Mon April 29, 2013 3:00 pm By Paul Burka

Today is the pivotal moment of the session—a vote on HB 11, the funding bill for the water plan. The vote was preceded this afternoon by a meeting of the House Republican caucus, at which Rick Perry was in attendance. Afterward, he told reporters that the prudent thing to do was to use to the Rainy Day Fund to pay for the water plan. The bill, he said, "was far from perfect, but this is one way to address the most important problem facing our state."

I am told that at this point, the Republicans have around 80 votes—not enough to pass the bill on third reading because using money from the RDF requires a vote of 2/3s of the members present (second reading requires only a simple majority). This is also the last point in the session when the Democrats will have any leverage. The moment the gavel falls to certify the final passage of HB 11, the Democrats will lose whatever power they have.

Sylvester Turner has been in heavy negotiations with Republicans. One plan he was supporting was to go with a 2 + 2 + 2 bill: $2 billion each for water, transportation, and education. But Republicans have pushed forward with water alone right now. In the meantime, Jim Pitts is concerned about a "nuclear bomb"—that is, attempts by Republicans to fund the water plan with general revenue, which would implode not only HB 11 but the budget. This is not an R vs. D issue; Democrats care about water too. But remember that all of this is occurring while the budget is in conference committee. As Pitts said, "If we pass HB 11 today [using GR], then you had better bring your scissors tomorrow."

AP Photo | Tony Gutierrez

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Fri April 26, 2013 10:37 am By Paul Burka

The opening of the George W. Bush Presidential Center went smoothly, complete with blue skies and warm feelings. There were a few protestors with signs on the SMU campus, but they were stationed a long distance from the area occupied by the presidents--and out of their sight. The best description I can give for the proceedings was "sweet." W. is not a man who hides his emotions, and his eyes glistened during the speeches. He choked up as he finished his own remarks, and he was particularly moved by the presence of his parents, noting that this was the first time the parents of a president have been present for the dedication of their offspring's presidential library. Laura's appearance was greeted by a huge ovation; for the former First Family, Dallas is most certainly home.

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Thu April 25, 2013 12:20 am By Paul Burka


The George W. Bush Presidential Center will be dedicated today on the campus of Southern Methodist University, in Dallas. As is the custom with such events, the current president, along with every living former president, will be on hand, and I am pleased to be there to witness it. But inevitably it will be a bittersweet ceremony, because the memories of the Bush presidency are still fresh, and unfortunately there is not a lot to celebrate. They were difficult years, but also consequential ones. We need to look back no farther than the bombing at the Boston Marathon to recognize that we are still living in that era.

Bush was an extremely popular governor, and as someone who thought he was a very good one, I never expected that his presidency would take the turn that it did. He started his political career as "a uniter, not a divider," and to my dismay, ended it as one of the most divisive presidents in American history. By the halfway point of his presidency, 2004, the person I knew as Governor Bush had morphed into President Bush, a politician whom I did not recognize. It was sad, but self-inflicted.

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Wed April 24, 2013 8:00 am By Paul Burka

Gov. Rick Perry said Monday that spending more state money on inspections would not have prevented the deadly explosion at the West Fertilizer Co. plant that was last investigated by Texas environmental regulators in 2006. Excuse me for asking, but ... how would Perry know? You can't prove a negative.

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Mon April 22, 2013 8:31 am By Paul Burka

Has anyone else noticed how innocuous the daily House calendars have been? General State is short and filled with bills of little consequence; debate proceeds at a snail's pace, maybe six bills covered in a day. Major State is primarily for Sunset bills.

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