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The King Ain’t Dead

January 9th, 2007 at 8:07 pm

If any doubt remained that Tom Craddick was about to survive an unprecedented challenge to his House speakership, it was formally vanquished at 5:57 p.m. In the legislative equivalent of tipping over one’s king to surrender a chess game lost, Democratic Rep. Jim Dunnam moved that the speaker’s election be an open record vote, with each member’s preference instantly flashed in red or green on the House tote boards.
The motion, approved without objection, effectively undid hours of tedious debate on voting procedures crafted in an effort to let members — especially fellow Republicans — oppose Craddick without fearing political payback.

And immediately thereafter, the fear of revenge coursing through the chamber was measured in the final tally. Rep. Jim Pitts, Craddick’s GOP challenger, had already withdrawn rather than ask supporters to fall on their swords. Craddick was re-elected 121-27 in a race that early this morning was too close to call.

Craddick’s opponents failed to kill the king, and three questions loomed over weary House members on adjournment:
Which members abandoned the insurgency? What were members promised for their votes? And what revenge, if any, will Craddick unleash on those who worked to oust him, most notably when he hands out committee assignments in the coming weeks?

By nature, drama in the Texas House plays out in excruciatingly small increments — a procedural vote here, a point of order there — as competitors vie to precisely shape the final vote.

Tuesday’s House session proved nothing if not excruciating for those who hoped to topple the leadership.
According to Pitts, the Waxahachie Republican, his race fell apart sometime around 10:30 in the morning when a deal with a number of Craddick Republicans fell through. So why were members and their families subjected to seven hours of choreographed tedium?

“We didn’t know the deal was truly dead until the vote,” said Pitts.

The deciding moment was a vote on whether the election for speaker would be a secret ballot. The likely winner of a secret ballot would have been Jim Pitts. In that vote, members had to show publicly whom they supported. Craddick’s side won 80 to 68, and at that point it was only a matter of time before Pitts conceded.
Craddick couldn’t have done it without the support of 11 Democrats.

After his swearing in, Craddick went out of his way to thank three of them — Aaron Pena, Patrick Rose, and Sylvester Turner — for seconding his nomination.

“I am greatly honored and humbled by your vote today,” Craddick said.

Time will tell.

by David Pasztor

6 Responses to “The King Ain’t Dead”

  1. Susan Baughman says:

    Bully!

    Four hours spent sitting in my Rep’s office. Excitement at the start to hear that the secret ballot just might go through! Enter Craddick wielding a huge needle to pop our party balloon.

    More than once while walking down Congress, while heading to the Austin Club for refreshment, the term “bully” was heard bandied about the possibly poisonous air.

    Just like a 6th grade schoolyard. Oh goody.

  2. Jim says:

    It’s good to see your blog. Keep up the good work!

  3. Texas Observer Blog » Blog Archive » The Back Hall says:

    […] The exchanges got heated. “I thought things were going to change,” Dunnam said, referring to the recent speaker’s race and talk of ending the atmosphere of intimidation in the House. “Yet here we are on the first day [of debate]…and Mr. [Burt] Solomons [R-Carrollton] has apparently gone from loving [the amendment] to being told that he has to be against it.” […]

  4. Texas Observer Blog » Blog Archive » CHIP’s Ahoy says:

    […] Money alone won’t heal CHIP. Lawmakers also must reverse the bureaucratic barriers mostly responsible for siphoning about 200,000 kids off the program since September 2003. Turner said he believes his bill (HB 109), which eliminates the bureaucratic roadblocks, will pass out of the Human Services Committee soon. The scuttlebutt at the Capitol has it that Turner’s bill to restore CHIP was one of the legislative goodies the Craddick Democrats received for their decisive support of Speaker Tom Craddick’s reelection. […]

  5. Texas Observer Blog » Blog Archive » House Rules says:

    […] Sylvester Turner, the highest-ranking “Craddick D,” can’t win for trying. The Houston Democrat’s HB 551 stalled out again today on […]

  6. Texas Observer Blog » Blog Archive » Turner’s Turn says:

    […] conference committee. This will be Turner’s chance to show that his role as a leader of the Craddick D’s in the oh-so-long-ago speaker’s race was worth it […]

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