The state is cut into 150 pieces for purposes of electing members of the Texas House. It’s chopped into 15 chunks for purposes of electing members to the State Board of Education. The head of the House Redistricting Committee, Rep. Delwin Jones, R-Lubbock, thinks those numbers should sync up. He says he’ll draw the SBOE maps to exactly include ten House districts each.
Mapmaker, Mapmaker, Where is the Map?
Crunch Time in the Pink Building
If you’ve been thinking nothing much was going on during this session of the Legislature, you’ve got loads of company. But take a look at the calendar and get ready for a very fast month.
Easter Bonnets or Hard Hats?
Lawmakers will get ready for the Easter break by kicking the budget out of the House and lining up for copies of the redistricting “working” maps they’ve been promised by the two chairmen in charge of political cartography. Even without redistricting, the remaining seven weeks of the session will be kinda hairy. Still on the list of things to do: The House-Senate conference on the budget, teacher health insurance, Medicaid funding, campaign finance reform, major water and air bills, a number of Sunset bills affecting major agencies, a handful of controversial criminal justice bills, transportation bills and any number of things we’ve left off. There’s a stack of stuff to do and not much time to do it. But the focus isn’t on that stuff: It’s on the maps.
Rain in the Forecast
They say they’re not having a political fight, but if Lt. Gov. Bill Ratliff and Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander were having a political fight, chances are it would look a lot like this.
The Texas House, Divided
For purposes of redistricting, break the House into seven pieces. Six parts would each be comprised of members from the six largest counties in the state: Harris, Dallas, Tarrant, Bexar, Travis, and El Paso. The seventh group includes representatives from the other 248 counties in the state.
Seven Days Later and Nothing’s the Same
The rural areas are in worse shape than they were expecting. The suburbs are in better shape than they were expecting. The urban areas are in both better and worse shape—maybe it’s just disturbingly different than they expected. There is not a GOP primary for governor on the horizon.
Mass Preoccupation
When Rep. Delwin Jones, R-Lubbock, went to the front microphone in the House to talk about redistricting numbers the other day, you could have heard a pin drop. The chairman of the Redistricting Committee had nothing dramatic to say; he was keeping members up to date on the U.S. Census Bureau’s plan to deliver numbers any day. He said it’d take several days to load the data into the computers so that the political cartographers can get to work. He finished; everyone exhaled.
Republican Enough for the GOP?
When Bill Ratliff sits down to talk to the members of his exploratory committee after the end of the legislative session, they’ll tell him a number of things they could tell him today.
Nothing Like a Grand Jury to Perk Things Up
The state had a scandal cooking the last time the Legislature worked on redistricting, in 1991, and there was something brewing in 1981, and ten years or so before that. Lawmakers knew they were going to have problems with Medicaid, but had no idea that would involve anything but money.
Drop the Money and Back Away Slowly
Explain this to your daddy: The State of Texas has $5.2 billion more money to spend over the next two years than it had during the last two years. There is probably enough money available for the state to continue to do the things it already does, even when you factor in inflation and other increases.

