Democratic Lawmakers Flee Texas Again


Oh, for the love of god. These Texas Republicans have no shame. They're trying to redraw the boundaries again! And this time they're trying to change the rules of the Texas Senate to do it. Previously, the Senate required a 2/3 majority to bring up a issue to debate. The Republicans want to change the rules to allow them to bring up redistricting with only a simple majority. The current districts were done in 2000. Because they obstructed the redistricting then, it was thrown into court and done by a judge. Now they want to redraw the boundaries to suit themselves.

The House Democrats stopped it the first time by leaving the state. Now the Senate Democrats have done their part to stop this obscene power grab. With regard to the Republicans, the only thing I can think of is "What goes around comes around." They're overplaying their hand, and people who are fairminded are a bigger bunch than Republicans or Democrats. Hopefully this will get those fairminded people agitated enough to run Gov. Goodhair, Rep. DeLay, and Karl Rove out of Texas.


AUSTIN, Texas - Democratic state lawmakers fled Texas on Monday for the second time in three months to thwart a Republican drive to redraw the state's congressional districts.

Eleven of the 12 Democrats in the state Senate left for Albuquerque, N.M., as a first special session called by the governor to address redistricting drew to a close and he called a second special session, which began Monday afternoon. The second session could last up to 30 days.

"We're availing ourselves of a tool given to us by our Texas Constitution to break a quorum," Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos said at a hotel in Albuquerque. "It's not about Democrats, it's about democracy."

Asked how long the group might stay in New Mexico, Sen. Judith Zaffirini of Laredo said: "Thirty days. More if it's necessary."

In May, during the regular spring session, the Republicans tried to push redistricting toward a vote in the GOP-controlled state House. But 51 Democrats in that chamber fled across the state line to Oklahoma to block a quorum, killing the bill.

On Monday, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst began the new session by ordering the 11 who left back to the chamber.

"I'm asking our Senate Democrats to come back and to work with us," Dewhurst said. "I would say that I'm very, very disappointed."

He said he expects the Senate will pass a redistricting plan. "If I read the tea leaves correctly, we will pass a fair redistricting plan now or later," Dewhurst said.

Dewhurst said he would enlist the Senate sergeant-at-arms and possibly off-duty police officers to retrieve the 11 lawmakers, but acknowledged that Texas authorities likely could not cross state lines.

If the senators stay in Albuquerque, or even out of the Capitol, business in the chamber will shut down. It takes two-thirds of the Senate's 31 members — to form a quorum and allow the chamber to take up business.

When the House Democrats fled to Oklahoma, Republican House Speaker Tom Craddick ordered state troopers to find them and bring them back to Austin. The office of U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay also became involved, calling the Federal Aviation Administration to try to locate the plane of one of the Democrats.

The authority of the state Department of Public Safety to pursue and arrest the lawmakers in Texas remains in question.

A lawyer for a House member who sued over the department's involvement in the earlier flight says troopers can't arrest the missing lawmakers. The state attorney general's office says they can, but Dewhurst said he doubts the department will even be called this time.

Republicans are pressing for more seats in the state's 32-member delegation to the U.S. House. The Democrats currently hold a 17-15 advantage, which Republicans say does not reflect the state's increasingly Republican voting patterns.

Most Democrats want to keep the existing congressional map drawn by a three-judge federal panel in 2001. They say redistricting amounts to a power grab pushed by DeLay, a Republican.

The Senate and House adjourned their special session Monday afternoon. Shortly afterward, Gov. Rick Perry called a new one.

Zaffirini said the senators boarded two private flights arranged by two Senate Democrats, but said most did not know where they were headed.

Perry said he was disappointed in Monday's developments. "Today a minority of members in the state Senate prevented the Senate from finishing important work," he said.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democrat, welcomed the Texas lawmakers.

"New Mexico has a long history of helping people on the run — and should these legislators decide to stay awhile, I will be proud to have them," Richardson said.

During the first special session, Senate Democrats were able to block a redistricting bill that could have given Republicans an additional seven seats. Eleven Democrats and one Republican stood firm against the bill.

Senate rules require that two-thirds of the chamber support a bill before it can be taken up for debate. Dewhurst has said he would do away with that rule during the second session so that only a majority would be needed.

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