
Texas Reps react to Governor Greg Abbott's veto of SB3, the THC ban bill, and call for a special session
In an interview Tuesday for Eye On Politics, Republican State Senator Charles Perry of Lubbock told CBS News Texas, "He raised some legitimate concerns in his proclamation as to why he got to where he did. I have all the confidence in the world that we will alleviate and address those concerns in a special session in fairly short order. SB 3 is on solid ground. My prediction would be we'll have something fairly close to what SB 3 did."
Gov. Abbott's legal concerns
In his proclamation, Abbott said he vetoed the measure because of legal concerns. "If I were to allow Senate Bill 3 to become law, its enforcement would be enjoined for years, leaving existing abuses unaddressed. Texas cannot afford to wait. Knowing that it faces a lengthy battle that will render it dead on arrival in court-would hinder rather than help us solve the public safety issues the bill seeks to contain." The Governor's veto comes despite the fact that all Republicans in the State Senate and all but two Republicans in the State House voted for SB 3.
Representative Brian Harrison of Midlothian was one of the two Republicans who voted against the bill. In an interview for Eye On Politics, Harrison told CBS News Texas, "I believe I was the only Republican in the legislature to call on the Governor to veto SB 3 and I did that three weeks ago. It was unfortunate that the legislature passed a bill that in my opinion was massively a government overreach. It was marching us in the direction of California-style nanny-stateism and it was going to force adults to make a horrible choice. These are patriotic, freedom-loving Texans who either want or rely on these products. It was a bill that needed to be vetoed."
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick "puzzled" by veto
Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, who pushed for this bill during the regular legislative session, held a news conference Monday and didn't hold back about the Governor's veto. "One can only come to this conclusion which surprises me. The governor of the state of Texas wants to legalize recreational marijuana in Texas."
In response to the Lt. Governor's news conference, the Governor's Press Secretary Andrew Mahaleris, issued a statement that said in part, "Governor Abbott has always shared the Lieutenant Governor's desire to ensure that THC products are not sold to our children, and that the dangerous synthetic drugs that we have seen recently are banned."
In his veto proclamation, the Governor also cited a similar Arkansas law that was challenged in the courts and had been held up. But last week, a federal appeals court overturned a lower court's ruling that blocked the Arkansas legislation banning THC. In a post on the social media platform "X", the Lt. Governor cited the ruling saying, "All we have to do is pass SB 3, just like we passed during the regular session."
The Governor responded on "X", "Even though the Arkansas law was not plagued with the same legal defects as the Texas bill, it still was unenforced for two years and will be further tied up in court for years to come."
A poll by the Texas Politics Project at UT Austin, shows overall, 53 percent oppose the ban on THC products, 31 percent support it. Among Republicans, a much closer margin, with 46 percent support the ban, while 39 percent oppose it.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
Senate Passes Its First Spending Bills, but Battles Lie Ahead
The Senate on Friday overwhelmingly passed the first of its spending bills for the coming year, with bipartisan approval of measures to fund military construction projects, veterans and agriculture programs and legislative branch agencies. But the broad agreement over the $506 billion package of bills, typically the least controversial of the annual federal spending measures, masked a bitter fight in Congress over how to fund the government past a Sept. 30 shutdown deadline. Senators pushed through the legislation after several intense days of haggling as part of an agreement to allow the chamber to make progress on funding the government before senators leave Washington for a monthlong summer recess. 'We are on the verge of an accomplishment that we have not done since 2018 — and that is pass appropriation bills across the Senate floor prior to the August recess,' Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine and the chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, said on the floor. Still, debate over the package hinted at the bigger spending challenges that lie ahead. Democrats, furious about the White House's efforts to subvert Congress's power in the purse, are wary of striking spending deals with Republicans when President Trump and his team have signaled they intend to continue ignoring or defying lawmakers' spending dictates, even those enacted into law. And Republicans are fighting among themselves over how closely to hew to the Trump administration's spending targets. The package approved on Friday night would provide $452 billion for veterans programs, $300 billion of it mandatory spending to fund veterans benefits; $19.8 billion for military construction and family housing projects; $27.1 billion for agricultural programs; and $7.1 billion for the operations of Congress and legislative agencies. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Fox News
a few seconds ago
- Fox News
Political analyst offers an answer to who is the leader of the Democratic Party
Panelists Matt Towery and Dan Turrentine discuss former Vice President Kamala Harris' interview with Stephen Colbert on 'The Ingraham Angle.'


Fox News
a few seconds ago
- Fox News
CNN guru says Democrats are 'historically divided' with no 2028 frontrunner
CNN senior political data reporter Harry Enten showed how the Democratic Party continues to repulse voters after their loss in November.