
Texas attorney general seeks to remove 13 absent Democrats from office
Republican leaders in Texas had set a Friday deadline for Democrats to return to the state capitol in Austin or face punishment, including arrest and possible removal from office. Dozens of Democrats left the state over the weekend to prevent a Republican redistricting effort, requested by the president, to redraw the Texas maps mid-cycle to secure a Republican House majority in the 2026 midterms.
'These cowards deliberately sabotaged the constitutional process and violated the oath they swore to uphold,' the Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, a far-right ally of the president, said in a statement that hinted he could target more lawmakers in future litigation. Paxton's lawsuit is the latest escalation in a fast-evolving standoff between blue and red state leaders.
It comes after the Texas house speaker, Dustin Burrows, moved to enforce arrest warrants in other states and as Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, warned in an interview with NBC News that he was prepared to 'arrest Democrats who may be in Texas, may be elsewhere'.
During the short house session on Friday, Burrows said state authorities were working to make civil arrest warrants against the Democrats enforceable outside Texas. He also announced that the legislature was withholding the Democrats' direct deposit payments, requiring absent members to pick them up in person at the capitol in Austin.
'Each one of you knows that eventually you will come back,' Burrows said, addressing the absent Democrats from the chamber floor. 'But with each passing day, the political cost of your absence is rising, and it will be paid in full.'
Also on Friday, Paxton announced that he was suing the Texas Democrat Beto O'Rourke for 'unlawful fundraising activity' on behalf of the quorum-breaking state lawmakers. On X, O'Rourke said that his political group, Powered by People, had responded by suing Paxton in state court.
Democrats have remained defiant, saying they would remain out of state for 'as long as it takes' to stop Trump's redistricting effort. But Abbott has said that they would have to stay away for years to be successful. The current special legislative session, called by the Texas governor, lasts until 19 August, but Abbott has vowed to call 'special session after special session after special session'.
'But I'll tell you this also, Democrats act like they're not going to come back as long as this is an issue,' Abbott said in the NBC News interview. 'That means they're not going to come back until like 2027 or 2028, because I'm going to call special session after special session after special session with the same agenda items on there.'
In a separate interview, he said he might push for more than five seats.
'What I'm thinking now is that if they don't start showing up, I may start expanding,' he said. 'We may make it six or seven or eight new seats we're going to be adding on the Republican side.'
Tensions have escalated dramatically since the Democrats left Texas and sought refuge in Democratic states. The Republican-led state house has approved civil arrest warrants for the absent lawmakers, and Abbott took the extraordinary step of filing a lawsuit with the state supreme court that seeks to remove Gene Wu, the house Democratic leader, from office.
The court has asked Wu to respond by Friday to Abbott's emergency petition to remove him from his Houston-area seat.
On Thursday John Cornyn, the Texas senator, said the FBI had agreed to assist in locating the Democrats, but the FBI declined to comment and it is unclear what authority federal law enforcement would have, as they are not charged with federal crimes.
'For those who have fled to Illinois or California, be reminded that the FBI's assistance has reportedly been enlisted and their powers are not confined to a single state's boundaries,' Burrows said on Friday.
One Democratic member of the Texas state house, Claudia Ordaz, said in a statement that state troopers had showed up at a relative's home looking for her, even though she had stated publicly that she was dealing with a 'personal health matter'. In the statement Ordaz said she was sharing from a hospital waiting room, the lawmaker denounced the officers' visit as an 'deliberate abuse of power and an intimidation tactic' while also criticizing those she said had 'falsely accused' her of being present in the chamber to help Republicans make a quorum.
Earlier on Friday, the St Charles police department confirmed that the Illinois hotel where some of the quorum-breaking Democrats are believed to be staying had experienced a second bomb threat. It comes days after an initial bomb threat at the Q Center Hotel, in suburban Chicago.
Several Texas Democrats were in Sacramento on Friday to meet with the California governor, Gavin Newsom, who has threatened to respond in kind with a new congressional map that would offset the seats Republicans stand to gain in Texas if the president's push is successful.
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