Author Archive

Public Officials Need Support to Do What’s Right

August 16, 2010

Weatherford Democrat

Steve Boggs

State Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, addressed the Business Before Breakfast meeting of the Weatherford Chamber of Commerce Friday morning. Aside from touching on the familiar conservative talking points, King went out of his way to ask the public to stand behind their elected officials in the budget-cutting times to come.

For that, he deserves an attaboy.

There are budget-cutting times ahead, and everyone who holds public office right now is going to have to make some tough choices. Tax revenues are down, and this recession is showing no signs of letting up any time soon. Even the mighty Texas economy, the best in the U.S. by far, is expected to contract by $18 billion over the next two-year budget cycle.

It’s clear that there are but two choices: Raise taxes or cut spending. Texas doesn’t have the option of deficit spending because the state’s constitution doesn’t allow it. Unlike California, the state isn’t facing $40 billion in debt on top of a yearly budget deficit.

Still, there is work to be done. With revenues down and the federal government spending money like a drunken sailor, state lawmakers will roll up their sleeves and tackle an $18 billion budget shortfall come January. They should not take on debt, and there is no appetite for a tax increase at the state level, so that leaves but one option: spending cuts.

Attention Conservatives – Your Assistance is Vital to Help Texas Stay the Course

August 1, 2010

Contact Information:
817-381-8282

When the 82nd Texas Legislature convenes in January 2011, our state will face many challenges.

We must balance the budget without raising taxes in the face of a projected $18 billion budget shortfall. We must resist continued encroachments by the federal government on our liberty. We must secure our elections and our border. We must continue to reform and reduce property taxes – homeownership is increasingly at risk. We must allow the free market to thrive in order to get Texans back to work.

To advance our conservative constitutional principles in light of these challenges, the Texas Conservative Coalition has drafted a legislative agenda called our “Pledge with Texans,” which I have signed along with forty-seven other conservative state legislators. Click HERE to read the TCC Pledge with Texans.

However, we need help to ensure that implementation of our pledge is fully effective.

Here are three action items that courageous conservatives need to do to help:

  1. Please read our Pledge online.
  2. Please sign the Citizens Petition in support of the TCC “Pledge with Texans”. Click HERE to go to the petition.
  3. Please forward this email so that your fellow grassroots activists can read our Pledge and sign the Citizens Petition.

Please also post the Citizens Petition link (http://txcc.org/citizens-petition) to Facebook and other social networking accounts.

The support of conservative Texans will be invaluable to our success.

Rotarians Receive Summary of Economy

July 26, 2010

Weatherford Telegram

Lance Winter

State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) brought before a packed house of Rotarians last week, a summary related to the Texas economy. His comments concerned the state’s budget, the ever-pressing school finance system and the economy as a whole.

King told the group that Texas had the largest 10-year growth in private sector jobs in the country and that in pre-recession 2008, more jobs were created in Texas than all of the other 49 states combined.

But with the good also comes the bad, he said, noting that the nation is experiencing the worst economy it’s seen in the last 75 years.

“I sit in on a lot of economic briefings and I would suggest that the economy will go further south in the not-to distant future,” he said. “The biggest reason is that you can’t have an economy prosper if it’s based on debt, social services and the re-distribution of wealth.

“You’ve got to have job creation in the private sector not the public sector [and] you have to have consumers spending money and having money to spend.”

He went on to suggest that everything the federal government is doing, in most of the states, is in the opposite direction of that.

“I don’t know how many times government needs to try Keynesian economics and socialism for you to be able to look at history and say, ‘You know, those just don’t work,'” he said.

On the bright side, King said the Texas economy is holding its own and that the 8.2 percent unemployment rate for the state remains below the national average of 9.7.

“Our unemployment rate has been at or below the national average for 41 consecutive months,” he said.

When it comes to the budget, King said Texas is set up on a two-year budget cycle and is currently without a debt balance.

“We don’t have a massive debt like the state of California does,” he said.

Governor Mike Huckabee Endorses Phil King

June 21, 2010

Contact Information:
(817) 596-8100

Austin – State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) received the formal endorsement last week of Governor Mike Huckabee, former presidential candidate and host of the popular Fox News talk show, Huckabee. King is seeking re-election to the Texas House of Representatives District 61 seat he currently holds.

Governor Huckabee stated, “Huck PAC and I are pleased to endorse Phil King. Since his election in 1998, Phil has made a lasting impact on Texas public policy; serving as the Chairman of the Regulated Industries Committee, one of the key committees in the Texas House, for three legislative sessions.”

Huckabee continued, “Phil is a commonsense conservative who consistently leads by example, and has rightfully earned a glowing reputation among his peers. I hope you will join me in supporting Phil King – we need him in Austin.”

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GOPAC-TX Issues Seminar at Texas GOP State Convention a Huge Success

June 16, 2010

Contact Information:
(817)596-8100

On the eve of the Republican Party of Texas state convention, GOPAC-TX held an Issues Seminar for state legislative candidates and incumbents to discuss key issues facing Texas such as the budget, property rights and taxes, energy and healthcare, school finance, and redistricting. Over 80 candidates and incumbents attended this seminar.

GOPAC-TX Chairman Phil King stated, “The opportunity for incumbents and candidates to engage in a meaningful discussion on important issues can only help better prepare us for the next legislative session.” He added, “And, when we stick to our core conservative principles, Republicans will have even greater success in the November election.”

GOPAC-TX will continue to sponsor trainings throughout the State of Texas in order to grow the Republican majority in the Texas Legislature.

King Applauds SBOE on Updated Social Studies Curriculum Standards

May 22, 2010

Contact Information:
(817) 596-8100

After more than a year of debate, over 30 hours of public testimony over the course of four open public meetings, and 14,000 emails, the State Board of Education (SBOE) approved and successfully passed new Social Studies Curriculum Standards at their May 21, 2010 meeting. There has been much criticism from liberal commentators on how the SBOE handled the drafting of the new curriculum standards. While no curriculum can ever be perfect, the final work product is a strong step in the right direction and will give students a better understanding of the roots of American history.

State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) remarked, “The attacks on the State Board of Education ignored the transparent approach that the Board took toward developing curriculum standards for Texas school children, misstated many of the changes that the Board proposed, and sought to undermine the Board’s diligent work to execute its constitutional and statutory obligations. The Board should be applauded for their conscientious efforts; Texas school children will be the long-term beneficiaries.”

Is Texas Messing With History?

April 27, 2010

Wall Street Journal

David Upham

For several months, the elected members of the Lone Star State’s board of education have considered extensive revisions to the state’s K-12 social studies curriculum. After months of efforts, the board’s conservative majority tentatively approved a new curriculum in March, and on April 15 the board published its proposal, which it may adopt after allowing 30 days for public comment.

The comment has been vocal. Critics in Texas and across the nation have decried the changes as educational malpractice, with news reports characterizing them as “historically inaccurate” and reflecting “far right” bias. The board allegedly expunged Thomas Jefferson, minimized constitutional safeguards for religious freedom, and ignored the struggles of women and minorities for civil rights. A letter signed by several historians at the Universities of Texas at Austin and El Paso claimed the board “undermined the study of the social sciences in our public schools by misrepresenting and even distorting the historical record.” Newsweek ridiculed the “Texas Curriculum Massacre.”

Despite the allegations, however, no one has pointed to a particular significant error of fact. My own review of the proposed curriculum did not reveal anything plainly false, and the oft-repeated accusations of outrageous omission are demonstrably false. The board did not excise Thomas Jefferson, downplay constitutional religious freedom, or minimize the role of women and minorities. On the contrary, the curriculum is replete with specific references to Jefferson, religious freedom, the civil rights movement, and the achievements and struggles of women and minorities.

To cite but one example, at every grade level, classes must observe “Celebrate Freedom Week” with instruction concerning “the importance of the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, including the Bill of Rights.” This annual study of the Declaration (initially drafted by Jefferson) “must include the study of the relationship of the ideas expressed in that document to subsequent American history, including the relationship of its ideas to the rich diversity of our people as a nation of immigrants, the American Revolution, the formulation of the U.S. Constitution, and the abolitionist movement, which led to the Emancipation Proclamation and the women’s suffrage movement.”

The allegations of omission seem to have arisen from a few contentious decisions made by the board. For example, the board amended an advisory panel’s recommendation that world-history students learn how modern politics was influenced by the “Enlightenment ideas” of Rousseau, Voltaire, Jefferson and others. Instead, the board removed Jefferson from this specific list and broadened the study to include three non-Enlightenment thinkers who had a profound influence on modern politics: Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and William Blackstone.

These changes were reasonable. The recommended list had given insufficient attention to the ways pre-modern and other non-Enlightenment political theories influenced modern politics. Conversely, Jefferson was more of a statesman who was profoundly influenced by others’ political theory than a political theorist. He is, therefore, somewhat out of place on a list of political theorists.

In another controversial but understandable move, the board declined to require that third-graders study Dolores Huerta alongside Helen Keller and Clara Barton as an exemplar of good citizenship. This decision contributed to the erroneous assertion that the board had ignored the contributions of women and minorities. Like Cesar Chavez, Ms. Huerta was an important leader in the cause of farm workers’ rights and remains in the high-school curriculum. But she is also a prominent advocate of unrestricted abortion and socialism, the honorary chair of the Democratic Socialists of America, and therefore, arguably, not a role model for third-graders.

The board’s Republican majority rejected an amendment by board member Mavis Knight, a Democrat, to teach students that “the founding fathers protected religious freedom in America by barring the government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion above all others.” This decision fostered the myth that the Republicans had de-emphasized religious freedom.

Yet the proposal was an overstatement of the historical truth. While virtually all the Founders endorsed religious freedom, they disagreed as to whether, and how, the government should promote Protestantism, Christianity, theism, or religion in general.

To be sure, the proposed curriculum is far from perfect. Because the board erred on the side of inclusion, the new curriculum is more than 40% longer than the old one, which was itself too long. As board member and former teacher Patricia Hardy, a Republican, lamented, “It’s hard for teachers to get through it all.”

And some needless additions smack of score-settling from old political battles. An advisory panel referred concisely to “McCarthyism, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the arms race, and the space race.” But the board’s conservatives insisted that the standards elaborate “how the later release of the Venona Papers confirmed suspicions of communist infiltration in U.S. government.” While accurate, this specific detail seems incongruous and is arguably improper.

There are also questionable omissions. The revised curriculum treats slavery as a significant cause of the Civil War, but it fails — like the existing curriculum — to frankly acknowledge slavery’s preponderant role. Despite an admirable focus on reading primary sources, the curriculum conspicuously omits the Texas Declaration of Secession, which provides strong evidence that the preservation of slavery was the principal motive of Texan secessionists.

In one respect the curriculum is profoundly conservative. As “Celebrate Freedom Week” suggests, the board determined that the abolition of slavery and the expansion of civil rights for women and minorities should be treated as a fulfillment of the Declaration of Independence. Unlike the liberal readings of history that prevail in academia, this approach affirms that this progress resulted from the renewal of the Founders’ principles, and not their rejection.

Is the board’s more conservative and overtly patriotic reading of history the best one? That’s a matter of legitimate disagreement. Yet there is no evidence to support the charge that this imperfect curriculum amounts to educational malpractice.


Mr. Upham is an assistant professor of politics at the University of Dallas.

Conservative Texas Legislators Band Together to Start New Organization; Put People Before Party

April 12, 2010

Contact Information:
(817) 596-8100

On the eve of the “Tea Party” movement’s anniversary, conservative legislators in Texas have banded together to form a new organization – the Independent Conservative Republicans of Texas. With conservative voters organizing like never before to protest the unprecedented overreaching intrusion of the federal government, voters need to know there are Republican legislators who share their beliefs and will uphold their principals.

The group was founded on five core principles each member has committed to uphold:

  • Stand for conservative principals and to put people before Party.
  • Fiscally accountable, limit the size of government, and fight for free market principles.
  • Protect our borders and to support a strong military.
  • Protect life, support strong family values, and uphold the Judeo-Christian beliefs our nation was founded upon.
  • Honor the Constitution and protect the sovereign rights of Texas.

“We are all proud members of the Republican Party and will remain so. However, this organization provides us with accountability outside of our political party,” the group’s founder Sen. Dan Patrick (R-Houston) remarked. “We recognize we are first and foremost accountable to the people who elected us. We have dedicated ourselves to these core principals and have said ‘this is who we are and this is how we will legislate,’” Sen. Patrick concluded.

“We’re joining together to say test us, try us, hold us accountable. We mean it when we pledge to defend limited government, individual liberties and free enterprise,” remarked Rep. Phil King (R-Weatherford).

“The voters placed their trust in us because we share their values and priorities, and we have a responsibility to govern according to those principles,” Sen. Jane Nelson (R-Lewisville) added.

“With increased awareness of the citizens expressing their desire to be involved, it is exciting to be a part of this movement to accept the challenge of bringing our state and nation back to the conservative, godly heritage of our founding fathers,” Rep. Dan Flynn (R-Van) offered.

“Dedication to America’s founding principles, through our commitment to civic awareness and responsibility, is what the Independent Conservative Republicans will follow as our course of action,” Sen. Florence Shapiro (R-Plano) observed.

Additional information may be found on the group’s website at www.ICRepublicans.com.

King Discusses Plan to Reject ObamaCare

March 22, 2010

Contact Information:
(817)596-8100

The following statement may be attributed to State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford):

The Constitution was written to restrain our federal government. Last night the Democrats in Congress and President Obama basically threw our constitution out the window. That may sound strong, but friends, it is a steep and slippery slope when government ignores its most fundamental law.

Regardless of how you feel about the health care bill – which I believe to be terrible legislation – enacting it was a clear and brazen violation of our constitution. In other words, it was an illegal act! Texas Attorney General Gregg Abbott announced last night that he is filing a suit against the federal government to try to stop the implementation of the health care bill. In the Texas Legislature, my conservative Republican colleagues and I are aggressively pursuing additional options.

I will keep you posted in the days to come. For now, speak out with a loud voice. Help friends and family understand the impact of last night’s vote. And, above all, pray faithfully for our nation.

State suing for responsible scientific conclusions

March 13, 2010

Houston Chronicle

Attorney General Greg Abbott

The Environmental Protection Agency recently concluded that man-made greenhouse gas emissions — including carbon dioxide — are harmful pollutants and must be regulated. The lawsuit I filed challenging that finding does not address the disputed science surrounding global warming. Instead, it focuses on the indisputable fact that the EPA relied on information that has been discredited, manipulated, lost or destroyed, and sometimes evaded peer review. The lawsuit does not attempt to show that the globe is not warming. It does, however, show that the process used by the EPA in deciding to regulate greenhouse gases is riddled with errors that render its conclusion untrustworthy.

Before regulating man-made greenhouse gas emissions, the EPA was required to conduct a scientific assessment. Rather than conduct its own assessment, the EPA relied on reports by third parties. The EPA’s conclusions rest primarily on information gathered by a creation of the United Nations called the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC — an organization that has become mired in scandal because the reliability, objectivity and scientific validity of its work has come under fire.

For example, the IPCC reported that glaciers in the Himalayas were rapidly melting and would disappear by 2035. However, after the EPA reached its conclusion, the IPCC had to reverse itself and acknowledge that the Himalayan glaciers claim was false. The IPCC’s chairman was informed of the problem months before the erroneous report was published, but he did nothing to correct the report. Why? Perhaps because the research institute the chairman runs was seeking millions in grant funding to study those very same not so rapidly declining Himalayan glaciers.