2026-02-17
By dividing the power among competing groups with different agendas
- Different terms of office
- Different constituencies selecting the officeholders
- Different responsibilities and powersThis is: “separation of powers”
By giving each part the power to stop the other parts from doing things that are not appropriate
- Veto power (President over Congress)
- Impeachment power (Congress over President))
- Judicial review power (Supreme Court over Congress and President)Separation of Powers
State vs Federal Powers
One of the least talked about and most important state powers for preventing federal tyranny is the power to…
Conduct elections
Why is this so important?
Last peaceful check against federal tyranny - with state control, we can vote them out
War and peace
Foreign diplomacy
Congress coule coin money and borrow money
Major decisions required 9 of the 13 states to vote yes
Congress could not tax - it had to ask the states for money
Congress could not regulate commerce between the states or with foreign nations, only recommend legislation to the states
Almost all powers of sovereign states - even among the states themselves
James Madison called the Articles, “a rope of sand” - it was too weak to hold the states together” and “nothing more than a mere treaty…of amity of commerce and alliance between sovereign states”
The Constitution called for 9 states to ratify it before it would go into effect
To be truly effective, the Constitution would have to be ratified by all 13 states
Compromise
Satisfying state interests
- the state leaders at the time
- the leaders' concerns about the future of their states and peoplePopulation of Mexican Texas - 1836
- 5,000 to 7,000 Tejanos
- 30,000 Anglo settlers by 1832Loving County: Population 64 - Today!
Terrell County: Population 760 - Today!
- 7th least populous
- County seat is an unincorporated town called Sanderson
- There are no incorporated towns in the countyCrockett County: Population 3,098 - Today!
- County seat is Ozona
- There are no incorporated towns in the county
- Largest city is Ozona with a population of 2,663
- Ozona is the only Census designated place in Crockett CountyCome and Take It
American Revolution (not directly involved) - 1776
- Tejanos were not involved, but many Anglo settlers were alive during the American Revolution
- Anglo settlers brought with them the ideals of the American Revolution
- American Revolution inspired the Mexican Revolution
- Mexico's first democratic, republican, federalist government drew frpm US ConstitutionMexican War of Independence - 1810-1821
- War against Spain
- Texas mostly Tejano and Native American at the time
- Anglo settlers invited by new Mexican government which was a democratic RepublicTexas Revolution - 1835-1836
- Federalist, democratic, republican government of Mexico had been replaced by dictatorial Centralist Republic of Mexico
- Anglo settlers rebelled against the Mexican government
- Yucatan also successfully rebelled against the Mexican government
- Zacatecas, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas also rebelled against the Mexican governmentUS Civil War 1861-1865
- Texas was a slave state
- Texas seceded from the Union and joined the Confederacy
- Texas was occupied by Union troops after the war
- Texas was readmitted to the Union in 1870 with new Constitution in 1871Texas is a large and diverse state
- 2nd largest state in the US
- 2nd most populous state in the US
- 2nd most diverse state in the USTexas is a majority-minority state1
- American Indian and Alaska Native: 278,948
- Asian: 1,585,480
- Black or African-American: 3,552,997
- Hispanic or Latino: 11,441,717
- Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander: 33,611
- White (not Hispanic or Latino): 11,584,597
- Some other race: 3,951,366
- Two or more races: 5,133,738Language Other Than English Spoken at Home in Texas: 35.4% ± 0.2%
- Spanish 28.2%
- Other Indo-European 2.7%
- Asian and Pacific Island languages 3.3%
- Other languages 1.2%Language Other Than English Spoken at Home in United States: 22.5% ± 0.1%
Christian: 77%^[https://www.pewresearch.org/religious-landscape-study/database/state/texas/
- Evangelical Protestant: 31%
- Mainline Protestant: 13%
- Historically Black Protestant: 6%
- Catholic: 23%
- Mormon: 1%
- Orthodox Christian: 1%
- Jehovah's Witness: 1%
- Other Christian: 1%Non-Christian Faiths: 4%
- Jewish: 1%
- Muslim: 1%
- Buddhist: 1%
- Hindu: 1%
- Other World Religions: 1%
- Other Faiths: 1%Unaffiliated: 18%
- Atheist: 2%
- Agnostic: 3%
- Nothing in Particular: 13%Don’t Know: 1%
Diverse political culture has two themes that are shared across party, ethnic, and religious lines
- Individualism
- TraditionalismThe Texas political mix is complex
- Individualism and Traditionalism share common sources
- The two are antagonistic in some ways, similar in others
- The power of Texas and its distance from the East Coast make these even less simpleGrew from multiple sources
Frontier experience of neighbors cooperating especially through churches
Provincialism - distance of frontier from capital cities
Business dominance
- Important to note this was dominance of Texas businesses
- East coast business interests especially banks were not well regardedRegions of Texas map
Traditionalism dominates
- Interior Lowlands
- Great Plains
- Basin region
- Gulf Coastal Plains - outside urban areasIndividualism dominates
- Urban areas in Gulf Coastal PlainsBut both strains are present in force in all areas
Individualism: Consider the following?
- the specifics vary but this is a fundamental characteristic of Texas culture
- What about variation among demographic groups? Is there any or is this a commonality?
- Native Texans and newly arrived Texans?Traditionalism and Individualism can be in conflict
- How does this play out in Texas politics?
- How does this play out in Texas policy?
- How does this play out in Texas political parties?Do Traditionalism and Individualism always conflict or can they reinforce each other?
- When does traditionalism encourage self-reliance?
- When traditionalism encourages community cooperation, does that encourage or discourage individualism compared to reliance on state or federal government?As the share of white Texans continues to shrink, the Legislature remains mostly white and male
2023 State Legislature
- 70% male
- 54% white
- white male: nearly halfGender History in Texas Legislature: from Texas Tribune
Delegate model: elected officials should act as direct representatives of their constituents’ preferences
Trustee model: elected officials should use their own judgment to make decisions in the best interest of their constituents, even if it goes against their constituents’ preferences
Descriptive representation: the extent to which elected officials resemble the demographic characteristics of their constituents
Substantive representation: the extent to which elected officials advocate for the interests of their constituents, regardless of their demographic characteristics
What matters most in representation policies or demographic background? Does delegate vs trustee affect this?
Does it seem likely that Texans want to elect white males or they like something about Republican candidates and most of them are white males?
Is the white, male domination more of a long run problem for voters or for the Republican Party?
Why are minority voters willing to vote for white male Republicans over minority Democrats?
Which party is this more of a problem for and why?
First Black Statewide Official
???
First Hispanic or Latino Statewide Official
1
First Republican Hispanic or Latino Statewide Official: Alberto Gonzales
- Texas Supreme Court Justice (1999-2001)
- Resigned to become White House Counsel (2001-2005) for George W. Bush
- US Attorney General (2005-2007)Ted Cruz, US Senator (2013-present)
George P. Bush, Land Commissioner (2015-present)
First Female Governor: Miriam Amanda “Ma” Ferguson
Second female Governor in the United States
Husband James Edward Ferguson, Governor 1915-1917
- impeached and removed from officeMa Ferguson Governor 1925-1927 and 1933-1935
- "Two for the price of one"Democrat
Second Female Governor
First Female United States Senator
Author: Tom Hanna
Website: tomhanna.me
License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
HCC GOVT2305, Spring Second Start, Instructor: Tom Hanna