From The Texas Observer:
On a balmy, overcast afternoon in late March 2025, a crowd gathered outside Texas Southmost College’s auditorium in downtown Brownsville. With them came signs, many of them directed at the city’s mayor, John Cowen, who was giving the annual “State of the City” address inside.
“Brownsville is at the edge of its future,” Cowen told attendees. The mayor, who also serves as president of his family’s international logistics company, headquartered in the border city he now leads, described various industries operating, or soon to be operating, in the area. Some prominent corporations sponsored the event, including Houston-based NextDecade, the company behind the gargantuan gas export project Rio Grande LNG.
The phrase “edge of the future” echoed the “New Space City” sentiment first promoted by the previous mayoral administration and inspired by Elon Musk’s nearby SpaceX launch site. The boosterish idea is codified in Brownsville’s newly expanded slogan: “On the border, by the sea, and beyond.” Outside among the protesters, however, local industry expansion, especially in liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, was not seen as an economic driver but an existential threat.
“Brownsville cannot keep selling us out to these toxic polluters,” said Josette Cruz Hinojosa, an organizer with the South Texas Environmental Justice Network and onetime candidate for the Port of Brownsville’s board of commissioners. “The city has continued to fail us, and the city is endangering us directly—endangering our children and their future.”










