Maybe this could be a model for getting other lawmakers to give us what we want.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYqSP4xoP5U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYqSP4xoP5U
The internet is full of folks on both sides of the issue commenting about how unlikely that sort of behavior is to win over, or at least get someone to listen to your side of the discussion.
I'll be waiting to see if you can unelect him. Because that's what you threatened to do if he does not do what you say. You put yourselves in a "put up or shut up" position.
I think it is brother. Only a a couple guys in someone's office. Saying its the peoples office. Then the guy filming is his boy started telling the guy to leave his office. Then they finally get escorted out. Finally the guy filming shoves his foot in the door so they cant shut it for some reason.I didn't click the link but I bet it's the video of Kory and his crew getting kicked out of a rep's office. That is NOT how we do it in Texas! That is how the Kory Watkins' show does it, and they do it alone.
Not very productive IMO.
I assume that they did place a bug in his office, right?
Earlier this session, open carry supporters visited some lawmakers’ offices, urging them to support open carry and drew media attention after a heated exchange with a state lawmaker.
Watkins posted a video online that showed open carry advocates being aggressive with state Rep. Poncho Nevarez, D-Eagle Pass, telling him he “won’t be here very long, bro,” because he doesn’t support open carry.
Soon after that, the Texas House approved new rules letting lawmakers install panic buttons in their office, to summon Texas Department of Public Safety officers if they feel the need to remove people from their offices.
Some open carry supporters at the time feared that such an aggressive campaign could hurt their effort to overturn the state’s ban on openly carrying handguns.
“The chances of passing what they call ‘constitutional carry’ got more remote with [the Jan. 13] shenanigans,” former Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, who as a state senator shepherded the state’s concealed carry through the legislature and supports open carry, said at the time. “That set the stage. That’s the topic of discussion now.”
So when are you running for one of those house seats?Can't guarantee these numbers, but:
In the Senate, 31 members, 11 Democratic Party and 20 Republican Party.
In the House, 150 members, 51 Democratic Party, 96 Republican Party. (3 vacant?)
Can't guarantee these numbers, but:
In the Senate, 31 members, 11 Democratic Party and 20 Republican Party.
In the House, 150 members, 51 Democratic Party, 96 Republican Party. (3 vacant?)