Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

Is History Ready to Judge the Trump Presidency? – History News Network (HNN)

Shenger Zhou is a resident of Shanghai and an undergraduate student of politics and history at Boston University.

With the second Trump impeachment concluded, the (first) Trump presidency is officially confined to history. How should history understand the Trump presidency? Right now, we would be hard-pressed to find anyone who disagreed with the contemporary consensus that Trump shattered the norms of the presidency itself. Hovering like a specter over historical analysis, that consensus obscures other significant innovations that Donald Trump brought to the presidency. Understanding his political strategies will help historians and political scientists generate further insights into the nature of power inherent in the office of the President and the structures that enabled him.

We know that Trumps presidency was consequential. He single-handedly changed the presidency in several ways, from altering relationships with the press, to hollowing out bureaucracies, and garnering unprecedented media attention from all over the world. What makes Trump different however is the unusualness of his style and methods. Take his use of social media as an example, effective as it was in boosting his own political standing by stirring chaos through entertaining and inflammatory remarks on Twitter. His Twitter account ultimately did not serve the interest of the country (as Twitter itself determined in the wake of the January 6 attacks on the Capitol, with the controversial decision to suppress the Presidents access to the platform). And yet no doubt future presidents might adopt similar strategies to more traditional ends (whats without controversy is to hope they use the Twitter pulpit to pursue national interests rather than personal ones.)

Another controversial president who could demonstrate the unprecedented nature of the Trump presidency is George W Bush. Although few people draw comparisons between the two, Bush like Trump - was plagued by historical low approval ratings and controversies, from his decision to invade Iraq in 2003 to his handling of the US economy in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Are both presidents destined to be remembered horribly?

The Bush and Trump presidencies could not have been more different, as Bush, though awkward in conducting foreign policies, more plausibly rooted his intentions in what he believed was the morally righteous thing to do. By contrast, Trump was a tactician who applied unconventional methods in fulfilling his own political gains regardless of the nation. Concerning Bush, it was his policies that were out of touch with reality. He was simply not savvy enough to understand the political and military complexity of invading the Middle East. Though he perhaps had a point in assuming the danger of terrorism, given the shock that the nation endured with 9/11, his false judgment in invading Iraq, a nation with no credible evidence of preserving weapons of mass destruction, was of his own making. Like Trump, he handicapped himself by politicizing his own intelligence bureau, and the nation paid the price. Unlike Trump, Bush also paid the political costs.

Bush was often depicted as a war criminal for the destabilization of the entire Middle East. In retrospect, at least it seems that Bush was reacting to a truly national emergency. Based on his course of actions, we can assume that Bush was simply inept. The nation suffered from the opposite problem with Donald Trump, who apparently never acted in the interest of the nation but who was so adept at controlling media narratives that he remains king of the Republican Party (where is George Bush, these days?). By repeatedly calling the news media fake news, he discredited negative stories. This tactic is effective in a rational choice framework if we were to disregard the implications of it all.

If we were to use the criteria that presidents should be judged by how they employ the most rational choice and effective strategy in fulfilling their political interest within a set of limited options, it should be noted that while Bush did react out of proportion to the crises that he inherited, he did not necessarily use those crises to his own advantage. Bush used the resources of his office in a more traditional sense, though at the time of his presidency many thoughts about his tactics ranging from the opening up of Guantanamo Bay to the invasion of Iraq are approaching the borderline of the power of the American presidency. Though many might argue that his winning of reelection in 2004 indicated the successful selling of his wartime president status, this victory prolonged the festering of the existing crisis he manufactured himself in Iraq.

More money and time were wasted in the Middle East, creating a financial drain on the country that cemented his status as a controversial president or war criminal by the time he left office in 2009. As it should also be noted those were arguably bad political tactics; though Bush won reelection in 2004 as a wartime president, he left office with low approval, and saw his own party move away from his leadership through the Tea Party. Trump, on the other hand, while unsuccessful in winning reelection, used a new method of conducting the presidency that made every scandal conducive to his own personal interest, retaining the loyalty of his base and command of the Republican Party.

Compared to Bush, Trump played the role of presidency unconventionally by being able to manufacture crises to his own advantage, completely changing the way presidency is conducted and, possibly, basic expectations about its function. However much controversy Bush stirred, his controversial legacy nonetheless pales in comparison to Trumps. And yet, the Trump presidency might be the point of inflection for the country, and a moment for historians to recalibrate how they judge future presidents.

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Is History Ready to Judge the Trump Presidency? - History News Network (HNN)

Hillside Public Library upcoming events – The Island Now

HILLSIDE PUBLIC LIBRARY155 Lakeville RoadNew Hyde Park, NY 11040Telephone: 516-355-7850March 16, 2021Contact: Nylah Schneider

Unless otherwise specified all Library Sponsored Events will be using the Zoom platform. Prior to the program the Zoom access information will be emailed to you.

PROGRAMS and EVENTSBook Discussion: Get to Know Margaret Atwood Monday, March 29 at 7 p.m. Learn about the life and time of award-winning author Margaret Atwood. Well dive deep into her collection of fiction and non-fiction works to uncover the background and inspiration for some of these famous stories.

Medicare Updates 2021 Tuesday, March 30 at 7 p.m. Be ready and informed of 2021 Medicare changes and available options! Barry Klitsberg, a certified and experienced counselor from the Nassau County Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Program (HIICAP), will discuss: Supplemental Insurance Medicare Advantage, Prescription Drug Plans, Medicare Savings Programs, NYS EPIC Drug Coverage, Medicare coverage of COVID testing and vaccines. and more! Bring your questions!

CHILDREN and YOUNG ADULT EVENTSUnless otherwise specified all Library Sponsored Events will be using the Zoom platform. Prior to the program the Zoom access information will be emailed to you.

This N That with Miss AllyKat Friday, March 26 at 10 a.m. Ages: Birth- 5 years (with parent/caregiver). Stories, rhymes, and giggles & wiggles! Topic: Spaced Out!

Virtual Mad Tea Party Friday, March 26 at 7 p.m. Grades 5 12. Fall down the rabbit hole into our very own Mad Tea Party! Pick up your tea goody bag and enjoy a tea tasting while playing a zany wonderland game. (All goody bags can be picked up by making a curbside appointment when registering). A prize will be awarded to the games winner.

Curbside Crafts Tuesday, March 30, 12 noon 5 p.m. All Ages! Come pick up your very own Easter or Spring Craft to design at home! Please select your craft choice in the drop box below in the registration form.

Silly & WackyKahoot Trivia Game Night! Tuesday, March 30 at 7 p.m. Grades: 1-3 (Family Game Night!) Come & test your knowledge with some fun and silly trivia. Dont let the tricky questions fool you! **All participants will be entered in a Raffle to receive a surprise.

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Hillside Public Library upcoming events - The Island Now

Clayton Mikolasy Obituary (1942 – 2021) – Millville, NJ – The Press of Atlantic City – Legacy.com

Mikolasy, Clayton C. "Clay", - 78, of Millville, passed away on March 23, 2021 at his home. He was born October 24, 1942 in New York City. Clay was the son of the late Alexander and Ruth Walters Mikolasy. He was raised in Lehigh County, PA, finished high school in Sunnyvale, CA and went to the school of City College in San Mateo and City College of San Francisco. Clay enjoyed reading, kayaking, canoeing, snorkeling, automobiles, trolley cars, gardening, using his snowplow, riding his recumbent "Catrike 700", visiting Sanibel Island, FL, Washington D.C., the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, classical music, YouTube and visiting with friends and family. Clay worked in property insurance underwriting and safety inspection and fire premium rate grading. In 1972, he began his business as "Clay Mikolasy Fire Insurance Rate Analysis" and "Clay Mikolasy Insurance appraiser on buildings", working directly for property owners to reduce their property insurance premiums and to set an estimate of construction costs of their buildings so they could buy the correct amount of insurance. He worked fulltime up until December of 2020 when he was forced to retire with the unwelcome diagnosis of terminal stage four pancreatic cancer. About ten years ago, he became a member of the Tea Party and later ran for Republican Party county committee, defeating an Establishment candidate. He is survived by his loving wife Diane (Cameron); stepson Paul Cameron (Heather) and grandson Kaden Cameron. Clay has always been extremely grateful and privileged to work for his wonderful clients in the Ocean City, Maryland area for many years. A special thank you to Bayada Hospice for their compassionate care. Clay will be sorely missed. Burial services will be private at the convenience of the family. Memorial donations may be made in his name to First Presbyterian Church, 119 N. Second Street, Millville, NJ 08332. condolences and guestbook at http://www.pennjerseycremation.com

Published by The Press of Atlantic City on Mar. 27, 2021.

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Clayton Mikolasy Obituary (1942 - 2021) - Millville, NJ - The Press of Atlantic City - Legacy.com

Sam Adams Taproom Reopens And Launches New Beer | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 – iHeartRadio

BOSTON (WBZ NewsRadio) The Sam Adams taproom in Faneuil Hall reopened Wednesday, after being shut down for the winter due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The doors open at 2 p.m. and seating is on a first come, first serve basis.

There is available seating on the rooftop as well as the patio.

Sam Adams closed its patio last summer due to an influx of out-of-state visitors.

READ MORE: Kim Janey Sworn In As Bostons 55th Mayor At City Hall

Since Boston loosened some restrictions on Monday, the brewery is back in full-force.

To celebrate the reopening, the company released a new brew called Brewer Patriot Ale, which features the tea blend that was thrown overboard during the Boston Tea Party.

The Boston-based brewery plans to launch the new beer in the coming weeks and is partnering with The Boston Tea Party Museum.

The slogan, This is Boston. Drink Accordingly, will be showcased inside Fenway Park starting opening day, April 1.

The marketing campaign will remain up until the end of the season.

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Sam Adams Taproom Reopens And Launches New Beer | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 - iHeartRadio

Trump’s Gone, but the Texas GOP Keeps Drifting Rightward – Dallas Observer

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In the days leading up to Jan. 6, Olivia Troye saw the online chatter grow more extreme. Former President Donald Trumps supporters believed the November 2020 election had been rigged in favor of eventual winner Joe Biden. Trumps team challenged election results where they could and Troye couldnt shake the feeling that it wouldnt end well.

An El Paso native, Troye once served as a homeland security and counter-terrorism adviser to former Vice President Mike Pence. Her worries proved prescient on Jan. 6, when Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol. At her home in Virginia, Troye and her family watched the news in horror as the violence unfolded. Many of the rioters wore militia-like tactical gear, many carried arms and some were calling for Troyes old boss, Pence, to be hanged. (Trump falsely claimed Pence had the ability to overturn the election, leading many of his supporters to label the vice president a traitor.)

Troye knew well how volatile the former presidents supporters could be. After she broke with the White House last August over his administrations handling of the pandemic, she went on television and criticized Trump, even predicting the kind of violence that happened on Jan. 6. The threats poured in.

Troye believes Trumps rhetoric, parroted by sycophantic Republican lawmakers, led to that days chaos and deadly violence. And she was furious: Shed dedicated her life to a party that, the way she saw it, had betrayed its principles for power.

Its such a dark moment for our country to watch the fragility of our democracy in action. And the fact that theres this mob attacking the U.S. Capitol and it was like watching a banana republic, right? Troye said. This doesnt look like the United States, but it is happening here.

Some political pundits announced the death of the Republican Party immediately following the insurrection, but its a notion that GOP leaders and experts roundly reject. Even in reliably red Texas, some have prophesied a blue wave, thanks in large part to the state governments failures to manage the fallout from Februarys deadly winter storm.

Its such a dark moment for our country to watch the fragility of our democracy in action." - Olivia Troye, former homeland security adviser to Mike Pence

During the 2020 general election, that blue wave missed Texas and Republicans easily retained majority control of the state Legislature, but with conflict inside the party, the Texas GOP will have to decide: Just how much further to the right does it want to drift?

Troye feels abandoned by the party she once loved. She was appalled when prominent Republican lawmakers from her home state, among them U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert, spread the lie that the election was stolen.

Thanks to these lawmakers actions, Texas Republicans are in a critical juncture, Troye said, but not everyone agrees.

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In the era of Trump, its no surprise that the Texas Republican Party flirted with the extreme right, which surged alongside the former presidents ascent to power. That dalliance escalated last summer, when the states GOP ousted incumbent chair James Dickey and brought on a newcomer to the state: former Florida Congressman Allen West.

Once a star in the Tea Party movement, West has racked up an impressive resume throughout his career in politics, which is now a little more than a decade long. Early on, the 60-year-old ultraconservative made a name for himself attacking political adversaries. He lashed out at former President Barack Obama, whom he called an abject failure and a low-level socialist agitator. In 2015, he described protests against Confederate monuments as a manufactured crisis. Later, he cheered on Trumps pick of Gen. James Mattis as defense secretary, sharing a Facebook meme that said the retired general would exterminate Muslims.

Allen West, the Texas GOP chair, is no fan of Gov. Greg Abbott, a fellow Republican.

Courtesy of Allen West

Once in Texas, West aimed his sights elsewhere. Last summer, he led the conservative charge against a fellow Republican, Gov. Greg Abbott, railing against the governors coronavirus safety restrictions. The move won him fans among the partys ultraconservative base.

Last October, The Texas Tribune reported that West joined other prominent figures, such as far-right conspiracy theorist and InfoWars founder Alex Jones, in protest outside the governors mansion. West demanded that Abbott reopen Texas 100%, even as COVID-19 cases continued to soar statewide and the bodies piled up. Outside the mansion, West spoke to some 200 demonstrators, most of them without masks. His rallying cry? Abbotts safety restrictions were hurting the states businesses,according to Fort Worth talk radio station WBAP.

West confronted Republican critics head-on that day. He told attendees that a county chair also questioned why hed spearhead the effort before voting began for the general election. "I told him that true leaders don't pick and choose when they do what is right," West said, according to The Tribune. "They do what is right all the time."

Wests crusade fueled speculation that he may try to unseat Abbott in 2022. If that happens, the states GOP will face a tough choice: Should it will align with the moderate conservatives in the state Legislature or with the so-called silent majority that helped to elect Trump in 2016?

Going up against Abbott is no small task. Even though West raised impressively for his 2020 chairmanship campaign nearly half a million dollars, according to The Texas Tribune Abbotts fundraising capacities are unmatched. According to Associated Press reports, the governor has secured more than $150 million during his six years in office, more than any other governor in American history.

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A lifelong Republican, Troye grew up an only child in a middle-class Texas family. She identified with the partys small-government and strong-military platform, and her college thesis made the argument that the GOP was the pro-minority party of Abraham Lincoln. Later, Troye began working for the Republican National Committee in D.C.; as a Latina, she aimed to build coalitions and strengthen minority outreach.

Then, terrorists attacked the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. On her way home from work that day, Troye recalls walking past the still-burning building. It made such an impression on her that she decided to become a career intelligence officer focused on national security issues.

Aside from her work in national security, Troye also served as an adviser on Pences COVID-19 task force. She left her position in August 2020 because of the way that the coronavirus had become politicized. It was frustrating to see the president actively work to discredit and undermine his own administrations health experts. The White House had become less concerned about protecting constituents from a deadly disease than retaining control in the November election, she said.

Because of how extreme Trump's rhetoric had become, Troye could see that the president was slowly radicalizing his base.

When Jan. 6 happened, I kept thinking, This is the culmination of four years of a Donald Trump presidency, she said. These are the moments that I worried about that would come to fruition in our country. And unfortunately, that moment did.

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Last summer, it wasnt just Allen Wests head-to-head with Abbott that raised eyebrows about which way the Texas GOP was headed. In August, the party adopted a curious new slogan, one that quickly prompted backlash: We are the storm. Critics pointed to the similarity between the new slogan and a term affiliated with the pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory. According to Q lore, The Storm refers to a time when Trump would defeat a nefarious satanic cabal of Democratic pedophiles and return the country to greatness.

West didnt budge. The party kept the slogan, and the chairman has adamantly denied any affiliation with QAnon.

Meanwhile, old ideas gained new steam under West. Texas Republicans have kicked around the idea of secession for years, with diehard conservatives calling for a return to state independence. Now, another attempt to abandon the union is on the table again: A bill filed by Fredericksburg state Rep. Kyle Biedermann would allow Texas to opt out of the union through a referendum. Although West recoiled when asked if he supports secession, the chairman endorsed the proposal to break away. Ive said What would be wrong with allowing people to have a vote on the future of Texas? Thats all, he told the Observer.

Ive said What would be wrong with allowing people to have a vote on the future of Texas? Thats all." - Allen West, chairman of Texas GOP.

Nicknamed Texit, the push for secession has generated plenty of headlines, but its an oddball long shot at best, said Thomas Marshall, a political science professor at the University of Texas at Arlington. Long shot or not, parties boost their fundraising mechanisms when they embrace such ideologically extreme positions, Marshall said; politicians often strategically maintain a more radical stance than voters. In Republicans case, it helps to generate conservative grassroots approval, he said.

Professor Thomas Marshall said extremism in pursuit of Texas Republican votes is no vice but is a good ploy for raising money and profile.

Ashley Gongora

Theres no penalty for being flamboyantly out on the edge, Marshall told the Observer. Even floating issues which are so far out of the mainstream and so unimaginable to pull off that theyre just 72-hour news cycle events, but thats where money flows in from and thats where extremely conservative grassroots people sort of nod and say yes.

Those hardline ideas are making the rounds this legislative session as a swath of anti-abortion bills works its way through the chambers. Some seek to outlaw abortions, even though the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed a womans constitutional right to the procedure in 1973. Others would bar abortion after a heartbeat is detected. Filed by Royse City state Rep. Bryan Slaton, one bill would even make abortion a crime that could be punishable by death for women and physicians.

Another bill by state Rep. Justin Holland would turn Texas into a Second Amendment sanctuary state, preventing state agencies from enforcing new federal gun laws.

At the same time, the party has created an account on the far-right social networking site Gab. The Texas GOPs vice chair, Cat Parks, has joined Abbott in condemning the move, deepening the internal rift within the states party.

In a statement on March 9, Parks said she was concerned by the number of anti-Semitic comments she saw on the platform, and there should be no question about where the party stands on bigotry.

But the Republican Party of Texas official Twitter account said in a post that it wouldnt end any of its social media accounts. West had no response to the internal row over Gab, but he did say many Americans feel as though social media networks have censored them, and he calls that fascism. I would have never thought that in the 22 years that I served in the military that I would see fascism taking root here in the United States of America, he said.

Meanwhile, as many Republicans distanced themselves from Trump following the Capitol riot earlier this year, a portion of the GOPs base cried heresy. The discontent was so intense that some even founded their own splinter parties to honor the former president, such as the far-right MAGA Patriot Party, which launched in San Antonio in January. Although Trump has stayed onboard the Republican Party, many of his most loyal supporters have claimed theyll never vote Republican again, including some North Texans who have been charged by the U.S. Justice Department for allegedly participating in the Capitol riots.

New parties or not, dissident Trump supporters arent likely to do much damage to the GOP. Rather than siphoning voters from the Republicans, the MAGA Patriot Party and others like it will probably lose steam, said professor Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, chair of the political science department at the University of North Texas. For instance, the populist Tea Party movement that birthed West first emerged in 2009 before fizzling out, but the Republican Party later absorbed its ideologies into its platform, he said.

Even something as shocking as the Jan. 6 insurrection might not stay on voters radars for long, he said. These things are really short-term in the minds of most voters, and they dont seem to have an enduring impact, Eshbaugh-Soha said. If it was going to be an enduring impact, we would have already seen Republicans significantly alter their approach to governance. And were not seeing that.

Then theres the question of leadership. On the national level, Trump is still the partys de facto leader, Marshall said. In fact, when right-wingers from around the country traveled to Florida for the annual Conservative Political Action Conference late last month, Sen. Ted Cruz said Trumpism aint goin nowhere. Trump later took the stage as the keynote speaker.

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Some Democrats have boldly declared that Texas is now a battleground state. In Texas, Trump beat President Joe Biden by fewer than 6 percentage points during the 2020 election, a tighter margin than Trump won by in 2016.

In Austin, Abbotts likeability has also tanked in recent months over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. Liberals decried his decision to end the mask mandate while the coronavirus continues to spread; conservatives, meanwhile, were upset that hed ever set any restrictions at all. That tension has manifested itself in a push in the Texas Legislature to limit the governors emergency powers, with Granbury state Sen. Brian Birdwell leading the charge.

As horrifying as the insurrection was, Eshbaugh-Soha expects that Republicans will find a way to rationalize it rather than supporting a party that has policies they dont agree with. A Jan. 6 YouGov poll even found that 45% of Republicans nationally approved of the storming of the Capitol building. No one event is going to undo an institution that has enormous relevance to voters, members, structures of the political process, Eshbaugh-Soha said.

Professor Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha says Republicans will have no problem getting over the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Courtesy of UNT

More than his policies, it was Trumps rhetoric that has repelled some, especially among suburban women and moderates, admitted Jason Vaughn, policy director for the Texas Young Republicans. At the same time, though, Vaughn insisted that Trump brought in swaths of working-class people and LGBT Republicans. The former president also helped the Republican Party make significant gains among Latino voters in counties along the Mexican border.

Trump mobilized some who had never been politically active before, Vaughn said; many flocked to Trump because they believed he would fight for them. And sometimes people want somebody to express and feel their anger more than they actually want something to be accomplished, he said.

But even as Allen West tries to drag the party further right and Democrats lash out at the governor over Februarys deadly winter storms and repealing the mask mandate, experts say Abbott has managed to keep himself safe from threats internal and external. Marshall said hes still the runaway favorite for 2022, and he sees no reason for the governor to be really worried by either West or the Democrats.

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Olivia Troyes forecast isnt sunny. She sees the former president as a divisive figure, someone who has inflected a great deal of harm inside the Republican Party. To her, those still supporting Trump are saying theyre OK with the fact that he essentially conspired and incited and contributed to the insurrectionists murderous pursuit of his own vice president.

At some point, GOP lawmakers need to take a stand for whats right for the country, Troye said. Instead of worrying about their voter base, they should break away from Trumpism or else they risk destroying whats left of the Republican Party.

Youve already seen Texas voters starting to take a stand and not being OK with whats happening in the Republican Party and the things that are going on in the Texas party, especially, she said. And youve seen a growing movement of blue, I would say and rightly so.

After the insurrection, Troye cofounded the Republican Accountability Project, an anti-Trump political action committee that created a billboard campaign encouraging Cruz and others to resign. Cruz and Gohmert readily volunteered as enablers of the president, Troye said, and their willingness to spread lies about election fraud helped pave the way for what happened on Jan. 6. Voters need to be reminded of their actions leading up to the next election, she said.

The Republican Accountability Project also supports individuals they view as principled Republicans, people who took a stand against Trump following the insurrection, Troye said. In that vein, the group has created signs thanking conservatives who voted for impeachment. Moderate Republicans need to band together and vote against MAGA candidates, she argued. We have a short-term memory sometimes as voters but we want to make sure that people dont forget. And that they deserve better, Troye said.

I may be a lifelong Republican, she continued, but if theres a principled person who is running to do whats right for the country, thats who Im going to back. And I think that youre going to see that across Texas.

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Simone Carter, a staff news reporter at the Dallas Observer, graduated from the University of North Texas' Mayborn School of Journalism. Her favorite color is red, but she digs Miles Davis' Kind of Blue.

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Trump's Gone, but the Texas GOP Keeps Drifting Rightward - Dallas Observer