Gov. Greg Abbott has signed the so-called “Death Star” bill that strips the state’s municipalities of their power to strengthen labor rights, environmental protections, and more. Democracy annihilated.
by Kenny Stancil, CommonDreams.org
Texas Republicans this week completed their demolition of local democracy in the state when Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill that drastically limits the ability of cities and counties to enact progressive policies.
House Bill 2127, pushed by corporate lobbyists and signed into law on Wednesday, prohibits municipalities from adopting and enforcing new local ordinances that contradict what’s permitted under nine broad areas of the Texas state code. The new law doesn’t just prevent localities from implementing fresh regulations; it even overturns existing measures that exceed state rules governing agriculture, business and commerce, finance, insurance, labor, local government, natural resources, occupations, and property.
Progressives have long condemned H.B. 2127 as the “Death Star” bill, a reference to the space station the Empire used to destroy self-governing planets in Star Wars. When the law takes effect on September 1, democratically elected policymakers will be preempted from improving working conditions, tenant rights, environmental safeguards, and more.
“H.B. 2127 is an unprecedented, dangerous power grab that is already beginning to put workers’ safety at risk, and will leave our communities vulnerable in times of crisis,” the Texas AFL-CIO tweeted Thursday. “The state will now have near-total control of the issues that impact us most. Texans didn’t ask for this.”
BREAKING: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has signed the "Death Star" bill, which will decimate local control.
Local governments will no longer be able to meaningfully pass bills on issues like housing, worker protections, public health, and more.
The state will now override local laws.— More Perfect Union (@MorePerfectUS) June 15, 2023
When the GOP-controlled Texas Senate approved the legislation last month, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg (I) called it “probably the most undemocratic thing the Legislature has done, and that list is getting very long.”
The Gulf Coast AFL-CIO similarly decried H.B. 2127 as a “dangerous attack” on democracy that “will fundamentally alter” Texas.
“It will roll back decades of worker protections and public safety measures, and ban new ones,” the union declared last month. “Leaders we elect to serve our communities won’t be able to pass policies that address our needs as working people.”
In April, when the GOP-controlled Texas House passed H.B. 2127, Terri Gerstein, director of the Project on State and Local Enforcement at the Harvard Law School Center for Labor and a Just Economy, expressed alarm that Republicans were poised to reverse and disallow numerous local occupational health and safety laws—including measures recently ratified by city officials in Dallas and Austin that require construction companies to give workers water breaks when temperatures reach a certain threshold.
Texas, where heat-related workplace deaths have doubled in the last 10 years, is already among the most dangerous places in the country for workers; more workers have succumbed to heat illness in Texas than in any other state over the past three decades. The deadly effects of extreme heat are only projected to grow worse as the U.S. and other rich nations fail to adequately confront the fossil fuel-driven climate crisis, and Texas Republicans have chosen to exacerbate the problem by outlawing required water breaks and other essential protections.
U.S. Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas), a recently elected progressive member of Congress who represents a district between Austin and San Antonio, noted that laws such as H.B. 2127 underscore the need for federal legislation to enhance public health and the well-being of workers and ecosystems.
The signing of HB 2127 today is an attack on our democracy & an assault on worker rights. Workers will lose protections, including rest breaks, & be more vulnerable to exploitation. We will organize & fight bc every worker should make it back home safely at the end of the day. pic.twitter.com/JI4ZluSbVN
— Workers Defense Action Fund (@WDActionFund) June 15, 2023
Texas’ new law is expected to go far beyond barring municipalities from mandating water breaks for construction workers. Mandatory paid sick leave and minimum wage provisions are also on the chopping block.
In addition, opponents warned last month that “local governments would no longer be able to combat predatory lending or invasive species, regulate excessive noise, or enforce nondiscrimination ordinances,” as The Texas Tribunereported. “But those changes might be just the start.”
As the newspaper explained:
Texas Sen. John Whitmire (D-15), who is running to become Houston’s mayor, lamented last month that H.B. 2127 would be the “final nail in the coffin” of local government and eradicate the notion of “local control.”
The New Republic‘s Prem Thakker wrote Thursday that “Texas is showing us what has always been the case: Conservatives’ conception of ‘local control’ just means ‘I control you.'”
The legislation’s lead sponsors were state Rep. Dustin Burrows (R-83) and state Sen. Brandon Creighton (R-4).
Thakker detailed Burrows and Creighton’s conflicts of interest:
“The same politicians working to suppress our vote are now trying to subvert it,” the ACLU of Texas tweeted Thursday. “Instead of taking power away from our communities, state politicians should want local leaders to have the power to represent us.”
As the Gulf Coast AFL-CIO explained last month:
“H.B. 2127,” the union added, “is an unacceptable infringement on our right to have a say in how the places we live and work are governed.”
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