3406 News Items Found
October 19, 2020
Texas is Much More Politically Competitive in 2020 Trump's negative effect on the Republican Party “catalyzed” the demographic changes already at work in Texas, said political science fellow Mark Jones.
Read more at the Washington Post October 18, 2020
TX Senate Candidates Treat Climate, Energy Issues as Balancing Act If John Cornyn wins reelection, "you’ll see Cornyn doing a rear-guard effort to slow the transition away from fossil fuels as much as possible while not being in the camp of climate-change deniers,” said political science fellow Mark Jones. But since the largest energy companies, including Shell and BP, are already moving toward renewables, “That train has already left the station.”
Read more at Texas Climate News October 15, 2020
Hafiz al-Assad and the Elusive Quest for Syrian-Israeli Peace Baker Institute Director Edward Djerejian recently discussed his experiences as the U.S. Ambassador to Syria (1988-1991), and the prospects today for an Israeli-Syrian peace agreement.
Read more at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy October 13, 2020
High Stakes Battle for the Texas House Political science fellow Mark Jones gives the Democrats a 1 in 3 — or 2 in 5 — chance of flipping Texas' lower chamber; Republicans will retain a Senate majority, he says. Democrats made solid inroads in 2018 by flipping 12 state House seats. Read more at the Dallas Observer.
Read more at the Dallas Observer October 13, 2020
Explore No More? Upstream Gas Transforms A transformation in the upstream sector is shifting the industry's focus to proved, developed and producing resources. "It is more of a manufacturing process now than anything else, so the whole game is technical and financial excellence,” said energy fellow Mark Finley. "People who can drill the best wells, do the best frack jobs at the lowest cost are the ones who are going to win."
Read more at Natural Gas Week