logo
National progressives back Houston attorney who fought GOP in court in Texas special election

National progressives back Houston attorney who fought GOP in court in Texas special election

The Hill24-04-2025

Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee on Thursday won the endorsement of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) in the special House election for Texas's 18th District.
Menefee, the youngest County Attorney in Houston history, will face off against a crowded slate of largely young, progressive Democrats vying to represent one of the state's most populous districts following the death of Rep. Sylvester Turner (D) in March.
'Christian is the proven fighter Texas's 18th district needs. We are proud to back his campaign,' Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC members Reps. Greg Casar (D-Texas), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) said in a statement on Thursday.
They pointed to Menefee's history of 'multi-million dollar settlements holding corporations accountable' and his legal fights against Texas Republicans.
Menefee, they wrote, 'has a demonstrated record of standing up to Republican overreach and delivering results for working families. '
Menefee told The Hill that Texas progressives occupy a critical role in a national party seeking to claw its way out of the wilderness.
He added that decades under far-right rule have given Texas Democrats something the national party needs: the ability to 'be scrappy' and fight against tough odds.
The state's Democrats have been 'cast aside' by party members nationally 'who don't believe that Texas has the ability to flip,' Menefee said.
But faced with Republican control of all three branches of state government, he argued, Harris County Democrats — and the County Attorney specifically — have repeatedly fought the state GOP to a standstill.
'We're resourceful. We know what it looks like to be in a situation where you feel like your back is up against the wall, where the only thing protecting communities you love and the people you serve is your ability to fight,' he said.
'We can show national Democrats how to leave no stone unturned when it comes to trying to advocate for the people we care about,' he added.
With a lead in endorsements and funding, Menefee opened the race with a position as 'frontrunner,' University of Houston political analyst Brandon Rottinghaus told The Houston Chronicle last month.
The endorsement from the CPC, an alliance of 100-plus Democrats focused on issues like securing more pay and less pollution for workers, adds weight to Menefee's pitch that he is part of the party's vigorous new face.
Menefee, who grew up in the district, and credits his current success to social democratic programs like free school lunches, Pell Grants, the G.I. bill — a kind of programming he now sees being threatened by the Trump administration.
'I've seen how effective the government can be when it works the right way,' he told The Hill.
'And I know that if our government works for regular working class people, instead of the wealthy and the well connected, that if there are programs in place that ensure that nobody's left behind, every single person can have a fair shot at the American dream.'
Under Menefee, the Harris County Attorney's office has repeatedly pushed back against state attempts to constrict the powers of Harris County, from defending a pilot program that would guarantee basic income to select county residents to fighting against deregulation that his office has argued would increase deadly pollution in the county.
For example, Menefee sued the state environmental regulator over a concrete crushing plant in the middle of a neighborhood. He has also dueled with far-right Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) — who has announced his own run for Sen. John Cornyn's (R) Senate seat — in state and federal court, challenging Paxton last year, for instance, on an attempt to loosen federal standards for pollution from, among others, Harris County's vast fleet of more than 200,000 petrochemical plants.
Menefee's 300-person team also won an $18 million settlement against Volkswagen after suing the company for allegedly manipulating emissions monitoring in its vehicles and $20 million from e-cigarette maker Juul over accusations that it targeted marketing toward minors — wins that put the county budget in the black.
Menefee's pushback against the state government also played a role in making the upcoming special election happen. Turner, a former Houston mayor, previously won the seat in November, but died in office just two months into his term. Following his death, Gov. Greg Abbott (R) took weeks to authorize a special election to replace him — until Menefee threatened to sue him.
But Menefee also last year announced his willingness to work across the aisle with Paxton in investigations of CenterPoint Energy, the Houston-area utility that saw millions of customers lose power during last year's Hurricane Beryl.
Beyond the Texas GOP, Menefee has scored victories against the Trump administration as well: for example, a lawsuit from his office resulted in the administration unfreezing $10 million in funding for refugee healthcare last month.
Texans 'can have political differences from a policy perspective, but what you're seeing out of like modern MAGA Republicans in elected office is much different,' Menefee told The Hill.
For his courtroom opponents, he said, 'it's not about making the best policy, it's about proving a point.'
He told The Hill that he believes that both MAGA Republicans and many national-party Democrats have left a lane open for their future opponents.
'The base is crying out for a fight from their elected leaders. They're tired of seeing Donald Trump and Elon Musk run roughshod over their rights,' he said.
And at the same time that 'elected Democrats have thrown their hands up and saying, there's nothing we can do here,' he said, 'in Harris County, we have done a case study on how to fight back against Republicans — zealously, courageously — in the face of what would appear to be insurmountable opposition.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Musk demands do-over on Trump budget bill
Musk demands do-over on Trump budget bill

Axios

time15 minutes ago

  • Axios

Musk demands do-over on Trump budget bill

Elon Musk says Republicans need to start over on the Trump budget bill. Why it matters: A no-new-deficits bill would require far smaller tax cuts, or far deeper spending cuts. Both are non-starters for Republicans, who are watching in dismay as Musk turns his ire on them. "A new spending bill should be drafted that doesn't massively grow the deficit and increase the debt ceiling by 5 TRILLION DOLLARS," Musk posted on X. The House-passed bill would include $2.4 trillion in deficit spending over the next 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office said on Wednesday. CBO also estimated the Trump tariffs would bring in $2.8 trillion in revenue over the next 10 years. Zoom in: House Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday that Musk didn't "answer" a phone call on Tuesday but hopes they can speak today. Musk turned on the "one big, beautiful bill" as a "disgusting abomination," but privately tried to block cuts to electric vehicle credits, Axios reported on Tuesday. "We don't have time for a brand new bill," Johnson told Fox News on Wednesday. "We worked on the bill for almost 14 months. ... We have a great product to deliver here," he said.

Nebraska is the latest state to ban transgender students from girls' sports
Nebraska is the latest state to ban transgender students from girls' sports

Fox Sports

time18 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Nebraska is the latest state to ban transgender students from girls' sports

Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen signed into law Wednesday a measure banning transgender students from girls' sports, making the state the latest to keep transgender athletes from competing on women's and girls' teams. Pillen signed the law flanked by dozens of lawmakers, women athletes and other advocates — including former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines, who has made a name for herself as a vocal advocate of banning transgender athletes from women's sports. The measure passed by the Nebraska Legislature last week broke a filibuster by a single vote cast along party lines. It was pared down from its initial form, which also sought to bar transgender students from using bathrooms and locker rooms corresponding with their gender identity. Sponsors agreed to drop the bathroom and locker room ban when one Republican — Omaha Sen. Merv Riepe — declared he would vote against it otherwise. The measure was first introduced in 2023 by then-freshman Sen. Kathleen Kauth, but failed to advance as lawmakers angrily argued over Kauth's other bill that sought to bar gender-affirming care for transgender minors under the age of 19. An amended version that banned gender-affirming surgery — but not all gender-affirming care — for minors later passed and was enacted that year. On Wednesday, Kauth promised to revive her bathroom and locker room ban next year, reiterating her rejection that people can determine their own gender. 'Men are men and women are women,' she said, and urged voters in Riepe's district to pressure him to support it. Republicans behind the sports ban say it protects women and girls and their ability to fairly compete in sports. Opponents say with so few transgender students seeking to participate in sports, the measure is a solution in search of a problem. Fewer than 10 transgender students have participated in middle school and high school sports in the state over the past decade, according to the Nebraska School Activities Association. At least 24 other states have adopted similar bans. President Donald Trump also signed an executive order this year intended to dictate which sports competitions transgender athletes can enter and has battled in court with Maine over that state's allowing transgender athletes in girls' and women's sports. The American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska denounced the measure. ACLU Nebraska Executive Director Mindy Rush Chipman said the ban 'slams the door shut' for some transgender students to fully participate in their school communities. 'This ban will only create problems, not solve any,' Rush Chipman said, adding that 'the constant targeting of LGBTQ+ Nebraskans must stop.' in this topic

Trump agrees with longtime rival Elizabeth Warren on need to abolish the cap on US debt
Trump agrees with longtime rival Elizabeth Warren on need to abolish the cap on US debt

USA Today

time18 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trump agrees with longtime rival Elizabeth Warren on need to abolish the cap on US debt

Trump agrees with longtime rival Elizabeth Warren on need to abolish the cap on US debt Eliminating the federal limit on government borrowing would remove one hurdle to congressional approval of the Trump's package of major policy priorities for tax cuts and border security. Show Caption Hide Caption Moody's pushes US out of top triple-A rating club, citing debt Moody's downgraded the U.S. sovereign credit rating on May 16 due to concerns about the nation's growing $36-trillion debt pile, in a move that could complicate President Donald Trump's efforts to cut taxes and send ripples through global markets. Trump agreed with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., that the country should abolish the federal limit on borrowing. After credit-rating agencies downgraded the U.S. government, Trump said the debt limit should be scrapped to avoid economic catastrophe. WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump announced he agrees with a longtime antagonist, Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, on the need to abolish the cap on the country's borrowing. The announcement marked a thaw in years-long criticism that Trump and Warren of Massachusetts have hurled at each other over government finances and other issues. The rare consensus came as Congress faces the need to raise the country's debt limit again, a hurdle to approving an 1,100-page package of Trump's priorities for tax cuts and border security. The United States is nearly $37 trillion in debt and every time it approaches the limit on borrowing set by Congress, lawmakers must take a painful vote to raise it or risk being unable to pay bills. More: When is the debt ceiling deadline? What happens when the US reaches debt limit Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has warned the country will reach the cap in August. A provision to increase the limit was included in the House-passed package of Trump's priorities. The two-term Republican president lashed out this week at Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, who opposes the House bill and called for a separate vote on the debt limit. The debt limit is largely procedural because Congress has always voted to increase it. But the vote every few years becomes a cudgel against members of the governing party because approval contributes to the appearance of unbridled spending. Congress imposed a debt limit in 1939 to modernize federal financing, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. But political disputes about the accumulation of debt and difficulties raising the limit led credit-rating agencies to lower their grades for the federal government. The debate is another example of strange bedfellows in U.S. politics. Trump has derisively called Warren 'Pocahontas' for previously claiming Native American heritage. But Warren posted on social media May 30 that she agreed with Trump that 'the debt limit should be scrapped to prevent an economic catastrophe.' Trump endorsed the proposal in a social media post June 4 and said he was 'very pleased to announce' that he agreed with her. 'The Debt Limit should be entirely scrapped to prevent an Economic catastrophe,' Trump said. 'It is too devastating to be put in the hands of political people that may want to use it despite the horrendous effect it could have on our Country and, indirectly, even the World.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store