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Tag: special session

  • ‘We need it now:’ Protesters urge special legislative session on TX data centers

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    People gathered outside of the Texas Capitol on Feb. 23, calling for a special session on data center expansion in Texas.

    People gathered outside of the Texas Capitol on Feb. 23, calling for a special session on data center expansion in Texas.

    Attendees of a Monday protest want Texas to Gov. Greg Abbott to call a special session to address the effects of data centers on the state.

    About 40 people — including visitors from the Paluxy Valley and a slate of speakers — rallied outside the Capitol on Monday, asking for the special session as data centers pop up across Texas. In North Texas and across the state, people have sounded the alarm over existing and planned sites, raising concerns over noise, water use and possible environmental impacts.

    Attendees stood outside in front of the Austin building, holding signs in opposition of data centers. One read “you can’t drink data.” Another advocated for the protection of farmland. “Say no to data centers,” declared a sign, accompanied by a drawing of a microphone.

    Only Texas Gov. Greg Abbott can call the Legislature into special session. The next regularly scheduled legislative session starts on Jan. 12.

    “Our star filled skies will be gone,” said Brian Crawford, a retired Lockheed Martin employee who shares a fence line with a planned the Comanche Circle data center project. “Our quiet nights of only hearing wildlife will be gone. Our two lane farm-to-market roads will be incredibly dangerous.”

    Crawford, whose property is in Somerville County, was representing Protect the Paluxy Valley Inc. as a speaker at the event. He said Abbott should take a “sober look” at the impact data centers and power plants on the state.

    🟥Election 2026🟦

    The governor should convene a special session where lawmakers could issue an immediate “statewide moratorium or rural industrialization” so that the effects of such projects can be analyzed, Crawford said. Legislators should also consider letting counties regulate industrial development to protect citizens, he said.

    “My message is that we need a special session, and we need it now,” said Joanne Carcamo, a co-founder of the Paluxy Valley group who attended the protest. “We cannot wait. This is an invasion of rural Texas. This is an invasion in Hood County.”

    Hood County commissioners recently rejected a proposal to put a six-month moratorium on industrial development, which would have given officials time to study the impact of data centers. Residents have raised concerns about the centers encroaching on their rural lifestyles.

    Ahead of the vote, Hood county commissioners received a letter from Sen. Paul Bettencourt, a Houston Republican, that said the moratorium would have violated state law. The letter was also addressed to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

    The proposal is expected to be reconsidered on Tuesday, following the approval of a moratorium on “green energy” projects in northeast Texas’ Van Zandt County.

    There are multiple planned projects in the Hood County area. Among them is a 2,600-acre data center complex called Comanche Circle that has gotten pushback from ranchers, landowners and conservationists near Glen Rose.

    A $10 billion data center is also planned in southeast Fort Worth, though it hit a speed bump earlier this month when zoning requests for the project were put on pause as the city awaits a report on data centers from city staff.

    Senate District 22 Republican candidate Rena Schroeder was among the speakers at the Monday protest. A campaign staff member helped organize the event in her capacity as an individual. The Senate district includes part of Tarrant County. Speakers from Round Rock and Waco area groups also addressed attendees.

    “Our way of life in Texas is being torn apart by these data centers,” said Gary Oldham with Protect Round Rock. “Whether we’re in the suburbs, a small farm, a large working ranch, or even in the middle of Fort Worth or Houston, they’re impacting us all.”

    In a statement, a spokesperson for Abbott didn’t address whether Abbott would consider a data center related special session.

    “Texas leads the nation in strategically and methodically attracting tech investments that create jobs and drive innovation,” spokesperson Andrew Mahaleris said. “Governor Abbott was proud to sign Senate Bill 6 into law to support long-term grid planning, protect ratepayers from transmission costs, and ensure system reliability. Governor Abbott will continue to work with the Legislature to ensure Texas remains the nation’s leader in innovation while ensuring sustainable growth.”

    He noted that governments and groundwater conservation districts have existing tools to regulate water usage, and that the Public Utility Commission has been tasked with studying how much water data centers use and what it’s used for.

    A spokesperson for Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick didn’t immediately return an email seeking comment.

    “Data centers have become an issue of national security,” Speaker Dustin Burrows said in a written statement. “The Texas House is committed to working to balance private property rights and economic growth while ensuring responsible planning that protects our communities. Given the statewide and long-term impacts of this issue, I look forward to engaging with members throughout the interim and next session.”

    Staff Writers Elizabeth Campbell and Emily Holshouser contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published February 23, 2026 at 4:51 PM.

    Eleanor Dearman

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Eleanor (Elly) Dearman is a Texas politics and government reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She’s based in Austin, covering the Legislature and its impact on North Texas. She grew up in Denton and has been a reporter for more than six years.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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  • House Speaker calls Virginia lawmakers back to Richmond as possible redistricting fight brews – WTOP News

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    Surprise special session for Virginia lawmakers comes just days before Election Day, with Democrats weighing plans to redraw congressional lines amid GOP accusations of a “power grab.”

    This article was reprinted with permission from Virginia Mercury

    Virginia House Speaker Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, on Thursday called lawmakers back to Richmond for a special session Monday afternoon, setting off speculation that Democrats are preparing to act on redistricting plans just days before voters elect a new governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and all 100 members of the House of Delegates.

    In a letter to House members, Scott cited constitutional provisions and joint resolutions authorizing the General Assembly to reconvene the 2024 Special Session I “to consider matters properly before the ongoing session and any related business laid before the body.”

    The House will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in the Capitol chamber, he wrote, adding that the clerk’s office will soon provide logistical details.

    “My office has spoken with Senate leadership and has been assured that a similar communication … will be made by the Senate Clerk’s Office to Senate members,” Scott wrote.

    He did not explain why the legislature is being recalled, and neither he nor Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, responded to inquiries from The Mercury on Thursday.

    Redistricting speculation

    Several Democrats and legislative staffers told Virginia Scope that part of the session’s focus will be redistricting — a move that could reopen debate over how Virginia’s 11 congressional boundaries are drawn. Six of these are currently held by Democrats, and sources told the outlet that Democrats in Washington believe a new map could yield at least two additional Democratic-leaning seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Virginia voters in 2020 approved a constitutional amendment creating an independent redistricting commission of lawmakers and citizens, but the panel deadlocked in late 2021, leaving the Virginia Supreme Court to draw the current maps.

    With Democrats now holding narrow control of both legislative chambers, some strategists have discussed using their majorities to revisit that framework.

    Options under discussion include breaking up heavily Democratic districts to make them more competitive while reshaping Republican-leaning areas to favor Democratic candidates.

    Timing is key — under Virginia’s amendment process, a constitutional change must be approved twice by the General Assembly with a House election in between before being placed on the ballot for voter approval or rejection.

    According to Virginia Scope, Democratic leaders are considering an initial vote before the Nov. 4 election, followed by a second vote during the 2026 session, potentially allowing a referendum next spring and new maps as early as April — two months before congressional primaries.

    Still, many Democratic lawmakers remain uneasy about the plan. Senate Democrats held a caucus meeting Wednesday night, and several members told the outlet they had been “kept out of the loop” about the special-session agenda.

    National backdrop

    Across the country, redistricting battles are intensifying as both parties look to lock in advantages ahead of the 2026 midterms.

    Earlier on Thursday, the New York Times reported that Virginia’s Democratic leaders are considering “joining a growing number of states” seeking to counter what they call partisan gerrymandering efforts encouraged by the administration of President Donald Trump.

    “We are coming back to address actions by the Trump administration,” Surovell told the Times, suggesting Democrats view their move as a corrective to Republican-led redistricting maneuvers in states such as Texas, Florida, and North Carolina.

    Those states have recently pushed new maps designed to cement GOP control after a series of federal court rulings loosened constraints on mid-decade remapping. The Supreme Court is currently weighing a major redistricting case from Louisiana, another sign of how important the issue is to legislators and voters nationwide.

    In August, Sen. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, hinted publicly that Virginia could soon act.

    Sharing a post by former President Barack Obama on X, formerly Twitter, praising California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s approach to mid-decade redistricting, Lucas wrote: “Every state in the nation should follow suit. Stay tuned for Virginia …”

    Political fallout

    Republicans swiftly accused Democrats of scheming to rewrite the rules ahead of a pivotal statewide election.

    Republican Party of Virginia Chair Mark Peake, a state senator from Lynchburg, in a video on X characterized Scott’s move a sign of Democratic desperation.

    “Desperate Democrats are pulling a pathetic, political stunt,” Peake said, accusing the majority of “doing anything they can to take attention away from their horrible candidates.”

    He added that “the General Assembly hopes they can do something with this ruse about redistricting,” but urged voters not to “fall for it.”

    The campaign of Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, the GOP nominee for governor, blamed Democratic contender Abigail Spanberger for supporting the idea of dissolving the independent commission.

    “In a stunning display of arrogance, Abigail Spanberger wants to overrule the will of Virginia voters in favor of a cynical power grab,” campaign spokesperson Peyton Vogel said in a statement Thursday.

    “She came out in favor of abolishing Virginia’s Independent Redistricting Commission and wants to hand control back to the politicians in Richmond so they can guarantee their own reelection. … It’s never been about the voters or what’s best for Virginia. It’s always been about what’s best for Abigail Spanberger.”

    However, in an interview with WJLA in late August, Spanberger said she opposed mid-decade redistricting and warned against “politicians trying to tilt the playing field in their favor,” aligning herself with Maryland Gov. Wes Moore’s call for fair-maps legislation.

    What comes next

    With the state legislature reconvening Monday afternoon, both chambers are expected to gavel in briefly before potentially taking up redistricting-related measures later in the week.

    Procedural resolutions adopted earlier this year would allow lawmakers to address “matters properly before the ongoing special session,” giving Scott wide latitude to add topics to the agenda.

    Any move to alter Virginia’s redistricting process would likely trigger intense legal scrutiny and political backlash — especially given the proximity to Election Day. But Democratic strategists across the country argue that Republican-led states have already rewritten maps to their advantage.

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  • Live updates: Day 3 of the Oregon special session on transportation funding

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    The Oregon Legislature plans to meet for the third day of a special session on transportation funding on Labor Day, with the House of Representatives convening at 10 a.m. for third reading and debate on the package of bills sponsored by Gov. Tina Kotek.

    The Senate is scheduled to begin considering the measures at 2 p.m. on Sept. 1.

    Follow along as legislative reporter Dianne Lugo, state government reporter Anastasia Mason and photographer Abigail Dollins cover the special session on Labor Day.

    How we got here

    The 2025 Legislature adjourned on June 27 without passing a transportation bill, leaving the Oregon Department of Transportation short about $300 million to maintain service levels for the two-year budget cycle that began July 1.

    Kotek announced layoffs of 483 ODOT workers and the closure of a dozen maintenance stations across the state. The layoffs and closures were later put on hold, pending the outcome of the special session.

    Two last-minute amendments from House Speaker Julie Fahey, D-Eugene, were adopted Aug. 31 by the Joint Special Session Committee on Transportation Funding after the second public hearing on the bills.

    One of Fahey’s amendments would eliminate a 0.1% increase to the payroll tax in House Bill 3991 after Jan. 1, 2028.

    The other amendment gives the Department of Administrative Services the ability to lower tax rates, but not to raise them, if the rates paid by heavy and light vehicles reach a certain imbalance.

    “Getting here has been a long road, but the result is a bill that ensures that cities, counties, and the state will be able to perform basic maintenance and safety work on our roads — filling potholes, plowing snow in the winter, and making sure our bridges don’t fall down,” Fahey said after the House committee adjourned.

    What Gov. Tina Kotek’s transportation funding bills would do

    The governor’s amended transportation package is estimated to raise $4.3 billion over the next 10 years. Her bills include:

    • A 6-cent increase to the state gas tax for a total of 46 cents per gallon

    • A $42 and $132 increase in vehicle registration and title fees

    • A doubling of the 0.1% payroll tax to fund public transit until Jan. 1, 2028.

    • A $30 supplemental registration fee for electric vehicles, and

    • A new “road usage charge” to be phased in for electric and hybrid cars starting in 2027.

    House Bill 3991 also would repeal mandatory tolling language from the existing statute, which Kotek paused in 2024, and transfer power to the governor to appoint and fire the director of the ODOT. The last major transportation bill, passed in 2017, gave the power to hire and fire the head of ODOT to the Oregon Transportation Commission.

    Anastasia Mason covers state government for the Statesman Journal. Reach her at acmason@statesmanjournal.com or 971-208-5615.

    Dianne Lugo covers the Oregon Legislature and equity issues. Reach her at dlugo@statesmanjournal.com or on X @DianneLugo or Bluesky @diannelugo.bsky.social

    This article originally appeared on Salem Statesman Journal: Oregon Legislature meets in special session Labor Day weekend

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  • NM Gov declines GOP’s invite to visit ICE detention center

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    This article was published by Source NM. Read more at sourcenm.com.

    Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s “busy schedule” Monday means she won’t join Republican lawmakers on a tour of New Mexico’s biggest immigration detention center, a spokesperson for the governor told Source New Mexico on Thursday.

    New Mexico Republicans shared a letter on social media Wednesday announcing some members would be touring the Otero County Processing Center on Monday, and they invited the governor to come along. The detention center in Chaparral currently houses most of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees in the state, and its population has increased since President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown began this year.

    The governor’s chief lawyer told an interim legislative committee in July that the governor was considering adding a measure to the agenda at an upcoming special session that would ban immigration detention facilities in New Mexico.

    Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham gives her State of the State address on Jan 16. 2024 during the opening day of the legislative session.

    “Before we take any action with such far-reaching implications (for example, putting New Mexicans out of work and risking millions of federal funding), it is essential that we have a clear first-hand understanding of the conditions within these facilities and the operations that take place there,” Republican lawmakers Rep. Andrea Reeb and Sen. Crystal Brantley wrote in the letter.

    The letter went on to invite the governor to tag along for the visit at 8 a.m. Monday.

    “We believe your participation would be instrumental in ensuring that any decisions made are fully informed and in the best interests of the people of New Mexico,” the Republicans wrote.

    In an email Thursday afternoon, Michael Coleman, the spokesperson for the governor, told Source that the governor won’t join the tour and also hasn’t decided yet whether she’ll add an ICE detention facility agenda to the special session call.

    “The governor has a busy schedule on Monday and won’t be joining in the tour,” Coleman said. “We’re still working to determine a special session agenda, and no final decision has been made on this particular issue.”

    He also said the governor hasn’t yet decided on a date for the special session, which her lawyer said she anticipated would happen later this month or in September to address federal funding cuts Congress recently enacted in the “Big Beautiful Bill” act. Other crime-related measures could also be on the governor’s call. Se

    nate GOP spokesperson Brandon Harris told Source New Mexico earlier Thursday that delays around background checks likely mean reporters won’t be able to join the lawmakers during their tour, but they intend to hold a news conference or otherwise provide an update to the public about the tour.

    That could be on social media or at a previously scheduled meeting of the interim Courts, Corrections and Justice Committee also occurring Monday in Las Cruces. But the governor, who hadn’t responded to the GOP’s invite as of 1:30 p.m. Monday, would be able to join if she wanted, he said.

    “If anyone could probably get expedited [approval],” it’s the governor, Harris said. “If she wanted to, she probably could.”

    The GOP’s letter said the CCJ committee canceled a long-promised tour of the facility, citing concerns about background checks.

    As of Aug. 4, the average daily inmate population at Otero County Detention Center is 863, an increase of about 60 inmates, on average, since December last year, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The other two New Mexico facilities in Torrance and Cibola counties have average daily populations of 444 and 223 ICE detainees, respectively, according to TRAC.

    Read more at SourceNM.com.

    Patrick Lohmann has been a reporter since 2007, when he wrote stories for $15 apiece at a now-defunct tabloid in Gallup, his hometown. Since then, he’s worked at UNM’s Daily Lobo, the Albuquerque Journal and the Syracuse Post-Standard.

    This article originally appeared on Las Cruces Sun-News: NM Gov declines GOP’s invite to visit ICE detention center

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  • State lawmakers return to Colorado Capitol for special session to address massive budget gap

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    DENVER — State lawmakers returned to the Colorado Capitol on Thursday to begin a special session to address a massive budget shortfall.

    Governor Jared Polis blames the budget deficit on the tax changes made in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Act (H.R.1). According to the governor and fellow Colorado Democrats, Colorado is set to collect less revenue than expected when lawmakers approved the state budget in May.

    Across the aisle, Colorado Republicans say the federal government’s spending bill isn’t to blame.

    Lawmakers will also attempt to tackle other issues during the special session, including a proposal to provide financial support to Planned Parenthood, which was targeted by the OBBA.

    Politics

    Denver7 presses lawmakers on how they plan to address the state’s $1B budget gap

    What caused Colorado’s budget shortfall?

    Despite misinformation on social media, the state’s current budget shortfall was not caused by excessive spending on undocumented immigrants or the state’s spending over the past several years.

    State Rep. Bob Marshall, D-Highlands Ranch, said he’s tired of hearing misinformed arguments about the budget deficit.

    “Well, it’s really irritating,” Marshall said. “I mean, the reason we’re here is because we have a $1.2 billion hole blasted in the middle of our budget.”

    While the federal government can spend more money than it collects, Colorado’s constitution requires state lawmakers to pass a balanced budget each year. Indeed, that’s what lawmakers did earlier this year.

    But that wasn’t the end of the story.

    Colorado is one of a handful of states with “rolling” conformity, meaning that it automatically adopts changes to the federal tax code. So, if Congress passes legislation that cuts or raises federal taxes, Colorado automatically mirrors it.

    Budget analysts say this automatic mirroring has benefits, such as making filing taxes easier for Coloradans. It can also create problems.

    Trump’s bill made a lot of changes to the federal tax code and cut taxes. Because of its automatic mirroring, Colorado adopted those changes. Many provisions from the OBBA will take effect in 2026 and 2027, but several took effect immediately, resulting in less revenue for the state to collect.

    Colorado approved its state budget in May. State lawmakers approved the budget, anticipating no major changes to the federal tax code. But in July, Congress gave approval to the OBBA, and the president signed it into law on July 4.

    “The impacts on Colorado are particularly immediate,” Polis said. “The impact on taxpayers depends on your tax situation. You may benefit; you may not. But there is a significant loss in revenue, largely from the corporate tax changes that are in this bill.”

    Polis called a special session to address the sudden budget shortfall.

    • Political reporter Brandon Richard recaps Day 1 of the special legislative session in the video player below

    Colorado lawmakers conclude first day of special legislative session

    How much is the shortfall?

    According to Mark Ferrandino, Colorado’s budget director, the OBBA created a $1.2 billion budget gap for the current budget.

    Some of that revenue loss was absorbed by the state education fund and the affordable housing fund. Around $300 million that the state had in surplus, which would have been refunded to taxpayers, will now be used to help fill the gap.

    That still leaves lawmakers with a budget gap estimated to be around $783 million.

    How do lawmakers plan to fill the budget gap?

    Democrats, who are in charge of both chambers of the legislature, have proposed a three-pronged approach: end corporate tax breaks, dip into the state’s rainy-day savings, and cut some spending.

    House Speaker Julie McCluskie said on Tuesday that she anticipates closing the corporate tax loopholes would provide $300 to $400 million. She estimates lawmakers will need to take $200 to $300 million from the state’s reserves, which would leave about $300 million in cuts that would need to be made.

    McCluskie said Democrats would make cuts “responsibly.” However, Democrats want the governor to make those cuts for them.

    Democrats have introduced SB25B-001, which would establish procedures for the Joint Budget Committee (JBC) to hold hearings with the governor’s office when the state doesn’t have enough money to provide state services.

    Under current law, the governor can end or pause functions of state agencies for up to three months if the state doesn’t have enough money for state services. The bill will give the legislature, through the JBC, more involvement in those decisions.

    “To come in in the middle of August, and cut the hundreds of millions of dollars that need to be cut, that’s just not something that the budget committee is equipped to do,” said State Sen. Jeff Bridges, the chairman of the JBC.

    2025 special session bills authorized by sponsor for pre-release

    House Bills

    • Artificial Intelligence Systems (25B-0004)
    • Sale of Tax Credits (25B-0005)
    • Insurance Premium Tax Rate for Home Offices (25B-0006)
    • Eliminate State Sales Tax Vendor Fee (25B-0007)
    • Corporate Income Tax Foreign Jurisdictions (25B-0008)
    • Qualified Bus Income Deduction Add-Back (25B-0009)
    • Prescription Drug Benefit Information Transparency (25B-0011)
    • Consumer Protections for AI Interactions (25B-0013)
    • Continuity of Care for Impacted Communities (25B-0018)
    • Improve Affordability Private Health Insurance (25B-0021)
    • Health Ins Affordability Enter Board Appointment (25B-0023)
    • Voter Approval for State Vendor Fee Reductions (25B-0024)
    • Prohibit Certain Cash Fund Use Against Fed Action (25B-0025)
    • Additions to Definition Federal Taxable Income (25B-0028)
    • Health Insurance Affordability Fund Allocation (25B-0033)
    • Spending Reduction Procedures (25B-0034)
    • Transfer of Money in Refinance Discretionary Account (25B-0036)
    • Health Providers Practice Scope Preventive Care (25B-0037)
    • Limit Subsidies Health Ins Affordability Enterprise (25B-0042)
    • Retention of Vendors Fees for Collecting Sales Tax (25B-0043)

    Senate Bills

    • State-Only Funding for Certain Entities (25B-0001)
    • Healthy School Meals For All (25B-0002)
    • Processes to Reduce Spending During Shortfall (25B-0003)
    • Reallocate DNR Wolf Funding to Health Ins Enterprise (25B-0010)
    • Tech-Neutral Anti-Discrimination Clarification Act (25B-0012)
    • Increase Transparency for Algorithmic Systems (25B-0017)
    • Voter Approval Additions to Federal Taxable Income (25B-0031)
    • Tax Credit for Health Savings Accounts (25B-0032)

    Courtesy of Colorado General Assembly website

    Republicans call special session ‘premature’

    While Polis and Democratic lawmakers say the special session is necessary, Republicans aren’t so sure about the timing.

    “I think the special session is very premature,” said Colorado House Minority Leader Rose Pugliese. “I think that the impacts of the bill really should have gone through the Joint Budget Committee process, and then once the Joint Budget Committee can understand what the implications of the budget are, then we can come in for a special session or during a regular session to get this budget issue dealt with.”

    Republicans said the special session fails to address the state’s structural budget challenges and believe Democrats plan to raise taxes.

    “For years, Democrats at the Capitol have spent beyond their means and ignored Republican solutions. Now, they want taxpayers to bail them out,” Pugliese said. “Republicans will protect your right to vote on tax increases, defend your refunds, and not give Democrats a blank check. Our bills repeal hidden tax hikes, protect small retailers, and preserve Medicaid for the most vulnerable. These are real solutions for Colorado families.”

    Republicans have introduced bills that they say would provide “common-sense solutions,” but the proposals are not expected to pass the Democratic majority.

    Politics

    How common are special sessions in Colorado? Here are all 52 that’ve been called

    Lawmakers will address other issues

    The OBBA made reproductive clinics like Planned Parenthood ineligible for federal reimbursements. Colorado Democrats have introduced a bill, SB25B-002, which would authorize state funding for those clinics until they become eligible for federal reimbursements again.

    “We are irreplaceable,” said Jack Teter, the vice president of government affairs for Planned Parenthood. “And I’m very grateful that the legislature and the governor’s office recognize that and that they’re acting during special session to preserve access for our patients.”
     
    Lawmakers will also consider SB25B-003, a bill to ask voters to provide more money for the SNAP food assistance program.

    “Republicans in Congress made unprecedented cuts to SNAP in their federal budget, which slashed millions from nutrition programs that helped Coloradans feed their families,” said State Sen. Dafna Michaelson Jenet, D-Commerce City.

    Lawmakers will also consider changes to Colorado’s artificial intelligence law.

    The special session is expected to last into the first part of next week.

    Denver7

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Brandon Richard

    Denver7 politics reporter Brandon Richard closely follows developments at the State Capitol and in Washington, and digs deeper to find how legislation affects Coloradans in every community. If you’d like to get in touch with Brandon, fill out the form below to send him an email.

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  • Special Session No. 2 is Underway As Democrats Make Their Way Back to Texas

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    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and the House Republicans are hoping to make up for lost time in a second special session that began Friday and includes all 18 items on the previous agenda, including redistricting, plus a new proposal for legislation to improve youth camp safety.

    Abbott’s first special session adjourned last week without signing any new bills into law, due to the absence of a quorum prompted by House Democrats who left the state to avoid voting on new U.S. Congressional boundary lines. The rare mid-decade redistricting initiative was ordered by President Donald Trump to pick up five Republican seats in U.S. Congress ahead of the 2026 primaries.

    The Democrats announced that they would return to Texas if the Legislature adjourned and if California introduced a redistricting plan that “would neutralize the Trump-Abbott voter suppression effort.” Both of those demands were met, and a quorum of lawmakers was expected to be in Austin by Monday, August 18.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom said his state will call a special election to seek voter approval for a new congressional map that would pick up more blue seats, countering the effort in Texas.

    The Democrats still think the proposed Texas redistricting maps are racist and illegal. Rep. Todd Hunter, R-Corpus Christi, refiled House Bill 4 on Friday. Democrats say they’re preparing for a legal battle in court.

    “Under the advice of legal counsel, Democrats must return to Texas to build a strong public legislative record for the upcoming legal battle against a map that violates both the current Voting Rights Act and the Constitution,” officials with the Texas House Democratic Caucus said in a press release on August 14.

    click to enlarge

    At least 50 Texas Democrats have been absent from the Capitol for about two weeks.

    Screenshot

    Speaker of the House Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, announced the adjournment of the first special session on Friday morning and told lawmakers not to stray far from the Capitol, as he expected the governor would call a second special session “very, very soon.” A second special session began two hours later, and a quorum was still not present.

    “I want to point out that today’s outcome may be a win for Texans and for the rest of the governor’s call,” Burrows said. “If our absent colleagues had shown up this morning, they could have used a few remaining days to stall, or possibly even block, the passage of critical legislation: property tax relief, protections for the unborn, safeguarding women’s private spaces, and reining in runaway local taxes.”

    “By following Governor Newsom’s lead, instead of the will of Texans, they have allowed us to reset the clock,” he said, adding that he hopes to accomplish every item on the agenda and adjourn the second special session before Labor Day weekend.

    A quorum of at least 100 state representatives and 21 senators — two-thirds of each elected body — is needed not just to pass redistricting legislation but to vote on disaster response, elimination of the STAAR test, THC reform and numerous other measures on Abbott’s special session call.

    Scott Braddock, editor of the nonpartisan Texas political newsletter Quorum Report, said on social media last week that the Democrats are “about to come home to lose here while rallying their party to maybe win nationally.”

    The Republican-majority Legislature has accused the Democrats of being cowardly and ducking their duties at the expense of important disaster response bills that would help families in the Texas Hill Country who are still recovering from deadly July 4 floods.

    The Democrats have said they wanted to consider flood legislation but Abbott pulled a fast one and instead made redistricting the top priority.

    “We do not believe stealing five seats to attempt to determine the outcome of the next election is the right thing to bring us back for,” said Rep. Ann Johnson, D-Houston, in a Zoom livestream from Chicago last week. “Yes, we are in the position of breaking quorum, which is an extraordinary and exceptional act but it is the only tool that we have in our toolbox, as the minority, to try and defeat [redistricting].”

    The Dems would ultimately like Abbott to set aside redistricting, which technically doesn’t have to be taken up until the 2030 Census. Several have pushed for an independent redistricting commission to redraw the lines.

    “I’ll offer it again and if Governor Abbott wants to accept that bill and put it up for a hearing, we can find out if both sides are really willing to do this,” Johnson said. “I would love it if the solution to all of this is that the people rise up and say, ‘Hey, politicians, stop drawing your lines. We’re going to draw them for you.’ To me, that’s the ultimate win.”

    Rep. Jon Rosenthal, D-Houston, is also on board with an independent redistricting commission.

    “From my perspective, we should be doing what the people want us to do,” Rosenthal said, noting that about 99 percent of those who spoke at public hearings before the quorum break were against mid-decade redistricting. “I would love to see federal law enact a nonpartisan redistricting commission process.”

    The redistricting conversation isn’t just about Texas, the lawmakers said.

    “One of our big pushes, one of our big priorities, is for this to become a national conversation,” Rosenthal said. “Redistricting in Texas in the midterm just for the purpose of rigging an election will affect the entire country.”

    Representatives from both parties have indicated they’re not backing down.

    “Trump thought he could easily get his way in Texas with compliant Republicans, but Democrats fought back ferociously and took the fight to Trump across America,” Texas Dems said in a statement. “We will return to the House floor and to the courthouse with a clear message: the fight to protect voting rights has only just begun.”

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    April Towery

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  • Newsom welcomes Texas Democrats who fled to foil Trump’s redistricting plan

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    California became center stage for the national political fight over House seats Friday when Gov. Gavin Newsom welcomed Democratic lawmakers from Texas who fled their home state to foil President Trump’s plans to redraw congressional districts.

    California lawmakers plan to respond with their own plan to gerrymander districts to favor Democrats and neutralize any Republican seats gained in Texas in 2026, with a proposed map expected to become public next week, Newsom said at a news conference after meeting with the lawmakers.

    “Make no mistake, California is moving forward,” the governor said. “We are talking about emergency measures to respond to what’s happening in Texas, and we will nullify what happens in Texas.”

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    He noted that while Democrats still support the state’s independent redistricting commission, they must counter Trump’s plan in GOP-led states to give their party a better chance in next year’s midterm election.

    “They drew first blood,” he later added of Republicans.

    Asked about the gathering, a Trump administration spokesperson said Newsom was seeking the limelight to further his political ambitions.

    “Gavin Newsom is a loser of the highest order and he will never be president, no matter how hard he prostitutes himself to the press,” said the spokesperson, Steven Cheung.

    Friday marked the second time in two weeks that Texas Democrats have stood next to Newsom at the California governor’s mansion and warned that Republican efforts to draw a new map in their state would dilute the power of Black and brown voters.

    The Texas Democrats hoped that their departure would leave the state Legislature with too few members present to change the map in a special session. They face $500 fines for each day of absence, as well as threats of arrest and removal from office by Gov. Greg Abbott and other Texas GOP officials. Some of the Democratic lawmakers were evacuated from a Chicago hotel where they were staying after a bomb threat Wednesday.

    “We are now facing threats — the threat that we’re going to lose our jobs, the threat of financial ruin, the threat that we will be hunted down as our colleagues sit on their hands and remain silent, as we all get personal threats to our lives,” said Texas state Rep. Ann Johnson, one of six Texas Democrats at the news conference, who was among those evacuated from the Chicago hotel. “We as Democrats are standing up to ensure that the voices of every voter is lifted up in this next election, and that the next election is not stolen from them.”

    Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco); Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-San José), chair of the California Democratic congressional delegation; California Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg); state Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (D-Hollister) and other elected officials joined the meeting in a show of unity as California Democrats attempt to convince their own state’s voters to fight back.

    Pelosi noted that the state’s congressional delegation is united in backing the redistricting proposal to counter Trump.

    “The president has paved over the Rose Garden. He’s paved over freedom of speech. He’s paved over freedom of education, [an] independent judiciary, the rule of law,” Pelosi said. “He’s gone too far. We will not let him pave over free and fair elections in our country, starting with what he’s trying to do in Texas.”

    She countered an argument some have made — that two wrongs don’t make a right.

    “This is self-defense for our democracy,” she said.

    The California plan calls for the state Legislature to approve a constitutional amendment establishing new congressional voting districts crafted to make GOP members vulnerable.

    Passage of the bill would result in a special election on Nov. 4, with California voters deciding whether the state should temporarily pause the congressional boundaries created by an independent redistricting commission in 2021 and adopt new maps for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections.

    If approved by voters, the measure would include a “trigger” specifying that it would take effect only if Texas or other Republican-led states follow through with redrawing their maps to boost GOP seats before the midterm election. California would revert to its existing redistricting law after the next census and before the 2032 election.

    At least so far, California voters appear uncertain about whether they want to swap Newsom’s plan for the independent redistricting system they previously adopted at the ballot box.

    An Emerson College poll found support for redrawing California’s congressional map at 33% and opposition at 25%. The survey of 1,000 registered voters, conducted Aug. 4 and 5, found that 42% were undecided.

    Newsom has expressed confidence that California voters will back his plan, which he is casting as a rebuttal to Trump’s efforts to “rig” the midterm elections.

    “I’m confident we’ll get it when people know what it is and what it’s not, and I think, at the end of the day, they understand what’s at stake,” Newsom said Thursday.

    Newsom argues that California’s process is more transparent than Trump’s because voters here will see the map and decide whether the state should go forward with it.

    To fulfill Trump’s request for five additional seats, Abbott is attempting to redraw House districts in Texas through a state legislative process that does not require voter approval. It’s unclear what will happen in Austin, with Democrats determined to block the effort and the governor and other Texas Republicans insisting they will keep pressing it.

    The current special session ends Aug. 19. But in an interview with NBC News on Thursday evening, Abbott vowed “to call special session after special session after special session with the same agenda items on there.”

    In addition to arrest on civil warrants, the Democrats are facing threats of being removed from office. Direct-deposit payments to the legislators have been curtailed, forcing them to pick up their checks in person at the state capitol in Austin or go without the money.

    The redistricting fight has strengthened Newsom’s national platform as a potential 2028 presidential contender and bolstered his reputation as a Democrat willing to take the fight to Trump and his allies.

    Since Trump took office in January, Newsom had been walking a fine line between calling out the president and working with him in hopes of being able to join together to rebuild from the California wildfires.

    But Newsom took a hard line after Trump deployed the National Guard during federal immigration raids in Los Angeles in June, prompting the governor and his administration to much more aggressively resist the president’s agenda.

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    Seema Mehta, Taryn Luna

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  • Newsom calls Legislature into special session after lawmakers reject his latest salvo at Big Oil

    Newsom calls Legislature into special session after lawmakers reject his latest salvo at Big Oil

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom called California lawmakers into a special session Saturday after Assembly Democrats pushed back on his request to approve new requirements on oil refineries in the final days of the regular legislative session that ends Saturday night.

    The unusual maneuver effectively pushes the Legislature into overtime to address the complex and politically sensitive issue of energy affordability just as campaign season heats up in advance of the Nov. 5 election.

    Newsom’s order requires that lawmakers formally open a special session immediately, but it’s unclear when they plan to hold hearings to consider the bills or how long the session will go. Lawmakers were scheduled to leave Sacramento this weekend for four months in their home districts.

    “It should be common sense for gas refineries to plan ahead and backfill supplies when they go down for maintenance to avoid price spikes. But these price spikes are actually profit spikes for Big Oil, and they’re using the same old scare tactics to maintain the status quo,” Newsom said in a statement.

    “Calling the session now allows the Legislature to begin that work immediately so that the state can resolve this important matter to establish the necessary rules to prevent price spikes next year and beyond.”

    It’s the second time in two years that Newsom has called a special session focused on the economics of the oil industry, an issue that divides Democrats as they navigate a desire to fight climate change with ambitions to lower prices at the pump. Newsom has blamed high gas prices on the industry, which he accused of gouging consumers. Oil companies point to the state’s climate change and tax policies as drivers of higher prices.

    Two weeks ago, Newsom announced a proposal to require that petroleum refiners maintain a stable inventory in order to prevent fuel shortages and price spikes when refinery equipment is taken offline for maintenance.

    As the oil industry lobbied heavily against the proposal, Democrats in the Assembly and Senate squabbled over how to move forward. Lawmakers said they were frustrated with Newsom’s attempt to push the plan through the Capitol at the last minute.

    In a statement Friday, Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (D-Hollister) said his caucus agreed with the governor about the need to urgently address affordability and would deliver results if a special session was called. But he refused to take up the bills for a floor vote by Saturday’s deadline.

    “What I’m not going to do is push through bills that haven’t been sufficiently vetted with public hearings,” Rivas said. “Doing so could lead to unintended consequences on Californians’ pocketbooks.”

    Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas said he wouldn’t rush Newsom’s energy proposal through the Legislature.

    (Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)

    Newsom’s office began talking with the Senate and Assembly earlier this summer about legislation that would allow his administration to require that petroleum refiners maintain a stable inventory in order to prevent fuel shortages in California.

    After gathering more insight about pricing from laws passed in a previous special session on oil that ended last year, state regulators had reported that charges at the pump increase when the oil companies do not maintain enough refined gasoline to backfill production shortfalls or protect against the impact of unplanned maintenance.

    Western States Petroleum Assn. leaders said the governor’s refinery proposal will drive up fuel costs in California and reduce supplies in Arizona and Nevada. The argument raised a potent political concern that the state policy could become a national headache for Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats in a critical election year.

    “It’s noteworthy that legislators are considering such radical energy policies at a time when the nation is closely examining how the ‘California model’ will impact their families and pocketbooks,” Catherine Reheis-Boyd, CEO of the Western States Petroleum Assn., said in a statement this week.

    The warning from WSPA, Chevron and other industry players spooked Assembly Democrats, who were also irked by the late introduction of the proposal.

    In an effort to reach an agreement with Democratic lawmakers, the proposal was tied together with other bills in the Senate and Assembly during negotiations with leaders of both houses. But environmentalists opposed some of those proposals, leaving Democrats with a suite of bills that angered both ends of the environmental policy spectrum.

    One of the Assembly bills, which would cut energy and climate programs that fund HVAC improvements in schools, installation of energy storage and generation technologies in vulnerable communities and solar energy systems on multifamily affordable housing to achieve a meager one-time customer credit on electricity and gas bills, drew sweeping opposition from a coalition of environmental, education, housing and energy groups. Another bill, which ratepayer advocates supported, would have required the Public Utilities Commission to develop a framework for analyzing total annual energy costs for residential households.

    The bills didn’t offer enough incentive for Assembly Democrats to slam the plan through this week. They also soured on efforts by Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire (D-Healdsburg) to leverage the moment to pass Senate bills that would accelerate environmental reviews for clean energy and hydrogen projects, save ratepayers money by lowering requirements for utility wildfire mitigation plans and make it harder for companies to terminate utility service to customers.

    McGuire, who earlier this week said the Senate did not support a special session and urged the Assembly to take action on the bills, stuck to that position on Saturday.

    “The Senate always had the votes and was ready to get these important measures across the finish line this legislative year and deliver the relief Californians need at the pump and on their electricity bills,” McGuire said in a statement.

    “We won’t be convening a special session this fall, but we look forward to continuing conversations with the Governor and Speaker about this critical issue in the days and weeks to come.”

    It was unclear Saturday night how Newsom would respond or whether the Senate leader has the legal authority to refuse the governor’s call for a special session.

    The drama marked another effort by a governor on the cusp of the final two years of his second term to push last-minute bills through a Legislature guided by two new leaders. Earlier this summer lawmakers similarly balked on passing a bill that would have placed his measure targeting retail crime on the ballot.

    Newsom’s decision to call for a special session also marks the second time he’s sought to toughen California’s oil laws outside the typical two-year process to hear bills, which runs from January through August or mid-September each year.

    The governor called a special session two years ago to penalize oil companies for excessive profits as gasoline prices spiked. But lawmakers were ultimately reluctant to adopt a penalty and Newsom refined his request to instead demand more transparency from the industry.

    Instead of enacting a cap and penalty on oil refinery profits, Newsom and lawmakers gave state regulators the ability to do so in the future. Consumer advocates and the governor celebrated the resulting law as a groundbreaking tool that could keep gas prices from escalating.

    But Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo of Nevada joined the industry and his party in May when he sent Newsom a letter warning a cap could “further raise gas prices for both of our constituencies” because his state’s gas largely comes from refineries in California.

    On Friday, Andy Walz, president of Americas products for Chevron, sent a letter to the California Energy Commission saying that Newsom’s new refinery proposal “risks the safety of refinery operations, the orderly functioning of markets and would leave industry and labor experts without a voice in key policies.”

    “The physical, operational and cost burdens to sustain unnecessary inventory are also a concern,” he wrote. “Building just one new storage tank can take a decade and cost $35 million. These costs would likely be passed onto the consumer. And given the current regulatory regime, with constraints on permits and a gasoline vehicle sales ban, there is no opportunity to recover capital invested to build additional tanks, which could be the ‘last straw’ for the state’s energy market investors.”

    The timing of a second special session on oil regulations could work in Newsom’s favor if lawmakers immediately get to work.

    Newsom will finish signing the bills on his desk by Sept. 30, which means he could have the political upper hand if the special session begins before that period concludes. If the special session begins after bill signing, the governor could lose some of that leverage.

    But when, and, if, they ultimately pass new mandates on the oil industry or lower electricity bills could also affect the election.

    Legislation that saves consumers money could give them something to tout to their constituents. Laws that potentially raise gas prices could be weaponized in California races or national contests.

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    Taryn Luna, Laurel Rosenhall

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