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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (420388)6/29/2003 11:08:09 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
ho hum
just more and more of the same power grab from Texas to California.....
greeeeeeeeeeeed
The Lone Star Power Grab

June 29, 2003



The unslakable thirst of the House majority leader, Tom
DeLay, for partisan dominance is of Faulknerian
proportions: he keeps coming at the Democrats with a
gunslinger's bead that summons images of his early career
as a pest exterminator as much as his Capitol nickname of
the Hammer. In his tooth-and-claw resolve, the Texas
Legislature has been summoned into special session tomorrow
by Gov. Rick Perry, a DeLay ally, to once more take up Mr.
DeLay's hubristic plan to remap Texas' Democratic
Congressional majority out of existence.

The brazenness of the initiative - overreaching from
Washington to manipulate the state's right to draw
Congressional lines - was underlined last month when
Democratic legislators literally fled Texas. They denied
their opponents a quorum and foiled approval of the
customized gerrymandering Mr. DeLay wanted from the
G.O.P.-led Legislature. He sent his operatives to work the
back rooms in Austin and visited the Statehouse himself in
seeking to shape the place to his will. A new sort of
political bossism was upon the land.

In persisting, Mr. DeLay obviously feels entitled. He is
one of the nation's most assiduous fund-raisers, regularly
squeezing Washington's K Street lobbyists for campaign
tribute. The majority leader helped funnel $1.5 million
into the Texas campaign coffers last year when the
Republicans swept the Statehouse for the first time in over
a century. The party did not have as much success with the
Texas Congressional delegation, however, and Mr. DeLay
remains determined to try to defeat a half-dozen Democrats
by squeezing them into new districts - some of them shaped
like a Salvador Dalí nightmare - that include more
Republican voters. "I'm the majority leader, and we want
more seats," he declares with intimations of l'état c'est
Tom.

The Texas districts were remapped by court order after the
2000 census, and the national tradition of once-a-decade
redistricting is being violated by Mr. DeLay's stratagem.
He is gerrymandering out of season and mischievously
opening a new arena for D.C. power brokering. He has the
blessing of Karl Rove, President Bush's political guru, who
lately sounds like Karl von Clausewitz in envisioning fresh
ramparts for G.O.P. hegemony. Texas legislators should stay
in Austin this time and directly rebuff the majority leader
who would be king.

nytimes.com

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