Chattanooga Times Free Press

Some Texas Dems ready to walk as GOP digs in on voting bill

- BY ACACIA CORONADO AND PAUL J. WEBER

AUSTIN, Texas — The possibilit­y of Texas Democrats staging a second walkout to again stop one of America’s most restrictiv­e new voting measures grew louder Saturday, as hundreds of people waited hours to rail against the GOP’s plan in the largest turnout this year at the state Capitol.

As Republican­s made clear they intended this weekend to advance a new election bill — which would prohibit 24-hour polling places, ban drop boxes and stop drive-thru voting — some Democrats who broke quorum in May are now describing it as their best, if not only, option again.

Texas is among several states with GOP-controlled statehouse­s where Republican­s have rushed to enact strict voting laws in response to former President Donald Trump’s claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. A second walkout by Texas Democrats would mark a highstakes escalation of their efforts to deny Republican­s a major priority, and in turn, put more pressure on President Joe Biden to act on voting at the federal level.

Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic former Texas congressma­n who is considerin­g challengin­g Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in 2022, said he has already offered help, saying he was ready to raise money “literally to feed and house the legislator­s” if they go that route.

“Should we stick around? Hell no. For what?” Democratic state Rep. Jarvis Johnson said. “There’s nothing being done in earnest. There’s nothing be done with the utmost respect for one another.”

For weeks, Democratic leaders in the Texas House have said they are not ruling out another revolt, but have also expressed hope of weakening the bill during the 30-day special session. Johnson, however, believes a large number of his colleagues are ready to deny Republican­s a quorum for a second time, though most continue speaking cautiously.

Another walkout may merely buy more time: Abbott could keep calling more 30-day special sessions until voting measures are passed. Paychecks for nearly 2,000 Capitol staffers could also be on the line, because Abbott vetoed funding for the legislativ­e branch following Democrats’ latenight walkout.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ERIC GAY ?? Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio, and other Democratic caucus members join a rally on the steps of the Texas Capitol to support voting rights Thursday in Austin, Texas.
AP PHOTO/ERIC GAY Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio, and other Democratic caucus members join a rally on the steps of the Texas Capitol to support voting rights Thursday in Austin, Texas.

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