Late last night, I reblogged a bio of Texas Senator Wendy Davis. She is the woman who filibustered Texas’s proposed TRAP law – SB 5. This bill would have contained several burdensome restrictions on a woman’s constitutional right to seek a safe, legal abortion, including:
- Limit[ing] most abortions to the first 20 weeks of a pregnancy.
- Requir[ing] that doctors performing abortions have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles.
- Requir[ing] abortion clinics to meet the standards of an ambulatory surgery center.
- Put[ting] new rules [into place] around abortion-inducing medications, including requiring that women take such medicines in the presence of a doctor.
Along with over 180,000 people, I watched in real-time the YouTube streaming of the filibuster, parliamentary procedures, and the eruption of voices in the gallery until 1 am Central time (2 am my time here in Pennsylvania) when the YouTube feed was shut down.
NPR has a good report on what happened.
Apparently votes are electronically recorded and time stamped into the legislative journal. Reporters took pictures of these records immediately after the vote. The initial record had a time stamp of “June 26, 2013,” which was after the constitutionally mandated shut-down of a special legislative session.
Then a few minutes later, the time stamp mysteriously changed from “June 26, 2013″ to “June 25, 2013.” Republicans allegedly changed the time stamp for the SB5 abortion bill vote. Behold the magic from Becca Aarronson, reporter at the Texas Tribune that shows this doctored document.
So why did the Lt. Governor and the radical right-wing concede? Because of the excellent work of reporters in Texas who were able to show that the recorded vote occurred after midnight.
There was chaos on the floor and outrage when the Lieutenant Governor said that the bill had passed before the midnight deadline. The Democrats continued to contest the Lt. Governor’s ruling, noting that the voting ended after midnight. Which was documented by the automatic time stamp and noticed by the press.
Because the vote actually occurred at 12:02 am on Wednesday rather than before the Tuesday midnight deadline, the Republicans finally conceded that they had lost this fight a little after 4 am Central time when Texas Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst said,
“Regrettably, the constitutional time for the first called session of the 83rd Legislature has expired. Senate Bill 5 cannot be signed in the presence of the Senate at this time. Therefore, it cannot be enrolled. It’s been fun, but seeya soon.
Thank you everyone, especially Senators Wendy Davis (D-Fort Worth) for her filibuster and Senator John Whitmire (D-Houston) for his knowledge of parliamentary procedures. They helped create this much-needed victory on the war on women in Texas.
Meanwhile, I hope there is an investigation of this attempted tampering of the record in order to circumvent Texas’ Constitution!
And here’s my thank you to Senator Davis:
Filed under: Filibuster, Lt. Governor David Dewhurst (R-TX), Reproductive Justice, Sen. John Whitmire (D-Houston), Sen. Wendy Davis (D-TX), War on Women Tagged: Abortion, abortion bill, ambulatory surgery center, current-events, Filibuster, government, legal abortion, legislative journal, politics, Reproductive Justice, War on Women, wendy davis