Texas GOP seeks removal of Democratic House Leader
Summary
- Gov. Greg Abbott filed an emergency petition Aug. 5.
- Seeks removal of Democratic House leader from office.
- Democrats fled Texas to block redistricting efforts.
- The GOP aims to redraw congressional districts, gain
seats. - Democrats remain outside Texas, delaying a special
legislative session.
To prevent Republicans from having a quorum to
vote on President Donald Trump’s proposed redistricting plan, more than 50
Democratic lawmakers left the Lone Star State on August 3. In the upcoming
midterm elections, the Republican Party intends to reorganize the state’s 38
congressional districts in an attempt to unseat Democrats in five U.S.
congressional seats.
Abbott said that the departure of House
Democrats, including state Representative Gene Wu, “constitute abandonment
of their office, justifying their removal.” Abbott filed the action to
have Wu removed from office with the Texas Supreme Court.
The governor further alleged that Wu and the
Democrats “appear to have solicited and received certain benefits in exchange for
skipping a vote, further supporting their removal from office and allegations
of bribery.” Abbott has ordered the Texas Rangers to investigate whether
the Democrats violated bribery laws.
“Representative Wu and the other Texas
House Democrats have shown a willful refusal to return, and their absence for
an indefinite period of time deprives the House of the quorum needed to meet
and conduct business on behalf of Texans,”
Abbott said in a statement.
“Texas House Democrats abandoned their duty to Texans, and there must be
consequences.”
In response to the lawsuit, Texas House
Democrats said the governor “used the law as a weapon to silence his
people.”
“We took an oath to the constitution, not
to a politician’s agenda,”
the Texas House Democrats said in a statement
on social media.
Abbott threatened to arrest Democratic
lawmakers, the majority of whom fled to Illinois, New York, or Massachusetts,
prompting the lawsuit. During a statehouse session in Austin on August 4, state
Republican lawmakers decided to issue civil arrest warrants, which his order
was intended to compel the fugitive lawmakers to follow.
“To ensure compliance, I ordered the Texas
Department of Public Safety to locate, arrest, and return to the House chamber
any member who has abandoned their duty to Texans,”
Abbott said in a
statement.
But the arrest warrants only apply within the
state, and breaking quorum is not a crime that would allow Texas authorities to
pursue extradition from other states. Earlier on Aug. 5, Trump said the FBI
“may have to” help arrest the lawmakers and return them to their home
state.
Abbott has previously maintained that lawmakers
who willfully depart and violate quorum can be lawfully dismissed, claiming
that this is equivalent to resigning or forfeiting an elected state office.
The governor referenced Texas Attorney General
Ken Paxton’s 2021 non-binding opinion on Aug. 3, stating that the
“district court may determine that a legislator has forfeited his or her
office due to abandonment and can remove the legislator from office, thereby
creating a vacancy.”
What legal actions can Abbott take after
Democrats flee Texas for redistricting?
Abbott has ordered the Texas Department of
Public Safety (DPS) to “locate, arrest, and return” absent Democrats
to the House chamber to restore quorum. Civil arrest warrants have been signed
by House leadership. However, Texas law enforcement’s jurisdiction does not
extend outside Texas, so this power is limited to arrests within the state.
The state legislature has imposed fines of $500
per day on absent lawmakers under newly approved rules intended to penalize
walkouts.
Abbott has petitioned the Texas Supreme Court to
declare the seats of absent Democrats vacant, claiming they have abandoned
their offices.