In Daniel Hung’s Daily Texan article, Hung is targeting the general
public; however, the main intended audience is individuals on the University of
Texas at Austin (UT) campus. The article
asserts that the economic success in Texas is the result of the pro-business
and pro-growth policies put in place as a result of the Republican Party’s
control of state government. Daniel Hung
is a second-year law student at UT who has written editorials on open-carry
bills, Texas education, student tax cuts, and UT’s affirmative action
policy. Hung claims that during the
times that the Republican Party has held political power in Texas, the state
has prospered more than when the Democrats were in power. Hung argues that while there is room for
improvement in the state of Texas, such as public education, the improvements
that the Republican Party has made in Texas should allow it to stay in
power. In his article, Hung quotes Paul
Burka, the former senior executive editor of Texas Monthly, saying that “Texas has prospered under the
republicans” and that the “economy has been strong, tax collections have
likewise been consistently good, and the Rainy Day fund is bulging with money.” Burka, who covered Texas politics for more
than 40 years, believes that everything about the economics of Texas is good. Hung acknowledges other arguments that the
Republican Party isn’t responsible for Texas’s economic success but rather that
the fact that the state is blessed with abundant natural resources, such as oil,
is the real cause of that success. These
natural resources mean nothing Hung asserts, however, without pro-business policies
that help develop the resource. He
contrasts the success in Texas with the level of success in California, which
also has abundant resources, but little pro-business policy. Hung argues that all of these pro-business policies
have been implemented while Republicans have held power, which in the
legislature has been since 2003 and the governorship for the last 20-years. Even with all these arguments for the good
that Republican leadership has caused, Hung still points to improvements that
the party needs to make, including tax cuts for everyone, a full time
legislature, and the elimination of the affirmative action in University
admission.
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