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Gerrymander—Once more, with feeling
Posted: 10 June 2003 11:04 PM   [ Ignore ]
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This is hardly a new topic, as a glance at the archives for 2002.04.13 will show, but as the ensuing discussion was lost in the Great Agora Eclipse, I hereby take the liberty of pointing out that the word itself, as shown in a leader in yesterday’s New York Times, entitled Diverting the War on Terrorism, remains all too topical. For those uninclined to click on links, I reproduce the piece below :

Diverting the War on Terrorism

The recent dust-up over Republican attempts to gerrymander the Texas Congressional map had an overlay of old-fashioned political silliness and skulduggery. What is coming to be known as the Tom DeLay Power Perpetuation Act failed famously when more than 50 statehouse Democrats fled to Oklahoma, where they hid out until the bill died, depriving the Republican majority of a quorum. But it turns out that officials in Washington and Austin, desperate to round up the Democrats, made a platoon of Keystone Kops out of federal and state law enforcement agents. That is no laughing matter.
The new Department of Homeland Security was called in on the case as if it were the patronage police and the dissenting Democrats were terrorists. Mr. DeLay’s office breathlessly passed along detailed intelligence on the fugitives. More than 1,000 hours were devoted to the two-day search by 54 Texas officers. At least one F.B.I. agent appears to have been involved in the search.
The fact that federal agencies were involved in the partisan squabble is outrageous. Investigators usually assigned to track down terrorists or drug smugglers were sent off to try to find a small plane that had ferried one of the missing Democrats out of Texas. Documents relating to the search were later destroyed — in theory because the search did not involve a crime. Democrats are well within their rights to demand state and federal inquiries.
The original Republican plan to draw new Congressional districts in outrageously contorted forms in order to capture current Democratic seats was, at the very minimum, political dirty pool. But the idea that Republican honchos felt that they had the right to bring federal security forces into the case pushes the issue to a whole different level, one that smacks of a sense of entitlement and disrespect for normal legal boundaries.
This page was a consistent critic of the Clintons’ ethics problems, but the former president’s defenders should feel free to point out what kind of national outcry we would be hearing from talk show hosts and Congressional Republicans if anyone had tried to misuse the government’s antiterrorism machinery this way during the last administration.

Henri

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Posted: 10 June 2003 11:56 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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God bless Texas Politics.

When I moved here I thought I would miss the corruption, byzantine intrigue and Machiavellian power plays of Florida politics, but my fears were unjustified. There may be a little more twang, but it’s just as entertaining.

DJ

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“The obscure we see eventually, the completely&&      apparent takes longer.”——- Edward R. Murrow

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Posted: 15 September 2003 10:35 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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[quote author=demijohn link=board=wordsuggest;num=1055333086;start=0#1 date=06/11/03 at 08:56:32][center]...[/center]There may be a little more twang, but it’s just as entertaining.

As you observed, DJ, there’s no business like show business, and the show must go on ! And on, and on, and on, as evinced by this recent article from In These Times

BY SALIM MUWAKKIL | 9.15.03
The GOP’s Texas Power Grab
One of the major goals of the "southern strategy" pioneered by the Republican Party during the 1968 presidential campaign of Richard Nixon was to taint the Democratic Party as the party of "n i g g e r lovers." More specifically, the GOP understood they could use race as an issue to wedge whites away from a Democratic Party that increasingly seemed to have enlisted in the civil rights movement.

Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott lost his leadership post for publicly yearning for that era. But his party continues to work the angles of the southern strategy, and it still uses race as a political wedge. Demagogic use of immigration issues and affirmative action are two examples of how racial concerns still stir the pot. But the current legislative imbroglio in Texas best reveals both the subtlety and the persistence of this classic GOP gambit.

In case your hunger for governmental theater has not been satiated by the recall circus in California, let me fill you in on the drama in the Lone Star State: A second special session of the Texas legislature expired last month after 11 of Texas’ 12 Senate Democrats fled to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to deny the 31-member senate a two-thirds quorum on a redistricting vote. And now yet another special session has been scheduled by the determined governor.

The Texas GOP is seeking to redraw the state’s congressional electoral map to cram the state’s minorities into a few, already Democratic districts. Democrats argue the plan violates the Voting Rights Act by concentrating black and Latino voters into fewer districts, creating a majority of largely white congressional districts more likely to vote Republican.

They say this effort is part of a national strategy, designed by White House political director Karl Rove and House majority leader Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas), to use Republican-controlled state legislatures to help lock in a GOP congressional majority. The state that both Rove and DeLay call home is a major target of this strategy. Texas’ Republican Gov. Rick Perry is their main point man.

Perry tried to ram a GOP-friendly remap through the state legislature during the regular session. But Democratic house members fled to Oklahoma to prevent a quorum until the session expired. They argued that redistricting only made sense after a census revealed new population shifts. Federal judges drew the current state map in 2001 after the 2000 census. Democrats won a 17-15 congressional majority in the 2002 elections based on that map.

The Texas GOP’s attempt to redraw the electoral map so soon is clearly a power move based on partisan political advantage rather than democratic principles. Progressive activist groups, like MoveOn.org, have linked the Texas action to other GOP efforts like the California recall and a similar redistricting dispute in Colorado.

Perry next convened a special session of the legislature to pass the plan, but 12 of Texas’ 31 Senators opposed the remap, and under the Senate’s rules and tradition, a two-thirds vote was required to consider any bill. The plan was shelved. But the determined governor then called a second special session in which the Republicans imposed new rules ending the two-thirds requirement for a bill to pass the Senate. That’s when the senators bolted to Albuquerque.

"We do not take lightly our decision to leave the state," explained Sen. Rodney Ellis in a public letter written from New Mexico. "It was the only means left to us under the rules of procedure in Texas to block this injustice."

In addition to trashing the tradition of decennial redistricting, Ellis said the GOP’s effort elevates partisan politics above minority voting rights and "intends to decimate the Democratic Party in Texas."

The racial aspect of this legislative dispute has been downplayed in media accounts, but the boycotting 11 Democrats—nine of whom are minorities  —contend it is the major issue. "Our Senate colleagues think we did this for show. They’re very uncomfortable every time we bring up the black or Hispanic issue," said Sen. Leticia R. Van de Putte, head of the Democrats’ Senate caucus, at a recent news conference. "But this is about the consolidation of power and trying to direct control of the U.S. House for the next 20 years."

Ironically, the Voting Rights Act also has been invoked to justify the creation of the kind of supermajority congressional districts that Texas Republicans now champion. Thus, the stand by the Texas legislators also illustrates the growing maturity of minority-elected officials. No longer are they satisfied by the limited, symbolic benefits of an additional black or Latino member of Congress. If the congressional agenda is smothered by GOP dominance, those black or brown faces mean little.

A successful GOP effort in Texas will likely ensure that Republicans control the U.S. House for at least a decade. Even worse, it will further polarize political parties along racial and ethnic lines by making electoral coalitions more difficult. White Democrats with moderate-to-liberal leanings will be increasingly rare in Texas, as their integrated electorates disappear.

If DeLay has his way, Republicans increasingly will be white suburbanites and urban minorities will be Democrats. When partisan politics becomes electoral apartheid, that’s southern strategy for the 21st century.  

Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor of In These Times, where he has worked since 1983, and an op-ed columnist for the Chicago Tribune. He is currently a Crime and Communities Media Fellow of the Open Society Institute, examining the impact of ex-inmates and gang leaders in leadership positions in the black community.

Henri

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Posted: 19 September 2003 04:40 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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[quote author=KatyBr link=board=wordsuggest;num=1055333086;start=0#3 date=09/16/03 at 12:39:20][center]...[/center] I have a young friend in India, whom I believe I will confront on her countries failings and foibles their politics, and <Atomic bomb testing (um I don’t know What my fingers were thinking about on this)>.  That makes as much sense.

She will doubtless heed your sage advice, Katy !...

Henri

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