Even with the fresh threat of arrests hanging over them, a majority of House Democrats still refused to show up at the Texas Capitol on Wednesday.
On Tuesday night, House Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, took the extraordinary step of signing 52 civil arrest warrants for the missing Democrats, many of whom fled the state last month for Washington, D.C., to block the GOP elections bill.
But instead of prompting absent Democrats to return to the chamber on Wednesday as it gaveled back in soon after 10 a.m., the warrants were met by lawmakers from the minority party doubling down in their intentions to fight tooth and nail to extend their now weekslong quorum break.
“That’s why we didn’t go back,” state Rep. Michelle Beckley, D-Carrollton, who remains in Washington, said later Wednesday. “We knew this was going to happen.”
Beckley told The Texas Tribune that “there’s been talk of leaving again,” referring to some of her colleagues who returned to Texas this week as the House inched closer to regaining enough members to start up business.
Meanwhile, it’s still unclear how far Phelan and Republican leadership plan to take the arrests, and there remains debate about the limits of law enforcement’s authority to detain lawmakers who are not accused of committing crimes.
Phelan’s office said Wednesday that the speaker will continue to keep all options under House rules available to him as Republicans push to regain a quorum.
“Speaker Phelan has stated clearly that every option provided by the House Rules that members approved unanimously is on the table,” Enrique Marquez, a Phelan spokesperson, said in a statement to the Tribune. “Speaker Phelan looks forward to seeing his colleagues to move forward with the people’s business.”
The 52 warrants were turned over Wednesday morning to the House sergeant-at-arms, who gets to decide whether to tap law enforcement to help track down those absent lawmakers.
On Wednesday, it didn’t appear as though state troopers had been deployed, and a spokesperson for the Texas Department of Public Safety did not respond to a request for comment.
Copies of the warrants were distributed to Democratic representatives Wednesday morning in emails from House sergeant-at-arms Michael Black, who offered to “assist” members in “making any necessary arrangements” to be present.
“I respectfully request that you appear voluntarily in the House chamber today and report to the Journal Clerk so that your presence can be recorded in the Journal and the House can proceed with its business,” Black wrote.
Later Wednesday, Black and other House sergeants delivered the warrants to members’ offices, according to footage from KXAN and The Dallas Morning News, reading off scripts that asked whether the lawmaker was at the Capitol and requested they reach out should they need help returning to the chamber floor.
The arrest warrants were signed after House members voted overwhelmingly to authorize law enforcement to go after the missing Democrats, as part of a procedural move known as a “call of the House” in an attempt to regain quorum.
Though state authorities do not have jurisdiction to detain Democrats still in Washington, a number of lawmakers have returned to Texas in recent days. If lawmakers are arrested, they would not face criminal charges or fines and could only be brought to the House chamber.
The elections legislation that the absent Democrats are aiming to block would outlaw local voting options intended to expand voting access, further tighten the voting-by-mail process and bolster access for partisan poll watchers, among several other changes to state elections. Republicans have championed the proposal as “election integrity” that would bring what they argue are much-needed reforms to the state’s voting system, while Democrats and voting rights groups have criticized the proposal as a vehicle that would harm marginalized voters in the state.
At least one Democrat said he has shielded himself against the warrants, at least for the time being: Gene Wu of Houston, who on Wednesday was granted an order by a state district judge to temporarily avoid arrest if law enforcement tracks him down. The lawmaker said in a statement that he and his legal counsel were working to grant that same protection for his quorum-busting colleagues.
“The battle is far from over,” Wu said, “but we are fired up and ready to keep on fighting.”
But Attorney General Ken Paxton told the Chad Hasty Radio Show on Wednesday that he’d fight Wu’s protective order just like the state had fought a previous restraining order by a Travis County state district judge to block the arrest of other Democrats.