The Plutopia News Network team takes a wide-ranging look at the changing political landscape in Texas, using Jon Lebkowsky’s experience as a delegate to the Texas Democratic Convention as a springboard for a broader discussion of democracy, public policy, and the state’s future. The conversation explores Democratic efforts to compete statewide by expanding voting access, supporting public education, improving health care, protecting civil rights, and addressing climate and infrastructure challenges, while also examining water shortages, AI data centers, renewable energy, immigration, and Texas’s independent power grid. Along the way, the hosts compare American and British perspectives on issues such as universal health care and immigration, reflect on Texas’s political history, and critique the influence of Donald Trump and right-wing culture wars, ultimately arguing that the state’s future will depend on pragmatic solutions to environmental, economic, and democratic challenges rather than ideological battles.
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Jon:
The candidates for the Democratic Party were not — for one thing, there were many seats where Republicans were running unopposed in the past. This time every seat in the state has a Democratic candidate. They’re concerned about voting rights and democracy and the erosion of democracy. So they want to expand voting access, which has certainly not been happening in Texas. Maybe they’re even considering going for online voter registration.
Scoop:
You’ll hear some of the Republican office holders Kind of kissing up to Trump about doing away with electric vehicles and the windmills, as he calls them. But the reality is that’s the only thing it’s going to save Texas.
Wendy:
This is one of the things that when you live outside the states, most countries have some form of nationalized health care. You know, Britain was, of course, the pioneer in this. And that anybody sees it as socialist to have universal health care or somehow wrong just boggles people’s minds.