Galveston Island Democrats https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com Stand With Us! Tue, 09 Apr 2024 22:12:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-IMG_4603-32x32.png Galveston Island Democrats https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com 32 32 PHOTOS – VIDEOS https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/photos-videos/ Tue, 23 Jan 2024 17:31:00 +0000 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/?p=134
GID NON PARTISAN MAYORAL FORUM 2024
PRIMARY CANDIDATES THIRD FORUM
PRIMARY CANDIDATES SECOND FORUM
PRIMARY CANDIDATES FIRST FORUM
GID participates in MLK Parade, January 13, 2024
GID members prepare and serve luncheon for ACCT clients December 2023
GID Christmas Dinner, December 25, 2023.  13 members gathered to celebrate the holiday meal together! 
GID participates in the 1st PrideFest Parade held in Galveston on October 22, 2023.
GID MONTHLY MEETING WITH JUSTICE’S SPAIN & HIGHTOWER
GID Meeting 9-22-23
GID Blue Bazaar 9-16-23
GID BARRY WHITE CELEBRATION NIGHT ON THE TOWN
Joe Willis “How to Contact your Legislators”
GID meeting 8-29-23
23rd Street Station 8-20-23
Garage sale item pricing 8-16-23
Joe Jaworski 7-25-23
GID Pot Luck Diner 6-27-23
Galveston Island Democrats Presents William King III
GID night on the town
January 12, 2023 meeting
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GID NEWSLETTER https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/gid-newsletter/ Tue, 16 Jan 2024 15:49:00 +0000 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/?p=544 Read more]]>

Galveston Island Democrats (GID) publishes monthly newsletters, meeting reminders and new flashes of interest to fellow Democrats.  Current information and updates may also be found on our website Galveston Island Democrats , Facebook page or by emailing galvisledems@gmail.com.

Past Issues

11/12/23 – ABBOTT NOT GIVING UP

10/16/2023 – VOTE, SHARE and BIG WIN

10/14/2023 – Voucher Bill Passes Senate; Goes to House

10/14/2023 – WE DID IT!! CURRENT COUNTY PRECINCT MAPS FOUND DISCRIMINATORY

10/12/2023 – We need only four Republican votes to defeat voucher bill in the Senate

10/09/2023 – Help Stop School Voucher Legislative Action

10/03/2023 – Community Notice: UTMB Holding Rape Aggression Defense Classes

09/29/2023 – Learn How to Contact Your Legislator ☎

09/24/2023 – Don’t Forget! GID Meeting Tuesday, Sept. 26

09/21/2023 – We’re Still Fighting Vouchers 🤺

09/20/2023 – September’s ‘Trifecta’ Meeting

09/19/2023 – Join GID at ETC’s Four Old Broads on the High Seas on Sept. 28💃💃💃💃

09/11/2023 – The Big Blue Bazaar Awaits You

09/06/2023 – Come Join Us in Celebrating Barry White’s Birthday this Saturday 🎹

09/01/2023 – Introducing CANDIDATE SIGHTINGS! 👀

08/30/2023 – Help celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month 🎉

08/27/2023 – Don’t Forget! GID Meeting Tuesday, Aug. 29, 6:00 PM

08/22/2023 – Galveston County’s Redistricting

08/19/2023 – Voucher Plan Raises its Head Again! 🤡

08/17/2023 – Join other DEMS for an evening of music, beverages, and food 🎹

08/15/2023 – REMINDER: Democratic Garage Sale Donations Wanted 🎁

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Voting Information https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/voting-information/ Tue, 23 May 2023 17:10:19 +0000 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/?p=116

If you need to register to vote or must re-register because you have moved since the November 2022 elections, please contact us at galvisledems@gmail.com or call  919-294-6703. 

Galveston Island Democrats provide non-partisan voter registration.  We are always available to hold a voter registration event for your company or organization.   

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BETO O’ROURKE 1-20-23 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/beto-orourke-1-20-23/ Tue, 23 May 2023 16:28:46 +0000 https://galvestonislanddemocrats.com/?p=100 Read more]]>

It’s unnecessarily tough to be a woman in Texas.

In the least insured state in the union, where it’s harder to see a medical provider than anywhere else in America, women must also contend with the most extreme abortion ban in the country. Which means that too many Texas women are unable to make their own healthcare decisions about their own bodies, with dire consequences for far too many.

It also exacerbates an already tragic level of maternal mortality, especially for Black women, in Texas.

A Texas maternal death report released last month showed a sharp increase in complications from pregnancy and childbirth between 2018 and 2020. The report, the release of which was delayed until after the November election, shows that Texas has one of the highest levels of maternal mortality in the developed world (with Black women twice as likely to die as white women). As The Texas Tribune reported, in 2019 alone at least 118 women died, leaving nearly 200 children without a mother. And that was “just a portion of the death toll from pregnancy and childbirth in Texas” that year.

Importantly, in 90% of the cases reviewed by the state’s Maternal Mortality and Morbidity Review Committee, there was a chance to save the woman’s life. That supports what common sense and the stories of so many Texas women have already told us: these women didn’t have to die.

My hope is that this report provides some urgency for members of the legislature to take action and save lives. The self declared “pro-life” majority have proven themselves to be, at best, “pro-birth.” Really, they’ve contributed to the deaths of too many innocent Texans.

Whether it’s the kids killed in Texas schools (we lead the nation in school shootings), the obscenely dysfunctional foster care system (where more than 100 children have lost their lives since 2020), the criminally weak healthcare system (more kids die of diabetes in Texas than any other state) or the rickety electricity grid (which claimed the lives of more than 700 Texans two years ago) — it’s clear that those who relish running on the rhetoric of saving lives from all sorts of boogeymen (be they immigrants or reproductive healthcare providers) have failed abjectly in actually doing anything to protect the lives of their most vulnerable constituents. In so many cases they have, through misguided legislation and willful neglect, made their deaths far more likely.

And it’s not as though solutions are expensive or politically unattainable. Reopening access to reproductive healthcare, for example, will definitely save lives. When Texas closes access to abortion, it is also effectively foreclosing access to cervical cancer screenings, family planning providers or just any kind of medical provider — someone who could, for example, diagnose and treat pre-eclampsia, one of the leading causes of maternal mortality among Black women — in some of the most underserved parts of our state. Restoring access will save lives.

In addition, we are seeing other parts of the country successfully meet the challenge of Black maternal mortality through innovative new programs. A recent New York Times article highlights a program in St. Louis that is providing access to doulas (non-medical professionals who help women navigate their pregnancies, from pain management to hospital bureaucracies). The New York Times reports that continuous guidance from doulas has been shown to be “one of the most effective interventions in easing pregnancy.” We can implement these kinds of best practices in Texas.

Texas state Rep. Shawn Thierry of Houston has authored and introduced a number of bills this session that would give Texas women a fighting chance to survive — those 90% of preventable deaths highlighted in the recently released maternal mortality report.

From mandating a maternal mortality and morbidity data registry to requiring cultural competency education for physicians, Thierry is making sure that we have the facts and the medical education to provide better outcomes. And she’s also working to put best practices, like the doula program in St. Louis, into use here in Texas. Her House Bill 465 would create a pilot program to cover doula services through Medicaid.

But the only way to get that done is for the legislature to act. And the best way to ensure that they do is for us to reach out to those who represent us.

If you live in Texas, this link will help you find your state representative and state senator and get in touch with them.

Keep the faith,

Beto

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