Texas, California Governors Collide Over Redistricting; Hemp Lies in the Crosshairs | How to order Skittles Moonrock online
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Gov. Greg Abbott filed a proclamation at 10:21 a.m. Aug. 15 to call the Texas Legislature back into a second special session beginning at noon Aug. 15 to consider 19 agenda items, including regulating hemp products.
Despite Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Republican state lawmakers being fixated on banning consumable hemp products containing trace amounts of THC and other intoxicating cannabinoids, the governor is once again asking that they âestablish commonsense THC regulations.â
vetoed prohibition legislation in the regular session that Patrick, as the presiding officer in the Senate, championed.
barring state lawmakers from taking up legislative subjects in a special session that deviate from a governorâs call, Patrick and Texas Senate Republicans filed and passed Senate Bill 5 to ban the manufacture and sale of products containing hemp-derived THC and other intoxicating cannabinoids. Sponsored by Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, S.B. 5 mirrored the same legislation that Abbott vetoed in the regular session.
Whether the move to ban hemp THC products in the special session is unconstitutional, possibly deviating from Abbottâs call to regulate the products, could be a matter of judicial review down the road.
57 House Democrats packed their bags and left town to block the 150-member chamber from voting on a congressional redistricting plan devised by Abbott. The redistricting ploy could add five Republican seats to the U.S. House to protect the Republicansâ slim majority in Washington come the 2026 midterm election.
While the House Democratsâ quorum-busting walkout was primarily to protest redistricting, their absence in turn prevented any legislative business from crossing the finish line in the first 30-day special session, including the hemp ban, despite the Senate covering the entirety of the governorâs call from within their chamber.
In turn, Abbott threatened earlier this week that heâd âcontinue to call special session after special session until we get this Texas-first agenda passed,â should the House Democrats not return to legislative duty. He made good on that promise Aug. 15.
âDelinquent House Democrats ran away from their responsibility to pass crucial legislation to benefit the lives of Texans,â Abbott said in announcing his call for a second special session.
âBecause of their dereliction of duty, Texas families and communities impacted by the catastrophic Fourth of July flooding have been delayed critical resources for relief and recovery,â he said. âNumerous other bills to cut property taxes, support human trafficking survivors, eliminate the STAAR test, establish commonsense THC regulations, and many others have all been brought to a halt because Democrats refuse to show up for work. We will not back down from this fight. Thatâs why I am calling them back today to finish the job. I will continue to use all necessary tools to ensure Texas delivers results for Texans.â
In addition to the special session call, Abbott ordered the Texas Department of Public Safety to arrest the âdelinquentâ House Democrats who âabandonedâ their duty.
As it relates to the July 4 flooding in Central Texas that resulted in more than 130 fatalities, Texas House Democratic Caucus Chair Gene Wu has a different take. Wu led the walkout earlier this month to block the governorâs redistricting plan, calling it a political scheme and claiming Abbott submitted to President Donald Trump by incorporating a âracist gerrymander mapâ into Texas politics.
During an Aug. 3 press conference hosted by Illinois Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker in Chicago, Wu pointed out that Texas GOP lawmakers failed to make natural disaster preparation and flood relief a priority during the first two weeks of the first special session and instead focused on the redistricting plan.
âThey donât even have a bill filed to deal with what they promised the deal with,â Wu said of the absence of disaster preparedness legislation. âInstead, they have spent their entire time playing dirty political games that only help themselves.â
Amid Abbottâs calls for arrests and continued special sessions, the Texas fiasco has further sparked a divide in the national political scene.
In particular, former President Barack Obama came out in support of the Texas House Democratsâ quorum-busting tactics on Aug. 14.
âWe canât let a systematic assault on democracy just happen and stand by,â he said in a video posted on social media. âThis precious democracy that weâve got is not a given; itâs not self-executing. It requires us to fight for it. It requires us to stand up for it.â
As a result of the mid-decade gerrymandering attempt in Texas, California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is now joining the fight to balance the scales.
Newsom accused Abbott in an Aug. 14 video on social media of rolling over to Trumpâs demands for redistricting.
âTrumpâs election rigging comes to an end now,â Newsom said. âCalifornia wonât stand by and watch Trump burn it all downâwe are calling a special election to redraw our congressional maps and defend fair representation.â
The difference in California, Newsom said, is that he plans to pick up five congressional seats for Democrats in Washington through the âconsent of the peopleâ this November, versus ramming through legislation in a special session.
Newsom called it a âfive-alarm fireâ for Democracy.
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