
Current lead 5.0 games over the Rangers
Magic Numbers:
31 to clinch AL West
30 to clinch Wildcard Playoff spot

Current lead 5.0 games over the Rangers
Magic Numbers:
31 to clinch AL West
30 to clinch Wildcard Playoff spot
Yesterday on his rant that passes for a radio program, Michael Berry was on a tear about Bill Clinton desperately wanting to cement his legacy in a way that Franklin Roosevelt was unable to in failing to get his “socialist hag” of a wife elected president. MB went on to claim that Bill Clinton was “run out of the White House.”
Guess Red missed that part where Bill was “run out of the White House.” Last Red remembers ol’ Bill got elected to two terms, served them both, fended off a BS impeachment by the House, left the country with a budget surplus, and exited with an approval rating hovering around 65%. Run out indeed! Herbert Hoover was run out of the White House. Richard Nixon was run out of the White House. Gerald Ford was run out of the White House. Jimmy Carter was run out of the White House. Bill Clinton was not. I guess MB thinks his audience is so stupid they will believe anything he says.
The Lone Star Project provides you with the following Ken Paxton Corruption Quiz, so Red doesn’t have to. How shameful is it that we have an Attorney General that allows for this kind of humor? You decide.

KWTX has the sad story of a Salado man who drowned while trying to retrieve a golf ball from a water hazard.
Police identified the man Friday afternoon as Johnny Watson, 74. His body was found at around 9 a.m. Friday in the pond on the fifth hole of the Mill Creek Golf Course in Salado.
“We received a call about a man who slipped into the water trying to retrieve a golf ball and drowned trying to get out,” police Chief Jack Hensley said Friday afternoon.
“He didn’t know how to swim,” Hensley said. Watson was in the water for about 10 minutes, Hensley said. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
This is why Red buys the X-outs on Ebay. Count no man happy . . .

From the Annals of Texas Presidents – In 1908, Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) was born at his family’s home near Stonewall. He was the first truly Texas son to become President. Dwight Eisenhower was born in Denison but otherwise had little connection to the state. LBJ rose to power representing Texas in the House of Representative and Senate. But, he probably never would have become President but for the assassination of John F. Kennedy in Dallas in 1963. LBJ’s legacy of tremendous accomplishment in civil rights and attempts to eliminate poverty were overwhelmed by the Vietnam War.

Magic Numbers:
31 to clinch AL West
30 to clinch Wildcard Playoff spot
Note: Red will spice up the Astros Magic Number Update with some classic Astros’ Baseball cards.
Land Commissioner and Bush family scion George P. is living up to his family legacy of being water boys for powerful corporate interests by leading a push to make it more difficult to add species to the national Endangered Species List. And in doing so – George P. attacks the most endangered species in Texas – the trial lawyer. Thanks largely to Uncle George W.’s demagoguery and kowtowing to the insurance and medical lobby, the rights of Texas citizens to a fair trial have never been in more danger. So George P. jumps on the bandwagon in paying obeisance to his corporate masters by attacking lawyers and sucking up to the Tea Party base. The Texas Tribune has the full story.
The son of GOP presidential hopeful and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is leading an alliance of 23 state land commissioners in a charge against the Endangered Species Act, calling for more transparency on how animals are added to the federal endangered list.
In question is a practice known “sue and settle” under which environmental advocates sue the federal government if it misses deadlines to respond to their petitions seeking to name a new endangered species. To avoid long court trials, agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service sometimes enter into settlements with the environmental groups filing the petitions. The end result, Bush claims, is species ending up on the list without sufficient scientific basis, and taxpayers end up footing the legal bills of both parties.
“The Endangered Species Act was designed to preserve biodiversity, not enrich trial lawyers and political activists,” Bush said in a statement. “It’s time to prioritize scientific assessments in conservation when dealing with property rights and our national security.”
But environmental groups that file such suits call those accusations unfair. Federal wildlife agencies can enter into settlements because its cheaper than trial and agencies often have to pay legal fees of the winning party if they lose a lawsuit under the Equal Access to Justice Act. This applies to more than just environmental plaintiffs.
Winning a settlement doesn’t guarantee an animal a spot on the endangered list. It only forces the agency to make a decision, which typically doesn’t come for months, or even years, after a settlement is reached, said Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity.
“Fish and Wildlife Service sometimes just doesn’t act unless they’re sued,” Greenwald said. “They have to get sued in order to list those species.”
In a resolution brought by Bush and adopted by the Western States Land Commissioners Association, the officials ask Congress to enact legislation requiring federal agencies to report legal expenses on “sue and settle” cases and relax the deadlines leading to such suits.
The settlements lead to “a flood of litigation,” Bush said, and the tactic “lines environmental groups’ pockets by looting the national treasury.”
Okay, George P. – how about ceasing a baseless smear job and coming up with some actual facts? Since when is filing a legal lawsuit considered a criminal offense – i.e. looting? Name one trial lawyer who has gotten rich filing these types of lawsuits? Tell me whose pockets have been lined? And what they did with the money? And by the way, who has been lining your campaign pockets? Would it by any chance be people who have the most to gain from a roll back of protection for endangered species?
As we enter the stretch drive of the MLB season, Houston finally has something to be excited about other than anticipation of NCAA and NFL football. The Astros are relevant again and Red will keep you updated. For the neophytes, a team’s magic number is the combined number of wins (in this case by the Astros) and losses (here by the Rangers) that will clinch either a division title or a wildcard playoff spot. For example, if the Astros win 20 more games and the Rangers lose 13, the Astros will clinch the division.
Current lead:
4.5 games over the Rangers
Magic Numbers:
33 to clinch AL West Division
32 to clinch Wildcard playoff spot
Sam Clovis, the former Iowa Chair for Rick Perry’s flagging campaign, has landed with Donald Trump and will serve as his national co-chairman and policy adviser.
“I had an opportunity to get to know Mr. Trump over the past several months. I have some close friends working on the campaign. It’s a great opportunity for me to effect change in Washington, and I think Mr. Trump is exactly the person to do that.”
Perry had attempted to separate himself from some of the other also-rans in the massive GOP field by directly attacking trump. That must make Clovis’ switch to the GOP front runner an even more bitter pill for the former Texas Governor to swallow. Perry’s perilous position was weakened by Clovis’ abrupt departure earlier this week. Clovis has indicated that Perry’s vocal criticism of Trump does not represent his views. Now with the Iowa power-broker firmly in Trump’s corner, the end of Perry’s political life seems inevitable. Despite a recent influx of cash, Perry’s campaign is still having trouble meeting payroll.
The Texas Tribune reports extensively on Gov. Greg Abbott’s penchant for secrecy and obfuscation in the release of his emails. Abbott has repeatedly sought the help of embattle Attorney General Ken Paxton in this attempts to keep the public from knowing what he is up to. Abbott has used a private email for official communications and has argued that he is a “member of the public” and that the Governor’s office is a “competitor” in the private market place in his so-far successful attempts to prevent the public from knowing what is going on with their Governor.
In his objections to releasing various records to the Tribune, Abbott cited exceptions available under increasingly weak state transparency laws — from attorney client privilege to broad protections given to lawmaking deliberations — so it’s hard in many instances to tell which legal provisions triggered each redaction, or what types of records his office is refusing to provide.
The two objections drawing the most criticism from transparency advocates relate to Abbott’s email address and his successful attempt to avoid scrutiny of his use of taxpayer money to encourage business relocation or expansion in Texas.
On the email address issue, the Republican governor cites an exemption that was written into the law to protect the privacy of regular citizens who correspond with state and local government officials. Under that provision, authorities are forbidden from giving out “an email address of a member of the public that is provided for the purpose of communicating electronically with a governmental body.”
That’s the exemption Abbott cited when his office unilaterally chose to block out identifying information in the address fields on emails provided by the governor’s office. Without that information included — or some explanation from the governor’s office — it’s impossible to say for sure if it was the governor himself who promised a top donor some last-minute assistance on a lawsuit-restriction bill that was stuck in committee last May. Somebody in his office did, albeit unsuccessfully.
Several government transparency experts say the provision Abbott cites was never intended to protect the email addresses of public officials who are discussing state business inside the government.
“I can’t see how a governmental official’s email address that he or she uses to conduct official business can be redacted,” said Joe Larsen, an open government attorney who also serves on the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas.
Larsen said the email address, like the body of the email itself, becomes a public record the minute it’s used for public business.
“He’s not communicating with the government,” said former Travis County Judge Bill Aleshire, a Democrat. “He’s communicating within the government — with other government officials. And that email address ought not be confidential.”
Aleshire, an open records expert and attorney, is awaiting a decision on that very question in a lawsuit pitting an Austin watchdog publication, the Austin Bulldog, against the former Austin mayor and members of the City Council who have tried to withhold their email addresses using the same exemption. Aleshire is representing the Austin Bulldog.
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