Los Angeles Times

Democrats face arrest in Texas

Warrants are issued for state House members who left the Capitol to block a GOP voting bill.

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Warrants are issued for state House members who stayed away to block a Republican voting bill.

AUSTIN, Texas — The speaker of the Texas House of Representa­tives signed civil arrest warrants for 52 absent Democrats late Tuesday, setting in motion the potential roundup of lawmakers who have avoided the state Capitol to stymie a vote on a GOP elections bill that they say would harm minorities.

The House voted 80 to 12 on Tuesday to force the protesting lawmakers to return, just hours after the Texas Supreme Court cleared the way for the House to order them back to the chamber to secure a quorum.

The warrants were delivered to the House sergeant at arms Wednesday.

The move will probably further inflame partisan tension in the Texas House.

Rep. Chris Turner, who chairs the Texas House Democratic Caucus, said Tuesday that it was “fully within our rights as legislator­s to break quorum to protect our constituen­ts.”

“Texas House Democrats are committed to fighting with everything we have against Republican­s’ attacks on our freedom to vote,” Turner said in a statement.

One Republican voted against authorizin­g arrest warrants: Rep. Lyle Larson of San Antonio, who has been openly critical of the elections bill that Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has demanded.

“Civil discourse took a nasty turn today,” Larson tweeted of the arrest warrants.

Fugitive Democrats remain defiant, and an untold number are outside the reach of the House sergeant at arms and state troopers.

“I just question whether [the state Department of Public Safety] or anyone can break down my door to come and put me in shackles and drag me there,” Rep. Vikki Goodwin, an Austin Democrat, told the Dallas Morning News. “I feel certain that I can stay in my home, and stay off the House floor.”

At least two dozen House Democrats have stayed in Washington, where 57 of them camped out for all or most of a month to run out the clock on Abbott’s first special session.

“We broke quorum because anti-voter bills are nefarious attempts to disenfranc­hise Texans & these authoritar­ian motions by Republican­s just cement that we are on the right side of history,” Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, an Austin Democrat, tweeted. “We must hold the line against these desperate attempts to destroy our democracy.”

Abbott called the Legislatur­e into special session last month to reconsider a measure that House Democrats had blocked with an eleventh-hour walkout in May, at the end of the regular biennial session.

Democrats used the same tactic to stymie action in the special session and claimed victory when that session expired.

But Republican­s are determined to wear them down, and Abbott immediatel­y ordered a second special session that began Saturday.

Nineteen of the Democrats who broke quorum last month sought protection in a Travis County court. On Monday, District Judge Brad Urrutia signed an order to prevent arrests for 14 days.

Early Tuesday, Abbott and Speaker Dade Phelan asked the Texas Supreme Court to overturn that order, and the justices quickly agreed.

It wouldn’t take many arrests for the House to be back in business. A quorum requires two-thirds of the 150 members on site. Since Monday, 96 House members have checked in as present — just four shy.

During their self-imposed exile in Washington, the Texas Democrats have lobbied the White House and potential swing votes in the U.S. Senate for federal voting rights bills that would supersede anything Republican­s can get through the Texas Legislatur­e.

Texas Republican­s insist that their proposals are meant solely to boost election integrity and avert cheating.

Urrutia’s order prevented House members from being subject to a “call of the House.” GOP leaders said they could invoke such a call to order the House sergeant at arms to haul wayward lawmakers back to the Capitol from anywhere in Texas.

Under House rules, voting on legislatio­n requires a quorum. But votes to compel attendance of absent members, or to adjourn, do not.

“They just need to put them all in handcuffs, drag them in, throw them in the middle of chambers, lock the doors and unhandcuff ’em .... A couple of them would go bug-eyed crazy,” Rep. Cecil Bell, a Republican, said in an interview with the web show “The Undercurre­nt.”

But the optics of hauling in the lawmakers and locking them on the House floor would be risky for GOP leaders. Democratic Rep. Garnet Coleman of Houston, for example, is recovering from the amputation of a foot.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? TEXAS STATE Rep. Senfronia Thompson, center, shown last week, and other Democratic lawmakers say the GOP elections bill is an attack on voting rights.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press TEXAS STATE Rep. Senfronia Thompson, center, shown last week, and other Democratic lawmakers say the GOP elections bill is an attack on voting rights.

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