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Thursday, May 14, 2026 at 6:49 PM
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Gov. declares presidential run

Capital Highlights

by ED STERLING


Gov. Rick Perry declared his candidacy for president of the United States on Aug. 13 at Red State Gathering, a Republican blogger convention in Charleston, S.C.


Perry’s declaration ended a period of many months of public speculation over his intentions.


In declaring, Perry expressed his intention to export Texas ideas on governance to the rest of the nation and told the audience he would work to make Washington, D.C. as “inconsequential” as he can in the lives of Americans. He said his campaign would focus on jobs and budget cuts.


While Perry was in South Carolina, most other Republican candidates were in Iowa, competing to win the non-binding 2011 Ames Straw Poll, a GOP fund-raiser that allowed Iowans to make a $30 donation and pick their favorite.


U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas placed second in the poll, next to winner U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, an Iowa native. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who last week was the leader in national polls, placed seventh. As a write-in candidate, Perry placed sixth without exerting any on-the-ground effort in Iowa. He traveled to Iowa the day after the poll to make public appearances.


Perry’s third full term in office as governor will expire at the end of 2014. With more than 10 years already to his credit, he is the longest-serving governor in Texas history.


Court rules against Care Act
The Eleventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta on Aug. 12 affirmed a lower court’s ruling that the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is unconstitutional.


The court called the law requiring citizens to purchase health insurance or be penalized “an unprecedented exercise of congressional power” that “exceeds Congress’ enumerated commerce power.”


The state of Texas, led by state Attorney General Greg Abbott, is part of the 26-state coalition that challenged the federal law.


Abbott hailed the outcome as “an important ruling for freedom and limited government.”


The Act, which is still in effect and may be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Obama in 2010. Bills to repeal the Act have been filed but not taken up.


Workers comp data online
Computer-users who have an Internet connection can access state-maintained workers’ compensation data free of charge at www.tdi.texas.gov/wc/data.html.


On Aug. 9, the workers’ compensation division of the Texas Department of Insurance announced the availability of the agency’s semiannually updated System Data Report that contains data on income and death benefits, dispute resolution, medical fee disputes, designated doctor appointments and medical benefits.


Inmates to pay more for care
Each state prison inmate, beginning Sept. 1, will be charged $100 for the first health care visit they request, pursuant to a new law.


The fee covers all health care visits requested by an inmate for one year, but the Texas Department of Criminal Justice clarified that the fee won’t be charged for an emergency or life-threatening situation, follow-up services recommended by the health care staff, chronic care (including communicable diseases such as HIV, AIDS and TB), prenatal care, health screening and evaluations related to the diagnostic and reception process or health care services necessary to comply with state law and regulations.


Ed Sterling works for the Texas Press Association and follows the Legislature for the association.



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