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A provocation against democratic rights: Texas Republicans
order state police to seize Democratic legislators
By Patrick Martin
15 May 2003
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This weeks political events in TexasDemocratic
legislators boycotting the state House of Representatives to block
reactionary legislation, the Republican governor ordering state
police to arrest them, the Democrats fleeing the state capital
and taking refuge in neighboring Oklahoma, under the protection
of that states Democratic administrationare an indication
of the extraordinary buildup of political tensions within the
United States.
Democrats boycotted the state house to prevent passage of a
redistricting bill which would gerrymander the states congressional
delegation in Washington, shifting as many as seven seats from
Democratic to Republican control. This could be decisive in maintaining
control of the US House of Representatives by the Republicans
in the 2004 election. They presently hold a narrow majority of
229 to 205.
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who represents a wealthy Houston
suburban district, played the key role in drawing up the new boundaries
and deciding to push for them with legislation that would overturn
district lines set only last year by a nonpartisan panel of federal
judges. DeLay made no bones about his motive: Im the
majority leader, he said, and I want more seats.
Unable to defeat the redistricting bill in a straight up-or-down
vote, the Democrats blocked action under a state legislative rule
which requires a quorum of two-thirds of the lower house (100
members out of 150) to be present for passage of legislation.
On Monday, May 12, 57 Democrats absented themselves from the legislative
chamber, leaving only 93 representatives available to vote.
Republican House Speaker Tom Craddick invoked another legislative
rule allowing the sergeant-at-arms to seek the assistance of the
state police to bring absent legislators back to the chamber.
Governor Rick Perry, a Republican who served as lieutenant governor
under George W. Bush, dispatched Department of Public Safety officers
to the homes of the legislators, to arrest them and produce a
quorum by force.
Having anticipated this order, however, the bulk of the Democratic
legislators had left Austin on the night of May 11 and made their
way across the states borders with New Mexico and Oklahoma,
assembling at a Holiday Inn in Ardmore, Oklahoma, about 30 miles
north of the Texas state line. There they remain, planning to
wait out a Thursday deadline for House action on the redistricting
bill.
Despite the efforts of the national media to portray these
events as a comic opera, the Texas crisis has the potential for
serious and even violent consequences, including direct clashes
between the armed police of the states involved, fought out along
party lines.
Four Texas DPS agents arrived at the Holiday Inn in Ardmore
to attempt to convince some Democratic legislators
to return with them to Texas, in a plane which was standing by.
Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry, a Democrat, ordered his states
police not to cooperate with the Texas officers, effectively placing
the fugitive legislators under his protection. State officials
in New Mexico, under Democratic Governor Bill Richardson, also
declared that they would not assist the Texas state police in
arresting the boycotting legislators.
Significantly, none of the 53 Democrats who left the state
went to Louisiana, which is much closer to legislative districts
in Houston, Beaumont and other east Texas cities. They obviously
believed that Louisianas Republican governor, Mike Foster,
would have returned them, forcibly if need be, to the jurisdiction
of Texas.
Threats and intimidation
The conduct of the DPS officers belies the complacent suggestions
that the crisis was a quaint Texas ritual of no national significance.
Police visited the homes and offices of many of the Democratic
legislators, tailing family members and interrogating staff aides,
while threatening some of them with prosecution if they did not
cooperate.
The DPS set up a war room in the Capitol to organize
its campaign to find and bring back the legislators. It continued
visiting homes and conducting surveillanceallegedly for
the purpose of obtaining information to locate the legislatorseven
after the 53 Democrats appeared on television to announce their
arrival in Oklahoma.
According to one Democratic legislator, Craig Eiland of Galveston,
a Texas state policeman visited the neo-natal intensive care unit
at a local hospital where his premature twins were receiving care.
The state trooper also visited his home, where his wife is recuperating
from her pregnancy and delivery.
Frustrated Republican officials erupted in hysterical anger
against the Democratic maneuver. One Republican legislator printed
up a pack of cards, modeled on that used by the US military to
track down Iraqi government officials, with each fugitive Democrats
face displayed on a card. Another asked for a criminal investigation
by Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle, although failing
to attend a quorum call does not violate any Texas state law.
The Republican Party began running radio ads targeting selected
representatives, which reported that orders had been given to
arrest the Democrats and asking listeners to call the Department
of Public Safety if they had information on the whereabouts of
those who had taken flight.
DeLay condemned the Democratic stalling tactic and called for
the intervention of federal agencies like the FBI, which could
operate across state lines. If it is legal for them to do
so, it would be nice for them to help them out, help out the Texas
Rangers and the Texas troopers because these members are violating
the Texas Constitution, he told the press.
Social crisis and budget cuts
The attempt to criminalize Democratic Party opposition to the
Republicans takes place against the backdrop of a deepening financial
crisis of the Texas state government, and mounting public outrage
over the extreme-right political agenda unveiled by the Republicans
after they took control of the Texas legislature for the first
time in over a century.
Since the legislature assembled earlier this year, the new
Republican majority has pushed for severe cuts in social programs,
including dumping hundreds of thousands of poor children from
the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP), slashing
health care coverage for school teachers, pregnant women and the
elderly, and deregulating tuition at state universities and colleges.
Governor Perry had dozens of handicapped people arrested when
they protested at the state capitol against his proposed cuts.
The Republican legislators introduced bills to require a moment
of silence in public schools, a measure which some supporters
openly called a school prayer bill, to impose a 24-hour
waiting period for women seeking abortions, to give far-right
nominees to the state Board of Education the power to censor or
reject new school textbooks, and to impose penalties for ecological
terrorism, defined to cover virtually any type of environmental
protest.
The reactionary frenzy of the far right was summed up in a
comment by one Republican legislator that has been widely quoted
in the Texas media. In the course of a diatribe blaming illegal
immigrants from Mexico for the states health care budget
crisis, Debbie Riddle, a horse breeder from Houston, declared,
Where did this idea come from that everybody deserves free
education, free medical care, free whatever? It comes from Moscow,
from Russia. It comes straight out of the pit of hell. And its
cleverly disguised as having a tender heart.
The national implications
The political crisis in Texas is a warning to the American
people on the decay and disintegration of democratic processes
in the United States. In Bushs home state, the methods employed
against Arab and Muslim immigrants in the aftermath of September
11 are now being utilized against officeholders of one of the
two big business parties.
The role of DeLayand behind him, chief White House political
czar Karl Roveis significant. If this is what the Bush administration
and the congressional Republicans are prepared to do to individuals
who are themselves pillars of the political establishment, how
will they respond to a movement of genuine opposition from below,
from the working class?
The Bush administration only holds power thanks to the theft
of the 2000 elections, the outcome of the long-running right-wing
campaign of political subversion and destabilization of the Clinton
administration. A government that lacks any democratic legitimacy,
headed by a president who lost the popular vote and was installed
in office by the Supreme Court, is now seeking to remove any check
on its power.
In Washington, just as the Texas crisis unfolded, leading congressional
Republicans announced plans to overturn a filibuster by Senate
Democrats against two ultra-right nominees for positions on the
federal appeals court. The Senate has approved 98 out of 100 Bush
judicial nominees, virtually all of them far-right ideologues
committed to attacks on democratic rights and the elimination
of all governmental and judicial restraint on big business. But
the White House cannot tolerate even such token opposition.
The attempt to rig the Texas redistricting has the most ominous
implications for the 2004 elections as a whole, above all the
presidential campaign. This vote will be conducted under unprecedented
conditions. The mounting social and economic crisis of American
capitalism will drive millions of working people into opposition
to this government. At the same time, the Republican Party will
virtually demand public support for Bush as a wartime president,
casting all opposition as quasi-treasonous support for terrorism.
See Also:
The issues in the Texas redistricting
[15 May 2003]
The crisis of American capitalism
and the war against Iraq
[21 March 2003]
Lessons from history:
the 2000 elections and the new "irrepressible conflict"
[11 December 2000]
The impeachment
of President Clinton
Is America drifting towards civil war?
[21 December 1998]
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