Friday, August 08, 2003

Lord Help Me! I just sent a letter to the editor of the Amarillo fishwrap!

I gave this item a subject: Let's Get It Right: Texas Republicans Have Run Away, Too!



Texas Republicans Staged Their Own Walk-Out When They Were in the Minority

by April Castro, writing for the AP (August 6, 2003):

Republican lawmakers have had a rhetorical field day this year as Democrats, first in the House and then in the Senate, fled to other states in order to stymie GOP redistricting plans.

But the Democrats aren't the only ones to employ the tactic: Ten years ago, it was Republicans who walked out of the Texas Senate chamber to avoid a vote on a racially tinged judicial redistricting resolution.

"They clearly have a double standard," said Democratic Sen. Rodney Ellis, who is one of 11 Senate Democrats who entered their second week Monday holed up in a New Mexico hotel.

In 1993, Democrats were the powerhouse in Texas politics and were set on adopting a resolution as part of a settlement that would have ended at-large elections for state judges in a handful of Texas counties.

The proposal would have required 140 judges to run for election in sub-districts within affected counties. Republicans favored a system in which the governor appoints judges, who are then confirmed by the Senate.

But, the GOP was the minority back then, with only 13 in the 31-member body. So, as the Senate prepared to convene and vote on the proposal, several Republicans went into a closed-door meeting to discuss their options.

On the chamber floor, then-Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock announced that the Senate could not convene because no quorum was present. Only two of the 13 Republican senators were on the floor.

The 1993 Republican walkout only lasted a day. Eventually, the settlement was rejected by an appellate court on a technical issue.

© 2003 Associated Press

Greatest Briton? Winston Churchill - Greatest German? ABH (Anyone But Hitler) - Greatest American?

Who was the greatest American in my humble opinion? Tough call. I wonder what others might say? Use the Sapper Mail link at the left to send in your vote.



[x BBC News]

Hitler barred from German greats race

German TV is to make its own version of the BBC series Great Britons - but will not allow viewers to vote for Hitler or any of his Nazi entourage.

German public broadcaster ZDF will produce the series Unsere Besten (Our Best) in partnership with BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the corporation that sold the programme format.

In the UK, the public were allowed to nominate who they liked in the BBC Two series which ran for several weeks in 2002.

The overall winner, Sir Winston Churchill, nominated by former minister Mo Mowlam, was finally chosen from a list of the most popular 100 nominees.

In Germany, the voting procedure has been modified to stop Hitler or any his followers being included.

A panel of experts will nominate 250 people. The public will then be invited to chose 50 more before the final voting begins.

"The concept could not have found a better home in Germany," said Mark Young of BBC Worldwide.

"It will be a very exciting show, if you only think of all the strong candidates: Goethe, Bach, Luther, or perhaps Marx, or Gottlieb Daimler or even Franz Beckenbauer?"

Ratings hit

Walter Hellebrand of BBC Worldwide added that the competition would also be very open as to who qualified as being German.

"ZDF seems to be defining German in a very loose way," Mr Hellebrand told BBC News Online.

"Hitler was an Austrian, but then so was Mozart.

"But to the outside world everyone perceives them as Germans, even the Germans themselves."

One German who will qualify is Einstein, who was born in Germany, but brought up in Switzerland.

Sir Winston Churchill was named the greatest Briton of all time after weeks of heated debate.

The top 10 Britons were advocated by current well-known Britons, who stated their candidate's case in a series of one-off TV programmes.

Sir Winston won with 447,423 votes, beating his nearest rival, engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, by more than 56,000 votes.

The widespread interest in the series was reflected by high ratings, with the final attracting more than three million viewers.

© BBC MMIII

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