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League of Women Voters Files Amicus Brief Challenging Abbott's Defunding the Legislature

LWV Texas | Published on 7/6/2021

Quote by Chimene one amicus brief filed on defunding of legislature



To highlight the impact of Governor Abbott's veto of the legislative budget, the League of Women Voters of Texas filed an amicus curiae in In Re Chris Turner, et al. asking the Texas Supreme Court to void the Governor’s veto. 
 
The following statement can be attributed to Grace Chimene, President of the League of Women Voters of Texas:
 
“Governor Abbott's defunding of the legislative branch and its vital offices is dangerous to our democracy,  undermines the will of the people, and invalidates the checks and balances upon which our government is built. It’s vital that all Texans declare our independence from party politics and unite as one voice against this unprecedented move.”  
 
By defunding the Texas Legislature, its staffers, and nonpartisan legislative agencies, Governor Abbott’s veto will prevent the Texas Legislature from performing its constitutional duty to redistrict congressional, legislative, and state board of education seats.  Without any funds, the Legislature will not be able to conduct the redistricting process, nor comply with any of the citizen engagement expectations that usually accompany the legislative process.  The League is therefore deeply interested in the outcome of this case because, without judicial intervention, Governor Abbott’s veto of appropriations for the legislative branch will deprive Texas citizens of a timely and fair process for the redrawing of federal congressional and state legislative maps.
 
The League has a long history of advocating for fair, transparent, and accountable redistricting practices and works to encourage its members and all Texans to be informed and active participants in democracy. The League, therefore, seeks to raise for the Court’s consideration a significant consequence of the Governor’s veto and further the League’s mission of fighting against attacks on the fundamental constitutional right to fair and equal representation guaranteed to all citizens by the United States and Texas Constitutions. 
 
The League was represented by attorneys Allison J. Riggs and Noor Taj of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice and attorney Renea Hicks of the Law Office of Renea Hicks. The Southern Coalition for Social Justice, founded in 2007, partners with communities of color and economically disadvantaged communities in the South to defend and advance their political, social, and economic rights through the combination of legal advocacy, research, organizing, and communications.