The collapse came faster than anyone expected.
After a week of defiance, Texas House Democrats are marching back into a chamber they tried to shut down, broke, exhausted, and under threat. They stalled the map that could erase five of their own seats—but only for days. Now, with courts choking off funding, Republicans tightening the vise, and Abbott readying another special session, their dramatic stand is ending in a que… Continues…
Their return marks a painful admission: moral victories don’t pay hotel bills, and symbolic resistance can’t survive when courts block donors and the majority party holds nearly all the leverage. Gene Wu and his colleagues hoped to spark a broader uprising against a redistricting plan that could erase years of Democratic gains. Instead, they are re-entering a Capitol where Republicans still control the clock, the map, and the agenda.
Yet the walkout was not meaningless. It forced a delay, drew national attention to the stakes of redistricting, and reminded voters that quorum-busting remains one of the last, desperate tools of a minority party in a lopsided state. As Abbott prepares new special sessions and GOP leaders press ahead, Democrats must now fight on the floor, not from exile—knowing the lines that define their political future may already be all but drawn.
Their return marks a painful admission: moral victories don’t pay hotel bills, and symbolic resistance can’t survive when courts block donors and the majority party holds nearly all the leverage. Gene Wu and his colleagues hoped to spark a broader uprising against a redistricting plan that could erase years of Democratic gains. Instead, they are re-entering a Capitol where Republicans still control the clock, the map, and the agenda.
Yet the walkout was not meaningless. It forced a delay, drew national attention to the stakes of redistricting, and reminded voters that quorum-busting remains one of the last, desperate tools of a minority party in a lopsided state. As Abbott prepares new special sessions and GOP leaders press ahead, Democrats must now fight on the floor, not from exile—knowing the lines that define their political future may already be all but drawn.