texas Latinos from 2020 to 2024.
In men, that number was 40 percent.
Republicans hope the staggering shift away from Texas Democrats is permanent.
State Rep. Mano DeAyala, R-Houston, talked with FOX 26’s Greg Groogan about the GOP’s gains.
READ MORE: What went wrong for Democrats on election night? | Texas: The Issue is
Rep. Mano DeAyala: “We’re seeing the voters coming out in droves. For the first time in modern history a Republican president has won the Hispanic vote statewide. That’s amazing.”
Greg Groogan: “That is cataclysmic for the Democrats. It’s landscape changing for Republicans. Is it a one and done? How do you hold that?”
DeAyala: “Well, that’s the concern, is this a one and done? Did the stars align in so many reasons to make this happen? Or is this a progression that we see continuing? I think it’s the latter.”
Groogan: “The Democrats presented a message heavily weighted on abortion rights and failed to defend their policy on the border, failed to defend their policy on transgender issues.”
DeAyala: “It’s this welfare state mentality. It’s this, what am I going to do for you? Not what I can help you do for yourself. It is the, let’s go focus more on those that are here undocumented than the people that are citizens and residents here and the list goes on. All of that resonates. If you have the message and the right message. The truth ultimately prevails, and I think in this election cycle it did.”
Groogan: “Folks would much prefer an environment in which they can thrive and prosper on their own, versus asking for some type of support, aid or handout from the government. Do you agree with that?”
DeAyala: “A vast majority of Texans agree with that. It’s basically when you define American exceptionalism, that’s really what it is. I look in the mirror, I don’t look to the government and that is how I’m going to have my livelihood. The government’s job is to get out of the way and let opportunity abide for us to prosper and succeed. There’s a few, and I called them the kind of the super-educated elite, that feels like they have to play the parent and say I know what’s best for you. Let me let government do this for you. That’s a Band-Aid that’s temporary and usually causes more harm than good.”
READ MORE: 2024 Presidential Election: How Texas voted by county
Groogan: “Our mutual friend Bill King met with some Mexican-American lawmakers from South Texas who felt compelled to remain in the Democratic Party for a while, but said they were tolerated. Their pro-life positions were tolerated within a party that looked down on them because of that. Do you think this opens up an opportunity that [Rep.] Ryan Guillen took?”
DeAyala: “Ryan Guillen didn’t leave his party necessarily, his party left him. And you hear that over and over, you have [Houston State Rep.] Shawn Thierry, who left the Democrat Party and other. What you’re seeing here are are Democrats, especially in South Texas, in the valley, that say, you know what, I align more with the Republican Party, you’re not seeing it the other way around.”
Groogan: “Are Latinos in Texas just tired of waiting?”
DeAyala: “If we as a party do not capitalize on these gains that we had this last cycle, and I don’t mean next election cycle, I mean tomorrow. If we don’t continue to build on that, shame on us.”
You can watch Texas: The Issue Is every Sunday night on TV and anytime on FOX LOCAL.
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