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Texas Supreme Court may decide next plot twist in the Democratic walkout, and the fate of 2,100 state employees
Texas Tribune
Updated:
July 21, 2021 6:45 pm
The Texas Supreme Court on Jan. 15, 2020.
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The Texas legislature is immobilized. The governor is fuming. And the next chapter in the gamesmanship that has engulfed Republican efforts to rewrite Texas voting laws may fall to the state’s third branch of government: the judiciary.
The Texas Supreme Court has been asked to rule whether Gov. Greg Abbott’s unprecedented line-item veto of Article X in the state budget which pays for the Legislature and its staff is constitutional.
The Texas Supreme Court has been asked to rule whether Gov. Greg Abbottâs unprecedented line-item veto of Article X in the state budget â which pays for the Legislature and its staff â is constitutional. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas Tribune
Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.
The Texas legislature is immobilized. The governor is fuming. And the next chapter in the gamesmanship that has engulfed Republican efforts to rewrite Texas voting laws may fall to the stateâs third branch of government: the judiciary.
The Texas Supreme Court has been asked to rule whether Gov. Greg Abbottâs unprecedented line-item veto of Article X in the state budget â which pays for the Legislature and its staff â is constitutional.