By Mildred Robertson
Texas Democrats made a bold move
to flee the state, denying Republicans the quorum they need to bring
legislation to the floor. Already highly gerrymandered, Texas Republicans plan
to pass legislation that could create as many as five new pro-Republican
districts, thereby strengthening the Republican stronghold on the U.S.
Congress.
In an unprecedented show of solidarity,
Texas Democrats’ weeklong quorum break has stymied the Republican majority
while facing threats to either arrest them and bring them back to the chamber
or declare their seats vacant due to the quorum bust. The Republicans, however,
are no less aligned as they doggedly move forward to pass legislation that will
guarantee continued Republican dominance in Texas and the United States Congress.
Democrats' valiant but ill-fated attempt to stop the Texas Republicans raised national awareness of the cost to democracy if Republicans are allowed to pick their voters by drawing voting districts where they are predetermined to win. Their efforts have resulted in new strategies by Democrat-run states to counter Texas’s move to redraw maps mid-decade to steal Democratic-leaning seats and maintain congressional leadership.
Most Democrats are inclined to follow
political precedent, regardless of the lawless or unethical actions of the GOP.
Common thought implies that Democrats consistently
bring a knife to a gun fight when dealing with Republican lawlessness. This is
evidenced by the Democratic majority's hesitance to expand the Supreme Court
when they were in power, although Republicans packed it with right-wingers.
Under Mitch McConnell’s
leadership, the House stymied President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee
Merrick Garland eight months before an election, arguing voters should decide
which presidential candidate should pick the next justice. He made an
about-face when Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed during the final days of the first Trump
administration, hastening the seating of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett
days before the 2020 presidential election, which Trump lost to Joe Biden.
Several options were available to
Democrats. Obama could have made an interim appointment to the Supreme Court,
or the Democrats, who controlled Congress during Biden’s administration, could
have expanded the court. Democrats chose to go with precedent. Democrats, it
appears, choose to play fair, even when their opponents don’t. They generally
stand unarmed against the Republicans' ruthless pursuit of power.
But California Gov. Gavin Newsom
laid down the knife and picked up a gun. His nuclear strategy involves states under
Democratic control drawing maps to create additional safe districts in their
respective states to counteract the Republican power grab.
Good for him.
While his tactics are being
compared to the Republican power grab, they are not the same. First, Newsome
plans to put this proposed change on the California ballot. That means that California’s
redistricting would be sanctioned by its constituents. Furthermore, the redrawn
maps would only go into effect if triggered by a Republican state attempting to
redraw maps that disenfranchise voters and impact the makeup of Congress.
Having said that...it's a terrible
policy. but Democrats are left with few choices. Knife, or gun? Under the circumstances,
Newsome and other Democratic-dominated states are doing the best they can with
a bad situation. It is like the strategy of mutual assured destruction and
nuclear annihilation. Don't drop the bomb, and nobody will die.
1 comment:
Thanks for the post, Mildred. You are absolutely right about what strategies must develop and deploy. In addition to striking back quickly and strongly when they are confronted with Republican cheating and corruption, Democrats need to develop more strategies to take the offense all across the country. "When they go low, we go high" is simply politically insufficient, self-defeating, and suicidal when confronted with Republican actions.
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