THE KICK Podcast
Harris County does not need more noise. It needs leadership that can actually make government work. In this episode, Annise Parker breaks down one of the most misunderstood roles in Texas politics: the Harris County Judge. It is not a courtroom job. It is the position responsible for keeping a region of millions functioning, especially when things go wrong. From flood control and emergency response to affordability, public safety, and infrastructure, this conversation pulls back the curtain on how local government really operates. And more importantly, what happens when it stops working as a system. At the center of it all is a bigger question. In a political environment dominated by extremes, who is actually governing for the middle 80 percent? And what does it take to bring coordination, discipline, and accountability back to a county this complex? Key Takeaways * Why the Harris County Judge is less about authority and more about alignment across competing power centers * How dysfunction at the top can quietly slow down everything from flood mitigation to public safety * What most people misunderstand about where local tax dollars actually go * Why affordability is tied to infrastructure, not just housing prices * The hidden tradeoffs behind law enforcement spending, mental health care, and jail overcrowding * How governing for the “middle 80%” changes decision-making in a polarized environment Timestamps * 0:00 - Who Annise Parker is and what the Harris County Judge actually does * 4:50 - The real responsibilities: emergency management, flood control, and public systems * 11:30 - Why Harris County government feels dysfunctional right now * 16:10 - The real priorities: affordability, economy, and flood mitigation * 31:00 - From mayor to county judge: experience vs. authority * 39:40 - Law enforcement, budgets, and what’s driving costs
5 episodios
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