The Daily - A Dilemma in Texas
Episode Date: June 26, 2020Texas has become the latest hot spot in the coronavirus pandemic, forcing its governor to pause the state’s reopening process after a surge of infections and hospitalizations. We speak with our Hous...ton correspondent about the state’s dilemma. Guest: Manny Fernandez, The New York Times’s bureau chief in Houston. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: A growing number of state leaders are pausing plans to reopen as case counts rise. Among them is Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, who did so reluctantly after facing mounting pressure in the Republican-controlled state.We analyzed travel patterns, hidden infections and genetic data to show how the epidemic has spun out of control in the United States.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, Texas has become the latest hotspot in the pandemic,
forcing its governor to pause the state's reopening process
after a surge of infections and hospitalizations.
My colleague, Manny Fernandez, on the state's dilemma.
It's Friday, June 26th.
Manny, what is the story of how Texas has handled the pandemic and how it is we got to this point?
So really, there's a couple of things to know about Texas.
And that is that historically, Texas has been mistrustful of government.
This is a state where the state legislature meets once every two years.
legislature meets once every two years. This is a state where most people who ride a motorcycle don't have to wear a helmet and the government doesn't necessarily force them to wear a helmet.
It's this idea that you're on your own. You want to wear a helmet, go for it. You don't
and you get hurt. Well, okay, it's on you. And especially, you know, during the Obama years,
this was happening where Texas sued the government for overreach several times on several different
issues. Joined now by Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott. You've brought suits against the
administration some 30 times, correct? This is the 31st lawsuit that I brought against
the Obama administration, having won more
than half of them.
But Martha, this may be the most serious one because...
And the attorney general at the time had this famous line where the attorney general says,
you know what, my job is very simple.
I wake up in the morning, I go to the office, I sue the Obama administration, then I go
home.
If a president can get away with extending his powers to do things like this, there could
be no constitutional limitation on what the president could do.
And so all of that sort of changes or looks a little bit different after Trump takes office.
Now, the Republicans in Texas no longer have that big enemy. And they don't have somebody to go after
in their fight over limiting government overreach.
And so they identify a new enemy.
And that's the Democrats who lead the major cities like San Antonio, Austin, Houston.
And so this sort of war of words and war of policy begins where the governor and the Republican leadership of Texas has come into the cities and said, San Antonio, you know, we want you to cooperate more
with the federal authorities on immigration. Austin, you have a homelessness crisis and we're
going to get involved. Houston, you have some failing schools and we want to do a state takeover
of the public schools in Houston. So there's kind of a strange contradiction you're describing here, where the Republicans who run the state say they want less government, told the Obama administration
they want less government. But now in the era of Trump, they are interfering in the government
of their local Democratic cities in a way that may not feel like less government.
It's a complete contradiction. And that is the situation that's happening
as coronavirus hits Texas.
And in fact, that attorney general
who said how much he loved to sue Obama,
well, that attorney general is now the governor,
Greg Abbott.
And he's the one who's responsible
for the state's response to the coronavirus.
Okay, so given that very complicated stew that you have just described, how does Texas
under this governor, Greg Abbott, respond to the virus?
What does his handling of this look like?
Overall, you have the governor making some contradictory moves.
Starting back in March, you have the coronavirus spreading
in the Pacific Northwest and the Northeast.
California is the first state to issue a stay-at-home order.
New York follows, Ohio.
But in a lot of other states like Texas, there is no similar move. And a lot of these states, some of them in the South,
don't kind of register the same sort of crisis happening in their own states.
And then on March 23rd...
Governor Patrick, Lieutenant Governor Patrick agreed to join us tonight.
We're happy that he did.
Lieutenant Governor, thanks so much for coming on.
You have Dan Patrick, who's the lieutenant governor of Texas.
He's Texas's second in command.
Yeah, I turn 70 next week, you know, so I'm automatically in the high-risk pool.
Dan Patrick goes on Fox News and basically says...
And, you know, Tucker, no one reached out to me and said,
as a senior citizen, are you willing to take a chance on your survival in exchange for keeping
the America that all America loves for your children and grandchildren? And if that's the
exchange, I'm all in. He and other grandparents are willing to die to reopen the economy.
And we also have happening is that Abbott, around this time, he's shutting schools. He's
prohibiting visits to nursing homes. He's doing a lot of little things, but not doing
that big important one, which is to issue a statewide stay-at-home order.
And so meanwhile, you have the local officials who run a lot of the big cities and counties in Texas
saying, okay, we're going to do this on our own and we're going to enact local policies. You have the mayors and the officials who run the counties that have Houston and Austin
and San Antonio and El Paso all doing different things to try to control the virus. Some of them
are issuing curfews. Some of them are issuing local stay-at-home orders. And Abbott is kind of letting all that happen
and not really getting involved.
I am also modifying my previous executive order
about social distancing protocols in Texas.
But then he does get involved.
I'm issuing executive order GA-14
that establishes or that maximizes the number of lives we can save.
I'm establishing essential services and activities protocols.
He does eventually issue a statewide stay-at-home order, but he doesn't call it that.
This is not a stay-at-home strategy.
A stay-at-home strategy would mean that you have to stay at home. You cannot leave at home under any circumstances. That obviously is not what we've articulated here. This is a standard.
but just, you know, Texans wondering the very basic question,
okay, does Texas have a statewide stay-at-home order or not?
And does he ever clarify it?
He does clarify it.
Hi, this is Governor Greg Abbott.
With COVID-19 spreading across Texas, I issued this executive order that requires all Texans to stay at home except to provide essential services or
do essential things like going to the grocery store. Now I know this is a great... And it's
clear that that was a statewide stay-at-home order. And we will make it through this challenge together. Thank you, and God bless you all.
And the war between the blue cities and the red state comes up again.
Because Abbott, after issuing the statewide stay-at-home order,
basically later on tells the cities and the counties,
okay, guys, my state orders supersede your local orders.
You can't do anything that's tougher than what I'm doing on coronavirus.
Interesting.
And it sort of nullifies and sort of ties the hands of the local officials in doing
their own local action on coronavirus.
local officials in doing their own local action on coronavirus.
So after being very laissez-faire, and maybe classically Texas in a hands-off approach, this Republican governor is now telling these cities and counties who acted in his place
that his late actions now supersede their earlier solutions.
Yes, exactly.
And there's a lot of confusion, but it has a real effect on people's lives because it
has to do, well, it has to do with, can you wear a mask when you're out in public in San
Antonio or not?
You know, the locals say, yes, I do have to.
Abbott says, no,, what is going on?
You know, like it has a very real world impact.
And...
Shelly Luther is the owner of Salon a la Mode.
She arrived here defiantly opening the doors to her salon.
Another thing happens where a Dallas salon owner is not supposed to open.
She does reopen.
Luther says she fully expects to get arrested today,
but she says she has also filed a lawsuit in the Supreme Court.
And she is sent to jail for reopening.
Right, I remember that she was arrested.
We have a disturbing story out of the great state of Texas tonight.
In Texas, a local salon owner,
her name is Shelly Luther.
And she becomes a conservative celebrity.
She was given a seven-day jail sentence,
fined $7,000,
all because she opened the doors to her business
in spite of, quote, local lockdown orders.
Who was trying to sort of provide for her family by reopening,
by restarting the economy, and she's punished and sent to jail for it.
And the governor does something that, again, frustrates the local officials
and fuels this war between the blue cities and the red state.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has modified his orders to eliminate confinement as punishment,
effectively freeing Shelly Luther.
Abbott says, hold on guys, on my statewide orders,
you can't send someone to jail for a violation.
Shelly's free!
Shelly's free!
Shelly's free!
Because the uproar among conservatives was so loud and so fierce for that Dallas salon owner, he had to backtrack on that.
So this is becoming a very high stakes Abbott and Costello kind of routine where the governor is undercutting the cities
and the cities are saying this is the rule and then the state's saying no it's
not and I'm guessing that the people of Texas are pretty baffled. When Abbott
publicly does an about-face and says actually sorry guys you can't send
someone to jail we can't be that tough. That moment helped create this atmosphere of
almost a little bit of anything goes then, where it's like, what are the rules for coronavirus in
Texas? What are the penalties? What can people do? What can't they do? And how seriously should
it be taken? And does it matter? And who's going to enforce it? And, you know, in that moment, Abbott helped Texans let their guard down.
And that only increases as the reopening continues. We'll be right back.
My executive order to stay at home that was issued last month is set to expire on April the 30th.
That executive order has done its job to slow the growth of COVID-19,
and I will let it expire as scheduled.
Benny, how long does this shutdown in Texas last?
Not very long at all.
Texas had one of the shortest shutdowns in the country.
28 days.
Now it's time to set a new course.
A course that responsibly opens up business in Texas.
We will open in a way that... And how does Governor Abbott explain having such a short shutdown in the face of a national coronavirus pandemic?
His explanation is effectively the coronavirus is bad around the country, but it's not that bad in Texas. More than 1.9 million claims have been filed.
And over $2 billion has been paid out in unemployment benefits.
Now, our goal, of course, is to get those Texans back to work.
And he doesn't want to hurt the economy more than he needs to.
We are Texans.
We got this.
So what exactly does the reopening look like?
I mean, how quickly does it go from stay at home
to something that actually looks like a pretty open society again?
to something that actually looks like a pretty open society again?
You know, almost immediately, the reopening started on May 1st.
I'm in Houston, and I remember driving around Houston on that day,
and I remember being at an intersection.
There were two guys standing with these signs with big arrows, and it said, open for dine-in.
It was a little bit of a celebratory feel.
And meanwhile, you had some Republican conservatives
saying restaurants are open, other business is great,
but what about the gyms and the hair salons?
Those are still closed.
So you had some conservatives saying,
great, great,
governor, let's do some more here. What's wrong? And then meanwhile, you had Democrats,
including many local officials, saying, I don't like this. We have to do it. We have to go along with it. But we're in a little bit of a risk zone, heading towards a danger zone. And once this reopening is well underway, Manny, just how quickly do the infections start to rise?
It doesn't happen immediately.
You have the numbers going up in May, but they're going up at sort of a steady but not alarming clip.
a steady but not alarming clip. And then in the last couple of weeks, as more phases of the reopening have taken effect, as more businesses have reopened, those numbers have hit the ceiling.
What do you mean? The numbers of new cases skyrocketed.
1,935 as of Monday.
The numbers of hospitalizations skyrocketed.
Yesterday is more than 2,200.
North Texas has the...
There was more testing being done,
but that didn't account for such a high number so quickly.
2,504 new cases...
Happening in cities in South Texas, near the border.
41% increase over the past.
In cities in West Texas, in cities in the central Texas,
in Austin, outside of Austin.
More than 4,400 new positive cases.
Parts of Waco, Houston area, East Texas.
You have the numbers kind of going up in a lot of different places, a lot of different hot spots.
You had nursing home numbers being very high.
You also had the numbers of meatpacking plants.
Those numbers were very high.
So it's clear that this is plain old community transmission.
Texans infecting other Texans and not social distancing. A lot of local officials believe that and a lot of the public
health experts believe that. Yes, they are saying that this uptick is tied to more and more Texans letting their guard down, not wearing a mask,
going to restaurants, going out, going to the beaches, having more gatherings,
that the reopening is directly tied to the increase in the number of new cases.
increase in the number of new cases. And so you get to the point where we are now,
which is Texas sort of daily breaking records of new cases.
And when you say records are being broken, what are the specific numbers?
Yesterday, Texas had the most new cases it's had since the pandemic started in a single day.
And that was more than 6,200.
So there were more than 6,200 new cases prominent infectious disease experts and vaccine experts in Texas.
It's a doctor named Dr. Hotez out of Baylor Hospital in Houston.
He put out a tweet over the weekend.
hospital in Houston. He put out a tweet over the weekend. And his tweet said that if the numbers in Houston continued to go up the way they were, that Houston would be the hardest hit city
in America as far as the outbreak goes. So that brings us to Thursday and the governor's decision to pause this opening.
Yes.
And so the governor isn't rolling back the reopening.
He's not shutting the state down.
He's just saying from henceforward, we're going to pause any new reopening.
Now, a lot of people have said, well, there's a problem with that.
You know, Texas is basically fully opened right now.
Restaurants right now in Texas are allowed to operate at 75% capacity.
And 75% capacity versus 100%, it's not really going to make that much difference.
Right. I mean, given the conditions you're describing,
it feels like we're basically back to where we were in late March, where the governor of Texas,
Greg Abbott, for all the reasons that we touched on earlier, is afraid once again to order a
shutdown when it is perhaps the best solution to the conditions on the ground. And back in March,
the question around a shutdown was very urgent because it might have prevented a crisis.
Now, Texas is in a crisis,
and a shutdown would be perhaps required to contain it.
That's absolutely it.
You know, it's this inherently contradictory dance where he's saying, folks, Texas is open, but stay indoors. Texas, you should wear a mask, but I'm not going to order you to wear a mask.
We are now in a crisis with our numbers going up.
I'm not going to stop that reopening.
I'm just going to pause any new reopening we might have done down the road.
From the outside, there is a sense that states like Texas had extra time,
at least from the perspective of a place like New York or Seattle. They had time to watch and learn from the experiences of the hardest and earliest hit
communities in the country, and that they should have known that this was going to happen.
And that what is happening right now in Texas, as a result of closing down late and opening early was fairly
predictable and yet is now a very serious public health crisis. So what would Governor Abbott say,
do you think, to the least charitable version of this question, which is,
is there really any excuse for Texas being in this situation right now?
I don't know what Governor Abbott would say, but I know that it comes down to worldview and the Texas ideology.
Because it comes down to, you're absolutely right, Texas just needing to look around at other states
and see what was happening and see the writing on the wall.
But Texas didn't want to do that.
Texas wants to follow its own path, even in a pandemic.
Manny, thank you very much and stay safe.
Thank you so much and thanks for having me on.
On Thursday, based on the results of antibody tests,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that the number of infections in the U.S.
is probably 10 times higher than has been reported.
That would mean that so far,
about 23 million Americans,
or 7% of the population, have been infected.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to nerday.
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The 7-2 ruling upheld a 1996 law passed by Congress that limited the role
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And amid growing calls for police reforms,
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In Arizona, the chief of police in Tucson offered to resign after releasing a two-month-old video
of officers restraining a 27-year-old Latino man, Carlos Ingram Lopez,
face down on the ground for 12 minutes, resulting in his death. In Colorado, the governor appointed
a special prosecutor to investigate the death of a 23-year-old Black man, Elijah McLean,
who died after officers stopped him in the street and put him in a choke
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See you on Monday.