Texas humiliated after asking Illinois to help them bring back 'rogue legislators' who called its bluff – We Got This Covered
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Texas humiliated after asking Illinois to help them bring back ‘rogue legislators’ who called its bluff

Turns out it's not as simple as republicans say.

Texas has had to ask Illinois to help bring back its own lawmakers who fled the state to avoid a vote. What started as a political standoff in Texas has turned into a surprising legal battle between states, with Texas now begging Illinois to assist in rounding up its Democratic legislators.

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These lawmakers left for Illinois to stop a redistricting vote, a move that Texas leaders first criticized but now seem desperate to undo. They have filed legal papers in Illinois, essentially making a public plea for help, per Fox News. The whole situation has been a back-and-forth game of bluffs, and now Texas’s attempt to use the courts has backfired, making the state look foolish.

The problem began when Republican lawmakers in Texas tried to push through a redistricting plan during a special session. To stop the vote, Texas House Democrats left the state and went to Illinois, making it impossible for the Texas House to meet the required number of members to conduct business. The Speaker of the Texas House, Dustin Burrows, oversaw the session and, after a vote by the House, issued civil arrest warrants for the missing lawmakers.

Texas needs help of other states to rangle democrats

The idea was to force them to return, with the state’s sergeant-at-arms responsible for carrying out the arrests, backed by police if needed. However, the lawmakers stayed in Illinois, proving that Texas’s threats were empty. With no way to enforce its own warrants and the legislature stuck in gridlock, Texas decided to take things further. Officials filed a request with a court in Adams County, Illinois, listing the Texas House of Representatives as the one making the demand and the missing lawmakers as the ones being targeted.

The filing openly asked the Illinois court to recognize the Texas arrest warrants as valid and to help enforce them. Even more surprisingly, Texas asked the Illinois court to issue its own warrants, telling local police to help arrest the lawmakers and send them back to Texas.

This legal move puts Texas in the awkward position of begging another state’s government to do its job, something that has never happened before and shows just how powerless Texas is in this situation. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who is also running for U.S. Senate, called the Democrats “rogue legislators” in a statement. He claimed Texas would use “every legal remedy” to hold them accountable, saying Texans won’t tolerate “losers” and “cowards.” But these tough words ring hollow now that Texas has admitted it can’t enforce its own laws without help from another state.

Speaker Burrows made similar remarks, saying “all options are on the table.” He explained that the lawmakers had been given plenty of chances to come back on their own, but since they refused, Texas had “no choice but to pursue additional legal remedies to compel their return from other states.” This admission makes it clear that Texas is out of options, turning what was a local political fight into a legal mess that now depends on an out-of-state court.


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Jorge Aguilar
Aggy has worked for multiple sites as a writer and editor, and has been a managing editor for sites that have millions of views a month. He's been the Lead of Social Content for a site garnering millions of views a month, and co owns multiple successful social media channels, including a Gaming news TikTok, and a Facebook Fortnite page with over 700k followers. His work includes Dot Esports, Screen Rant, How To Geek Try Hard Guides, PC Invasion, Pro Game Guides, Android Police, N4G, WePC, Sportskeeda, and GFinity Esports. He has also published two games under Tales and is currently working on one with Choice of Games. He has written and illustrated a number of books, including for children, and has a comic under his belt. He does not lean any one way politically; he just reports the facts and news, and gives an opinion based on those.