Miami Herald

Legislator­s from other states joining Texas Dems in D.C.

- BY RAGA JUSTIN AND EMILY CALDWELL

As the Texas House Democrats who bolted from Austin prepare for their last week in Washington before Gov. Greg Abbott’s current special session ends, their push for voting rights protection is getting a boost from activists and other state legislator­s nationwide.

Over 100 state lawmakers from more than 20 states will join the Texas Democrats in Washington this week, many of them coming from Republican­led legislatur­es that have either threatened or already passed legislatio­n similar to the GOP-backed voting bills the Texas members are blocking in the Legislatur­e.

The legislator­s have planned a rally outside the Capitol on Tuesday, and said Monday they will continue to push for the federal bills at public events and private meetings throughout the week – even as the Texas lawmakers’ return to Austin remains shrouded in uncertaint­y.

“We’re literally fighting the same fight,” said Daniel Hernández, an Arizona state house representa­tive who is flying in Tuesday morning to join the rally. He said the Arizona delegation is attempting to set up meetings with Sens. Kyrsten Sinema and Mark Kelly. “So whether you’re in Texas or Arizona, there are a lot of similariti­es. When we’re looking at the next election, the voting restrictio­ns don’t just impact Democratic voters, or voters of color. They impact all Texans, and all Arizonans, and all Americans.”

The group will echo the

Texas delegation’s call for the Senate to pass the For the People Act and the

John Lewis Voting Rights Act – or at least make progress – before the chamber’s August recess.

Both bills, which Democratic lawmakers say are the only way to override Republican efforts at the state level to limit access to the ballot box, have stalled in the Senate without the 60 votes needed to pass.

Gov. Greg Abbott has signaled his intent to continue calling session after session in an attempt to force the Democrats’ hand. Democrats stress that they are taking a stand until Abbott’s agenda lines up with theirs – including conversati­ons on issues like the power grid and the pandemic. So there’s no end in sight yet to the stalemate in Austin.

“We need to hear from the governor and the speaker of the House that the priority in our session is that – we see more people are dying, we’re recognizin­g that we failed in ensuring the people are safe from the pandemic,” said Texas state Rep. Ana Maria Ramos, of Richardson. “But you won’t hear that from them, because they don’t care. [Texas Democrats] have to continue in the right direction, which is what we’re doing now.”

The discussion on voting rights has pivoted to include calls to eliminate the filibuster. At least 60 of the 100 members of the Senate must vote to end a filibuster, which Republican­s have used to successful­ly stall federal voting rights legislatio­n.

“The filibuster is sin,” civil rights activist Rev. William J. Barber II of the Poor People’s Campaign said at a Push Democracy Forward rally in Washington Monday.

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