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Tag: john huffman

  • Houston schools cratered after state takeover. Fort Worth, fight back! | Opinion

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    Students are drilled for tests instead of inspired to learn. This isn’t education — it’s demoralization.

    Students are drilled for tests instead of inspired to learn. This isn’t education — it’s demoralization.

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    Demoralized

    I’m the parent of two recent Houston ISD graduates who lived through the state takeover of the district. I hoped it would bring positive change. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

    Under Superintendent Mike Miles, Houston children are drilled for tests instead of inspired to learn. Students deliberately answer questions wrong to avoid “team centers,” where success means more worksheets. This isn’t education — it’s demoralization.

    Houston public schools have lost nearly 20,000 students, more than during the pandemic. Last year alone, a record number of staff members left, including many of our best educators. One campus had six principals in less than two years.

    I urge Fort Worth ISD to fight the state takeover. Protect your schools, your teachers and your students’ futures.

    – Heather Golden, Houston

    Priced out

    When I was a kid, it was possible to return enough soda bottles or mow enough lawns to pay for a ticket to see the Rangers play. Now that I’m retired, I’ll never enjoy another game because of the high ticket and concession prices. Had I known the cost of going to the State Fair this year, I would have stayed longer last year.

    It’s sad that so many normal folks can’t afford to enjoy what used to be the little things in life.

    – Ray Flenniken, Fort Worth

    Clean it up

    Guest commentary author Matthew Kandrach is wrong: Coal isn’t the answer to lowering energy costs, period. (Oct. 31, “Electric bills are rising fast. Here’s how coal plants can help”) Coal power is more expensive than ever because of the high cost of maintaining aging plants, rising fuel prices and environmental cleanup requirements.

    Renewable energy such as wind and solar is now the cheapest source of new electricity. Once generation is built and connected to the electrical grid and battery storage facilities, renewables have no fuel costs and protect consumers from global price spikes, while also creating local jobs and, most important, not contributing further environmental damage. If we want affordable, reliable energy for the future, we should invest in clean, renewable power — not return to outdated, costly, dirty coal.

    – Andrea Christgau, Keller

    Wrong choice

    I always read the Star-Telegram Editorial Board’s endorsements for elections, and I generally trust and agree with the information you provide. However, your choice of John Huffman for the Texas Senate was surprising. (Oct. 19, C6, “Star-Telegram endorsement: Tarrant election to fill state Senate seat”)

    Perhaps the intent was to draw a distinction between two Republicans, Huffman and Leigh Wambsganss, but you could instead endorse the Democrat, Taylor Rehmet. He is an up-and-coming leader, who is enthusiastically trying to represent unions and working people.

    Huffman’s campaign literature says he will defend schools against extreme “woke” indoctrination, ban so-called “critical race theory” and protect women and girls by keeping men out of their sports. I think it’s way past time for the Star-Telegram to call out these candidates who have nothing to offer except this kind of inflammatory nonsense.

    – Penny Baxter, North Richland Hills

    Power grabs

    We have a constitutional amendment election Tuesday. This Texas Legislature doesn’t need another victory for its power grabs and poor spending decisions. Vote against all 17 amendments. That would send a strong message that we are sick of Gov. Greg Abbott and his cronies.

    – Robert Adams, Fort Worth

    Our fault

    For the last 80 years, Congress has steadily ceded its constitutional powers to the presidency. If an autocracy is pending, we have done this to ourselves. I do not care if our next senators and representatives from Texas are Democrats, Republicans or independents. I want to elect candidates who will claw back from the executive those powers that rightfully belong to Congress and make it again a co-equal branch of government.

    – Paul R. Schattman, Arlington

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  • Las Vegas Sands Continues Pouring Money Into Texas Politics

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    Posted on: October 14, 2025, 10:21h. 

    Last updated on: October 14, 2025, 10:32h.

    • Las Vegas Sands remains invested in Texas politics
    • Sands wants to build a casino resort in Dallas
    • Sands is heavily backing Texas Senate candidate John Huffman

    Las Vegas Sands has contributed millions of dollars to political races in Texas over the past few years. Despite little return on the many campaign contributions, the world’s largest casino operator by market capitalization is showing no signs of folding.

    Las Vegas Sands Texas politics John Huffman
    Texas Senate candidate John Huffman posted a photograph of his family looking over the Bellagio Fountains on X. Huffman is being heavily supported by the casino lobby and Las Vegas Sands, though he wrote in July that Las Vegas is not his “style.” (Image: X)

    According to campaign finance records disclosed by the Texas Ethics Commission, Texas Sands PAC last month gave state Senate District 9 Republican candidate John Huffman $500K. Huffman, a former city councilor and mayor of Southlake in the Dallas/Fort Worth suburbs, is a self-described “true fiscal conservative” who seeks to cut taxes and reduce regulation.

    Sands sees Huffman as a possible state lawmaker who might get on board with the idea of casino gambling as an economic stimulator that could lessen the tax burden on Texans, and keep the many millions of gaming dollars from flowing annually to Oklahoma tribal casinos and commercial casinos in Lake Charles, La. Huffman’s chief opponent for the November 9 special election — Republican Leigh Wambsganss — is on record saying she doesn’t believe gambling is good for society.

    The research is conclusive — gambling has a negative impact on families and has a detrimental effect on the community as a whole,” Wambsganss told the Texas Scorecard. “I do not think expanded gambling is right for Texas.”

    Huffman says voters — not state lawmakers — should decide whether casinos are right for Texas.

    If voters choose expansion, it should be limited, well-regulated, and focused on a small number of high-end destination resorts that create jobs and attract tourism,” Huffman said.

    Sands’ largest shareholder is billionaire Dr. Miriam Adelson, who, along with her son-in-law, Patrick Dumont, controls the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks. In late 2023, the Adelsons bought a 69% position in the Mavs from Mark Cuban for about $3.8 billion. 

    Casino Lobby

    Adelson’s late husband, Sheldon Adelson, the founder and longtime chair and CEO of Sands, had sought entry into Texas for many years. Adelson is carrying on her husband’s ambitions.

    Adelson’s purchase of the Mavs is thought to give the businesswoman and philanthropist an upper hand in Austin in convincing lawmakers to consider gaming. Her crusade is supported by Cuban, who believes Texas needs to diversify its leisure travel attractions. Adelson and Cuban have suggested building a new NBA arena accompanied by an integrated resort casino.

    Adelson and Sands are the lone financiers of Texas Sands PAC. In August, she gave $9.1 million to the political action committee. Sands gave $4,500.

    Adelson is also a major backer of the Texas Defense PAC. That committee gave Huffman almost $600K. The Adelson-based committees collectively account for about 94% of Huffman’s total campaign war chest.

    Political Irony

    Huffman believes it’s quite ironic that Wambsganss opposes casinos in Texas, considering her family made money off gaming. Those claims stem from her husband previously being an investor in a skill gaming manufacturing company that primarily operated in Virginia, the state in which Wambsganss was born before moving to Texas as a child with her military parents.

    Skill games in Virginia have been illegal since July 2021, though legal challenges continue. Skill games are slot-like machines that require players to identify winning paylines.

    Huffman’s support of casinos is also a bit ironic. Last summer, he posted his family’s favorite cities across the US after being “blessed to travel to all 50 states.” His review for Las Vegas wasn’t exactly an endorsement.

    We didn’t gamble — obviously — but we walked the Strip, marveled at the Bellagio Fountains, and soaked in the sensory overload. Glad the kids saw it, but no one was in a hurry to return. Just not our style,” Huffman summarized.

    The Texas politician ranked Las Vegas No. 16 among 21 major cities they visited.

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  • Congressional candidate John Huffman says George Santos apologized for protest video

    Congressional candidate John Huffman says George Santos apologized for protest video

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    Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., returns to a GOP caucus meeting working to formally elect a new speaker of the House on Oct. 13, 2023.

    Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., returns to a GOP caucus meeting working to formally elect a new speaker of the House on Oct. 13, 2023.

    USA TODAY NETWORK

    Southlake mayor and congressional candidate John Huffman said Saturday that expelled former U.S. Rep. George Santos of New York has apologized for a video accusing Huffman of siding with the Black Lives Matter movement.

    Santos apologized for the video Friday in a meeting with Huffman, U.S. Rep. Beth Van Duyne and syndicated radio talk show host Dana Loesch at a Southlake restaurant, Huffman said.

    Huffman is one of 11 candidates for the open U.S. House District 26 seat vacated by U.S. Rep. Michael Burgess. The district covers south and east Denton County, Cooke County and south Wise County.

    The video set off a torrid social media response Friday when Loesch and a Santos assistant exchanged sharp barbs on X, formerly Twitter, over photos of a social justice rally on June 6, 2020, in Southlake Town Square.

    Loesch accused “Big Con grifters from NY” of attacking Huffman over the rally. Huffman joined then-Southlake Mayor Laura Hill at the rally as Hill spoke to a crowd of about 1,000 mostly young people, urging calm.

    Santos, the first Republican ever expelled from Congress, is facing up to 22 years in federal prison on 23 felony counts alleging financial fraud. He earns money sending personal greetings as celebrity messages on Cameo.com, he has said.

    Santos replied to Loesch that the video was paid anonymously and “I don’t even know who the candidates are.” He happened to be in Dallas, he said, asking, “Highland Park country club for drinks? Hahaha.”

    The Cameo video was posted Jan. 29 on X. It starts with Santos shouting, “Hey, Mayor John Huffman!” He says he doubts voters would support anyone who “supports BLM and attended a BLM rally.”

    No retraction had been posted by Santos as of late Saturday.

    The Southlake Peaceful Protest was organized by a high school club after the May 25 murder of former Houston resident George Floyd, 46, by a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    Huffman did not speak. He accompanied Hill because city police had received threats of violence, he said.

    On her Feb. 1 radio show, Loesch, a Southlake resident and nationally syndicated radio host, told her audience she was also at the 2020 rally and that Hill and Huffman went to keep the peace.

    Hill also faced similar campaign accusations in her 2022 Republican primary runoff loss to now-state Rep. Nate Schatzline.

    Santos was “taken advantage of by liars” who ordered the video, Huffman said.

    He did not name an opponent, saying only: “There is some strategy and shenanigans afoot. That’s primary politics for you.”

    Huffman’s $303,084 raised so far is second only to Flower Mound Republican Brandon Gill ($478,700). Gill has been endorsed by former President Donald Trump, Sen. Ted Cruz, U.S. Rep. Ronny Jackson and former Trump national security advisor Michael Flynn.

    Next are Dallas Republican Luisa Del Rosal ($189,200), former District Judge Doug Robison of Denton ($110,650) and former Denton County Judge Scott Armey ($95,425). Armey is endorsed by his father and former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, and U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm.

    Late Friday, Loesch posted a photo of herself with Huffman, Santos and Van Duyne hugging and smiling.

    Her post: “Cheers to Friday!”

    This story was originally published February 3, 2024, 8:45 PM.

    Bud Kennedy is a Fort Worth Star-Telegram opinion columnist. In a 52-year Texas newspaper career, he has covered two Super Bowls, a presidential inauguration, seven Republican and Democratic national conventions and 18 Texas Legislature sessions..
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    Bud Kennedy

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