From âCatastrophe 88,â the Texas Observer guide to the new session of the state legislature, opening tomorrow:
Elections have consequences. This political bromide is overused for a reasonâitâs reliably true. And this year, the fallout for vulnerable Texans could be particularly destructive.
After something approaching a blue wave swept across Texas in November 2018, a chastened Republican majority in the Legislature kept its focus in the 2019 session on serious policymakingâschool finance and property tax reformâwhile largely forgoing their typical red-meat fare.
Republicans thwarted expectations of another Democratic surge in November 2020, and the next year the GOP ignored the problems laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic crisis, instead focusing on passing as much right-wing legislation as possible over the course of a regular session, plus three painful specials.Â
The final outcome was ugly: Abortions were effectively banned by threat of bounty, handgun permits were done away with, voting laws were made more restrictive, transgender kids were targeted with statutory bigotry, and school curricula on race and history were whitewashed. Profound policy problems, meanwhile, were left to fester.Â
Critically, the stateâs electoral districts were redrawn for the next decade to ensure incumbent Republican majorities will be insulated from electoral backlash while the stateâs growing numbers of people of color and Democratic-aligned voters are kept at bay.Â
This fresh gerrymander set the table for another Republican rout last November as the GOP maintained strong majorities in the state House and Senate and easily swept the stateâs high-powered executive officesâled by Governor Greg Abbottâs 11-point defeat of Democratic challenger Beto OâRourke.Â
Firmly in control, Abbott, Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, and GOP lawmakers are now free to do as they pleaseâto pick up where their vengeful 87th legislative session mercifully left off just over a year ago.Â
Some top Republicans hinted during campaign season that they might want to soften the sharpest edges of their draconian and unpopular ban on abortion or pull back on the most extreme parts of their so-called âelection integrityâ laws. But thereâs little reason to think this legislative session will yield moderation. The partyâs activist base is eager to continue the march toward one-party authoritarianism, punishing political enemies and catering to political patrons as they go.Â
Read the full guide on the Texas Observer.