The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Texas governor ready to show he’s in charge

Republican’s moves deepen rift within state party.

- By Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, TEXAS — Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is demonstrat­ing his power and wants to quiet doubts over who’s really calling the shots in the biggest conservati­ve state in America. But that doesn’t mean the Legislatur­e he is summoning back to work will deliver on his wishes.

Abbott surprised lawmakers last week by reviving a long list of conservati­ve measures that failed despite Republican­s holding majorities in both chambers at the Texas Capitol, including a “bathroom bill” targeting transgende­r people that has deepened a GOP rift and is opposed by major corporatio­ns such as Apple and Google.

Abbott also stuffed the agenda for a special session that begins in July with more anti-abortion efforts, antiunion proposals, school vouchers and more. Not all of the 20 priorities he announced are likely to prevail but that may be fine for Abbott, who is out to reassert himself over criticism that his leadership has been lacking and that he has let the state’s powerful lieutenant governor set the terms instead.

“I wish he would have had that press conference before the session ended. It would have made it easier,” said Republican state Rep. Jason Villalba. “Had he done that, there would have been a little more guidance from the top about what we need to do in Texas in accordance with what his political philosophi­es are.”

Villalba said Abbott, who is up for re-election in 2018, made clear while advocating for the special session agenda that he was in charge. But “even though he says ‘Here are 20 things that matter,’ we said no to a good 25 percent of those items already.”

The session starts July 18 and lawmakers are unlikely to ram through all the items in just one month.

Special sessions are not unusual in Texas — Rick Perry routinely ordered the Legislatur­e to work extra weeks and months during his 14 years as governor. But unlike Perry, who ran the job with back-slapping swagger, Abbott has kept a far quieter profile since taking office in 2015 and given room for others to seize the spotlight.

None more so than Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, whose office carries considerab­le power in Texas politics because it presides over the state Senate. Patrick led the push for a North Carolina-style “bathroom bill” and ran President Donald Trump’s campaign in Texas.

Patrick, who has repeatedly said he won’t run for Abbott’s job next year, set the agenda for social conservati­ves and helped force a special session when bathroom restrictio­ns and property tax changes fizzled out in the House.

Abbott put the blame on lawmakers for the stalled proposals and said it would be their fault again if the measures failed a second time.

“If they fail, it’s not for a lack of time. It would be because of a lack of will,” Abbott said.

The sharpest debates are again likely to involve a so-called bathroom bill. A version endorsed by Abbott stops short of requiring people to use the bathroom listed on their birth certificat­e but would rollback transgende­r protection­s in major Texas cities.

“How many chances do the Republican­s need to get their agenda passed? They control everything,” Democratic state Rep. Eric Johnson said. “It’s a lesson in failed leadership, is what it is.” Compliment­ary Design Consultati­ons from Award Winning Designers

 ?? GAY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ERIC ?? Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced last week that there would be a special session of the Texas Legislatur­e in Austin. Abbott is reviving a so-called “bathroom bill.”
GAY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ERIC Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced last week that there would be a special session of the Texas Legislatur­e in Austin. Abbott is reviving a so-called “bathroom bill.”

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