On our recent primary election

In the last post I was lamenting the voter rights act and it’s effect of Texas primaries.  Well, as it happens we would not be celebrating a couple of the Tea Party wins if that primary had been held when first scheduled.  Because we were delayed we had time to gin up support for Ted Cruz and others in the Tea Party to be in a runoff election.  Without that runoff we would have somewhat conservative members of the Republican Party running for the U S Senate and other offices. So for this one time it worked to our advantage.

Now that we have these candidates I have hopes we can become a more conservative Texas.  I know that is a contradiction in terms for some liberals, they think we are way too conservative as we were.  While I want to have a more conservative group in local offices, I am also going to work to get more conservatives on the national level.  On that note I want you to take a look at this article:

 5 Voter Registration Provisions Focus of Injunction

[…]

A federal judge on Thursday granted a temporary injunction against five state provisions that affect voter registration in Texas.

Family Travel without viagra australia online Dysfunction Traveling with family can be an enjoyable and carefree experience, but that can only happen after first taking the time to master several important steps. They look at things like the mail’s topic and body, check with RBL databases, and figure out key terms like levitra consultation or intentionally misspelled spam terminology. This means the motors operators may not be sound enough in repairing a machine but they should have be skilled enough in maintaining the cialis without prescription supplementprofessors.com motor too. The flavors will enable you enjoy the taste sildenafil viagra de pfizer of this jelly medicine is far better than an ordinary tablet. U.S. District Judge Gregg Costa of Galveston ruled that a law that prohibits third-party voter registrars from working in more than one county and another that mandates registrars in Texas be residents of the state violate the First Amendment.

“During the 2011 legislative session, the Governor signed two bills that imposed a number of additional requirements,” Costa wrote in his 94-page opinion. “The result is that Texas now imposes more burdensome regulations on those engaging in third-party voter registration than the vast majority of, if not all, other states.”

The judge also struck down provisions that required deputy voter registrars be paid hourly, that prevented registration certificates from being photocopied and that prohibited completed forms from being mailed in to elections officials. A final judgment must still be rendered, Costa declared. Until then, the laws cannot be enforced.

Read it all here.

 

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