Governor in state address: Texas on 'comeback' from pandemic
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Republican Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday night said Texas is on a comeback from a pandemic that's killed more than 35,000 people statewide, third-most in the U.S., then pivoted America's biggest red state into a thicket of contentious issues that have roiled the nation during the past year.
In his final State of the State address before he is on the ballot for a third term in 2022, Abbott declared calls to "defund the police" an emergency in need of stopping and ordered the GOP majority in the Texas Capitol to prioritize "election integrity" without mentioning there was no evidence of widespread fraud during the 2020 elections.
He also demanded more gun protection on the books at a time when the NRA is newly looking to reincorporate in Texas, and more anti-abortion laws in a state that already has some of the most restrictive measures in the country.
Abbott, who has not ruled out a 2024 presidential run, delivered his State of the State on primetime television in Texas for the first time — rather than in front of lawmakers in the state Capitol, where COVID-19 worries continues to restrict gatherings.
But that gave Abbott an even larger audience than usual to defend his pandemic response — which has come under attack from members of his own party — at a moment when Texas, like most of the U.S., is finally seeing hospitalizations and cases fall after reaching record highs in recent weeks.
"Our comeback is already materializing," Abbott said. "Texans are returning to work. Students are returning to school. Families are re-establishing routines. With each passing day of more vaccinations and increased immunity, normalcy is returning to Texas."
He praised frontline hospital workers for their resilience and declared expanding broadband access a priority in the aftermath of a pandemic that forced millions to work and go to school from home. There was no mention of direct relief for Texans put of work but a demand for legislation that would protect businesses from pandemic-related lawsuits.
Democrats, who are still dusting themselves off from a demoralizing election cycle in which their massive expectations in Texas flamed out up and down the ballot, did not even wait for Abbott's address before blasting his response to the pandemic.
"As the Governor attempts to gloss over the lives that have been lost and the seriousness of the crisis we face, Texans everywhere know things are not right, and they are getting worse," Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa said. "We must demand more out of leaders or we'll never get to a point where every one of us has a fair shot to get ahead."
The State of the State is typically when governors lay out their legislative priorities over the coming year. In Texas, lawmakers meet for only five months every two years, giving legislators only until the end of May to try delivering Abbott's priorities to his desk.
This legislative session in Texas is the first since mass shootings that shook the state before the pandemic, the most deadly of which was a gunman who allegedly confessed to targeting Mexicans when he opened fire at a Walmart, killing 23 people. Abbott formed a task force on domestic terrorism following the attack but did not mention the shooting during his address.