Ask your boss, owned by them
Ask your boss, owned by them
His last name says it all
And…
No. NO! STOP THIS NOW.
He means it, will try it, whether martial law, seizing voting machines and ballots like in Georgia. STOP HIM.
He is a cornered rat, and will never obey any law, because he know the Republicans will lose the House, and hopefully the Senate.
BELIEVE HIM.
STOP HIM.
END THIS!!!
None finer♥️
My partner Petra Kaufmann has recently started sharing her writing on Medium.
Here’s her thoughts:
medium.com/@pkauf1
My partner Petra Kaufmann has recently started sharing her writing on Medium.
Here’s her thoughts:
medium.com/@pkauf1
More. Do more
NOOOOOOOOOO
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO
And…. Nothing will happen
Try more than a “strongly worded letter”, can you?
They’re also going to CHEAT.
He means it, whether martial law, seizing voting machines and ballots like in Georgia. STOP HIM.
He is a cornered rat, and will never obey any law, because he know the Republicans will lose the House, and hopefully the Senate.
BELIEVE HIM.
STOP HIM.
END THIS!!!
Dallas County is the second-largest county in Texas. It’s overwhelmingly Democratic. It’s exactly the kind of place where voter suppression has the biggest payoff.
Write it down. March 3, 2026. They just showed you their whole playbook.
If they’re willing to force a voting system change, create mass confusion, and then rush to court to block the fix—in March—what do you think November looks like?
This Is March. Imagine November.
This was a primary. A primary with relatively manageable logistics compared to what’s coming in the general election.
The government created the problem. A court ordered a remedy. The AG killed the remedy. And now there are ballots sitting in a pile, separated, waiting for someone to decide if they count.
And the attorney general—who, by the way, is running for Senate himself in the Republican primary—ran to the state supreme court to make sure the fix didn’t stick.
The Republican Party created the confusion by forcing a system change nobody needed. The state’s own website gave voters bad information. A judge tried to fix it.
Tonight, Dallas County had a hotly contested Democratic U.S. Senate primary between Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico. That race will determine who Democrats put up against the Republican nominee in November—in a state where Democrats haven’t won a Senate seat since 1988 but keep getting closer.
Ken Paxton isn’t losing anything if more Democrats vote tonight.
But here’s what you do gain: you weaken whoever comes out of it. You damage the eventual nominee. You shape the field. You get a test run for your playbook.
This Was the Point
I need you to think about why you’d do this in a Democratic primary.
You don’t suppress votes in a primary to win the primary. Republicans aren’t on the Democratic ballot.
They blocked the extension and ordered Dallas County to separate out all votes cast by people who weren’t in line by 7pm.
Those ballots are now in legal limbo. The court’s order doesn’t say what happens to them. It just says separate them.
He didn’t argue that the switch to precinct voting hadn’t caused mass confusion. He argued paperwork.
And the Texas Supreme Court—which, let’s be clear, is an all-Republican court—issued a temporary stay.
His argument? The lower court judge didn’t give his office the required notice before issuing the extension.
Seriously. Paxton didn’t argue that voters weren’t harmed. He didn’t argue that the state’s website hadn’t sent people to wrong locations.
This is how the system is supposed to work. A problem occurs, people are harmed, a court steps in with a remedy.
Then Ken Paxton Showed Up
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed an emergency motion with the Texas Supreme Court to block the judge’s order.
Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins confirmed the extension.