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2021 Austin Election Voter’s Guide

Below is information about the upcoming City of Austin election and the voting recommendations made by the Travis County Solidarity Party.

Election day: Saturday, May 1

In-person early voting: April 19-27

Last day to register to vote: Thursday, April 1

Last day to request a ballot by mail: Tuesday, April 20 (received by the county clerk, not postmarked)

Prop A: Charter amendment allowing the Austin Firefighters Association to force the city into binding arbitration if they reach an impasse in collective bargaining.

Our recommendation: YES– This keeps bargaining efficient, produces results, and keeps our hardworking firefighters and EMS workers out serving our city and providing for their families.

Prop B: Code amendment prohibiting public camping in addition to sitting or lying down on a public sidewalk or sleeping outdoors in and near Downtown and the UT-Austin area.

Our recommendation: NO– while it is no secret that ever since the repeal of the camping ban Austin’s homeless problem has gotten worse, going back to the status quo does not fix the root of the issue or respect the dignity of those caught in the tragic circumstances of homelessness. The city does need to take immediate action in fixing the homelessness epidemic that we are currently caught in but criminalizing people is not going to fix it or respect the dignity of these persons, only push the problem off to the sidelines while we penalize instead of caring for our neighbors.

Prop C: Charter amendment permitting City Council to appoint or remove the director of the Office of Police Oversight.

Our recommendation: YES– The national and local events of last year have shown that there are some systemic lacks in the oversight of our local police force. To clarify not every police officer is bad, most are good hardworking servants of the people. But when a few officers are not doing their jobs correctly and it has tragic circumstances, it is an injustice when there is little to no oversight or consequence. Austin needs a system that hold its public servants accountable and is outside the influence of those they are overseeing.

Prop D: Charter amendment moving Austin’s mayoral election to presidential election years.

Our recommendation: YES– All evidence shows that there is much higher turnout on presidential election years, and with that much higher turnout for all other downballot races. The Austin Mayor is an important position that should have as many voices as possible in electing them, not just those interested enough during midterm years.

Prop E: Charter amendment creating ranked choice voting for city elections. If passed, voters would rank candidates instead of voting for just one candidate.

Our recommendation: YES– So much time and money is wasted on runoff elections in our city, for such low turnouts as well. As well as the current system of First Past the Post voting that Austin currently uses makes sure that voters vote strategically and votes against candidates they don’t like instead of who they want or who stands for their values. Austinites deserve a voting system that is efficient, cost effective, and lets them select who they actually want to lead the city, not the lesser of two evils.

Prop F: Charter amendment changing Austin’s form of government from “council-manager” to “mayor-council,” also known as “strong mayor.” If passed, this would eliminate the city manager position; the mayor would not have a vote on Council but would have the authority to veto Council decisions.

Our recommendation: YES– Currently the city’s most powerful executive position is an unelected contract position that is not accountable to the voters. A majority of what the city does is based on the recommendations of the City Manager and the City Manager makes many decisions that are outside the authority of the Council. When the City Manager makes a bad decision there are few recourses for accountability. Having a strong mayor system would make the city’s most important decisions be made accountable to the ballot box, not a contract.

Prop G: Charter amendment creating an 11th City Council district. Because the mayor would be rendered a nonvoting member of Council if Prop F passes (see above), an 11th single-member district was proposed in an effort to avoid potential 5-5 deadlocks on Council. However, because Prop G is a stand-alone proposition, it is not dependent on Prop F’s passage or failure.

Our recommendation: YES– While Prop G is stand alone and not dependent on Prop F it would be rather shortsighted to recommend Yes of F and not Yes on G. Another City Council district would help Austin represent it’s citizens better by making the districts smaller (better ratio of citizens-to-council member), and make running for City Council more accessible to the ordinary citizen by not having such big districts requiring large amounts of signatures.

Prop H: Charter amendment creating a so-called “Democracy Dollars” public campaign finance program that would provide up to two $25 vouchers to every registered voter, who could then contribute them to candidates for city office.

Our recommendation: YES– The last mayoral election broke records in that fundraising was in the millions of dollars for the first time in city history. The average Austinite is not able to compete with the interests of big business and and PACs with those kinds of numbers. Democracy dollars helps level the playing field and have candidates to city office be supported by the people, not giant corporations or duopoly PACs.

Official 2020 Election Results

Finally the moment y’all have been waiting for. This year, the American Solidarity Party presidential ticket of Brian Carroll and Amar Patel gained 253 votes in Travis County. This is almost double our vote count of 131 from 2016!

Along with this total count we have developed a spread sheet of precinct by precinct data of votes, along with a simple map to show where these votes are coming from.

Very simply, we look very forward to getting to know all 253 of y’all that voted for us, and ask for your support in organizing and future elections.

In Solidarity,

Brian Talbot,
County Chair- Travis County Solidarity Party

Precinct Data: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/19UsB3YbR18UBmixgLoF9-0jI1C1w0HuLWnEubM3fLEc/edit?usp=sharing

Map of Precinct Data

2020 TCSP Organizing Meeting

Good afternoon everyone!

With the State and National ASP conventions coming up this month The American Solidarity Party of Travis County will be conducting a virtual organizing meeting/election to formally organize from more than just a one-person team and be officially recognized by the Texas ASP Committee.

This meeting will be asynchronous, meaning it will not be conducted in real-time, but throughout a time-period through electronic means. From now until June 15th will be a proposal/nomination period. You can create a motion for the agenda, amendment to a motion, nomination of an officer, etc. Voting will be done through email from June 17th-19th.

Currently, the proposed items on the agenda are linked on the document below. If you would like to participate please send an email asptraviscounty@gmail.com.
In Solidarity,
Brian Talbot- County Chair

COVID Conundrums

We do need to stay home, but the way Austin Mayor Steve Adler and Governor Greg Abbott have been handling this crisis is less than stellar. Social distancing, wearing a mask outside, and staying at home when possible are necessary for reducing the spread of COVID-19 and flattening the curve. However we cannot ask people, especially those out of work or cannot work at home to do this for months on end, no amount of eviction bans, are gonna pay rent/mortgage and put food on the table. But opening the economy back up this early with no data to support a decrease in cases/deaths is just as irresponsible no matter how well thought out the plan is.

We need solutions that really help the common man. A $1200 check from the federal government every once and a while isn’t going to help Austinites. We need real, and speedy financial support for those effected most by this crisis, so they can do the right thing and stay home until the curve is flattened. Then we can actually reopen in the stages described in the governor’s plan.

The cities/counties and state need to be working together in a spirit of solidarity and subsidiarity to come up with solutions that best fit communities not one-size fits all solutions imposed from top down.

2019 Voter’s Guide

Voter's Guide

Texas Constitutional Amendments

Prop 1: Allows persons to serve as more than one appointed or elected municipal judge. Recommendation: For, it is a shame that there are not enough willing citizens to serve their communities as a municipal judge, an all too important position in our communities. While we would like for judges to serve only one position, we must have our judgeships filled to serve the community.

Prop 2: Allows the Texas Water Development Board to issue up to $200 million in bonds. Recommendation: For; The programs by the TWDB support people in rural and low-income communities by continuing to provide clean water. Clean water should be a right for all Americans.

Prop 3: Authorizes temporary property tax exemption for disaster areas. Recommendation: For; when disaster strikes a community the last thing families in crisis should be worried about is property taxes.

Prop 4: Prohibits the state from levying an income tax on individuals. Recommendation: Against; while no one likes new taxes it is extremely short-sighted to completely ban a revenue option without considering what Texans might need in the future. While an income tax might not work now, who’s to say in 10, 20, or even 50 years from now? State law already makes it so you would need a constitutional amendment and a vote to start an income tax, that could then only be used for projects like education. Banning the possibility of an income tax can hurt future Texans, while this proposition failing keeps the status quo, no income tax.

Prop 5: Dedicates revenue from the sales tax on sporting goods to parks, wildlife, and historical agencies. Recommendation: For; This proposition creates no new taxes, it only redirects tax revenue from the general fund to better protect and conserve our natural and historical treasures.

Prop 6: Authorizes the legislature to increase bonds for the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute. Recommendation: For; this proposition allows for greater resources for cancer research, treatment, and prevention.

Prop 7: Increases distributions to the state school fund. Recommendation: For; I will admit, as a teacher I am a little biased on this one, but our public schools deserve the resources available.  There are no new taxes or taxpayer burdens, this proposition would simply increase the amount of money allowed to transfer from the Permanent School Fund (the investment portfolio) to the Available School Fund (money to be given to districts and schools for educational needs).

Prop 8: Creates a Flood Infrastructure Fund. Recommendation: For; we’ve all seen how devastating floods in our area can be. Whether it’s here in Austin or our neighbors who receive the brunt of hurricanes, we need to take better care of our neighbors and ourselves when it comes to recovering from and protecting against floods.

Prop 9: Authorizes property tax exemption for precious metals held in depositories. Recommendation: Against; while the construction of the “Texas Bullion Depository” would add jobs for our friends in Williamson County, why it’s being built is the issue. One of the major issues in our country is the hoarding of wealth. This proposition encourages the hoarding of wealth and natural resources instead of responsible use for the benefit of our communities and families.

Prop 10: Allows for transfer of law enforcement animals to handlers or others if in animal’s best interest. Recommendation: For; the bonds built between law enforcement officers and working animals can be strong life long bonds. It is best for the welfare of the animal if they are given to the people they are most accustomed to once they have finished serving their communities.

Travis County Proposition A

Recommendation: For. This prop will energize the County Expo Center and help it make improvements so that the needs of users (such as the Austin Rodeo) can be better served in bringing jobs, opportunities, and culture to our county.

City of Austin Propositions A and B

Recommendation: Against. These props are not supported by any major business, civic, cultural/artistic organization in the city. These props set up barriers for the new development of community spaces and the expansion of social services such as solutions for homelessness.

Prop A was originally designed to stop the Austin FC Stadium from being built, but even the prop’s initial supporters have stopped supporting it.

Prop B gets rid of newly expanded funding for historic preservation, cultural projects, and programs to help end homelessness. The prop also does not comply with state law, making it a target for being nullified by the courts.

These recommendations are the personal opinions of the Brian Talbot, the Travis County Chair. They do not represent the recommendations or opinions of the Solidarity National Committee, or the American Solidarity Party of Texas