Hours after Gov.ย Greg Abbottย said he believed the Legislature could pass a school vouchers bill before the end of the special legislative session, the House all but killed any deal.
The House met briefly Wednesday evening and recessed likely until Monday or Tuesday, pending the Senateโs approval of bills related to border security.
The special session ends Tuesday and the House has not so much as considered a voucher bill in committee, an early step in the lawmaking process.
At a news conference at the governorโs mansion Wednesday morning, Abbott said โwe are on track to ensure there will not be another special sessionโ and referenced a โbill that will be coming out of the House later on today.”
Lt. Gov.ย Dan Patrickย signaled his own optimism, saying in an afternoon statement that there was still time to pass a vouchers bill, but only if the House amended legislation already passed by the Senate rather than attempting their own version.
โThe Senate will concur if we agree with the House’s changes or try to work out the differences in conference,โ Patrickย saidย on the social media platform X. โThe Senate is ready to act, as we have been for weeks.โ
But no bill materialized in the lower chamber, and House members took no action on the Senateโs voucher bill.
Rep.ย Brad Buckley, R-Killeen and chair of the public education committee, told KUT that the timing was โtoo tightโ to pass a vouchers bill before the Tuesday deadline.
The Houseโs inaction all but guarantees a fourth special session, which Abbott had previously vowed to call if school vouchers did not become law. If that fails, Abbott has said he will support primary challengers to anti-voucher Republican House members.
Wednesdayโs dissonance between the governor and House mirroredย what happened Tuesday. Abbott announced that he had โreached an agreementโ on vouchers with House Speakerย Dade Phelanโs team, only for the speaker to demur and Republican holdouts to say there was, in fact, no such deal.
For all his pronouncements that the passage of a voucher bill is imminent, Abbott has been unable to show publicly that any of the two dozen Republicans who opposed vouchers in a spring test vote have flipped.
That group of mostly rural conservatives, along with nearly all Democrats, have successfully blocked vouchers in the House.
This article was written by ZACH DESPART of The Texas Tribune . This article originally appeared at : https://www.texastribune.org/2023/11/01/texas-house-dade-phelan-school-vouchers-greg-abbott/