
Texas Democrats receive bomb threat in escalating standoff over redistricting
John Bucy III, a Democrat who represents Austin in the state legislature, confirmed the threat on X on Wednesday and said the lawmakers were evacuated. 'This is what happens when Republican state leaders publicly call for us to be 'hunted down'. Texas Democrats won't be intimidated,' he said.
'We are safe, we are secure, and we are undeterred,' three other members of the Texas house Democratic caucus, representatives Gene Hu, Ramón Romero and Barbara Gervin-Hawkins, said in a statement. They thanked Illinois's governor, JB Pritzker, and law enforcement officials 'for their quick action to ensure our safety'.
The showdown between Texas Republicans and the Democrats who fled the state to block redistricting plans escalated late on Tuesday when Texas's governor, Greg Abbott, filed an emergency petition asking the state supreme court to remove Hu, the top Democrat in the state house of representatives, and declare his seat vacant.
'Fearing one of eighteen items on the Special Session agenda, Democrat members of the Texas House claim an entitlement to abdicate their official duties by refusing to show up for work,' lawyers for Abbott's office wrote in the filing, asking the court to rule on his request by Thursday. 'These members have abandoned their official duties required by the Constitution.'
In a statement on Tuesday evening, Wu said he would not be intimidated by Abbott's request.
'This office does not belong to Greg Abbott, and it does not belong to me. It belongs to the people of House District 137, who elected me. I took an oath to the constitution, not a politician's agenda, and I will not be the one to break that oath,' he said in a statement. 'Let me be unequivocal about my actions and my duty. When a governor conspires with a disgraced president to ram through a racist gerrymandered map, my constitutional duty is to not be a willing participant.'
Texas Republicans already hold 25 of Texas's 38 congressional seats, but Abbott agreed to redraw the state's congressional districts at the request of Donald Trump to add more GOP-friendly districts. Republicans hold a narrow 219-212 advantage in the US House, and the Texas redraw is a brazen effort to try to shore up Republicans' advantage before next year's midterm elections, when Republicans are expected to lose seats.
A new map unveiled last week would favor Republicans in 30 of 38 seats and weaken the influence of Hispanic voters throughout the state.
Abbott's effort is considered a long shot, legal experts told the Texas Tribune. In 2021, the Texas supreme court made clear that the state constitution both allows state lawmakers to break quorum and allows for mechanisms for lawmakers to bring them back.
'I am aware of absolutely no authority that says breaking quorum is the same as the intent to abandon a seat,' Charles 'Rocky' Rhodes, a constitutional law expert at the University of Missouri law school, told the Tribune. 'That would require the courts extending the premise to the breaking point. It's inconsistent with the very text of the Texas Constitution.'
The Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, a Republican, has said he also plans to take legal action to try to remove the lawmakers from office.
On Tuesday, Senator John Cornyn asked the FBI to assist in returning the lawmakers to Texas. Trump said on Tuesday that the FBI may have to get involved. 'The governor of Texas is demanding they come back,' Trump said. 'You can't just sit it out. You have to go back. You have to fight it out. That's what elections are all about,' he said. The FBI has declined to comment.
Under rules enacted by the legislature, lawmakers also face a $500 daily fine for each day they are not present in the capitol. Many of the costs so far, including a private charter to Illinois, meals and lodging have been picked up by Powered by People, a political group started by former Representative Beto O'Rourke, the Texas Tribune reported.
Other states appear to be following Texas's lead and considering mid-cycle redistricting. Ohio is already set to redraw its congressional map this year because of a unique state law, and is expected to add more GOP-friendly seats. Republicans in Missouri and Indiana are also reportedly considering redrawing maps to add GOP-friendly districts.
Democratic governors have threatened to redraw the maps in their states too to offset Republican gains, though they do not have the power to draw as many seats as Republicans do. The biggest opportunity for Democrats is in California, which has 52 seats in Congress. Governor Gavin Newsom is reportedly moving ahead with a referendum this fall to ask to adopt a new map that would add Democratic seats and override an independent redistricting commission.
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