With Time Running Out, Texas Legislature Still At Impasse On GOP Elections Bill
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August 2, 2021
As the final week of the special legislature began, the partisan stalemate over the priority election law for Texas Republicans has not come any closer to resolution in Austin.
Enough House Democrats to prevent a quorum – 100 of the 150 MPs in the House of Representatives have to be together to do official business – are still camping in the country’s capital, and Republicans are still waiting for them in Austin, struggling through the daily monotony .
The few glimmers of hope for negotiations have long since vanished, and neither side seems to be in the mood for discussion. Republicans believe they have made many legislative compromises, while Democrats are suspicious of both the policy driving the legislation and their GOP counterparts after seeing how they have managed the bill so far to have.
Governor Greg Abbott has vowed to convene special sessions after special sessions until the electoral law is passed and has said the next one will begin the day after that session ends; a special session can end early, but not last longer than 30 days, and Friday is the 30th day.
Should there be another special meeting, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick hinted that the Senate will pass an electoral law similar to that at this session, which could close the door to possible further negotiations between Republicans and Democrats.
“At the end of the day this bill will be passed, pretty much as it is – we are always ready to listen if you have any suggestions … but this bill will be passed,” Patrick said at a Capitol press conference in July. “Is it August, September, October? Is it next february? Is it next june? This law is passed because the people of Texas of all colors want safe and secure elections. And the longer this takes, the weaker ” [Democrats’] Argument gets. “
Grand Prairie Rep. Chris Turner, chairman of the House Democratic Committee, told reporters last week that the Democrats breaking the quorum had been “very clear” about their goals from the start – stopping the electoral law in the current special session and up for federal law on the right to vote.
“We’re not here in Washington trying to negotiate a law that will show all the signs [Republicans] “I’m not interested in negotiating or discussing it with us,” Turner said during a press conference, and we’ll take care of whatever comes out next. “
When asked if he knew how many Democrats were planning to stay in Washington beyond the last day of the special session, Turner said no.
Aside from the electoral law, little progress has been made in restoring legislative funding, which Abbott vetoed in retaliation for the Democrats’ initial strike against the law. The clock is ticking – funding should start on September 1st.
This issue could be resolved in the Texas Supreme Court after a group made up of House Democrats and Legislative officials asked the court to overturn Abbott’s veto.
Should time run out before the court intervenes or the lawmakers act, salaries and benefits for over 2,000 government employees, as well as a number of other services and contracts, are at risk, as property manager Will Metcalf, a Republican of Conroe, wrote in a memo dated Jan. July to the members of the lower chamber.
“The implications for the operation of the home are significant,” wrote Metcalf, outlining the legislative operations that could be canceled if funding is not restored, such as:
With most Republican lawmakers waiting for action inside the Capitol, activism outside in support of the absent Democrats has continued. Beto O’Rourke, a former member of Congress and an unsuccessful US Senate and Presidency candidate, helped lead a march from Georgetown that began Wednesday and Saturday at the State Capitol with a rally with an appearance by Willie Nelson ended.
“We will prevail, we will prevail until we win this,” said O’Rourke, thanking “our brave lawmakers who are in Washington, DC right now.”
O’Rourke was accompanied by Rev. William Barber, a national civil rights activist, who used his rally to pressure President Joe Biden to do more against state voting legislation through Congress.
“Biden, we loved your Philadelphia speech, but you have to get to Texas and stop just talking to these politicians who are telling you what can’t be done,” Barber said. “Come and talk to the people in Texas.”
The Democrats at Texas House in Washington were re-optimistic on Friday as Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris met with Democratic Congressional leaders about federal suffrage. While the congressional push still has a long way to go, the post-meeting White House issued a statement saying that leaders “have agreed on the moral imperative of passing” such laws “and remain urgent work towards this goal ”.
Republicans in Austin got their own small dose of optimism early last week when some of the Austin Legislative Democrats reappeared. But only one of them, Rep. Philip Cortez of San Antonio, was part of the core group of 57 Democrats who broke the quorum, and he returned to Washington days later, citing unproductive talks about the Austin electoral law. He had also had grief from some in his own party who were caught off guard by his temporary return to Austin.
House Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont issued an arrest warrant for Cortez’s arrest, but it came after Cortez had already returned to the country’s capital – outside of state jurisdiction. Even then, not all Republicans were hostile to the breakaway Democrat.
“We certainly understand why the speaker did what he did, and that is certainly his right,” said Rep. Jim Murphy, head of the House of Representatives GOP caucus, during a news conference the day after Phelan’s announcement of the warrant .
However, Phelan’s action has continued to fuel tension between Republicans and Democrats, many of whom have long-standing relationships with members of the other party.
Stresses on these relationships could affect the legislative process in the House of Representatives during a second special session, and it is unclear what measures, if any, could alleviate this dynamic in another round of overtime – especially if legislators are quickly ordered back to Austin after the current session ends.
The most polarizing source of this tension was the electoral law, with Republicans and Democrats saying the others acted maliciously in negotiating the law.
Republicans point to a number of talks with Democrats on electoral law before the special session began in July.
These talks included approving motions from Democrats for a new house writer to carry the law, as well as a new house committee to review the bill, according to lawmakers of both parties involved. Members who took part in these talks also negotiated specific provisions in the legislation before the bill was tabled, according to these legislators.
“You know as well as I do that this legislation was negotiated in good faith and deserves your attention,” said Rep. Travis Clardy, R-Nacogdoches, during a congressional hearing last week on the right to vote, referring to the quorum-destroying Democrats . “You had your fun, it’s time to get home.”
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