Hundreds of protesters gathered in the summer heat outside the University Center on Monday to rally against a proposed Texas congressional redistricting before a public hearing on campus.
On July 9, Gov. Greg Abbott announced an 18-item agenda for a special session, including a mid-decade redraw of the Texas congressional maps, which made waves throughout the state.
Hosted by the Texas House of Representatives' Select Committee on Redistricting, the hearing was scheduled in the evening at UTA’s Rosebud Theatre to discuss 14 of 38 congressional districts in Texas.
Several government officials spoke out against the redistricting during the protest, including Texas Rep. Chris Turner, D-Grand Prairie, U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey, D-Fort Worth and Tarrant County Commissioner Alisa Simmons.
Having recently undergone a county redistricting that shifted Precinct 2, which formerly contained most of Arlington, Simmons said she understood the issue well.
“Don’t mistakenly call this a power grab, a political play. It is racism," Simmons said. “It is diluting the voting strength of people that look like me, and who are Hispanic, Asian and others.”
Texas Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, said the issue is that people are attempting to ensure they gain and maintain power, while shifting others away.
“This is ground zero, Texas, and if it happens in Texas, it can happen anywhere in this country,” West said. “If it happened on the congressional level, it could happen at the local level.”
He said that he was glad to see protesters show up in near 100-degree weather and are able to express their opinions.
“That continues to give me faith that democracy is not dead, that it is still alive,” West said.
Chants criticizing President Donald Trump, denouncing gerrymandering and demanding fair redistricting maps echoed through the parking lot where protestors stood outside the University Center.
Yaseen Tasnif, sociology and logistics senior, said the attempt to redistrict was a call to action from Trump, asking Abbott to push for up to five Republican congressional seats.
“It feels like it’s taking away our representation, specifically when it comes to UTA,” Tasnif said.
They said a lot of voices will be diluted if the redistricting goes into place.
Irving resident Staceye Randle, said lawmakers should be focusing on enhancing infrastructure and ensuring people have access to life-saving measures, referring to the recent Hill Country floods.
“[Lawmakers] need to listen to the people in their communities, to their constituents,” Randle said. “That’s the most important thing. We put them in office and we can fire them.”
Not everyone at the event shared that perspective. Across the street, Arlington resident Kenny Mills, 64, stood with an American flag and voiced his support for the redistricting.
Mills said the community elects its representatives, and if they decide that there needs to be redistricting, he agrees.
“I’m sure when [democrats] were in charge, there was plenty of it going on,” Mills said. “I think [Republicans] are doing a good job.”
But Turner disagreed.
Turner said that what lawmakers are attempting is wrong and that they are targeting two majority-minority congressional districts in Texas and dismantling them.
“In our first two hearings, we’ve heard from hundreds of people, in Austin and Houston, who have shown up to testify,” Turner said. “Not a single person said they’re in favor of this.”
During the public hearing at UTA and during two separate hearings in Austin and Houston, there were no redistricting maps to show the public what the specific changes would be. Turner, who serves on the Texas House of Representatives’ Select Committee on Redistricting, stated that without maps, the public can't testify on any issue.
“We’ve asked repeatedly, ‘Where’s the map? Who has the map? Who’s seen the map? When are we going to see the map?’ and we’re being stonewalled,” he said.
Turner said the protest was about the community not wanting a Trump takeover of Texas.
“We want Trump and Abbott to leave these congressional districts alone and not further gerrymander an already heavily gerrymandered map,” he said.
@ tay._.sansom @wall035203