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Greg Abbott on Technology

 

 


Broadband not a luxury; it's an essential tool

From medicine to education to business, broadband access is not a luxury-- it is an essential tool that must be available for all Texans. That's why I am making the expansion of broadband access an emergency item this session.
Source: 2021 State of the State Address to the Texas legislature , Feb 2, 2021

Innovation renaissance: biotech, wearable tech, clean tech

We all know that Texas leads the nation in areas like oil and gas. Importantly though, Texas is in the middle of an innovation renaissance that weans our economy off of energy.

Biotech. Defense tech. Wearable tech. Clean tech. Technologies developed in Texas are changing the world in which we live. The Dallas, Houston and Austin areas are now known as three of the world's premiere "knowledge capitals." And get this: Midland beats the San Francisco area in the percentage of jobs created by startups. And, we continue to cultivate the next generation of entrepreneurs and innovators.

For example, Texas now has more public high schools ranked in the top 100 than any other state. We have the fourth highest high school graduation rate in America. We are second among Hispanic and African-American students, and first among economically disadvantaged students. And the No. 1 public high school in America is in Dallas Independent School District.

Source: 2017 State of the State address to Texas Legislature , Jan 31, 2017

Proposition 1: the people have demanded $4B for roads

With the passage of Proposition 1 this past November, Texans sent a loud and clear message that they are tired of being stuck in traffic. It's a sad day in Texas when a guy in a wheelchair can move faster than traffic on our congested roads.

My budget adds more than $4 billion a year to build more roads in Texas without raising taxes, fees, tolls or debt. This funding comes from 3 places: One is the funding received from Proposition 1. Two, it ends diversions of state highway funds-- tax dollars paid for roads should be spent on roads. Third, my plan constitutionally dedicates one-half of the existing motor vehicle sales tax to fund roads.

The plan--including the constitutional amendment--is needed to ensure TxDOT has the sustainable, recurring and predictable revenue needed to plan large-scale, multi-year construction projects. Regardless of the priorities that may exist in this Capitol, the voters made unequivocally clear their priority--they want roads funded.

Source: State of the State address to 2015 Texas Legislature , Feb 17, 2015

Other governors on Technology: Greg Abbott on other issues:
TX Gubernatorial:
Allen West
Beto O`Rourke
Chad Prather
Chris Bell
Deirdre Gilbert
Don Huffines
Gina Hinojosa
TX Senatorial:
Carl Sherman
Colin Allred
James Talarico
Jasmine Crockett
John Cornyn
Ken Paxton
Roland Gutierrez
Ted Cruz
Wesley Hunt

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Page last updated: Feb 16, 2026; copyright 1999-2022 Jesse Gordon and OnTheIssues.org