Michael Quinn Sullivan

Michael Quinn Sullivan is the publisher of Texas Scorecard. He is a native Texan, a graduate of Texas A&M, and an Eagle Scout. Previously, he has worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine contributor, Capitol Hill staffer, and think tank vice president. Michael and his wife have three adult children, two sons-in-law, and a dog. Michael is the author of three books, including "Reflections on Life and Liberty."
Scoring Straus

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Scoring Straus

One of the most common questions I get about the Fiscal Responsibility Index is “Why doesn’t Joe Straus have a session rating?” Much of the answer lies in simply the way the Index is calibrated – we only rate lawmakers based on the votes they take. By tradition,...

Departing Bullies

Departing Bullies

A video was released last week showing State Rep. Byron Cook (R-Corsicana) purposefully trying to trip a citizen in the halls of the state Capitol. Why?    Because Cook is a bully.   He’s the kind of guy who threatens business owners in his district if they put up...

Byron’s Very Bad, No Good Session

Byron’s Very Bad, No Good Session

Certain perks are supposed to come with being one of the most powerful members of the Texas House – most notably, passing your district’s legislative priorities. Yet on that count, State Rep. Byron Cook of Corsicana failed his constituents miserably. Only one measure...

House Tax Revision

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House Tax Revision

In the days since the legislative session ended, House Speaker Joe Straus and his coalition government of Democrats and liberal Republicans has been bragging about passing the very tax cuts they had opposed. “We cut taxes,” Straus bragged in a statement issued by his...

Dan Patrick Got It Done

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Dan Patrick Got It Done

On his first vote as a state senator, Dan Patrick voted alone. In the recently concluded legislative session, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and the state senate substantively delivered on every measure he campaigned on last year. A main stay of Patrick’s policy agenda, since...

Business As Usual?

Business As Usual?

Texas' business community got a rude awakening. After playing nice with the Texas House coalition leadership of Democrats and liberal Republicans, they expected some meaty policy reforms. Unfortunately for them, they wanted reforms that conflicted directly with the...

Unethical Treatment

Unethical Treatment

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott made Ethics reform a centerpiece of the legislative session. He wanted measures "requiring elected officials to disclose contracts they have with public entities, prohibiting lawmakers from voting on legislation from which they could profit, and...

Continuing (mis)Education

Continuing (mis)Education

Education reformers were again thwarted by the Texas House leadership. The only substantive “reform” to make it through was a bill designating schools and districts with a letter-grade rating. That replaces the current system of rating districts as "acceptable,"...

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84th Taxes

Along with strict spending limits, one of our founding policy interests has been to see the state’s business “margins” tax reformed and reduced to the point of elimination. This 84th Session of the Texas Legislature finally saw definitive action on the measure. Both...