From The Texas Tribune:
After bringing the hammer down in last year’s elections on fellow Republicans who opposed his priority school voucher bill, Gov. Greg Abbott returned to this year’s legislative session more powerful than ever.
On Sunday, he unveiled an ambitious agenda that looks to the state’s future while also covering policies that appeal to all factions of a divided Texas GOP.
For business-minded Republicans, Abbott prioritized property tax cuts, a “generational investment” in the state’s water infrastructure and expanded vocational training opportunities. For social conservatives, he declared school vouchers a must-pass item; threw his weight behind further restrictions on diversity, equity and inclusion programs; and stiffened his opposition to transgender Texans in public life.
Judging by the reaction among Texas Republicans who dominate both legislative chambers, Abbott is on track to getting most, if not all, of his priorities through the Legislature with little resistance.
“He has such sway over his party,” said Jon Taylor, a political science professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio, adding that Abbott “has a tremendous opportunity to not just shape the Republican Party of Texas, but basically Texas as well, and shape its future.”
Praise came from often dueling GOP factions. Republican Party of Texas Chair Abraham George, a staunch social conservative, called the governor’s agenda “leadership at its finest,” while the new House Speaker, Dustin Burrows, the leader George opposed in the race to head the lower chamber, said the House is “clearly aligned” with the governor’s goals.
The state’s Legislature – which has been dominated by Republicans for 22 years – has been mostly supportive of Abbott in the past, backing him on his priority issues like immigration, barring cities from cutting police budgets and cutting property taxes.
But after Abbott followed through on his threat of targeting Republicans who crossed him on school vouchers, the little resistance there was to Abbott from GOP members in the legislative branch is all but gone.
Rep. Tom Oliverson, a Cypress Republican who leads the House GOP Caucus, said its members are in near perfect alignment with the governor.
“The caucus is relatively, uniformly pro-governor,” he said.
Abbott priorities look to the future
A clear theme in Abbott’s speech was keeping the state a national business leader and he prioritized items that the Texas business community has wanted for years.
Glenn Hamer, president and CEO of the Texas Association of Business, said Abbott “knocked it out of the park” with his agenda and praised his focus on water infrastructure, an expansion of vocational career training and property tax cuts.
“Governor Abbott’s priorities neatly align with job creators in Texas,” Hamer said.
Hamer, who chairs the governor’s Small Business Freedom Council, which is focused on reducing business regulations, said Abbott’s agenda charted a course for the state to continue to be an economic leader.
Abbott’s two most controversial emergency items will likely be his push to allow the use of public dollars for private education in a voucher-like program and his call to stiffen bail laws.
But Abbott is confident that his school voucher legislation, which he refers to as school choice or “education savings accounts,” will be approved by lawmakers this session after he successfully campaigned to replace 11 House Republicans who opposed his legislation two years ago with lawmakers who have said they support the policy.