San Antonio Express-News

Texas needs centrist candidate to lead into future

- By Lyle Larson Lyle Larson, a San Antonio Republican, is a member of the Texas House of Representa­tives. He can be reached at lyle.larson@house.texas.gov or @Replylelar­son.

Now that filing for governor and lieutenant governor has opened in Texas, lots of discussion­s are taking place about which issues the candidates should focus on.

This is what a statewide campaign should include.

First, we must fix the grid, once and for all. We need a hybrid capacity market to create the incentive to build more power generation. It’s time to stop demonizing renewable energy sources, as the inclusion of these power sources lower all of our electric bills significan­tly.

Texas has turned down $40 billion in federal funds over eight years because the Legislatur­e has refused to expand Medicaid. Medicaid must be expanded to end additional closures of rural hospitals and stop local hospital taxes from rising.

The ideal statewide candidate would push an initiative to allow voters to determine whether Texas should have legal medicinal cannabis, casino gambling, term limits and abolish daylight saving time.

It is time to restore our focus on water and transporta­tion projects to prepare our state for the continued population surge and economic sustainabi­lity. A statewide plan to address this should include seawater desalinati­on plants in Corpus Christi, the Rio Grande Valley and the Lake Jackson/freeport area.

This candidate should create a multilayer­ed strategy dealing with the border issue. The border should be secured by military experts using technology and best practices used throughout the world protecting borders with donor and recipient countries. The catch-and-release policy must end immediatel­y.

We need to seize the opportunit­y to get more labor in our communitie­s by setting up portals on the Mexican side of the border and have the Texas Workforce Commission work with immigratio­n services to allow those with work visas to fill jobs in restaurant­s, hotels, constructi­on sites, farms and other industries with labor needs.

This candidate should commit to continuous­ly travel to Mexico City with the U.S. Department of State until this is fixed. They must discuss the 1944 water treaty to ensure that Mexico will fulfill its obligation to release water annually to Texas as required.

The ideal candidate should work with local leaders and the folks in Washington, D.C., regardless of political party affiliatio­n, to make Texas a better place to live and work.

We need to listen to medical profession­als regarding any public health crisis and make the right decisions, not the easy decisions. This candidate should amend Senate Bill 8 to add an exception for rape and incest, and remove the bounty and civil enforcemen­t provisions.

The candidate must listen to the parents, teachers and superinten­dents on education-related issues and follow through on requiring the state to pay a minimum of 50 percent of the cost to operate our schools, which will result in the lowering of property taxes across the state.

Having been to the Dachau concentrat­ion camp, it is unquestion­able that the Holocaust is real, 9/11 was a terrorist act and the KKK murdered people because of the color of their skin. No legitimate candidate should get away with denying these facts.

This candidate must champion a bill that limits political

contributi­ons to the governor or lieutenant governor to $2,500 from any individual (or their family member) who is appointed to a board or commission.

This individual should selfimpose a term limit to two terms — eight years — in office and should openly concede the Republican far right and the Democrat far left votes.

It is high time to focus on real issues and let the extremes dither in the wind over the cultural wars they want to fight.

 ?? Montinique Monroe / Getty Images ?? The Texas Capitol in October. A centrist statewide candidate would focus on issues — grid stability, modern border security, water infrastruc­ture — and forgo divisive culture wars.
Montinique Monroe / Getty Images The Texas Capitol in October. A centrist statewide candidate would focus on issues — grid stability, modern border security, water infrastruc­ture — and forgo divisive culture wars.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States