Texas Dems do a two-step over voting rights victory
PHILADELPHIA—Texas Democrats did a victory lap Monday at their delegation’s “Texadelphia” kickoff event for the Democratic National Convention, celebrating a recent court victory that found the Lone Star State’s voter identification law discriminatory while paying tribute to their own political legacy.
“He wanted you, all of you, to vote,” said Lynda Johnson Robb, the oldest daughter of President Lyndon Baines Johnson and a former first lady of Virginia. (She is married to former Gov. and Sen. Chuck Robb.)
Her presence here at a time when her famously hardcharging father is being lionized with the play and movie version of “All the Way”—about his efforts to pass the Voting Rights Act—lent the event an iconic air usually absent from the typical rah-rah convention delegate events.
Topic A at the event was the July 20 decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that Texas’ voter identification law discriminated against Hispanic and black voters. The court sent the case back to the district court to come up with a remedy.
The court did not strike down the statute entirely, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has vowed to fight for the law.
But the mood among Texas Democrats, here at the city’s venerable Bookbinders Restaurant and Olde Bar, was ebullient.
“As many of you know, last week we had a big victory,” said Matt Angle, head of the Texas Justice and Education Fund, which helped spearhead the challenge. The law required photo identification to vote, among other requirements Democrats and minority rights groups said were designed to prevent them from participating at the polls.
Robb was on hand, amid requests for selfies and introductions to delegates, to present Texas Democratic Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson and Gene Green with the LBJ Lone Star Legacy Award, which Angle’s group awards. (Angle is also the founder of the Lone Star Project, a Democratic policy group, and is a longtime Texas political hand with close ties to former Rep. Martin Frost.)
“I would not be standing here today if Lyndon Johnson had not been president,” Johnson said, referring to passage of the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act. “From Lyndon Johnson’s work, I have been able to see the first African-American president. From Lyndon Johnson’s work, we will be able to see the first woman president, Hillary Clinton.”