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Diamondbacks visit Pirates with a sense change is near
Diamondbacks visit Pirates with a sense change is near

Hindustan Times

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • Hindustan Times

Diamondbacks visit Pirates with a sense change is near

The Arizona Diamondbacks are slipping out of the playoff race and will attempt to gain some traction when they hit the road to face the surging Pittsburgh Pirates in the opener of a three-game series Friday. HT Image The Diamondbacks came away empty-handed during a three-game series against the Houston Astros, after returning from the All-Star break with three consecutive victories over the St. Louis Cardinals. Arizona will turn to right-hander Ryne Nelson (6-2, 3.52 ERA) on Friday, opposite Pittsburgh rookie right-hander Mike Burrows (1-3, 4.70). The Pirates are not in postseason contention and are likely to be sellers approaching the July 31 trade deadline. But there have been some bright spots of late, including a surge from their often-anemic offense during their three- game sweep this week of the American League Central-leading Detroit Tigers. The Pirates have been especially dangerous at home, where they have won 10 of their past 13 games. Pittsburgh first baseman Spencer Horwitz posted a pair of three-hit games in the team's first two wins over Detroit. On Wednesday, he hit his first career grand slam in a 6-1 win. He was batting .225 when the series started after opening the month with a .258 average. "I don't know that it's been that bad," Horwitz said. "I think the underlying numbers have been pretty good. But yeah, I'm getting the outward results. And I think it's rewarding, for sure." Arizona had high expectations when the season began, but a disappointing first half has brought uncertainty as the trade deadline approaches. "It's kind of weird. I might say goodbye to some players on the road and I'll never see them in this clubhouse again," Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said after the team's 4-3 loss to Houston on Wednesday. "It initially grabs you and postures you a little bit, but we've been hardened by this game, and we know that it's a possibility and we'll figure a way out of it. We'll be fine no matter what happens." The Pirates took two of three games from the Diamondbacks in Arizona from May 26-28. Nelson started the lone Diamondbacks victory in that series, tossing 6 2/3 shutout innings on four hits and no walks with four strikeouts. Nelson, who is 1-0 with a 3.09 ERA in two career starts against Pittsburgh, has done his part during Arizona's search for consistency. Since moving to the rotation full-time on June 7, Nelson is 4-1 with a 3.61 ERA and has 34 strikeouts over 42 1/3 innings. Nelson won his most recent outing over the Cardinals on Saturday, after he allowed one run on four hits and one walk while striking out four over six innings. The Diamondbacks have won six of Nelson's past seven starts. Burrows' first career start against Arizona didn't go well, as he gave up five runs (four earned) on five hits over 3 1/3 innings on May 27. But Pittsburgh rallied for a 9-6 victory. In Burrows' most recent outing, he allowed two runs on three hits, walked two and struck out six over five innings during a 10-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox on Saturday. --Field Level Media

After years of tension, Texas House emerges as cooperative partner for Dan Patrick and his conservative agenda
After years of tension, Texas House emerges as cooperative partner for Dan Patrick and his conservative agenda

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

After years of tension, Texas House emerges as cooperative partner for Dan Patrick and his conservative agenda

With tensions boiling over in the final days of the 2021 Texas legislative session, Rep. Dustin Burrows, a Lubbock Republican and a top House lieutenant, went out of his way to throw shade at the Senate and its leader, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, for letting too many House bills languish. From the back microphone on the House floor, Burrows rhetorically asked then-Speaker Dade Phelan if he was aware that 'less than 50% of the House bills that we sent over were passed by the Senate' — much worse than the success rate for Senate bills sent to the lower chamber. It came shortly after Patrick had flayed the House for killing several of his top conservative priorities. Four years later, Burrows' first session wielding the speaker's gavel is winding down with little of the same inter-chamber acrimony. Conservative priorities that had failed in session after session in the House, from private school vouchers to stricter bail laws, have cleared the Legislature with time to spare. So have once-thorny issues, like property tax cuts, school funding and immigration, that in years past had generated bad blood between the chambers and needed overtime sessions to address. Many of those now-imminent laws were in the sweeping agenda Patrick unveiled near the start of the session in January, marked by several issues that Gov. Greg Abbott also championed as 'emergency items.' All but a handful of Patrick's priorities — from conservative red meat to top bipartisan priorities to the lieutenant governor's own pet issues — have made it across the finish line or are poised to do so in the closing days of the session, which ends June 2. The lack of discord reflects the collegial relations Patrick and Burrows have worked to maintain from the start; Burrows' apparent desire to avoid drawing Patrick's wrath and the political damage it inflicted upon his predecessors; and the reality that the House, thanks to the turnover wrought by a bruising 2024 primary cycle, is now more conservative and more receptive than ever to Patrick's hard-charging agenda. 'The tools that Patrick uses — and I think he uses them as effective as anybody — is he's aggressive, he's up front, and he's early,' said Bill Miller, a veteran Austin lobbyist and political consultant. 'He lets you know what's coming and why and how important it is to him.' Patrick's influence — and that of the hardline conservative Senate he oversees — is evident down the homestretch of the Legislature, as a steady drumbeat of his highest priorities make their way onto the House floor as a waystation to Abbott's desk. For critics of the dynamic, the most telling case was the House's move this week to adopt Patrick's ban on hemp-derived THC products, in lieu of the carefully crafted regulatory bill offered up by one of Burrows' lieutenants. Patrick's crusade to eradicate the hemp industry, underscored by his threat to force a special session if the THC ban fell through, met almost no resistance from House Republicans, nearly all of whom stayed silent on the issue throughout the session. Speaking from the House's back microphone Friday, Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, jokingly asked whether Texas has a 'bicameral legislature' and, if so, whether either of the chambers is 'superior to the other.' 'I believe that democracy calls for this house to exercise its authority in as much as or to the same extent that the other side does, and I don't believe that's happening,' Dutton said, before echoing his favorite refrain about the Senate: 'If they won't respect us, they need to expect us.' In a statement, Patrick disputed the notion that either chamber 'gets its way over the other' and noted that, without cooperation from the House and Senate, 'nothing gets to the governor's desk to be signed into law.' 'The Speaker and I don't keep track of what's a Senate bill or a House bill. That simply depends on the flow of legislation and how we divide up the work as the session progresses to find the best way to pass a bill,' Patrick said. 'The Speaker and I, and the members from both chambers, have never had a more positive and collaborative relationship in my 18 years in office and that's why this session will be the most productive in history on so many major issues.' Burrows said he and Patrick 'began session aligned on many major issues' and kept their 'shared legislative priorities' moving by staying in contact. 'As a longtime conservative member of the Texas House, I appreciate the input and perspective from our Senate colleagues in crafting legislation and the support of Lieutenant Governor Patrick in making sure this was a banner conservative session for our state,' Burrows said in a statement. Democrats in recent weeks had intensified their criticism of Senate Republicans for failing to move on a multibillion-dollar school funding package, sent over by the lower chamber in tandem with a $1 billion school voucher bill that was quickly sent to Abbott and signed into law. The Senate's lead negotiator, GOP Sen. Brandon Creighton of Conroe, said the delay was a matter of lawmakers doing their due diligence on 'the most complex piece of legislation we will consider and negotiate this session.' Both chambers struck a deal on the $8.5 billion package this week. Just before it advanced out of the Senate Friday evening, Patrick — perched on the Senate dais — took aim at 'the media and those outside who said, why is it taking so long?" 'You don't pass those bills with the snap of a finger, because there are 150 opinions over there and 31 opinions over here,' Patrick said. 'So, we shut out the rest, the outside noise, the media who doesn't even understand how a bill passes. … It's really been a five-month process, and it's a masterpiece for the rest of the country to follow.' This session, Patrick has also taken a special interest in reining in the Texas lottery, which has come under scrutiny over the proliferation of online ticket sellers — known as couriers — and the revelation that a $95 million jackpot in 2023 went to a group that printed 99% of the 26 million possible ticket combinations. Couriers and bulk ticket purchases would each be banned under a last-minute Senate bill that has zoomed through the House and is set to reach the floor on Sunday. Patrick has also championed a push to more than double the amount of money the state spends to lure film and television production to Texas, with extra incentives for faith-based productions. That measure, Senate Bill 22, also made it onto Sunday's House floor agenda. The House has until the end of Tuesday to give initial approval to most Senate bills. The Senate, meanwhile, faces a Wednesday deadline to grant final passage to legislation from either chamber. Senators and House members will then spend the final days of the session reconciling their different versions of bills in closed-door conference committees. Some of Patrick's priorities have already cleared those hurdles and been sent to Abbott's desk, including a measure to allow time for prayer in public schools and create a $3 billion dementia research fund, the latter of which will also need approval from voters in November. Several priorities of Patrick and fellow hardline social conservatives also are on track to reach Abbott's desk after stalling in the House in recent sessions. Those include a requirement for public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments and a law barring residents and governments from countries deemed national security threats from buying property in Texas. The pressure for the House to pass conservative legislation has also come from within the chamber, with GOP members from the party's rightmost flank urging Burrows' lieutenants to push key bills through their committees. On Friday, a group of the House's most conservative members called on Rep. Ken King, a moderate Republican from Canadian who chairs the influential State Affairs Committee, to advance a bill aimed at restricting the flow of abortion pills into Texas. 'If Chairman King kills a bill that would protect tens of thousands of innocent children from the murder that is abortion, Republicans will be forced to hold him accountable,' Rep. Nate Schatzline, R-Fort Worth, said at a news conference highlighting conservative legislation stuck in limbo. King's committee advanced the measure, Senate Bill 2880, hours later. It was one of a handful of high-priority Senate bills that have been voted out by King's panel in recent days after being parked there for weeks, including the school prayer measure and a proposal to bar local governments from helping Texans travel out of state to receive abortions. Around the same time, some of King's bills sent over to the Senate — most of which had been frozen — suddenly began moving. Patrick has denied that King's bills were purposely being held up. The House's hardline ranks have swelled after last year's wave of GOP primary defeats that saw more than a dozen incumbents ousted, largely over their opposition to vouchers, support for the impeachment of Attorney General Ken Paxton or a combination of both. Others chose to retire and were replaced by more conservative successors, forming a class of insurgent GOP freshmen who make up the bulk of the House's more than 30 new members — the largest freshman class since 2013. 'There are two things that are working in Patrick's favor,' said Brandon Rottinghaus, a political science professor at the University of Houston. 'Number one, the House is more ideologically conservative than it's ever been. And two, a lot of the members are brand new.' Still learning the ropes, many of those new members 'are going to follow Patrick's lead,' Rottinghaus said, 'because he is, in some ways, the party's de facto leader.' That was especially clear in the debate over THC. King, who carried the Senate's THC bill in the lower chamber, proposed a version that would have sharply tightened regulations on the hemp industry and restricted which products are allowed to contain THC, while preserving hemp-derived THC edibles and drinks. That was done away with by proponents of a ban, who centered their pitch for a complete crackdown around the idea that Texas would expand its limited medical marijuana program, known as the Texas Compassionate Use Program, or TCUP. Midway through the House's THC floor debate, Patrick voiced support on social media for expanding the medical program to allow for more licensed medical marijuana dispensers and let providers operate satellite storage facilities designed to make it easier for patients to fill their prescriptions. Rep. James Frank, R-Wichita Falls, read off Patrick's post to the full chamber to bolster the case for a ban. House lawmakers included those provisions in legislation approved by the chamber last week. Their draft also would add several qualifying conditions, including chronic pain, and extend eligibility to honorably discharged veterans — both key selling points from House Republicans championing the THC ban. Both provisions — eligibility for chronic pain and veterans — were stripped from a new Senate draft of the bill unveiled days after the House's THC vote. The change sparked one of the first real signs of public discord between the chambers, kicked off when Rep. Tom Oliverson, the Cypress Republican who led the charge to restore the THC ban in the House, wrote on social media Saturday that he was "deeply disappointed in the removal of chronic pain" from the Senate medical marijuana bill. Pitching the ban this week, Oliverson told his House colleagues he had fought to include chronic pain in their version of the bill, and he promised he would "fight for that on the other side." In an addendum, he later added, "To clarify my statement below, no agreement on chronic pain in TCUP was ever reached with the Senate and none have been broken." Patrick followed later Saturday evening by thanking Oliverson for clarifying, before adding a key detail: Patrick said he had told Oliverson personally that the Senate would not add chronic pain as a qualifying condition, well before Oliverson later told House members he would fight for its inclusion. "I was as transparent as I could be. He knew the Senate wasn't adding chronic pain 2 weeks ago," Patrick said, adding, "For all of us, our word is the most important currency we have in the legislature." In conference committee, Patrick said, "Tom will get a chance to make another pitch. We'll listen in good faith." Disclosure: University of Houston has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here. First round of TribFest speakers announced! Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd; U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio; Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker; U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-California; and U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas are taking the stage Nov. 13–15 in Austin. Get your tickets today!

Searching billions of photos led police to fugitive paedophile Richard Burrows after decades
Searching billions of photos led police to fugitive paedophile Richard Burrows after decades

ITV News

time30-04-2025

  • ITV News

Searching billions of photos led police to fugitive paedophile Richard Burrows after decades

A paedophile who stayed on-the-run in a place he called "paradise" for almost 30 years was caught after a search of billions of online photos. Richard Burrows fled the UK, in 1997, to escape justice for sexually abusing boys during his time as a scout leader and school housemaster. He failed to appear at a court in Chester while on bail, but the authorities did not know he had managed to leave the country and no appeal helped to trace him. In 2023, advances in facial recognition software offered detectives the chance to scour the internet for Burrows. Out of the billions of images the system trawled, there were matches to someone calling himself 'Peter Smith' who was living in Thailand. 'Smith' worked at an advertising company and had appeared in the local Thai media. Detective Inspector Eli Atikinson told ITV News about what she called the "breakthrough moment." She said: "We put in the custody photograph from 1997. "The software provided a couple of matches to images from news articles from Phuket which showed his retirement do from the sailing club that he was a member of." The identity Burrows was living under had been stolen from a terminally-ill acquaintance of his. Back in 1997, he had used Peter Smith's name to fraudulently obtain a genuine passport and then travel to Thailand undetected. After confirming that 'Smith' was Burrows, Cheshire Police contacted the National Crime Agency and the Crown Prosecution Service to begin extradition proceedings. But officers soon became aware of Burrows' intention to return to the UK under his stolen alias after he ran out of money. Last March, the now 81-year-old was arrested at Heathrow Airport. For Burrows' victims, seeing him in a courtroom has taken a painfully long time with some passing away before it could happen. James Harvey is among those still here to see it. He was just 12-years-old when he was indecently assaulted by Burrows. Mr Harvey waived his right to anonymity to speak about what happened to him. He told ITV News: "I suddenly was aware that this man was trying to touch me in a way that nobody had ever tried to touch me before. "I knew in that instant that this was not normal. This was terribly embarrassing and uncomfortable, and I didn't like it. "[Burrows] is a serial, pitiless, cruel, manipulative, cynical human being who deserves to spend the rest of his life in prison." Burrows' offending in Cheshire took place between 1969 and 1971 while he was employed as a housemaster looking after vulnerable children at Danesford Children's Home in Congleton. His victims in the Midlands were abused between 1968 and 1995, the majority through local Scout groups where Burrows worked as a leader. In each case, he befriended the boys using his position of trust. One victim told Chester Crown Court that Burrows had "stripped away my humanity" in an eight-hour ordeal during his camping trip with the Scouts. The Honorary Recorder of Chester, Judge Steven Everett, replied: "You have done nothing to be ashamed of." Another victim said at the time he hid the abuse from his parents, could not tell any of his friends or trust a grown-up any more. He said: "I had no-one to turn to and just internalised it all. It totally affected my future relationships and behaviour. "Even now I keep going through my head: 'Why did you assault me?' I looked up to you.'' Judge Everett responded: "I want to be crystal clear. There is only one person at fault here and he is sitting opposite me in the dock." Those who finally tracked down Burrows hope this case shows that suspects will always be found, even in far-flung corners of the globe. Det Insp Atkinson said: "In emails that we have found since his arrest, Burrows described how he has spent the past three decades 'living in paradise', while his victims have all been left to suffer as they struggled to try and rebuild their lives. "Thankfully, following our determination, he has finally been held accountable for his actions and is now behind bars where he belongs. "I also hope that this case acts as a warning to any other wanted suspects - demonstrating that no matter how long you hide, we will find you and you will be held accountable."

Paper boys and girls reunite at Ely newsagent to mark closure
Paper boys and girls reunite at Ely newsagent to mark closure

BBC News

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Paper boys and girls reunite at Ely newsagent to mark closure

A man who delivered newspapers in the 1950s has joined more than 80 former paper boys and girls at a reunion for a retiring opened more than 125 years ago in Ely, Cambridgeshire, but is set to close after its third generation owner Jeff Burrows, 76, decided to closure was marked with a call-out on social media to former employees to turn up at the shop at 09:00 BST on Burrow's niece, Annabel Reddick, who works at the shop, said the response was "incredible, I thought we'd get about 15 or 20 if we were lucky". "We had at least 80 people turn up, including one girl who now lives in Manchester -and one gentleman who came from Norfolk and said he did his round in the 1950s," she said."Many of them wrote down their memories, thanking Jeff and saying it was a great start to their working life." The cash-only shop opens every day except Christmas, as well as deploying about 20 girls and boys to deliver papers to nearly 700 customers. Mr Burrows was 25 when he took over the business from his father Percy in 1973 - it was set up by his grandfather James reckoned that he had employed at least 500 paper boys and girls over the years since, most aged between 13 and 16, whom he described as "good as gold".Ms Reddick, who opens the shop every day at 05:00 BST, said: "Jeff and my grandad had a tradition of having hot cross buns for the paper boys and girls at Easter - they'd buy big trays of them - so we did the same and served them all buns from Boswell and Son Bakers on Saturday."Luckily she had bought enough to go round, she added. Burrows' last day of trading is 26 April and its paper round has been sold to a national company. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Winners and losers: Who came out on top — and who didn't — in the Texas House's committee assignments
Winners and losers: Who came out on top — and who didn't — in the Texas House's committee assignments

Yahoo

time15-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Winners and losers: Who came out on top — and who didn't — in the Texas House's committee assignments

House Speaker Dustin Burrows announced his highly anticipated committee appointments on Thursday, laying the groundwork for legislation to start moving through the lower chamber. The committee assignments relied heavily on the leadership team of Burrows' predecessor and close ally, Rep. Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont. Yet Burrows also gave nine lawmakers their first opportunity to lead a committee. As always, there were only so many chair positions to go around, with 30 standing committees for 88 Republicans, making it inevitable that some members would miss out on plum appointments. Adding an additional wrinkle this year, a new House rule banned members of the minority party from helming committees, which meant Burrows had to consider how to divide the spoils among Republicans — many of whom did not support him for the speakership — while still making sure the Democratic coalition that won him the gavel received enough crumbs to be satisfied. Here is a breakdown of some of the winners and losers of Burrows' first-ever committee appointments. The Lubbock Republican had fielded criticism from the far-right of his party since the moment he announced he would run to replace Phelan as speaker. But on Thursday, Burrows, who hardline conservatives accuse of being too cozy with Democrats, seemed to have pulled off a tough balancing act, rewarding his closest allies and elevating new ones while neutralizing many critics. He appointed four Republicans who voted against him to chairmanships, including one of Phelan's GOP rivals for the speaker's dais, fellow Panhandle Rep. John Smithee of Amarillo, who was appointed to lead the Criminal Jurisprudence Committee. Burrows also tapped two former speaker hopefuls, Rep. David Cook of Mansfield and Rep. James Frank of Wichita Falls, to lead new subcommittees. Democrats, who suffered a blow by losing their ability to lead committees, still seemed pleased with their committee assignments. Burrows appointed Democrats to lead six of the 12 standing subcommittees, and El Paso Democratic Rep. Joe Moody was named speaker pro tempore, a largely ceremonial position that nonetheless gave the minority party another win. Keeping the Democrats happy is crucial for Burrows because they make up the majority of his tenuous coalition. He was elected speaker with the support of 49 Democrats and 36 Republicans. But he also made enough Republicans happy to avoid sparking an uproar within his own party. Burrows followed an unsteady path to the speaker's dais after he announced his candidacy in December. When the House Republican Caucus soon after endorsed Cook, his main GOP opponent, Burrows said in a news conference he had the necessary 76 votes to win the speaker's gavel. But only hours later, lawmakers started taking their names off his list, dropping him below the majority threshold. The battle for uncommitted and flippable lawmakers continued into the first day of the session, with neither Cook nor Burrows having a clear lock on 76 votes heading into the speaker election that day. Lawmakers who eventually flipped from Cook to Burrows were handsomely rewarded in their committee assignments. Rep. Caroline Fairly, a Republican from Amarillo who announced the morning of the speaker's election that she was flipping her vote to Burrows, was appointed to the budget-writing Appropriations Committee, a major assignment for a first-time lawmaker. Magnolia Republican Rep. Cecil Bell Jr. also benefited from backing the right horse at the last minute. Bell initially went along with the GOP caucus and pledged to support Cook, but he switched his vote to Burrows on the first day of the session expressing frustration about the rhetoric from Cook's supporters, which he compared to 'having neighbors who constantly blare noise all day and all night in mind-numbing disregard of time and civility.' Now, the seven-term lawmaker and long-time budget writer will helm his first committee after being appointed to lead the newly created Intergovernmental Affairs Committee. Burrows also rewarded Republican lawmakers who voted against him in the first round of the speaker's vote but switched in the second round to help get him over the top. That group includes Rep. Sam Harless of Spring, who will lead the Corrections Committee, and Rep. Tom Craddick of Midland, a former speaker and the chamber's longest-serving member, who will head the Transportation Committee. Democrats knew they were likely to lose their ability to lead committees after a wave of establishment Republicans were swept out of the chamber by insurgent primary challengers who ran, in part, on upending the system of power-sharing. Republicans then picked up two more seats in the November general election, further limiting Democrats' leverage in shaping how the House would operate. They bet on Burrows to somehow continue the bipartisan tradition that had prevailed in the House since the 1970s. Burrows did not disappoint those lawmakers, rewarding them with leadership positions. Veteran Democrats like Reps. Rafael Anchía, Terry Canales and Chris Turner were tapped to lead standing subcommittees on telecommunications, transportation and property tax appraisals, respectively. Houston Rep. Gene Wu, the House Democratic Caucus chair, landed a spot on the influential Appropriations Committee. He was also appointed vice chair of the Criminal Jurisprudence Committee and he will serve on the subcommittee on juvenile justice, both areas of focus over his prior six terms. A few Democrats also received multiple leadership slots, including Rep. Oscar Longoria of Mission, who was appointed chair of the subcommittee on workforce and vice chair of the subcommittee on international relations. Austin Reps. John Bucy, Sheryl Cole and James Talarico were each appointed vice chairs of a standing committee and a subcommittee. Several less-experienced Democrats who were in Burrows' corner early scored leadership roles, too. A pair of second-term Democrats, Rep. Christian Manuel of Beaumont and Rep. Venton Jones of Dallas, won coveted appointments to the Appropriations Committee while also being appointed vice chairs of the Human Services and Corrections committees, respectively. And two Democratic freshmen, Reps. Cassandra Garcia Hernandez of Farmers Branch and Lauren Ashley Simmons of Houston, were appointed to the Appropriations Committee. Garcia Hernandez was additionally tapped to be vice chair of the subcommittee on state-federal relations. Lawmakers who backed Burrows faced a barrage of text blasts and other attacks from hardline conservatives who were determined to defeat him in the speaker's race. But those who hung tough with Burrows saw their loyalty pay off. Among them was Rep. Lacey Hull of Houston, who received sustained backlash on social media as the only Republican from Harris County to not line up behind Cook. She went on to give a fiery nomination speech for Burrows on the House floor, and she was rewarded with an appointment to chair the Human Services Committee, her first leadership position since she joined the House in 2021. Hull is also on the influential State Affairs Committee this session. Reps. Cole Hefner of Mt. Pleasant, Keith Bell of Forney and Jay Dean of Longview also were tapped to lead their first standing committees after being some of Burrows' most loyal supporters. The three stood with Burrows at a news conference in December as he announced he had enough votes to win. Dean in particular went on local TV stations in East Texas to voice his support for Burrows even amid threats of censure by his local Republican county parties. Though committee chairmanships are traditionally reserved for members who have served at least two terms, some freshman and sophomore Republicans still landed plum assignments after they sided with Burrows despite pressure to defect. Rep. Carl Tepper, one of Burrows' earliest and loudest supporters and a fellow Lubbock resident, was placed on the budget-writing Appropriations Committee, along with the Calendars Committee, which controls the flow of legislation, and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee, which was created with broad jurisdiction to consider a sweeping range of bills. Another Burrows supporter, sophomore Rep. Janie Lopez of San Benito, scored appointments to the Appropriations and Calendars committees. And two Republican freshmen, Reps. Jeffrey Barry of Pearland and Denise Villalobos of Corpus Christi, were placed on Appropriations. First-term GOP Rep. John McQueeney of Fort Worth also won a spot on the key State Affairs Committee, a rarity for a freshman. McQueeney backed Burrows even after Attorney General Ken Paxton held a rally in his district as part of a tour to pressure House lawmakers to back Burrows' rival for the gavel. There's no way around it: Compared to where they stood in the 2023 session, Democrats emerged as losers. After last year's elections, House Republicans had not only increased their ranks by two members, to a total of 88 of the chamber's 150 seats, but they also were bringing back more socially conservative politicians who were bent on ending the tradition of power-sharing with the minority party. That meant that after 22 years as the minority party in the House, Democrats finally lost their ability to run standing committees this year, under a rules package adopted by lawmakers last month that dictates how the lower chamber will operate. Democrats are also outnumbered by Republicans on every committee and subcommittee, unlike before. Wu, the House Democratic leader, highlighted the positives in his statement, pointing to the minority party's 30 vice chair positions and the 10 members who will serve as subcommittee chairs or vice chairs. Aside from barring Democratic chairs, the new House rules also expand the power of vice chairs by allowing them to request witnesses and hearings on bills or topics. Additionally, the speaker can refer bills to subcommittees, some of which are chaired by Democrats. But any way you slice it, Democrats chaired eight of the 34 standing House committees last session, and that number has been reduced to zero. Republicans who were hoping for more fodder to condemn Burrows' leadership — or anyone hoping to watch Republicans tear each other apart over committee appointments — largely came away disappointed. There were some scattered complaints by hardline conservative activists and a handful of House Republicans who charged that Burrows had 'kept Democrats in power.' Rep. Brian Harrison of Midlothian posted on social media his displeasure that Burrows had named a Democrat as speaker pro tem, and Rep. David Lowe of North Richland Hills shared an infographic implying that giving Democrats vice chair positions amounted to keeping them in power. But for the most part, Burrows avoided much public criticism, even among the new socially conservative batch of freshmen who made up much of the self-proclaimed 'reform caucus' that opposed Burrows' speaker bid. Usually vocal critics like Reps. Mitch Little of Lewisville, Shelley Luther of Tom Bean and Katrina Pierson of Rockwall either celebrated their committee assignments or kept their powder dry. A few Republicans took a big risk last year when they decamped from Phelan's team to advocate for a change in House leadership. Many of those lawmakers found themselves in the doghouse under Burrows' appointments. Reps. Briscoe Cain of Deer Park, J.M. Lozano of Kingsville and Tom Oliverson of Cypress were among Phelan – and then Burrows' – biggest critics and they all respectively lost their committee chairmanships on Thursday. Not all chairs who went against Burrows were completely left out in the cold, however. Burrows tried to bring Smithee and Frank, both former contenders for the gavel, back into the fold, and Rep. Ryan Guillen of Rio Grande City — who defected to Cook on the day of the speaker election — was tapped to replace Cain as chair of the Agriculture and Livestock Committee. Lozano previously chaired the Urban Affairs Committee, which was abolished and folded into the new Intergovernmental Affairs Committee chaired by Keith Bell, the late defector to Burrows. Oliverson was replaced as Insurance Committee chair by Dean, the Longview Republican.

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