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A chunk of a Chinese satellite almost hit the International Space Station.

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Last week, the International Space Station (ISS) was forced to maneuver out of the way of a potential collision with space junk. With a crew of astronauts and cosmonauts on board, this required an urgent change of orbit on November 11.

Over the station’s 23-year orbital lifetime, there have been about 30 close encounters with orbital debris requiring evasive action. Three of these near-misses occurred in 2020. In May this year, there was a hit: a tiny piece of space junk punched a 5mm hole in the ISS’s Canadian-built robot arm.

Last week’s incident involved a piece of debris from the defunct Fengyun-1C weather satellite, destroyed in 2007 by a Chinese anti-satellite missile test. The satellite exploded into more than 3,500 pieces of debris, most of which are still orbiting. Many have now fallen into the ISS’s orbital region.

To avoid the collision, a Russian Progress supply spacecraft docked to the station fired its rockets for just over six minutes. This changed the ISS’s speed by 0.7 meters per second and raised its orbit, already more than 400km high, by about 1.2km.

Orbit is getting crowded

Space debris has become a major concern for all satellites orbiting the Earth, not just the football-field-sized ISS. As well as notable satellites such as the smaller Chinese Tiangong space station and the Hubble Space Telescope, there are thousands of others.

As the largest inhabited space station, the ISS is the most vulnerable target. It orbits at 7.66 kilometers a second, fast enough to travel from Perth to Brisbane in under eight minutes.

A collision at that speed with even a small piece of debris could produce serious damage. What counts is the relative speed of the satellite and the junk, so some collisions could be slower while others could be faster and do even more damage.

As low Earth orbit becomes increasingly crowded, there is more and more to run into. There are already almost 5,000 satellites currently operating, with many more on the way.

SpaceX alone will soon have more than 2,000 Starlink internet satellites in orbit, on its way to an initial goal of 12,000 and perhaps eventually 40,000.

A rising tide of junk

If it was only the satellites themselves in orbit, it might not be so bad. But according to the European Space Agency’s Space Debris Office, there are estimated to be about 36,500 orbiting artificial objects larger than 10cm across, such as defunct satellites and rocket stages. There are also around a million between 1cm and 10cm, and 330 million measuring 1mm to 1cm.

The European Space Agency estimates there are around 36,500 objects larger than 10cm in orbit around Earth.  (Image credit: ESA)

Most of these items are in low Earth orbit. Because of the high speeds involved, even a speck of paint can pit an ISS window and a marble-sized object could penetrate a pressurized module.

The ISS modules are somewhat protected by multi-layer shielding to lessen the probability of a puncture and depressurization. But there remains a risk that such an event could occur before the ISS reaches the end of its life around the end of the decade.

Watching the skies

Of course, no one has the technology to track every piece of debris, and we also don’t possess the ability to eliminate all that junk. Nevertheless, possible methods for removing larger pieces from orbit are being investigated.

Meanwhile, nearly 30,000 pieces larger than 10cm are being tracked by organizations around the world such as the US Space Surveillance Network.

In Australia, space debris tracking is an area of increasing activity. Multiple organizations are involved, including the Australian Space Agency, Electro-Optic Systems, the ANU Institute for Space, the Space Surveillance Radar System, the Industrial Sciences Group, and the Australian Institute for Machine Learning with funding from the SmartSat CRC. In addition, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) has a SMARTnet facility at the University of Southern Queensland’s Mt Kent Observatory dedicated to monitoring geostationary orbit at a height of around 36,000km — the home of many communication satellites, including those used by Australia.

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One way or another, we will eventually have to clean up our space neighborhood if we want to continue to benefit from the nearest regions of the “final frontier.”

Source: www.space.com

AMAs 2021

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Los American Music Awards están cerca de llevarse a cabo en Los Ángeles.

Las nominaciones se anunciaron el mes pasado, colocando a Olivia Rodrigo a la cabeza con un total de siete nominaciones.

A diferencia de otros premios, en los que un jurado conformado por figuras de la industria decide a los ganadores, los homenajeados en los American Music Awards se eligen enteramente en función de los votos de los fanáticos.

¿Cuándo y dónde es la ceremonia?

Los American Music Awards 2021 tendrán lugar el 21 de noviembre en el Microsoft Theatre de Los Ángeles.

Si el nombre le suena familiar, probablemente es porque el recinto también ha albergado a los Emmy, los Grammy, los MTV Video Music Awards y otros eventos a lo largo de los años.

¿Dónde los puedo ver?

En los EE.UU., Los American Music Awards se transmitirán por la emisora ABC a las 8 p.m. hora del este / 7 p.m., hora del centro.

La transmisión también estará disponible al día siguiente en el sitio web de ABC y en Hulu.

La información de transmisión para el Reino Unido aún no se ha anunciado.

¿Quién es el anfitrión?

Cardi B será la anfitriona de la ceremonia de este año.

La rapera también está nominada en las categorías de Video Musical Favorito, Artista Femenina Favorita – Hip-Hop y Canción Favorita – Hip-Hop.

¿Quiénes son los nominados?

The Weeknd, ganador de cinco American Music Awards en el pasado, ha obtenido seis nominaciones este año.

Esto incluye la categoría Artista del Año, en la que se enfrenta a Rodrigo, BTS, Ariana Grande, Drake y Taylor Swift.

Bad Bunny, Doja Cat y Giveon tienen cinco nominaciones cada uno.

 

Harris County Commissioners Court Votes to Temporarily Pause Lawsuit Against TxDOT’s I-45 Expansion Project

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At a special meeting of the Harris County Commissioners Court, the Court voted to direct Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee to negotiate a temporary stay of the county’s lawsuit against the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) over the North Houston Highway Improvement Project (NHHIP), which would widen I-45 at various points in and near downtown Houston to Beltway 8, displacing more than 1,000 homes.

“Commissioners Court has spoken, but I want to be clear that this temporary stay does not mean that we’ve dismissed our lawsuit, nor will it impact the federal government’s pause of the NHHIP,” said Harris County Attorney Menefee. “The county’s goal is the same as it’s always been—a project that addresses the concerns of communities and is in the best interest of Harris County residents. The pause is a show of good faith by the county to remind TxDOT that we’re in this to find solutions and address community concerns. We expect TxDOT to work alongside us to achieve the same. If that does not happen, the county will resume the suit and we’ll let the courts decide.”

County Attorney Menefee will negotiate the terms of the lawsuit pause with TxDOT. He is expected to propose a 30-day pause with the county having the option to extend it for another 30 days if the initial negotiations are fruitful. In the lawsuit, Harris County asserts that in designing the NHHIP, TxDOT failed to follow federal law and properly consider air quality, flood mitigation, and other impacts on communities, schools, etc. near the segments of the highway that will be widened.

TxDOT has been instructed to pause all activity related to the NHHIP by the Federal Highway Administration, which is investigating whether TxDOT complied with federal environmental and civil rights laws in designing the project.

About the Harris County Attorney’s Office
Christian D. Menefee serves as the elected, top civil lawyer for Texas’ largest county. The Harris County Attorney’s Office represents the county in all civil matters including lawsuits. Menefee leads an office of 250 attorneys and staff members. He entered office at 32 years old, making him the youngest person and first African American elected as the Harris County Attorney. 

Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs Awards $62,500 to 12 Individuals and Nonprofit Organizations in 2 Grant Programs

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The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs (MOCA) announced today that it is awarding $62,500 in grants to 12 individuals and nonprofit organizations. MOCA awarded the funds through two grant programs, Let Creativity Happen! Digital and City Initiative. Both grants are administered by the Houston Arts Alliance and funded by a portion of the city’s Hotel Occupancy Tax.

“The arts helped the city flourish and enlightened the lives of our citizens during the pandemic,” said MOCA Director Necole S. Irvin.  “As we continue to recover, we know that the city’s continued support of the creative sector and communities’ support of cultural activities is integral to building back our economy.”

Through Let Creativity Happen! Digital, 7 projects by individuals and organizations were each awarded $2,500 totaling to $17,500. In its second round of the year, the grant supports the use of technology to connect people with art beyond the physical boundaries of a space, as well as expand the value of art in communities.

The awarded projects will occur across the city and include digital classes, concerts, installations, meditations, and dialogues, as well as live performances that can be accessed virtually. One project honors the memory of George Floyd and his childhood at Cuney Homes, a low-income housing development in a historically underserved area of District B where many families have struggled with social injustice.

The City Initiative grant program, which is in its 3rd round of the year, awarded four applicants with $10,000 and one with $5,000, totaling $45,000 in grants. The program focuses on three crucial areas for cultural tourism and sustainability as the city begins to reopen from the COVID-19 pandemic:  Neighborhood Cultural Destinations, Conference Tourism and Resilience Awareness.

Applications were adjudicated through a peer and community-based review process. Panelists review and score applications before scores are sorted from highest to lowest. The available funding is applied to the highest scoring applications until the budget is expended.

MOCA congratulates all award recipients as they embark on their projects and thanks them for their dedication to the arts and cultural vitality of Houston for its visitors, creatives, and Houstonians.

The seven awardees for Let Creativity Happen! Digital are:

George Floyd Childhood in the Cuney Homes
By Crystal Toussant
District B
Mack Performing Arts Collective (MPAC)
Children and residents of Cuney Homes will share stories of growing up in a low-income housing development where many deal with hard times and social injustice. They will explore the life and childhood of George Floyd  and use him as inspiration. MPAC members along with the participants will be using texts, lighting, costumes, make-up, and scenery to bring their stories to life.

Online Classes Using Art to Support Mental Health
By Andria Frankfort
District C
C G Jung Educational Center of Houston, Texas
Unique in the United States, The Jung Center offers year-round, live-streamed and online classes that employ the arts in supporting the mental health of the community. Two-thirds of their programming is open to the public, while the other third is designed specifically to bring healing arts to support the mental health of social service providers, frontline workers, teachers, nonprofit employees, healthcare workers, and others. Their public-facing programming is taught by psychotherapists, book and film group facilitators, improv actors, musicians, a children’s art therapist, and others. The Online Activation Form includes an incomplete list of public arts programming currently scheduled for Fall 2021: times are to be determined. More classes will be scheduled for the fall as well as for Spring and Summer 2022.

Be-Longing
By Mariela Dominguez
District C
Mariela Dominguez will choose an object to be the trigger for a story of a journey that evokes uprooting and regeneration. A set of four videos presents the stories between two speakers, one, the issue of a mother tongue as the other represents the mediator who personifies a new local generation that articulates the dominant English language.
This material object evokes cultural ties that are seemingly enigmatic to everyone except those who retain their mother tongue. The development of a set of four videos with English subtitles is projected and additionally, various audiovisual resources will be included.

SUKOON: Tranquility Thru Music
By Sheetal Bedi
District C
Indo-American Association (IAA)
Sukoon is an Urdu/Hindi word which translates to calm, peace, relief, serenity, tranquility, and wholeness. Through this project, IAA will endeavor to bring great sukoon and tranquility to digital audiences. Patrons have come to deeply value IAA’s digital concerts at a time of tremendous isolation and loneliness. The Sukoon project will give an opportunity to emerging artists to showcase their ability to connect digital audiences to a meditative space where tranquility can be found at the individual level, even for a few minutes. This will be presented through IAA’s social media platforms.

The Sankofa Project and its Virtual Dialogues
By Stephanie Mitchell
District C
Lawndale Art and Performance Center
The Sankofa Project brings light to the events that have been censored or ignored in historical narratives and reinforced the racial oppression of Black Americans. A free Zoom conversation between the artist and collaborating scholar or historian will be held and deepen the conversation on race and inequality and educate the community. These dialogues will be available post-event via Lawndale’s website and social media along with exhibition documentation and materials for public accessibility.

Mindful In This Moment
By Nathan Edwards
District D
On a clear morning in February 2022, Nathan Edwards will film a live installation around the theme of meditation. 50 black men and women dressed in monochromatic pastel colors will meet at a Houston park for a staged, live, one-hour installation/meditation that will be filmed, edited, and shared online.

Orange Show Media Project
By Sara Kellner
District I
Orange Show Center for Visionary Art
The Orange Show Media Project is a partnership with SWAMP and its young filmmakers to document five intimate performances by visionary Houston artists in front of live audiences at the Orange Show’s historic properties. These will be live streamed weekly starting July 4, 2022.

The 5 awardees for City Initiative Grant are:

Christmas in the 44: An Urban Christmas Tale
By Norma Thomas
District B
Christmas in the 44: An Urban Christmas Tale (UCT) brings theatre to Acres Homes community in more ways than one. UCT is “takin’ it to the streets!” Staged outside local businesses along the 4 major Acres Homes throughfares, festive tableau style scenarios, much like department store holiday window displays and the live nativity scenes of old, will delight passers-by, create community celebration, and foster holiday spirit.

Scott @ X
By Andrew Davis
District C
Scott @ X proposes a new way of engaging communities with performance art. Throughout November 2021, weekly Sunday performances will occur along Metro Rail stops in Third Ward; with the opening performance at the Leeland/Third Ward stop and closing performance at MacGregor Park/Martin Luther King, Jr. stop. The audience will be able to engage with the performance on site as well as virtually through Twitch using QR codes posted at the Metro Rail stops.

2 Post Cinema
By Britt Thomas
District C
2 Post Cinema is a neighborhood outdoor cinema set to open in November 2021. It will showcase contemporary film and video art created by underrepresented artists and filmmakers. Utilizing the non-obstructed view, they have of T.C. Jester Park’s parking lot from their property, Britt and Prince Thomas will erect a large, retractable rear-projected film screen in their backyard while relaying sound via radio transmission to viewers’ car stereos. 2 Post Cinema is a free, publicly accessible catalyst for bringing together our diverse community via the arts in a safe, socially distanced manner.

Cindee Travis Klement: Symbiosis
By Lawndale Art and Performance Center
District C
Cindee Travus Klement’s Symbiosis is a work of living land art in Mary E. Bawden Sculpture Garden at Lawndale Art and Performance Center, which introduces a variety of native plants to immerse the community in and educate them on the possibility of a more regenerative, sustainable future.

Swisha House: Rollin’ & Burnin’ Since ‘97
By Henry Guidry
District D
With millions of records sold, several Grammy nominated artists and the first record label/music genre to be archived in Rice University’s Fondren Library, Swishahouse has been a staple in the Houston hip hop scene since the mid-90’s. This event, held in East Downtown Houston at 8th Wonder Brewery, will exhibit items from the Rice archive, CD & mixtape covers and never-seen-before photos. The exhibit will simultaneously highlight the impact Swishahouse has made on the hip hop genre while introducing to many, and reinforcing to others, the significance of Swishahouse on the Southern hip-hop movement.
To see upcoming events from previous or the latest 2021 grantees, visit the frequently updated Cultural Events Calendar.

About the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
The City of Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs guides the City’s cultural investments with policies and initiatives that expand access to arts and cultural programs in the community, attract visitors and leverage private investment. Learn more at www.houstontx.gov/culturalaffairs and follow us on Facebook & Instagram @HoustonMOCA.

About Houston Arts Alliance
Houston Arts Alliance (HAA) is a local arts and culture organization whose principal work is to implement the City of Houston’s vision, values, and goals for its arts grantmaking and civic art investments. HAA also executes privately funded special projects to meet the needs of the arts community, such as disaster preparation, research on the state of the arts in Houston, and temporary public art projects that energize neighborhoods. To learn more about HAA, visit www.houstonartsalliance.com and follow us on Facebook & Instagram @HoustonArtsAlliance.

Gang member who was implicated in carjacking and two fatal shootings sentenced to 70 years in prison

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A 22-year-old gang member who bragged on social media that he followed a rival gang member’s family from a funeral and then shot at them in two separate drive-by shootings has been sentenced to 70 years in prison for his actions in a city-wide crime spree, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced Monday.

 “This gang member staked out a funeral so that he could terrorize a grieving family and tried to gun them down as they mourned,” Ogg said. “The families of his victims deserve to know that he will spend decades in prison for his intentional disregard for people and the rule of law.”

Joseph Pickron, a documented member of the 103 gang, was convicted in a trial last week of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon for pistol-whipping a woman while carjacking her on August 26, 2017.

 The first-degree felony carried the same penalty range as murder, up to life in prison.

After he was convicted, jurors tasked with deciding his punishment heard that Pickron was freed on a $50,000 bail a year after his arrest in August 2018. 

Jurors heard during the trial that while he was free on bail, Pickron was involved in gunning down Jarell Parnell outside of a club on September 30, 2018. The drive-by shooting erupted as part of a war between two gangs: the 100 Percent Third Ward or 103,which Pickron was part of, and the Young Scott Block, or YSB. The years-long conflict has claimed the lives of several gang members and innocent bystanders.

About a week later, Pickron went to Parnell’s funeral then followed the mourning family to a restaurant and opened fire on them in the parking lot of Pappasito’s and Pappadeaux restaurants in the 2500 block of the 610 South Loop. No one was seriously injured in that shooting.

From there, several grieving funeral attendees fled and reunited at a gas station on Cullen Boulevard at Ward Street. Thirty minutes after the shooting, Pickron found them standing outside of that convenience store, and opened fire hitting five people and killing Decarlos Washington.

Assistant District Attorney Keaton Forcht, who prosecuted the case with Sarah Neyland, said shell casings at both scenes, social media accounts and witnesses who identified the same red car showed that Pickron was connected to both  drive-by shootings that day.

“The Houston Police Department did a fantastic job uncovering the evidence,” Forcht said. “We can see that the defendant was bragging that he went to the funeral, wanted to kill them at the funeral, and then waited until they went to the Pappadeaux’s and then the gas station.”

 

Dancing with the Stars: Watch the Semi-Finals TONIGHT at 8/7c

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Dancing with the Stars
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Who Will Be the Final Four?
Only six pairs remain, and the competition is fierce! Cast your vote tonight to decide which couples make it to the Dancing with the Stars grand finale next week!
CATCH UP NOW:
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Shaun and Park clash over an intense decision on tonight’s new episode of The Good Doctor. Two patients’ lives hang in the balance…but only one of them can be saved.
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Play the Dancing with the Stars Fan Challenge!
Show off your ballroom savvy for a chance to win super fan prizes! Make your predictions and then watch Dancing with the Stars every Monday 8/7c to see how you did. Brag about your scores and play a new game every week. Are you up for the challenge?*
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STARS OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES’ INSPIRATIONAL NEW DRAMA KING RICHARD CELEBRATE THE PREMIERE AT AFI FILM FEST 2021 AT HOLLYWOOD CHINESE THEATER!

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Filmmakers, talent and special guests celebrated the world premiere of the anticipated true life story and inspirational drama KING RICHARD. Check out images from the world premiere and share them with your readers.
 
Attending the event were stars from “King Richard” including Will Smith, Aunjanue Ellis Saniyya Sidney, Demi Singleton, Tony Goldywn, Jon Bernthal, and director of the film, Reinaldo Marcus Green, along with executive producers Venus Williams and Serena Williams. 

 

SPIDER-MAN: NO WAY HOME

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Genre: Action/Adventure

Synopsis:
For the first time in the cinematic history of Spider-Man, our friendly neighborhood hero is unmasked and no longer able to separate his normal life from the high-stakes of being a Super Hero. When he asks for help from Doctor Strange the stakes become even more dangerous, forcing him to discover what it truly means to be Spider-Man.

Directed by:
Jon Watts

Cast:
Tom Holland
Zendaya
Benedict Cumberbatch
Jacob Batalon
Jon Favreau
with Marisa Tomei

Beto O’Rourke announces he’s running for Texas governor

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The announcement ends months of speculation.

Democrat Beto O’Rourke is running for governor of Texas, pursuing a blue breakthrough in America’s biggest red state after his star-making U.S. Senate campaign in 2018 put him closer than anyone else in decades.

O’Rourke’s announcement Monday kicks off a third run for office in as many election cycles. He burst into the 2020 Democratic presidential primary as a party phenomenon but dropped out just eight months later as money and fanfare dried up.

“It’s not going to be easy. But it is possible,” O’Rourke said in an interview with The Associated Press ahead of his announcement. “I do believe, very strongly, from listening to people in this state that they’re very unhappy with the direction that (Gov.) Greg Abbott has taken Texas.”

O’Rourke’s return sets up one of 2022’s highest-profile — and potentially most expensive — races for governor. Abbott, a Republican, is seeking a third term and has put Texas on the vanguard of hard-right policymaking in state capitals and emerged as a national figure. A challenge from O’Rourke, a media-savvy former congressman with a record of generating attention and cash, could tempt Democrats nationwide to pour millions of dollars into trying — again — to flip Texas.

In a video announcing his campaign Monday morning, O’Rourke focuses heavily on the grid failure, saying Texans were “abandoned by those who were elected to serve and look out for them.” O’Rourke said in the interview that Abbott “has stopped listening to and trusting the people of Texas.”

Still, O’Rourke is coming back an underdog. Although the state’s growing population of Latino, young and college-educated voters is good for Democrats, the party’s spending blitz in the 2020 presidential election left them with nothing.

The outlook for Democrats nationwide is even worse heading into next year’s midterm elections. Texas has not elected a Democratic governor since Ann Richards in 1990. And freshly gerrymandered political maps, signed into law by Abbott in October, bolster Republicans’ standing in booming suburban districts that have been drifting away from the party. That could mean fewer competitive races and lower turnout.

O’Rourke, 49, will have to win over not only hundreds of thousands of new voters but some of his old ones. When O’Rourke lost to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz by just 2.5 percentage points, Abbott won reelection by double digits that same year, reflecting a large number of Texans who voted for O’Rourke and for the GOP governor.

That crossover appeal was a hallmark of a Senate campaign propelled by energetic rallies, ideological blurriness, and unscripted live streams on social media. But as a presidential candidate, O’Rourke molded himself into a liberal champion who called for slashing immigration enforcement and mandatory gun buybacks.

In one pronouncement heard far and wide in firearm-friendly Texas, O’Rourke declared: “Hell, yes, we’re gonna take your AR-15.”

“I don’t think that’s gonna sell really well,” Abbott said in January.

In the interview, O’Rourke signaled he’ll try to reclaim the middle in his bid for governor. He blasted Abbott for a “very extremist, divisive” agenda that caters to the hard right.

Asked about gun control, he said he does not believe Texans want to see their families “shot up with weapons that were designed for war.” But he pivoted quickly to slamming Abbott abolishing background checks and training for concealed handgun permits, gun regulations that once had bipartisan support.

O’Rourke argued that the broad coalition of voters that powered his near-upset in 2018, which included Republican moderates, could be formed again.

“What I’m going to be focused on is listening to and bringing people together to do the big work before us,” he said. “And obviously that first big job is winning this election. But the voters and the votes are there.”

O’Rourke officially announced his candidacy in a two-minute video, in which he directly speaks to the camera and criticizes a GOP agenda that he says ignores things voters “actually agree on,” such as expanding Medicare and legalizing marijuana. “Those in positions of public trust have stopped listening to, serving, and paying attention to the people of Texas,” he said.

O’Rourke isn’t the only one in the race out to regain his footing in Texas.

For most of his six years in office, Abbott has had an aura of political invincibility. But his job approval rating has slipped during the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 70,000 Texans, as well as a deadly winter blackout that darkened the nation’s energy capital and a legislative session that passed new barriers to voting and effectively banned most abortions in the state. Abbott also aggressively bucked the Biden administration’s pandemic policies, angering some of Texas’ largest schools and employers by banning mask and vaccine mandates.

Despite the conservative policy victories, Abbott faces pressure from the right flank of his party. Two conservative firebrands, including former Florida congressman Allen West, have launched primary challenges. Former President Donald Trump has endorsed Abbott but also has pressured him to audit the state’s entire 2020 election results over false claims of fraud, even though he won Texas. Abbott has refused.

Still, the Texas governor enters the race with a $55 million campaign war chest, the biggest of any incumbent governor in the country.

“The last thing Texans need is President Biden’s radical liberal agenda coming to Texas under the guise of Beto O’Rourke,” Abbott spokesman Mark Miner said following O’Rourke’s announcement. “The contrast for the direction of Texas couldn’t be clearer.”

Trump’s was a narrow victory by Texas standards, 5.5 percentage points, a closer finish than his win in the storied battleground of Ohio. For deflated Democrats, it was proof that Texas is turning — albeit painfully slowly.

The party struggled for months to identify a challenger to Abbott, resulting in a “Beto or bust” plan reflecting the enduring skepticism even in their own ranks. No other Democrats have entered the race or have flirted with challenging Abbott.

Actor Matthew McConaughey, who lives in Austin, has teased a run for governor for months but has not said whether he would make one as a Republican or a Democrat.

Any shot for O’Rourke will require at least a touch of the magic of his Senate run against Cruz, when the onetime punk rocker from El Paso won over suburban moderates and road-tripped to the reddest of Texas’ 254 counties. He said he will again show up in tough places for Democrats, who for decades have failed to translate torrid growth and demographic shifts in Texas to a path out of the political wilderness.

Supercharged Texas has boomed to nearly 30 million people over the last decade and has five of the nation’s 12 largest cities. Texas’ explosive growth is driven almost entirely by new Latino and Black residents, traditionally Democratic voters, and Democrats say those demographic shifts combined with fatigue over crises and GOP culture wars could drive Abbott out of office.

Republicans have mocked O’Rourke as overhyped since he dropped out of the presidential race. One of O’Rourke’s first projects after ending his White House bid — leading a charge to flip the Texas House — failed to pick up a single additional seat for Democrats.

Still, it began a reboot for O’Rourke, who teased his run for president with a cover story in Vanity Fair and soul-searching blog posts but has spent much of the past 18 months as a party activist and organizer. He knocked on doors along the Texas-Mexico border to sign up new voters and led a nearly 30-mile (48-kilometer) march to the state Capitol.

He has also proved that he can still tap into a large network of donors, who fueled his record $80 million in fundraising during his Senate campaign.

Gov. Greg Abbott released the following statement on O’Rourke’s announcement:

“From Beto O’Rourke’s reckless calls to defund the police to his dangerous support of the Biden Administration’s pro-open border policies, which have resulted in thousands of fentanyl deaths, Beto O’Rourke has demonstrated he has more in common with President Biden than he does with Texans. Governor Abbott proudly supports the men and women of law enforcement, has deployed Texas National Guard and Texas Department of Public Safety personnel and resources to secure the border, and has created a business climate that has made Texas the economic engine of America. The last thing Texans need is President Biden’s radical liberal agenda coming to Texas under the guise of Beto O’Rourke. The contrast for the direction of Texas couldn’t be clearer.”  

Source: www.khou.com