
The Texas House gaveled in on Monday with a quorum for the first time in two weeks after Democratic lawmakers who fled the state returned following a standoff over Republicans' redistricting effort. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. GOP leaders in the state House said they would take up their plan aimed at padding their party’s majority in the U.S. House on Wednesday.
Main Idea: Texas House Democrats returned to Texas, giving the House a quorum and ending a two-week standoff over Republicans’ redistricting push.
Key Points:
Texas Republicans can now push a new congressional map, which could weaken some voters' influence and raise fears of a partisan power grab.
Texas lawmakers are back to work, so state business and flood-related issues can move forward after a two-week delay.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
The state whose legislature, governor, and redistricting battle are the focus of the story.
Central official who announced the chamber’s rules for absent members and led the House response.
Central group in the standoff; its members fled the state and then returned, driving the article’s main development.
The lawmakers whose quorum break and return are the main subject of the article.
Key Republican official whose call for a second special session kept the redistricting push alive.
The redistricting fight is aimed at shaping the partisan balance of this chamber.
Mentioned as the counterforce that released a redistricting plan affecting the Texas standoff.
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Sign in to commentCited as part of the national Republican push behind the redistricting effort.
Named official who sought court orders against absent lawmakers during the dispute.