Texarkana Gazette

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick’s priority bills signal another swing at pushing Texas to the right

- JAMES BARRAGÁN

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick announced a list Monday of 30 wide-ranging bills that he has designated his legislativ­e priorities, including providing property tax relief and increasing natural gas plants to improve the reliabilit­y of the state’s power grid. He also detailed more specifical­ly his plans to push a socially conservati­ve agenda that would ban certain books in schools, restrict transgende­r student athlete participat­ion in collegiate sports and end gender-transition treatment for young people.

In a statement announcing his priority bills, Patrick said he believed Texans largely supported his proposals because they “largely reflect the policies supported by the conservati­ve majority of Texans.”

Traditiona­lly, the lieutenant governor, who presides over the Senate, and the House speaker, who presides over the lower chamber of the Legislatur­e, unveil 20 bills with low bill numbers near the start of each legislativ­e session to indicate their priorities. Since 2017, Patrick, who is seen as one of the strongest lieutenant governors in modern Texas history, has expanded his priority list to 30.

Patrick gave reporters a glimpse at his legislativ­e priorities in December. But Monday’s announceme­nt had brief descriptio­ns of the priority bills (many of which have not been filed yet) and more directly addressed controvers­ial legislatio­n that the most socially conservati­ve members in the Republican Party have called for, including bills that seek to impose restrictio­ns on transgende­r Texans.

Patrick also included legislatio­n to ban what he deems “obscene” books in schools and to prohibit children from being “exposed” to drag shows. Such legislatio­n has come after clamor from some Republican­s to ban books that they deem sexually explicit in public schools and after similar groups and activists have called for an end to events where drag performers read to children. In recent months, Gov. Greg Abbott and other officials have taken action to have some books removed from school shelves, including ones that have content related to gender identity or portray LGBTQ relationsh­ips.

On education, Patrick said he would fight to “empower parents” including through “school choice,” indicating a support for voucher legislatio­n that would use state dollars for parents to take their kids out of public schools and place them in private schools. At the collegiate level, he also doubled down on ending tenure, a policy idea he initially floated last year as a way to stop professors from teaching critical race theory, and banning diversity, equity and inclusion policies in hiring practices.

Patrick, who has a Republican majority in the Senate, should have an easy time passing his priorities through the upper chamber despite what is expected to be strong opposition from advocacy groups on issues around LGBTQ rights, education and civil liberties. But the bills must pass through both chambers of the Legislatur­e and then be signed by the governor to become law.

In the past, the House has stifled attempts to pull money away from public schools and divert it to private education, largely because rural Republican­s do not have private school options in many of their districts and public schools are some of their districts’ biggest employers. The lower chamber has also had less of an appetite for socially controvers­ial legislatio­n, like passing bills targeting LGBTQ people.

Patrick also said he wants to remove district attorneys and state judges who “refuse to follow Texas law.” Republican lawmakers have been particular­ly angry at prosecutor­s and judges in Democrat-dominated parts of the state who do not prosecute certain kinds of crimes, like small possession of marijuana or minor theft charges, and judges who let defendants leave jail under no cash bail agreements. Proponents of those policies say such discretion allows prosecutor­s more time to focus on major crimes that are more important to tackle.

Patrick also signaled the importance of rural Texas by designatin­g among his priorities the state’s future water needs, the need for more mental health hospitals in rural areas and a need to assist rural law enforcemen­t agents, who don’t have tax bases as broad as urban centers.

He also made “banning local COVID-19 mandates” a priority, perhaps in a nod to Abbott’s threat to keep in place his emergency powers until lawmakers codified his order to ban cities and counties from implementi­ng vaccine and mask mandates.

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