Archive for May, 2009

Sotomayor
May 31, 2009Geez, I go on vacation for once in my life and everything in the world happens.
I want to briefly talk about Sonia Sotomayor.
As a Hispanic girl, I think it’s awesome that we are finally breaking the barriers whether it is in Congress, in movies, in music or in the judicial system…but, too quickly we rally our support behind ANY fellow Hispanic, merely because they share in our background, our struggle and our story.
I don’t want the debate on Sotomayor to focus on her background, her empathy or her story. Her comments and her record prove that she has poor judgment when it comes to her rulings and she is a judicial activist. That is all.

ACTION ALERT: Concealed Carry on Campus
May 20, 2009From the Young Conservatives of Texas and Students for Concealed Carry on Campus:
The concealed carry on campus bill, SB1164 has officially passed the Senate! The vote to suspend the rules was a whopping 30-0. The official vote ended up being 20-10.
It’s because of student support that the bill made it through the Senate, but now Texas students have a bigger task ahead of them – pushing the bill through the TX House. It hasn’t been a very conservative environment in the House this session, making your hard work even more important.We need you all to call the House Public Safety Committee members and urge them to vote SB1164 out of committee. Next, call Calendar members and ask them to set the bill on the calendar quickly.House Public SafetyChair: Rep. Tommy Merritt 512 463-0750 Joint AuthorVice Chair: Rep. Stephen Frost 512 463-0692 Co-authorMembers:Rep. Lon Burnam 512 463-0740Rep. Joe Driver 512 463-0574 AuthorRep. Phil King 512 463-0738 Co-authorRep. Tryon D. Lewis 512 463-0546Rep. Barbara Mallory Caraway 512 463-0664Rep. Eddie Rodriguez 512 463-0674Rep. Hubert Vo 512 463-0568House Calendars CommitteeBrian McCall (chair) 512 463 0758 This is his Calendar’s office- Call THIS number!
Eddie Lucio III 512 463 0606
Norma Chavez 512 463 0622
Garnet Coleman 512 463 0524
Byron Cook 512 463 0730
Brandon Creighton 512 463 0726
Charlie Geren 512 463 0610
Jim Keffer 512 463 0656
Lois Kolkhorse 512 463 0600
Edmund Kuempel 512 463 0602
Jim McReynolds 512 463 0490
Allan Ritter 512 463 0706
Burt Solomons 512 463 0478Remind these members that this bill has passed the Senate and has a majority of the House as sponsors, therefore, they would do an injustice to their constituents if they did not at least give the bill a vote on the House floor.Thanks for all of your help so far. Let’s keep up the momentum.

Make Education Dollars Count
May 20, 2009Check out this week’s column with the American Issues Project.
Taxpayers can hold their school districts accountable for spending by advocating measures to force schools to post their check registers online. Taxpayers deserve to see how and where their hard earned money is being spent. Yet taxpayers are often afraid of school retaliation against their children.

Concealed Carry on Campus Still Alive in the Senate
May 18, 2009Better call your legislators NOW! Check out my new story in the Texas Insider:
The cutoff for bills in the Texas House left many upset about how the 81st Legislature is turning out. One measure, HB 1893, authored by Representative Joe Driver (R-Garland) would allow concealed carry license holders to carry on colleges and universities in Texas.
“We have a lot of important legislation and this would have been a big distraction,” said Rep. Joe Heflin (D-Crosbyton), who has a concealed carry license, in an interview with the Lubbock Online, commenting on HB 1893 not going up for a house vote.
“It’s disturbing that a Texas legislator finds the safety of individuals on college campuses as a distraction. This mentality is what we have faced from day one. This emotional ploy by opposition is used as a fear mongering technique aimed at individuals who fail to interpret the facts and statistics supporting concealed carry and the benefits it has. The handful of legislators in the House who caused HB1893 to die did an injustice to their constituents and fellow Texans,” said Katie Kasprzak, spokesman for the Students for Concealed Carry on Campus.
The Texas House has taken the time to debate various important matters such as restricting political free speech with the Texas version of McCain-Feingold Legislation (HB 2511), the “pork choppers” bill to hunt feral hogs from helicopters and even legislation that protects journalists from revealing confidential sources.
“I am not comfortable knowing that I have no means to protect myself if I am attacked,” wrote Jackie Ackner, a Daily Texan Guest Columnist in April of 2009.
Gun rights are respected in Texas and the state is home to gun friendly legislation, despite this, HB 1893 did not go up for a vote.
“With the majority of the House signed on as joint authors and co authors, a vote should not have even been questioned. This bill was not voted on because the select few, who coincidentally were able to make decisions in jeopardy of the bill, knew it would pass,” concluded Kasprzak.
Senate Bill 1164, authored by Senator Jeff Wentworth (R-San Antonio), will be on the Intent Calendar Monday, May 18, 2009.
“We still have a chance in Senate to pass CHL on campus,” announced State Senator Dan Patrick (R-Houston) at 2:57AM on May 16, 2009 via his Twitter page.

New Column
May 14, 2009Hot off the Texas Insider:
In January of 2008, at the University of Texas Pan American (UTPA) in Edinburg, a 22-year-old UTPA student was walking across campus to his vehicle when he was suddenly robbed and stabbed by an assailant. In March of 2009, just across the street from the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) a tow truck driver was shot and killed.
This year alone at the University of Texas at Austin (UT), there have been 4 assaults on campus. These types of incidents happen across the country at different campuses and in many states.Under current state law, students on campus must resort to carrying flashlights, walking in groups at night and carrying pepper spray. These ideas are good, but students’ odds are dramatically shifted to favor criminals.
Campus police do a great job keeping students safe but there is no guarantee that they can respond in time to prevent a tragedy, as was shown at Virginia Tech University.
HB 1893 by State Representative Joe Driver, and SB 1164 by State Senator Jeff Wentworth, would allow concealed handgun license holders to carry on campus. Both bills have seen bipartisan support in both chambers, but many university administrators have been strongly outspoken against the measure.
“I don’t think it’s a very effective solution to the challenges we’ve had,” said Shirley Reed, South Texas College (STC) President in an interview with The Monitor.
Unlike the aforementioned universities, South Texas College has no police force. In 1998, a shooting occurred on campus which resulted in the injuries of one STC security guard and three students.
“Gun-free zones are magnets for killers bent on maximizing their body count. They know that they face far less risk of quickly being stopped there. There are numerous cases in which private firearm owners have disarmed or disabled those attempting to murder indiscriminately in public places,” wrote Theodore Day, Professor of Finance, Stan Liebowitz, Ashbel Smith Professor of Economics from the University of Texas at Dallas and Craig Pirrong, Finance Professor at the University of Houston in a letter printed by the Dallas Morning News.
A 1995 study conducted by the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology at the Northwestern University School of Law concluded that “in a ten state sample of incarcerated felons interviewed in 1982, 34% reported having been ‘scared off, shot at, wounded or captured by an armed victim.’”
Disarming a concealed handgun license holder unfairly tilts the odds against the innocent bystanders, the law abiding citizens and the defenseless students going about their daily business on campus. The assumption that allowing concealed handgun license holders to carry on campus will lead to more violence is just as unfounded as the assumption that more pencils will cause longer essays on exam day.
“Since the Utah Supreme Court ruling in the fall semester of 2006, state law has allowed licensed individuals to carry concealed handguns on the campuses of all nine public colleges in Utah. Concealed carry has been allowed at Colorado State University (Fort Collins, CO) since 2003 and at Blue Ridge Community College (Weyers Cave, VA) since 1995.
After allowing concealed carry on campus for a combined total of more than eighty semesters, none of these eleven schools have seen a single resulting incident of gun violence (including suicides), a single gun accident, or a single gun theft,” according to the national organization Students for Concealed Carry on Campus.

Bob McDonnell’s New Ad
May 11, 2009Ch-ch-check it out:
Don’t forget to visit Bob’s website.
Bob McDonnell. Character. Experience. A husband. A father. Principles molded growing up in a middle class suburban neighborhood. A Lieutenant Colonel with 21 years in the Army and Reserves. A business manager for a health care company. As Attorney General, Bob McDonnell’s bipartisan actions against internet sexual predators drew national acclaim. Bob McDonnell. Character. Experience. Ready to be a jobs Governor.

TX Folks – Call Your Legislators
May 10, 2009It’s the moment we’ve been waiting for.
HB 1893
Relating to the carrying of concealed handguns on the campuses of institutions of higher education.
5/11/2009 H Placed on General State Calendar
View all actionsHCR 50
Affirming that the State of Texas claims sovereignty under the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States over all powers not otherwise enumerated and granted to the federal government by the U.S. Constitution, serving notice to the federal government to cease and desist certain mandates, and providing that certain federal legislation be prohibited or repealed.
5/11/2009 H Placed on Resolutions Calendar
So here’s where you come in. Get out your phones and start your emails. Contact your legislator and tell them to support HB 1893 and HCR 50.
If you’re not sure how to get a hold of them just follow this link. You can also contact your local YCT chapter to help you get your voice heard.

McAllen Unofficial Election Results
May 10, 2009Votes will be official when they are canvassed on Weds, May 13th.
Via McAllen:
Mayoral Race:
Cortina: 172
Armin Narro: 79
Richard F. Cortez: 2518
Snelling: 265
Commissioners Race:
District 1:
Scott C. Crane: 438
District 2:
Marcus C. Barrera: 323
District 3:
Hilda Salinas: 129
McAllen Public Utility Board
Place One:
Charles Amos: 1517
David O. Salinas: 1412
Place Four:
Roger Garza: 2345

Action Alert! Smoking Ban Voted Out of Committee
May 9, 2009Melt the phones!!
From the Young Conservatives of Texas:
Bad news! The House Committee on State Affairs has passed out House Bill 5, the ban on smoking in all workplaces. Considering that Calendars Committee Chairman Brian McCall is a joint author of the bill, it is virtually guaranteed to be placed on the House Calendar for a vote this week.
While it is true that the version passed by State Affairs is “watered down,” this means absolutely nothing. HB 5 author Myra Crownover has stated that the changes, which eliminated bars and counties with 115,000 or fewer residents “are not acceptable, but {they’re} a vehicle to get this through. The authors in the house fully intend to place the original language back into the bill, either on the house floor or during the conference committee.
This is why it is important that conservatives and other liberty minded folks contact the Senate Committee on Health and Human Services. The Senate version of the bill, SB 544, is currently held-up in that committee. It is important that we contact the Health and Human Services Committee members and urge them not to pass-on the bill to the Senate floor.
Here is a link to the Senate Health and Human Services Committee. http://www.senate.state.tx.us/75r/senate/commit/c610/c610.htm
Please contact the members offices and urge them to vote “NO” on sending the legislation to the full Senate for a vote.

