They ran out of money, time, and safe places to hide.
For a week, Texas House Democrats fled their own state, trying to stop Republicans from erasing their seats off the map.
But the threats mounted. The cash dried up. A judge cut off outside help.
They are returning not in triumph, but in exhaustion.
The week-long boycott briefly froze the Republican redistricting plan, but it never broke the GOP’s grip on power.
Once a court ruling cut off outside funding for their absence, the Democrats’ resistance became financially and personally unsustainable.
Lawmakers faced mounting threats, family strain, and the simple reality that they could not live indefinitely in political exile.
Back in Austin, Republicans are poised to move swiftly.
With only a handful of Democrats needed to restore a quorum in the House,
GOP leaders plan to end the current special session within days and are ready to launch another immediately.
The redistricting map that could erase multiple Democratic seats now looms over their return,
a stark reminder that delay is not the same as victory—and that in Texas, walking out has never guaranteed a way ba
