Texas Democratic lawmakers say arrest warrants do not faze them
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[August 13, 2021]
By Julia Harte and Brad Brooks
(Reuters) -Texas Democratic lawmakers,
scattered around the country, said on Thursday they were more determined
than ever to block voting restrictions in their state, after the state
supreme court ruled they could be arrested for fleeing Austin in July to
deny Republicans the quorum needed to pass the bill.
From Houston, Washington, D.C., and undisclosed locations, four of the
absentee lawmakers told Reuters they would continue to defy Texas
Republican Governor Greg Abbott's order to return to the legislature,
despite arrest warrants served on Wednesday for them and 48 other
Democrats.
The lawmakers' exodus on July 12 set up one of the most prolonged
showdowns over U.S. state bills limiting voting access. Republicans have
pushed the measures, citing former President Donald Trump's baseless
claims that voter fraud cost him the November election.
The state supreme court decision prompted Democratic lawmakers to seek
protection from other sources, such as Harris County District Court,
which on Wednesday granted state Representative Gene Wu a writ ordering
all attempts to "compel his appearance at the Capitol" to cease.
However, the Texas Supreme Court on Thursday temporarily blocked the
district court ruling - allowing for the civil arrests of any absent
lawmakers found within Texas. The arrest warrants are not valid outside
the state.
Before that Supreme Court ruling on Thursday, Wu told Reuters by phone
that the Democrats had "more cards up our sleeves" if the defense
strategy failed. He declined to provide further details.
The Sergeant-at-Arms office in the Texas House of Representatives
confirmed to Reuters that no actual arrests had been made as of
Thursday. Abbott and Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan, the Republican who
issued the arrest warrants, did not immediately return calls for
comment.
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A protester sits in the shade following a march for voting rights
and against the state's efforts to enact voting restrictions in
Austin, Texas, U.S., July 31, 2021. REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
Wu and another absentee Democratic lawmaker said
their caucus had considered returning to the legislature to deal
with other pressing issues, such as spiking COVID-19 cases in Texas
and allocation of federal emergency funding.
"We don't want the governor to divert billions of dollars in
coronavirus aid to go into his funding of the Texas border wall,"
said state Representative Alex Dominguez in a Wednesday phone call
from an undisclosed location.
But state Representative Trey Martinez Fischer said it was premature
for Democrats to consider returning to the statehouse, because he
thought Republicans had created a "toxic" culture of mistrust by
attacking Democratic lawmakers rather than negotiating.
"I don't have any plans to do anything this session other than to
defeat it," he said in a phone call from Washington.
All four lawmakers agreed unity for the Democratic caucus was
important.
"We're deciding everything as a group, and we remain committed to
each other in sticking together," said state Representative Erin
Zwiener in a phone call from an undisclosed location. "I am
confident that we will move together as a caucus."
(Reporting by Julia Harte in New York and Brad Brooks in Lubbock,
Texas; Editing by David Gregorio)
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