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Texas Democrats who left state in protest can ‘stay out long enough to stop this deal', Beto O'Rourke says

Texas Democrats who left state in protest can ‘stay out long enough to stop this deal', Beto O'Rourke says

The Guardiana day ago
Update:
Date: 2025-08-06T20:49:41.000Z
Title: Beto O'Rourke
Content: Texas Tribune reports that the former Texas congressman has been a top funder covering the costs of Texas lawmakers' exodus as they face a $500-a-day fine
Robert Mackey (now)
Shrai Popat and
Lucy Campbell (earlier)
Wed 6 Aug 2025 22.49 CEST
First published on Wed 6 Aug 2025 14.58 CEST
From
7.35pm CEST
19:35
Former Democratic congressman , who has emerged as a top funder covering the costs of Texas lawmakers' exodus, told CNN earlier that he believes they can 'stay out long enough to stop this deal in Texas'.
Donald Trump, Texas governor Greg Abbott, and Texas attorney general Ken Paxton are, O'Rourke said, 'trying to steal these five seats in Texas because without them Trump's going to lose a majority in the House of Representatives'.
Without that majority, there's a check on his lawlessness, accountability for his crimes and corruption, and the possibility of free and fair elections going forward.
The 56 Texas Democrats who left the state are, O'Rourke said, 'all that stand between that future and where we are right now'.
I think what they're doing is the highest form of public service. They're trying to stop the consolidation of authoritarian power in America.
They are the champions for this democracy, for America, for the rule of law and for our constitution.
Paxton has called their leaving a 'dereliction of the duty as elected officials' and said he would pursue a court ruling to declare the seats of 'any rogue lawmakers' vacant if they do not return to work at the statehouse by Friday.
'This matters more than any other priority,' said O'Rourke. 'We have to stop their power grab.' He added:
The election of 2026 is going to be decided in the summer of 2025, so we have to fight now and every day going forward.
Updated
at 8.41pm CEST
10.49pm CEST
22:49
The White House has released a statement to reporters in which the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, suggests that the idea of a direct meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, was proposed by the Russians during Putin's meeting with US special envoy Steve Witkoff in Moscow on Wednesday.
'As President Trump said earlier today on TRUTH Social, great progress was made during Special Envoy Witkoff's meeting with President Putin', Leavitt said. 'The Russians expressed their desire to meet with President Trump, and the President is open to meeting with both President Putin and President Zelensky. President Trump wants this brutal war to end.'
10.22pm CEST
22:22
Sam Levine
I asked Trey Martinez Fischer, a Democrat who represents San Antonio in the Texas state legislature what it was like away from the cameras as he and his colleagues live out of a hotel room in Illinois with no idea of how long they'll be there.
'It's important to just have the right mental focus and to stick to routines', he said. 'We're still, you know, we're still parents, and we're still spouses. And we're still trying to run our business or explain to our boss why we're not there. We try to live, you know, we try to live a normal life, and we will rely on each other'.
Texas' part-time lawmakers earn just $600 a month, so many have other jobs and have been forced to work remotely from outside the state, if they can.
Martinez Fischer wanted to make sure people knew that he and his colleagues are still doing legislative work, even though they're not in Austin. He mentioned that he filed two bills yesterday.
He said this was his fourth quorum break. He said he was a 'one bag guy' and had packed some leisure wear to wear with polos and his best suit he could stretch out a few days. 'I'm wearing some clothes today that I haven't worn yet. So, you know, that's a small success for me'.
'When we talk about the grand scheme of what we, what we're doing here and why we're here, I mean, there are people who have had it a whole lot worse than me', he said.
He also said this quorum break feels different than the one in 2021, when Democrats fled the state for several weeks to try and stop a bill with sweeping new voting restrictions from going into effect.
'2021, we spent more time trying to convince the country that there was an issue, right? This time, you know, there is no tutorial necessary and everybody is laser focused on the issue before us', he said. 'We don't have to debate somebody on the merits of this walkout. I mean, they know the implications'.
10.13pm CEST
22:13
Sam Levine
I just got off the phone with Trey Martinez Fischer, a Democrat who represents San Antonio in the Texas state legislature, and is one of dozens in his party who fled the state to try and stop Republicans from passing new Congressional maps.
I asked Martinez Fischer if he could lend any insight into how long Democrats would hold out before returning. He declined to say.
'These quorum checks and the strategies and end games are kind of best left undiscussed', he said. 'It's a very fluid, it's a very fluid dynamic. The idea that we had on Sunday may be different next Sunday'.
Martinez Fischer said he's not really concerned about the $500 per day fines lawmakers are accruing under state legislature rules enacted in 2023. 'Not concerned about it at all', he said. 'We've had rules set aside before, and courts don't have to interpret the rules the way Republicans want them to be interpreted'.
He said he also wasn't fazed by threats from top Texas Republicans to ask courts to remove Democratic lawmakers from office. Abbott filed a long-shot legal bid to do so against Gene Wu, the chair of the Democratic caucus, on Tuesday evening.
'I think he recognizes that he's on the losing side of this narrative', Martinez Fischer said. 'I think that the theories by which the governor is trying to remove people from office has a much more structured procedure than just filing some papers with the supreme court. So I don't think that that kind of stuff happens overnight'.
9.52pm CEST
21:52
Texas Democrats are still hunkering down in blue states across the country. It comes after they broke quorum for two consecutive days this week, in protest of a new GOP-drawn congressional map. It's now evolved into a nationwide redistricting battle.
Former Democratic congressman has emerged as a top funder, covering the costs of the lawmakers' exodus through his political group 'Powered by People'. In an interview with CNN earlier he said that state reps can 'stay out long enough to stop this deal in Texas'.
Meanwhile, many of the Texas legislators who decamped to Illinois were forced to evacuate from their hotel today when they experienced a bomb threat. The area was secured as bomb squad units conducted their investigation. No device was found according to local police. Illinois governor JB Pritzker said he was aware of the threats, in a post on X. 'Threats of violence will be investigated and those responsible will be held accountable,' he added.
In a post on Truth Social, the president said that 'great progress' was made at a 'highly productive' three-hour meeting today between special envoy Steve Witkoff and Russian president Vladimir Putin. This comes just two days ahead of a deadline Trump set for Russia to reach a peace deal in the war with Ukraine, or face fresh sanctions.
The New York Times also reports that Donald Trump plans to meet with Russian president Vladimir Putin as early as next week. Trump will then organise a follow-up for Putin, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and himself, sources tell the Times.
Trump also followed through on his threats to increase tariffs on India. Earlier he issued an executive order today imposing an additional 25% on goods from India, saying the country directly or indirectly imported Russian oil. It brings the total levies against India to 50%.
9.29pm CEST
21:29
The president plans to meet with Russian president Vladimir Putin as early as next week, according to reporting from the New York Times.
Sources tell the Times that Trump plans to follow up with a meeting between himself, Putin and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
The newspaper reports that Trump disclosed the details on a call with European leaders. Although, the meeting with Trump, Putin and Zelenskyy will not include any European counterparts, two people familiar with the plan tell the Times.
This comes after a three-hour meeting today between special envoy Steve Witkoff and Putin, which Trump described as 'highly productive' in a post on Truth Social.
Updated
at 10.00pm CEST
9.00pm CEST
21:00
George Chidi
Facing images of violent white mobs defending racial segregation, the condemnation of the world and of its own citizens, Congress in 1965 passed the Voting Rights Act, a law meant to end the hypocrisy of a democratic country that denied Black people the power of their vote.
Sixty years later, race remains at the center of American politics. Cases before the US supreme court, and a platoon of Texas legislators fleeing the state to prevent redistricting, demonstrate how the Voting Rights Act – and its erosion – remains on the frontline of the political battlefield.
'Democracy is at stake,' said Todd Cox, associate director-counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Even as voting rights advocates use the act to win additional congressional representation in Alabama and press cases in Louisiana and North Carolina, a conservative supreme court makes gains precarious, he said.
Read more about how the Voting Rights Act is confronting its biggest threats in the 60 years since its passage.
8.45pm CEST
20:45
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said, in a post on X, that Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting at Fort Stewart in Georgia, and the White House is monitoring the situation.
Five soldiers were shot and wounded today on the military base in south-east Georgia, before the shooter was taken into custody.
Parts of the base had been locked down earlier on Wednesday after a shooter was reported on the sprawling army post, a spokesperson said.
Updated
at 8.48pm CEST
8.33pm CEST
20:33
In an analysis by Politico, Democratic lawmakers from Texas stand to amass almost $400,000 in penalties, for leaving the state in protest during the special session that ends on 19 August.
Politico crunched the numbers and worked out the total based on the fewest lawmakers needed to break quorum, the anticipated length of their out-of-state trips, and the $500-per-day fee they're being charged.
'Should Democrats refuse to return for the length of the entire special legislative session, which will end on Aug. 19, they could rack up fines totaling at least $382,500,' Politico estimated.
Updated
at 8.43pm CEST
8.09pm CEST
20:09
In a post on Truth Social, the president said that 'great progress' was made at the meeting between special envoy Steve Witkoff and Russian president Vladimir Putin.
'Afterwards, I updated some of our European Allies. Everyone agrees this War must come to a close, and we will work towards that in the days and weeks to come,' Trump added.
The meeting comes just two days before a deadline the president set for Russia to reach a peace deal in the war with Ukraine, or face fresh sanctions.
8.02pm CEST
20:02
Texas state lawmakers – many of whom decamped to Illinois to break quorum over the new GOP-drawn congressional map – were forced to evacuate from their hotel earlier near Chicago today.
The St Charles police department said they responded to a report of a potential bomb threat at the Q-Center hotel and convention complex. Four hundred people were immediately evacuated, and the area was secured as bomb squad units conducted their investigation. No device was found.
On social media, Democratic state representative John Bucy III said that 'this is what happens when Republican state leaders publicly call for us to be 'hunted down',' referring to the Texas attorney general's earlier calls to bring absent lawmakers back to the state house.
Illinois governor JB Pritzker said he was aware of the threats, in a post on X. 'Threats of violence will be investigated and those responsible will be held accountable,' he added.
Updated
at 8.42pm CEST
7.44pm CEST
19:44
JD Vance will reportedly host top administration officials at his residence tonight, where they will discuss a strategy to address the fallout of the government's mishandling of the Jeffrey Epstein case and come up with a 'unified response', CNN reports.
Among the attendees will reportedly be, attorney Pam Bondi, her deputy Todd Blanche, FBI director Kash Patel and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles.
It comes as the administration weighs whether to release the contents of Blanche's interviews, including over 10 hours of audio and a transcript, with Epstein accomplice and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell. Two officials told CNN that the materials could be made public as early as this week.
One official told CNN that some of the conversation within the White House has focused on whether making the details from the interview public would bring the Epstein controversy back to the surface, at a time when many officials close to Trump believe the story has finally died down.
Updated
at 8.15pm CEST
7.35pm CEST
19:35
Former Democratic congressman , who has emerged as a top funder covering the costs of Texas lawmakers' exodus, told CNN earlier that he believes they can 'stay out long enough to stop this deal in Texas'.
Donald Trump, Texas governor Greg Abbott, and Texas attorney general Ken Paxton are, O'Rourke said, 'trying to steal these five seats in Texas because without them Trump's going to lose a majority in the House of Representatives'.
Without that majority, there's a check on his lawlessness, accountability for his crimes and corruption, and the possibility of free and fair elections going forward.
The 56 Texas Democrats who left the state are, O'Rourke said, 'all that stand between that future and where we are right now'.
I think what they're doing is the highest form of public service. They're trying to stop the consolidation of authoritarian power in America.
They are the champions for this democracy, for America, for the rule of law and for our constitution.
Paxton has called their leaving a 'dereliction of the duty as elected officials' and said he would pursue a court ruling to declare the seats of 'any rogue lawmakers' vacant if they do not return to work at the statehouse by Friday.
'This matters more than any other priority,' said O'Rourke. 'We have to stop their power grab.' He added:
The election of 2026 is going to be decided in the summer of 2025, so we have to fight now and every day going forward.
Updated
at 8.41pm CEST
7.02pm CEST
19:02
US envoy Steve Witkoff's meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Wednesday went well, a White House official has told Reuters, adding that Washington still planned to proceed with secondary sanctions on Friday.
The Russians are eager to continue engaging with the United States. The secondary sanctions are still expected to be implemented on Friday.
My colleague Jakub Krupa is covering this in greater detail over on our Europe live blog:
6.55pm CEST
18:55
It follows a Reuters report that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Donald Trump spoke on the phone earlier today, according to a source familiar with the matter.
Hours earlier, US special envoy Steve Witkoff held talks with Vladimir Putin in Moscow. There haven't been any immediate indication from either side as to how the talks went.
Updated
at 6.56pm CEST
6.52pm CEST
18:52
We're seeing lines on Reuters quoting a White House official that secondary US sanctions on Russia are expected to be implemented on Friday, the deadline Trump gave Putin to reach a peace deal to end its war in Ukraine.
Up until this point Trump had been unusually reticent to punish the Russian president, my colleague Patrick Wintour wrote in a piece published this morning, so 'what Trump – who some had claimed was a Russian asset – does next to punish Putin could define his presidency.'
I'll bring you more on this as we get it.
Updated
at 6.58pm CEST
6.39pm CEST
18:39
If state legislators in California move ahead with governor Gavin Newsom's plan to hold a special election – and begin the process of redrawing the state's congressional maps in response to Texas's plans – they'll have just five days to announce their decision.
The California legislature returns from its recess on 18 August, and it will have to declare a special election by 22 August, according to KCRA News.
'They're doing a midterm rejection of objectivity and independence, an act that we could criticise from the sideline, or an act that we can respond to in kind – fight fire with fire,' Newsom said in a press conference last week, referring to Texas Republicans' plans to pass a new congressional map.
Updated
at 7.38pm CEST
6.04pm CEST
18:04
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke with Donald Trump on the phone today, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
This comes after US special envoy Steve Witkoff wrapped up a three-hour meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin earlier today.
My colleagues are tracking the latest here.
Updated
at 6.18pm CEST
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