Locals Shine in Lone Star Virus Fight
that Sparks Slacking Like Never Before
“The man or woman or child who will not wear a mask now is
a dangerous slacker.” American Red Cross, October 1918
Texas Congress Republican Suggests Street Violence
Capitol Inside
January 1, 2021
The coronavirus crisis has been a stage for monumental heroics and histrionics in the Lone Star State where the pandemic appears to be reaching a crescendo on the final day of the most incredible year.
The Texas Corona Stars & Slackers is a tribute to those who've done the most to protect the public health and safety from a disease that's killed more than 28,000 people out of almost 1.8 million who tested positive around the state in the past 10 months.
But the project that Capitol Inside is unveiling on New Year's Day is giving due recognition to some of the so-called Texans who were scratched from Santa's list for bad behavior at a time when role models had been desperately needed. These are the sorest of the swollen thumbs - the politicos who sought to milk the contagion for attention and the peddling of agendas they'd been unable to sell when times were good.
These are the folks who've always seemed highly inconvenienced and offended by the thought of sacrifice for the public good. They've reveled in their defiance of government restrictions with their opposition to masks as the signature common thread. They've flouted common sense protocols as affronts to their freedom without regard for the pain and suffering that their selfish stupidity has caused.
The Texas covid all stars have understood the value of a united team effort as the key to true liberty and a full-scale economic recovery. The Texas corona stars were much more pro-life with their words and actions in 2020 than anti-abortion conservatives who worshipped President Donald Trump like a god and played the death toll down. Texas has confirmed what the Spanish Flu taught the country 102 years ago - that pandemics have a way of bringing the dangerous slackers out.
With the virus on a record-crushing tear in new cases in Texas where 12,481 people are spending New Year's Day in the hospital, the worst of the COVID-19 experience here could be a week or two around the corner as 2021 gets under way. Hope glimmers, however, beyond the sick bays and mortuaries with the debut of a vaccine that front-line workers, sick and old people and politicians have been among the first to get.
More than 28,000 people have died with covid infections in Texas during the past 10 months when nearly 1.8 million here tested positive for the disease. Despite a deadly summer as the U.S. epicenter, Texas has been par for the course as a state that accounts for 8.9 percent of the country's population and 8.6 percent of the coronavirus cases that have been recorded here since the virus surfaced here in March. That's nothing to brag about, though, in a state with relatively low population density and residents spread out much more than in other major states.
The coronavirus death and damage tolls would be dramatically higher if the Houston area hadn't proven to be the model for the nation that President Donald Trump incorrectly told Governor Greg Abbott that Texas would be back when both were clueless at a White House meeting in May.
Houston was the most vulnerable Texas location at the outset of the pandemic as the nation's fourth largest metropolitan area that features a port where tourists brought the first known covid cases here back home on cruise ships from China. But the Austin area is the only Texas metro that's had a fewer number of infections and fatalities per capita than Houston and Harris County.
Forget about all the political spin you've been hearing lately about Democrats defunding the police in cities that are controlled by Democrats. While Houston erupted into one of the nation's hottest spots during the summer, there have been no safer places in Texas with Austin's lone exception than the state's largest city during the fall and winter wave that's terrorized the entire state.
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner deserve a massive amount of the credit for the way the gargantuan area they lead has kept the virus under control and minimizing the suffering compared to other major Texas locations during the worst public health emergency since the Spanish Flu rampage in 1918.
Turner and Hidalgo are the runaway choice for co-Most Valuable Player in Capitol Inside's first and last Texas Corona Stars & Slackers list that we are unveiling here tonight.
A Colombia native who moved to Houston from Mexico City as a teenager, Hidalgo is a first-term Democrat who ousted a popular Republican opponent in 2018 amid comparisons to maverick U.S. Rep. Alexandria Oscasio-Cortez of New York. Hidalgo won't turn 30 until February. But she has performed like a seasoned veteran during a crisis that was more than the Republican governor could handle while trying to stay on the good side of donors and a president who ran like a frightened bully from the biggest fight of his life.
As a young Latina in her first term on the job, Hidalgo was an easy target for mega-macho white Republicans like Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick and U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Houston. The Texas Senate president who's the Trump state campaign chair screamed tyranny when Hidalgo imposed a mask order in the midst of the initial outbreak in April when Abbott was fiddling back in Austin.
But Hidalgo rose above the rhetoric - using intelligence, science and a caring heart as her guides without being lured into the mud by the Republicans who said she didn't have what it would take to be a prime time leader. While Trump did everything in his power to divide the nation at a time when it desperately needed to rally around the flag, Hidalgo did an amazing job of uniting the community in the face of unfathomable adversity.
The Harris County judge had some serious help - however - with Turner as her partner in the local response. A Houston native who served more than two dozen years in the Texas House, Turner saved countless lives in their mutual home base when he cancelled the GOP state convention when party officials didn't have the courage or good sense to do so themselves.
The GOP has a monopoly on the six-pack of slackers known here as the Texas Freedom Crashers Caucus. That will come as no surprise to anyone here. The Republicans after all haven't had a year this bad since the Great Depression. But GOP leaders like Abbott found it all but impossible to lead without a hint of help at the federal level with Trump backing down from the virus until his ouster by Democratic President-elect Joe Biden at the polls in November.
The Texas covid all-star team - in sharp contrast - is a bipartisan group that contains local elected leaders exclusively including a handful of Democrats in Austin Mayor Steve Adler, Fort Bend County Judge KP George, Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff, Hidalgo and Turner.
The lone Republican on the honor roll is Moore County Judge Rowdy Rhoades - a former sheriff who issued a mask order the day before Hidalgo when the area that he represents in the Panhandle had been the original Texas hot spot as a consequence of an outbreak at a meat packing plant there.
Texas had the benefit of a heads up from New York and California in the early going in terms of the hospital horror show potential and how to go about trying to prevent such a nightmare in advance. But Texas delivered a mediocre performance nonetheless at best with Abbott attempting an impossible juggling act with the public health, the economy and keeping President Donald Trump out of his hair as the guiding priorities.
Whenever Abbott did the right thing after seizing sole control of the state response, he always seemed to be acting a few weeks too late and cleaning up his own mess. The statewide mask mandate is the most critical example of the governor's better-late-than-never approach to crisis management. Abbott and the state are waving the white flag now amid visions of vaccinations as the pandemic panacea.
Abbott probably did about as well as anyone should expect from a Republican in a big southern state in the scary shadow of a president obsessed with power and revenge.
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Dan Patrick
Lieutenant Governor
Trump Texas chair relegated to Fox News expert who undermined state fight with misinformation, pitched seniors as sacrifice for good times, trashed Fauci and flouted protocols before historic publicity stunt with $1 million voter fraud bounty fund that's in debt now to Democrats. |
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Louie Gohmert
GOP U.S. Representative
Liberty was an excuse for laziness with East Texan who complained about masks, blamed one for catching covid, prompted Pelosi rules tightening and put colleagues, staff and countless others in danger with angry face exposed before no-shot lawsuit to overturn democracy. |
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Allen West
Texas GOP Chairman
Texas newcomer who seized on state convention chaos to score the job that he's redefined as staging ground for attacks on governor's covid orders and new House speaker he refuses to recognize amid secession denial, Davy Crockett chats and visions of suburban anarchists. |
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James Dickey
Ex-Texas GOP Chairman
Old party chair that the new one unseated was classic nuts and bolts yes man who promised to make the state convention a model for Trump's own coronation before pre-event meetings without promised protocols before local Democratic leaders in Houston shut the circus down. |
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Briscoe Cain
GOP State Representative
Tea party renegade turned team player made a pitch for anarchy from the right with call for open defiance of emergency health laws before lawyer roles in Shelley Luther and state convention court fiascos and ride to Trump rescue as crack legal team mercenary in bid to reverse the vote. |
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Tony Tinderholt
GOP State Representative
Tea party legislator used near death experience to suggest masks didn't work for him and his family who he claimed had worn them religiously even though he'd been seen at events without a covering over his face while ripping the governor's minimal attempts to protect the public health. |
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