Trump’s Trade War Leaves Texas at Head of Dark Path

Late last week, President Donald Trump opened the latest front in his ever-expanding trade war, announcing 25-percent tariffs on a long list of Chinese imports. The Chinese government responded in kind, creating similar tariffs on a bevy of U.S. agricultural products. While neither the U.S. nor the Chinese economy has…

Texans on the Campaign Trail React to Trump’s SCOTUS Pick

Texas candidates in the November midterm elections were quick to weigh in on President Donald Trump’s selection of Brett Kavanaugh, judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, to replace retiring U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said on Twitter that he…

McDermott Bridge May Have to Be Demolished Like Fake Kayak Rapids

The moment has arrived when we must expand our thinking about the new and troubled Margaret McDermott Bridge designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava on the Trinity River downtown. We’ve got to add at least one extreme outcome to the far end of the spectrum of possibilities. It may have…

Ken Paxton Pressures Fort Worth ISD on Sexuality and Gender

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is demanding Fort Worth ISD show him a sixth-grade sexuality and gender curriculum that has been taught for about five years now. In a letter to the school district, the sixth-largest in the state, Paxton said the district had told some parents that their kids could…

5 Reasons Ken Paxton Is the Luckiest Politician in Texas

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s political career should be on its last legs. Throughout his first term, he’s been dogged by controversy. He’s under indictment for alleged securities violations, although his trial is unlikely to begin before 2019. His defense of Texas’ ill-fated 2013 abortion law cost the state millions…

Book Celebrates National Treasure in Dallas that We Don’t Know Is Here

Scot Miller is a nationally renowned nature photographer who happens to live in Dallas. His books of photography depict world-famous places like Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, and Yosemite National Park in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains. His illustrated 100th anniversary edition of John Muir’s My First Summer in the Sierra,…

1,000,000 Gallons of Sewage Are Flowing Toward White Rock Lake

Dallas officials cut off all water recreational activities at White Rock Lake on Thursday afternoon until further notice after 1,000,000 gallons of untreated wastewater flowed into White Rock Creek for about 12 hours Wednesday night and Thursday morning, threatening the lake. The pollution stems from a Wednesday afternoon construction accident…

Dallas Signs Off on Bike-Share and Temporary Scooter Fix

Finally, about a year after hordes of multicolored bikes descended on the city, Dallas has definitive bike-share regulations. Electric scooters are coming to the city, too, after the City Council voted Wednesday to temporarily allow the stand-up two-wheelers. Since the bikes showed up last fall, the five companies that own…

Today Jim Schutze Will Ambush City Hall and You Get to Watch

When you’re the kind of hard-hitting, pavement-pounding capital-J Journalist Jim Schutze is, you’re not content taking questions on Facebook Live from the comforts of your cushy (sort of), fluorescent-lit Oak Lawn office. That would be amateur and you, darling, are no amateur. No, you go straight to the people you…

Chicano Border Activists Pass the Torch to Dallas Students

On March 10, Shellie Ross, executive director of the Wesley-Rankin Community Center, took a busload of West Dallas youthsto the U.S.-Mexico border in South Texas. The purpose of the trip was to educate the students about Mexican-American history and introduce them to activists in…

Heart of Dallas Bowl Likely to Survive, Still Be Terrible

The Heart of Dallas Bowl, the city’s annual post-Christmas, pre-New Year’s showcase at the Cotton Bowl for two aggressively mediocre college football teams, looks likely to survive after a Monday compromise for the city to continue paying ESPN to host the game. That doesn’t mean the game’s going to be…

Texas Supreme Court Just Tossed Bag Bans. What’s Next?

In this case, at least, Dallas pulled its hand back before it got slapped. On Friday, the Texas Supreme Court unanimously ruled that a state law regarding the disposal of solid waste preempted Laredo’s plastic bag ban. Similar bans in about a dozen other Texas cities are now effectively dead…

As Texas Dems Gather in Fort Worth, State GOP Targets Lupe Valdez

Over the weekend, the Texas Democratic Party, still big if not that powerful, took over downtown Fort Worth for its biennial state convention. The party’s full slate of statewide nominees preached to the assembled choir, and the party did its business, passing a platform calling for a bunch of stuff…

Texas GOP Platform Changes on LGBTQ People Stop Way Short

Much was made this week of the Texas Republican Party’s minuscule change to its platform concerning homosexuality. In a story Tuesday, The Dallas Morning News shared with readers a triumphant account of how the Texas Log Cabin Republicans pushed the party to stop saying that being gay is a choice. Thanks…