This discussion board topic is on the powers of the Texas Governor. While the Te

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This discussion board topic is on the powers of the Texas Governor. While the Texas governor has more limited powers than 48 of the remaining state governors, that does not mean he is powerless. What powers does the Texas governor enjoy? Are these significant powers? Do his actions have an impact on Texans?  Lets see what you think!
NOTE:  In answering your question, use the materials below and your own research as necessary.   
Handbook of Texas Online: Governor (https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/governor)
Lumen Learning: The Role of the Texas Governor (https://www.coursehero.com/study-guides/austincctexasgovernment1/the-role-played-by-texas-governor/)
The Qualifications and Roles of the Texas Governor (https://oertx.highered.texas.gov/courseware/lesson/1080/overview)
The Questions:
Identify and define three powers of the Texas governor.  (Note:  Look them up but explain the concepts in your own words.  Do not just repeat the definition.)
Which one of the three powers you identified do you believe to be the most significant and why?
Identify a power of the governor that could impact your life and explain why.
The rules for assignment credit:
Initial posts are due Thursday by 11:59pm. Peer review replies are due by Sunday at 11:59pm. Please review the grading rubric.
Your answer needs to be no less than 300 words.  You must answer all questions completely. Your initial contribution to the discussion forum should reflect meaningful engagement with the lesson and text, and include a “References” or “Works Cited” section, formatted in either APA or MLA.
Students then must post thoughtful replies to at least one other students’ post (100-word minimum for each of the student response posts).  When you post your reply to another student, I want you to use the SCCQ model.  What does this mean?  It means that each response should include a brief summary of the the main point of the student’s post, a comment about the student’s post, a connection to something both internal to the discussion (such as a reference to the text or lesson and something external to the discussion (such as a comment on your own experience/thoughts on the issue), and a question that will prompt further discussion (that is, a question that cannot be answered in just a few words).  Remember that the posts are not anonymous and will be moderated.  Inappropriate comments will cause students to lose credit for the assignment.
Students must submit a full, complete submission to the forum before gaining access to the entire discussion board, including other students’ writing. This is intentional, as the purpose of the initial submission is to gauge your own understanding of the course material without any influence from your classmates’ writing. Students who submit an empty, incomplete, or trivial post to the forum to gain access to other students’ writing will receive a failing grade on the assignment. Students who accidentally submit an empty or incomplete post to the forum must immediately email the instructor for an alternative assignment.
* Read:
Textbook : Title: Texas Government , Author: Daniel Regalado, Publisher:   OpenStax Texas Government , Web Link: https://tccd-tx-govt.github.io/posts/
Texas Government Chapters 7 (BELOW) https://tccd-tx-govt.github.io/posts/m7-executive/
Texas Government Chapters 6 (BELOW) https://tccd-tx-govt.github.io/posts/m6-intrest-groups/
Office of the Governor Transcript ( The Governor of Texas : The office of Governor in the State of Texas is one of the weakest in the United States. Limits were placed on the governor on purpose in the 1876 Constitution due to the individualistic political culture that has dominated this state. The two primary weaknesses of the governor are as follows: they have little to no say over the budget creation process and they do not get to appoint members to their cabinet. The Legislative Budget Board actually writes the budget that the Texas legislature considers, and cabinet members are directly elected by the voters of Texas.
While the office is weak in comparison to governors in other states it does not mean the governor is lacking powers. The governor has many powers tied to the legislature including signing bills into law, veto power, line-item veto, post adjournment veto, and the power to call special sessions. The governor has military powers including the power to call martial law, instate curfews, command of the Texas National Guard (unless the president takes command), and command of the Texas State Guard. The governor appoints many people to positions on boards and commissions across the state; the most significant position the governor gets to appoint is the Secretary of State. You will learn about some other powers of the governor in this module as well.
The Executive Branch of Texas includes the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, comptroller, land commissioner, agriculture commissioner, the Secretary of State, State Board of Education, and the Railroad Commission. Except for the Secretary of State, voters in Texas choose all the people who serve in these positions. Thank you for listening and learning about the Texas Governor. )
– Texas Agencies, Boards, and Commissions https://www.txdirectory.com/online/abc/
– The Handbook of Texas Online: Governor https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/governor
– Lumen Learning: The Role of the Texas Governor https://www.coursehero.com/study-guides/austincctexasgovernment1/the-role-played-by-texas-governor/
– The Role and Qualifications of the Texas Governor https://oertx.highered.texas.gov/courseware/lesson/1080/overview
– Introduction: Texas Governor and Executive Branch https://oertx.highered.texas.gov/courses/texas-government-2-0/view
– Lumen Learning: Gubernatorial Elections and Qualifications https://www.coursehero.com/study-guides/austincctexasgovernment1/gubernatorial-elections-and-qualifications/
– Lumen Learning: The Role Played by the Texas Governor https://www.coursehero.com/study-guides/austincctexasgovernment1/the-role-played-by-texas-governor/
– Lumen Learning: Texas Plural Executive https://www.coursehero.com/study-guides/austincctexasgovernment1/the-texas-plural-executive/
Posts
Module 6 Interest Groups
January 11, 2024
Introduction: Interest Groups and Lobbying in Texas
Overview
Chapter Learning Objective
By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:
Evaluate the role played by interest groups in Texas
Introduction: Lobbyists are Important for Democracy
“Say you’re passionate about finding a cure for Parkinson’s disease. You can try to be a lone voice in the wilderness, but chances are there’s a lobbying organization that can bolster your argument with research and facts, and the ability to get that info to people who make the decisions.
Critics like to slam lobbyists as stand-ins for special interests. That’s the funny thing about special interests. They’re easily dismissed as “special,” until they’re yours. Lobbyists represent all points of view on issues confronting the country: environment, labor, the elderly, veterans, but also privacy advocates, pet owners, and even online poker players. That’s the great thing about America.
Everyone has a voice, and lobbyists are an effective way to get those voices heard.”
Source: Brian Pallasch, former president of the American League of Lobbyists in Washington, D.C. Lobbyists are important for democracy [PODCAST]. February 13, 2008. American Public Media: Marketplace.
Interest Groups in Texas
Learning Objective
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Define the essential characteristics of interest groups and why they form
Introduction
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees the freedom of speech, which we usually think of as the right of an individual to openly express a point of view – even a controversial one. But the amendment goes on to guarantee “…the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”
The right to assemble and express a collective opinion is really a constitutional right to form interest groups, and to lobby on public policy issues. If the Texas chapter of the Sierra Club organizes a group to lobby state legislators on climate change issues, they’re exercising their constitutional right to express a collective opinion. If the Texas Association of Realtors organizes a group to lobby the legislature to repeal a real estate tax they consider unfair, what are they doing? They’re peaceably assembling, and they’re petitioning their state government for a redress of grievances. If the Texas Barber Association lobbies against a sales tax on haircuts, they’re doing the same thing.
In Buckley v. Valeo (1976), the Supreme Court upheld Congress’s right to regulate elections by restricting contributions to campaigns and candidates. However, at the same time, it overturned restrictions on expenditures by candidates and their families, as well as total expenditures by campaigns. (Note: Buckley v. Valeo, 75-436, 424 U.S. 1 (1976).) In 1979, an exemption was granted to get-out-the vote and grassroots voter registration drives, creating what has become known as the soft-money loophole; soft money was a way in which interests could spend money on behalf of candidates without being restricted by federal law. To close this loophole, Senators John McCain and Russell Feingold sponsored the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act in 2002 to ban parties from collecting and distributing unregulated money.
Some continued to argue that campaign expenditures are a form of speech, a position with which two recent Supreme Court decisions are consistent. The Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (Note: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 08-205, 558 U.S. 310 (2010).) and the McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (Note: McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, 12-536, 572 U.S. 185 (2014).) cases opened the door for a substantially greater flow of money into elections. Citizens United overturned the soft money ban of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and allowed corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts of money on elections. Essentially, the Supreme Court argued in a 5-4 decision that these entities had free speech rights, much like individuals, and that free speech included campaign spending. The McCutcheon decision further extended spending allowances based on the First Amendment by striking down aggregate contribution limits. These limits put caps on the total contributions allowed and some say have contributed to a subsequent increase in groups and lobbying activities.
Today, the debate about interest groups often revolves around whether the First Amendment protects the rights of individuals and groups to give money, and whether government can regulate the use of this money. In 1971, the Federal Election Campaign Act was passed, setting limits on how much presidential and vice-presidential candidates and their families could donate to their own campaigns. (Note: Wright, Interest Groups and Congress: Lobbying, Contributions, and Influence; Rozell, Wilcox, and Franz, Interest Groups in American Campaigns: The New Face of Electioneering.) The law also allowed corporations and unions to form PACs and required public disclosure of campaign contributions and their sources. In 1974, the act was amended in an attempt to limit the amount of money spent on congressional campaigns. The amended law banned the transfer of union, corporate, and trade association money to parties for distribution to campaigns.
What are Interest Groups?
While the term interest group is not mentioned in the U.S. Constitution, the framers were aware that individuals would band together in an attempt to use government in their favor. In Federalist No. 10, James Madison warned of the dangers of “factions,” minorities who would organize around issues they felt strongly about, possibly to the detriment of the majority. But Madison believed limiting these factions was worse than facing the evils they might produce, because such limitations would violate individual freedoms. Instead, the natural way to control factions was to let them flourish and compete against each other. The sheer number of interests in the United States suggests that many have, indeed, flourished. They compete with similar groups for membership, and with opponents for access to decision-makers. Some people suggest there may be too many interests in the United States. Others argue that some have gained a disproportionate amount of influence over public policy, whereas many others are underrepresented.
Madison’s definition of factions can apply to both interest groups and political parties. But unlike political parties, interest groups do not function primarily to elect candidates under a certain party label or to directly control the operation of the government. Political parties in the United States are generally much broader coalitions that represent a significant proportion of citizens. In the American two-party system, the Democratic and Republican Parties spread relatively wide nets to try to encompass large segments of the population. In contrast, while interest groups may support or oppose political candidates, their goals are usually more issue-specific and narrowly focused on areas like taxes, the environment, and gun rights or gun control, or their membership is limited to specific professions. They may represent interests ranging from well-known organizations, such as the Sierra Club, IBM, or the American Lung Association, to obscure ones, such as the Texas-based Romance Writers of America. Thus, with some notable exceptions, specific interest groups have much more limited membership than do political parties.
Definitions abound when it comes to interest groups, which are sometimes referred to as special interests, interest organizations, pressure groups, or just interests. Most definitions specify that interest group indicates any formal association of individuals or organizations that attempt to influence government decision-making and/or the making of public policy. Often, this influence is exercised by a lobbyist or a lobbying firm.
Formally, a lobbyist is someone who represents the interest organization before government, is usually compensated for doing so, and is required to register with the government in which he or she lobbies, whether state or federal. The lobbyist’s primary goal is usually to influence policy. Most interest organizations engage in lobbying activity to achieve their objectives. As you might expect, the interest hires a lobbyist, employs one internally, or has a member volunteer to lobby on its behalf.
Why Do We Form Interest Groups?
Political scientists point to three major reasons people form interest groups. The first involves material benefits. It’s fair to say Americans probably join the nation’s largest interest group – AARP (American Association of Retired Persons) – not to stand up for the rights of retired people, but in order to get discounts on insurance, as well as other products and services. For most of its history, the National Rifle Association was more about safety classes and insurance discounts that political advocacy.
The second reason involves solidary benefits. There’s something very special about getting together with other people who do what you do for a living.
Whether you’re a police officer, and apartment manager or a dentist, colleagues can learn from each other, discuss best practices and share stories only another person in their business can truly appreciate.
Finally, there are purposive benefits – the satisfaction of working together with others toward a common cause. Members of groups like the Sierra Club or Mothers Against Drunk Drivers are motivated primarily by the satisfaction of working with other like-minded people to support a specific cause.
Licensing and Attribution
CC LICENSED MATERIAL, ORIGINAL
Interest Groups in Texas. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
Interest Group Typologies
Learning Objectives
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Identify the various interest group typologies
Introduction: Types of Interest Groups
As of 2019, the Texas Ethics Commission listed 1834 registered lobbyists, many of whom represent multiple clients – some interest groups, some individual companies. What are some of the types of interest groups in Texas?
Texas Interest Groups
Trade associations are groups of companies involved in the same business. The Texas Association of Realtors, the Texas Bankers Association and the Texas Automobile Dealers Association are three prominent examples.
Professional Associations are like trade associations, but with individual – rather than company – members. The Texas Nurses Association and the Texas Society of Professional Engineers are two major Texas professional associations. The Texas Nursing Association advocates for safe nursing practices through education and licensure in the Texas Nursing Practice Act.
Organized labor is another major interest group type. While union members account for less than 5 percent of wage and salary workers in Texas, unions play a prominent role in the political process. The most prominent umbrella group for labor in Texas is the AFL-CIO, but with increasing competition from SEIU Texas, which specializes in government and service workers.
Historically, agriculture groups have played a more prominent role in Texas government than any other type of interest group. As Texas politics become more urban, however, groups like the Texas Farm Bureau and the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, while still important, don’t dominate policy in Texas as much as in the 20th Century.
Racial, ethnic, and minority groups from the Texas National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and LULAC to Equality Texas advocate on behalf of specific groups of people based on their racial heritage, sexual orientation, or other types of minority status.
Religious groups have a long history of advocacy in Texas. Groups such as the Baptist Christian Life Commission have historically held considerable influence on abortion, gambling, and alcohol issues, but are involved increasingly on social justice issues like predatory lending and human trafficking.
One of the least-known, but most powerful classes of interest groups in Texas, are groups of local governments. The Texas Municipal League and the Texas Association of Counties have been increasingly active during state legislative sessions as legislators deal with property tax and local control issues that affect their ability to serve their constituents.
Finally, for every cause about which Texans are passionate, there are cause groups representing their interests. From the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) to Texas Right to Life on abortion and Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) on drinking and driving laws to Bike Texas which advocates for bicyclists, cause groups lobby for their members’ views on a wide variety of policy issues. References and Further Reading
Texas Board of Nursing (2017). Laws & Rules – Nursing Practice Act (NPA).
United States Department of Labor – Bureau of Labor Statistics. Union Members in Texas – 2018.
Licensing and Attribution
CC LICENSED MATERIAL, ORIGINAL
Interest Group Typologies. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
How Interest Groups Influence Texas Government
Learning Objective
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Analyze the techniques used by interest groups to influence Texas government
Introduction
Texas interest groups use a wide variety of techniques to attempt to influence public policy, but most fall into two primary areas: electioneering and lobbying.
Electioneering
Electioneering is what groups do to influence who the policymakers will be. While federal law has strict limits on the amount of money that can be raised and contributed in federal races, Texas law permits groups to form political action committees that can receive and donate unlimited amounts of money to state and local election campaigns (Note: Home rule cities in Texas can limit contributions to candidates for city positions by ordinance).
The Texas Association of Realtors PAC raised nearly 2 million dollars during the 2018 election cycle, donating $1.2 million to candidates. Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a group that advocates for civil justice reform, donated $1.3 million, spread over 100 different candidates.
PACs in Texas have different approaches to political involvement. Many interest groups follow – officially or unofficially – the friendly incumbent rule. They avoid backing challengers to incumbent legislators – even when those challengers might be more in line with their group’s interests.
Why?
Because challengers rarely win, and many groups fear retaliation from a spurned incumbent legislator more than they value the chance – often a long shot – to replace that incumbent with a more supportive candidate.
Whatever an interest group chooses to do in an election, the election is eventually over, and a winner is sworn into office whether the group supported or opposed him. That’s when electioneering gives way to lobbying.
Lobbying
Lobbying is simply the process of advocating for your group’s interests. Some groups hire professional lobbyists to represent them in Austin. Others rely solely on volunteers.
Figure 10.1 Texas’ gun-rights lobby swiftly pushed back after Governor Greg Abbott raised the possibility of tighter firearms laws in response to a gunman killing 22 people and injuring 24 others at an El Paso Walmart on August 3, 2019. A gun-rights rally was held outside the Capitol on August 23 and included members of Open Carry Texas and Gun Owners of America. Rallyists carried signs like the one in the image above. Image credit: Jean Downs License: CC BY SA
Grassroots lobbying involves getting large numbers of constituents to contact their legislators on behalf of a particular issue. When done well, grassroots lobbying is incredibly effective with legislators, who are strongly motivated to please voters who live in their districts. Less well known but also effective is “grasstops” lobbying, which involves generating smaller numbers of contacts from people of special importance to legislators – possibly including their largest campaign contributors, local party officials, mayors or school superintendents. Even small numbers of highly influential people can sometimes make a significant impression.
Like lawmakers, many lobbyists are lawyers, and the persons they are trying to influence have the duty of writing laws. That the disciplines of law and lobbying are intertwined could be seen in the case of a Texas lawyer, Kevin Glasheen, who had been seeking compensation for his unfairly imprisoned client. Glasheen’s exonerated-prisoner client had trouble paying the legal expenses, which totaled $1,024,166.67. Glasheen then lobbied the Texas state legislature to pass a bill that increased the payout to exonerated prisoners from $50,000 per year to $80,000 per year. It succeeded, making it possible for his newly freed client to pay the lawyer’s fees (the lawyer was later sued for his billing in wrongful conviction cases).
Legislators frankly rely on interest groups for information. The 2019 legislature considered 10,877 individual bills and resolutions. Part-time legislators cannot possibly know how each of those proposed changes in state law might impact various industries and interests unless representatives of those groups tell them.
References and Further Reading
Top Ten PACs of the 2018 Texas Election Cycle. Transparency Texas. September 6, 2017.
Who Are the Biggest Spenders in Texas Races? Becca Aaronson. March 1, 2016.
Vertuno, J. (2019, August 23). Texas gun rights lobby pushing back on calls for new laws. AP News. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
Schwartz. J. (2011, May 9). Exonerated Inmates Fight Lawyer’s Lobbying Fees. The New York Times. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
Licensing and Attribution
LICENSED MATERIAL, ORIGINAL
How Interest Groups Influence Texas Government. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
Interest Group Regulation in Texas
Learning Objective
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Discuss how interest groups are regulated in Texas
Regulating Lobbying and Interest Group Activity
The federal and state governments prohibit certain activities like providing gifts to lawmakers and compensating lobbyists with commissions for successful lobbying. Many activities are prohibited to prevent accusations of vote buying or currying favor with lawmakers. Some states, for example, have strict limits on how much money lobbyists can spend on lobbying lawmakers, or on the value of gifts lawmakers can accept from lobbyists. According to the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act, lobbyists must certify that they have not violated the law regarding gift giving, and the penalty for knowingly violating the law increased from a fine of $50,000 to one of $200,000. Also, revolving door laws also prevent lawmakers from lobbying government immediately after leaving public office. Members of the House of Representatives cannot register to lobby for a year after they leave office, while senators have a two-year “cooling off” period before they can officially lobby. Former cabinet secretaries must wait the same period of time after leaving their positions before lobbying the department of which they had been the head. These laws are designed to restrict former lawmakers from using their connections in government to give them an advantage when lobbying. Still, many former lawmakers do become lobbyists, including former Senate majority leader Trent Lott and former House minority leader Richard Gephardt.
There are penalties for violating the law. Lobbyists and, in some cases, government officials can be fined, banned from lobbying, or even sentenced to prison. While state and federal laws spell out what activities are legal and illegal, the attorneys general and prosecutors responsible for enforcing lobbying regulations may be understaffed, have limited budgets, or face backlogs of work, making it difficult for them to investigate or prosecute alleged transgressions. While most lobbyists do comply with the law, exactly how the laws alter behavior is not completely understood. We know the laws prevent lobbyists from engaging in certain behaviors, such as by limiting campaign contributions or preventing the provision of certain gifts to lawmakers, but how they alter lobbyists’ strategies and tactics remains unclear.
Introduction: The Texas Ethics Commission
Texas doesn’t place as many limits on what interest groups can do as some other states, but Texas places a high value on transparency. An interest group in Texas can give an unlimited amount of money to a political campaign but must disclose their contributions to the Texas Ethics Commission, which makes that information available to the public on its recently redesigned, highly-searchable website.
Many have argued that the public has a right to know where candidates get their money. Candidates may be reluctant to accept contributions from donors affiliated with unpopular interests such as hate groups. This was one of the key purposes of the Lobbying Disclosure Act and comparable laws at the state level.
The Texas Ethics Commission has eight commissioners, appointed by the governor, lieutenant governor and speaker of the house.
Political Action Committees (PACs)
Political action committees (PACs) are formed by designating an official treasurer, who must then file contribution and expenditure reports twice a year, with additional reports due prior to any election in which it is involved.
Lobbying
The Commission defines lobbying as “making direct communications with members of the legislative or executive branch of Texas state government to influence legislation or administrative action.” Registration is required for any lobbyist who receives more than $1000 per calendar quarter for lobbying, or who spends “more than $500 in a calendar quarter to benefit a state officer or employee (or his or her immediate family) when the expenditures are made to communicate to influence legislation or administrative action.”
Registration is $750 per year, with a reduced fee for lobbyists representing non- profit groups. Registered lobbyists file monthly activity reports listing their clients and specific expenditures.
Gifts to officials are limited to $500 per year, and any gift with a value of more than $50 must be reported. Fines of up to $10,000 and criminal punishments as high as a second-degree felony may be pursued against violators.
Some local governments in Texas can place additional restrictions on interest groups. The City of Houston requires everyone who lobbies their city government to register – defining lobbying as either spending or being paid at least $200 in a calendar quarter or $800 in a calendar year “to influence municipal legislation or administrative action on behalf of the employer by whom the person is compensated or reimbursed.” To register as a lobbyist in the City of Houston costs $291.87 per year and is due along with a registration form within five working days of the lobbyist’s first communication with a city official.
After registering, lobbyists in Houston file quarterly reports detailing any spending on communications with city officials, from the cost of buying breakfast for the mayor to the price of a ticket to take a city council member to a ballgame.
As of October, 2019, there were 130 people registered as lobbyists with the City of Houston.
Question: How many lobbyists are registered in your city or town?
Figure 10.2 Defense contractors such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin sell extensively to the government and must, of necessity, engage in lobbying to win contracts. Photo credit: Piergiuliano Chesi CC BY-SA 3.0.
The list of registered lobbyists and their clients is available online. Filed registration forms and activity reports are available in the City Secretary’s office during business hours.
Does business group’s use of “dark money” for its political action committee follow state ethics rules? Find out more at the Texas Tribune
References and Further Reading
Texas Ethics Commission
Texas Ethics Commission. Checklist for Starting Your Lobbying.
City of Houston. Code of Ordinances – Article V: Lobbying. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
City of Houston. City Fee Schedule. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
City of Houston. Office of the City Secretary. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
Murphy, J. & Root, R. (2018). Does business group’s use of “dark money” for its political action committee follow state ethics rules? Texas Tribune.
Licensing and Attribution
LICENSED MATERIAL, ORIGINAL
How Interest Groups are Regulated. Authored by: Andrew Teas.License: CC BY: Attribution
Glossary
dark money: In the politics of the United States, dark money refers to political spending by nonprofit organizations—for example, 501(c)(4) (social welfare), 501(c) (unions), and 501(c)(6) (trade association) groups—that are not required to disclose their donors
free rider problem: the incentive to benefit from others’ work without making a contribution, which leads individuals in a collective action situation to refuse to work together
friendly incumbent rule: regarding interest groups, the informal practice of avoiding support for challengers to incumbent legislators – even when those challengers might be more in line with their group’s interests
grassroots lobbying: an approach that asks the general public to contact legislators and government officials concerning issues at hand, as opposed to conveying the message to the legislators directly.
interest group: an organization established to influence the government’s programs and policies
lobbying: an attempt to influence policy by persuading a government policy-making official
political action committee (PAC): In the United States, a political action committee (PAC) is a 527 organization that pools campaign contributions from members and donates those funds to campaigns for or against candidates, ballot initiatives, or legislation
References and Further Reading
Center for Responsive Politics (2015). “Political Nonprofits: Summary.” Retrieved from opensecrets.org. Retrieved September 9, 2019.
Robert Maguire (2014, April). How 2014 Is Shaping Up to be the Darkest Money Election to Date. Center for Responsive Politics. Retrieved September 9, 2019. Licensing and Attribution
CC LICENSED CONTENT, ORIGINAL
Interest Groups and Lobbying in Texas: Glossary. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
Posts
Module 7 The Executive Branch
January 11, 2024
The Executive Department and the Office of the Governor of Texas
Introduction: Texas’ Governor and Executive Branch
Overview
Introduction: Texas’ Governor and Executive Branch Learning Objective
By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:
Explain the structure and function of the executive branch of the Texas government
Introduction
In its 2019 session, the Texas Legislature failed to pass a “Sunset” bill that would have continued the existence of the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners. The bill had stalled amid controversy over whether or not to phase out this small agency and combine its functions into the larger Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.
Without passage of S.B. 621, Texas faced an interesting problem. With no law requiring plumbers to be licensed and no agency to license them, anybody with a pipe wrench could now go into the plumbing business, performing jobs from replacing a kitchen faucet to complex medical gas piping in a hospital with no license and no training.
Shortly after the session, legislators realized what they had done. Some legislators, plumbers, city plumbing inspectors and others began calling for a special legislative session to fix the problem. Instead, Texas Governor Greg Abbott simply issued an executive order extending the existence of the state board through the next regular legislative session.
How?
“A qualified workforce of licensed plumbers throughout the state, including from areas not directly affected by Hurricane Harvey, will be essential as those funds are being invested in crucial infrastructure, medical facilities, living facilities, and other construction projects,” he said in his order. By extending the board through the next legislative session or until “disaster needs subside,” the governor was able to tap into sweeping powers given to his office to deal with natural disasters.
How can a governor in a “weak governor” state sidestep the legislature and resurrect an agency despite legislation to the contrary? In this chapter, we’ll look at the executive branch of state government in Texas. Licensing and Attribution
CC LICENSED CONTENT, ORIGINAL
The Executive Department and the Office of the Governor of Texas: Introduction. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
Background
Learning Objective
At the end of this section, you will be able to:
Discuss the background of Texas’ executive branch and Governor
Introduction
This section discusses the background of Texas’ executive branch.
Figure 4.1 Seal of the Governor. Image Credit: Public Domain.
The executive branch consists of the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Comptroller of Public Accounts, Land Commissioner, Attorney General, Agriculture Commissioner, the three-member Texas Railroad Commission, the State Board of Education, and the Secretary of State. Texas has a [plural executive] branch system which limits the power of the Governor. Except for the Secretary of State, all executive officers are elected independently making them directly answerable to the public, not the Governor.
Partly because of many elected officials, the governor’s powers are quite limited in comparison to other state governors or the U.S. President. In popular lore and belief the lieutenant governor, who heads the Senate and appoints its committees, has more power than the governor. The governor commands the state militia and can veto bills passed by the Legislature and call special sessions of the Legislature (this power is exclusive to the governor and can be exercised as often as desired). The governor also appoints members of various executive boards and fills judicial vacancies between elections. All members of the executive branch are elected statewide except for the Secretary of State (appointed) and the State Board of Education (each of its 15 members are elected from single-member districts).
History and Background
The state’s first constitution in 1845 established the office of governor, to serve for two years, but no more than four years out of every six (essentially a limit of no more than two consecutive terms). The 1861 secessionist constitution set the term start date at the first Monday in the November following the election. The 1866 constitution, adopted just after the American Civil War, increased terms to 4 years, but no more than 8 years out of every 12, and moved the start date to the first Thursday after the organization of the legislature, or “as soon thereafter as practicable.” The Reconstruction constitution of 1869 removed the limit on terms, Texas remains one of 14 states with no gubernatorial term limit. The present constitution of 1876 shortened terms back to two years, but a 1972 amendment increased it again to four years.
The Texas Constitution specifies that the governor must be at least 30 years old, an American citizen and a resident of Texas for at least five years. Texas governors served two-year terms until voters changed the Constitution to provide for four-year terms in 1972.
The first governor of Texas was J. Pinkney Henderson, who took over executive leadership from the final president of the Republic of Texas, Anson Jones, in 1846. Every governor from Richard Coke (1874–1876) to Dolph Briscoe (1973-1979) was a Democrat. Since George W. Bush’s election to the governor’s office in 1994, all four Texas governors have been Republicans.
Texas was the first southern state to elect a female governor. Miriam Ferguson served two terms following the impeachment of her husband, James Ferguson, in 1917 – the only Texas governor ever impeached. The second female governor, Ann Richards, served in the 1990s.
The Texas governor currently receives a $150,000 annual salary, as well as living accommodations. The Texas Governor’s Mansion, immediately southwest of the Texas Capitol building, has been home to Texas governors and their families since 1856.
Gubernatorial Elections
Texas elects governors in the midterm elections, that is, even years that are not presidential election years. For Texas, 2022, 2026, 2030 and 2034 are all gubernatorial election years. Legally, the gubernatorial inauguration is always set for the “on the first Tuesday after the organization of the Legislature, or as soon thereafter as practicable.”If two candidates tie for the most votes or if an election is contested, a joint session of the legislature shall cast ballots to resolve the issue.
The incumbent, Greg Abbott, is the forty-eighth governor to serve in the office since Texas’ statehood in 1845. He assumed office on January 20, 2015, succeeding Rick Perry (R). Perry was the longest-serving governor in state history with a tenure lasting from 2000 to 2015. Abbott previously served as the Attorney General of Texas from 2002 to 2015.
Figure 4.2 Greg Abbott is an American attorney and politician who has served as the 48th Governor of Texas since January 20, 2015. A Republican, Abbott previously served as the 50th Attorney General of Texas from 2002 to 2015. Image Credit: Andrew Teas, License: CC BY: Attribution
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CC LICENSED CONTENT, ORIGINAL
Revision and Adaptation. Authored by: Kris S. Seago. License: CC BY: Attribution
The Executive Powers of the Governor: Revision and Adaptation. Authored by: Andrew Teas. License: CC BY: Attribution
The Qualifications and Roles of the Texas Governor
Learning Objectives
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
Define the qualifications, roles, responsibilities, powers, and procedures associated with the office of the governor of Texas
Introduction
This section discusses the qualifications, roles, responsibilities, powers, and procedures associated with the office of the Governor of Texas Qualifications
Article IV, Section 4 of the Texas Constitution sets the following qualifications for Governor:
Must be at least 30 years old;
Resident of Texas for at least 5 years immediately before the election;
Must be a U.S. citizen.
The Roles Played by Texas’ Governor
General RolesThe governor makes policy recommendations that lawmakers in both the state House and Senate chambers may sponsor and introduce as bills. The governor also appoints the Secretary of State, as well as members of boards and commissions who oversee the heads of state agencies and departments. As the state’s chief budget officer, governors submit an executive budget to the legislature as a plan for revenue and expenditure for the next biennium. The constitutional and statutory duties of the Governor include
Signing or vetoing bills passed by the Legislature.

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