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Host David Martin Davies discusses the Texas lawsuit to overturn the presidential election with Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey. Texas State Rep. Kyle Biedermann of Fredericksburg wants secession. Journalist Casey Michel on the Kremlin's connection to Texas secession
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The suit, viewed by election experts as a baseless Hail Mary attempt to get the justices to invalidate Joe Biden's victory, has little to no chance of success.
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Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn is among the latest GOP politicians to acknowledge that Joe Biden will be sworn in as president January 20.
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More than two weeks after the general election which President Donald Trump lost, he continues to attempt to block the peaceful transition of presidential power to Joe Biden. How serious of a threat is this to American democracy?
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For the first time in a century, Zapata County, a 94% Hispanic border county, backed a Republican with roughly 52% of voters casting their ballots for Donald Trump. But local voters and experts say state Democrats' troubles had been brewing for a while.
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Two San Antonians have been appointed to President-elect Joe Biden's transition team.Trinity Professor Juan Sepulveda and Noel Poyo from the National Association for Latino Community Asset Builders joined more than 500 experts in federal policy. They will be members of what the transition team calls agency review teams, or ARTs.
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Right-wing activists and protesters designated as hate groups echoed the president's false claims of a stolen election. As night fell, clashes between Trump fans and counterprotesters turned violent.
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The party’s victory included a strong showing among North Texas state House candidates.
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Refusing to concede to Democratic incumbent Henry Cuellar last week, Texas Congressional District 28 Candidate Sandra Whitten has raised concerns about Webb County’s use of pencils in voting booths. But the Texas Secretary of State's office and election security experts say pencils are acceptable for filling out paper ballots.
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This election was the first in decades to not include a straight ticket voting option on ballots across Texas. The change could hurt and help both parties, depending on the race in question.