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Bob McCranie, a Dallas based real estate broker, created Flee Red States — a real estate service to help marginalized people in Texas find new welcoming homes.
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Texas Congressional leaders, LULAC say they'll challenge Senate Bill 4 and Mexico says it rejects legislation.
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After more than a year of campaigning by Gov. Greg Abbott and three special sessions, the newest bill for Education Savings Accounts adds teacher pay raises, greater per-student allotment, a preference to families with lower incomes, and accountability measures. It still may not be enough to for legislators to approve sending public dollars to private schools.
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A bill to increase the state’s support for school safety appears stalled in this month’s special legislative session. But even if it passes, superintendents warn it isn’t enough.
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The vote came after a marathon day that saw tempers flare and lawmakers pass two additional controversial proposals. HB 4 makes unauthorized entry a class B misdemeanor. That offense could increase to a state jail felony for a migrant previously removed under the law.
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The Republican-led committee approved the measure despite pushback from Democrats who said the state has already spent billions on border security under Gov. Greg Abbott with few results. The Texas House could take up the measure later this week.
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Election season is here, and on the ballot are 14 proposed amendments that could change the Texas Constitution.
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San Antonio families have been fighting for school funding equity for 50 years. But wide disparities in funding still exist.
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3 in North Texas GOP missing from letter opposing Jonathan Stickland's meeting with Holocaust denierMost North Texas House Republicans signed on to a letter condemning Defend Texas Liberty PAC after its president met with a Holocaust denier. Three declined to do so, highlighting a rift in the Republican party.
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The third round of legislative overtime kicked off in Austin Monday as the hostility between the lower and upper chambers continues to grow.
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The attorney general – who was acquitted in his Senate impeachment trial earlier this month – settled with the four former employees in February for $3.3 million, but the Texas Legislature has so far declined to approve the funds.
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The state’s teachers’ union said in a statement it would stand by the state’s public school teachers who “teach the truth.”