Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Texas Dems don’t show up for new session

Standoff continues as Republican­s want to pass new election laws

- By Acacia Coronado and Paul J. Weber

Texas Democrats still refused to return to the state Capitol on Saturday as Gov. Greg Abbott began a third attempt at passing new election laws, prolonging a monthslong standoff that ramped up in July when dozens of Democratic state lawmakers left the state and hunkered down in Washington, D.C.

“A quorum is not present,” said Republican House Speaker Dade Phelan, who then adjourned the chamber until Monday.

More than 50 Democrats last month bolted to the nation’s capital, but the precise whereabout­s of each of them is unclear.

In a joint statement Saturday, Democrats said 26 of them would remain “part of an active presence in Washington maintained for as long as Congress is working.”

But there were also signs the stalemate may be thawing. Two of the Democrats who decamped last month returned to Austin Saturday, and one of them said enough of his colleagues may also begin trickling back to secure a quorum next week.

And Republican­s did not invoke a procedural move that would give Phelan the authority to sign arrest warrants for missing lawmakers, as they did when the Democrats left town.

Democratic state Rep. Eddie Lucio III said those who might return were feeling the pull of personal and profession­al demands. “I was encouraged that the baton would be carried by my Washington colleagues at the federal level, that there would be sweeping reform nationwide,” Lucio III said.

Republican state. Rep. Jim Murphy, chairman of the House Republican Caucus, also believed that more Democrats would come back in the coming days.

“People are talking to their friends, and we think we’re going to see quite a few more,“he said.

It was not just Democrats who were absent Saturday: Six Republican­s were also out, including one who recently tested positive for COVID -19.

Heading into the weekend, Democratic leaders had not committed to sitting out the entire 30-day session, leaving open the possibilit­y that enough could return at some point to end the standoff. Republican­s want to advance an overhaul of elections in Texas under legislatio­n that largely remains the same despite the months of walkouts and protests by Democratic lawmakers.

Texas would ban 24-hour polling locations, drive-thru voting and give partisan poll watchers more access under the bill that Republican­s were on the brink of passing in May.

But that effort was foiled by Democrats abruptly leaving the Capitol in a late-night walkout.

Democrats made a bigger gambit — by decamping to Washington on chartered jets — to run out the clock on the GOP’s second try.

Democrats had hoped to exert pressure on President Joe Biden and Congress to pass federal voting rights legislatio­n, but a Senate Republican filibuster continues to block such a measure.

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 ?? Jay Janner / Associated Press ?? Speaker Dade Phelan, R Beaumont, gavels the first special session Friday in Austin, Texas.
Jay Janner / Associated Press Speaker Dade Phelan, R Beaumont, gavels the first special session Friday in Austin, Texas.
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