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Molly Ivins

These people don't want to govern, they want to rule
September 10, 2003

AUSTIN, Texas -- Well, fellow Texans, they can stick a fork in us, 'cause we're done. Not only has Governor Goodhair called yet another special session (cost now at over $5 million) to implement Tom DeLay's dirty redistricting deal, but we're about to vote an end to public access to the courts, as well.

            Unless a miracle occurs -- like a whole lot of Texans giving up time on a football Saturday to go vote on a bunch of boring propositions -- Sept. 13 will see the end of the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution. Cleverly disguised a cap on medical malpractice awards, Proposition 12 is a direct assault on an independent judiciary.

            A hundred years ago, Justice Moody of the U.S. Supreme Court wrote: "The right to sue and defend in the courts is the alternative to force. In an organized society, it is the right conservative of all other rights and lies at the foundation of orderly government. It is one of the highest and most essential privileges of citizenship." The sickening irony is that we will vote to do this to ourselves, under the impression that we're helping doctors contain the cost of medical malpractice insurance.

            Why the docs let themselves get conned into fronting for the insurance companies on this one is beyond me, but that's what has happened. Friendly Doctor Welbys are all over the airwaves in ads telling us how they're being driven out of business by the high cost of medical malpractice insurance and the only way they'll be able to continue delivering babies and curing measles is if we vote for this abomination. Of course the poor docs are getting screwed by the insurance companies -- it's awful. But instead of regulating insurance rates, our bought-and-paid-for legislature went after our legal rights, instead.

            Don't let anybody tell you Prop. 12 is just about med-mal, just a little cap on jury awards in this one area. This is the whole ball of wax. This thing permanently alters the separation of power between the judicial and legislative branches.

            For 150 years, the Texas Constitution has guaranteed that every person who has suffered some sort of injury shall have remedy by due course of law. Prop. 12 limits the right to sue makers of dangerous supplements like Fen-fen, makers of unsafe tires and exploding gas tanks, polluters, drunk drivers, manufacturers of unsafe medical devices like the Dalkon Shield and corporate crooks. People like Ken Lay and Jeff Skillings of Enron, who destroyed the life savings of thousands of people, get legal protection under Prop. 12. This is the Polluters and Predators Protection Act. And it doesn't even do anything to discourage frivolous lawsuits.

            We aren't going to get any insurance-cost rollbacks out of this. One major insurance company already has approval for a 30 percent increase from the state Insurance Department. They're raising rates now so they can claim a "rollback" next year -- you can count on maybe a big 3 percent "drop." I can't even call the people who vote for this "suckers" because I know how much money the big special interests are spending to get this thing passed.

            For a comprehensive and beautifully researched look at just who bought the legislature and for what purpose, I highly recommend the Aug. 29 issue of The Texas Observer, with its cover article, "Hogwild: How a small group of politicians and corporations bought themselves a legislature."

            This case study of the Texas Association of Business and its tools -- including Tom DeLay, Goodhair Perry and Speaker Tom Craddick -- is the best explanation of what is happening in Texas anyone has written for years.

            Meanwhile, back at the Capitol, Goodhair and the boys don't even have a map ready yet. Lt. Gov. Dewhurst, who sensibly said at the beginning of the regular session that the state has a lot more important issues than redistricting to worry about, has now come around to the partisan Republican lockstep position. Wonder what they promised him?

            I'm not even sure this is a smart deal from their viewpoint. The fact is, we would already have a majority-Republican congressional delegation if it weren't for one thing -- Republicans. It's Republicans who cross the ballot in those West Texas districts to vote for the old Democrats they like. And they are not happy campers about this insane power grab.

            All of you people in other states better watch out -- it could happen to you, too. As State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos observed, "These people don't want to govern, they want to rule."

            To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Molly Ivins

"More issues in the business section"
  October 26, 2003

"Gully-washing, frog strangling..."
  October 22, 2003

"Stupefying"
  October 20, 2003

"Bush-hater strikes again "
  October 16, 2003

"Outrage and irony"
  October 8, 2003

"Why did we invade Iraq?"
  October 7, 2003

"Are you confused yet?"
  October 2, 2003

"Anyone but Bush"
  September 30, 2003

"George W. Bush's America"
  September 24, 2003

"A terrible president "
  September 23, 2003

"The Full Ostrich on Iraq"
  September 18, 2003

"These people don't want to govern, they want to rule"
  September 10, 2003

"Sigh."
  September 9, 2003

"I told you so again"
  September 4, 2003

"Arnold: Politics as showbiz"
  August 26, 2003

"Weathervanes for the wrong direction"
  August 21, 2003

"The All-American Blame Game!"
  August 19, 2003

"Hang in there, Texas Eleven"
  August 13, 2003

"National credulity fitness"
  August 11, 2003

"Utter degradation of political discourse"
  August 7, 2003

"One overwhelming impression: deception"
  August 5, 2003

"Iraq: The peace from hell"
  August 1, 2003

"It's not fair"
  July 31, 2003

"More intelligence"
  July 29, 2003

"The Other Great State"
  July 23, 2003

"Legal nonsense"
  July 21, 2003

"A stinging rebuke to the disgraceful level of journalism"
  July 14, 2003

"Recent Supreme Court action"
  June 30, 2003

"Global warming? Just edit it out!"
  June 26, 2003

"Medicare Prescription Drug Bill: 'This is soooo complicated'"
  June 24, 2003

"Iraqi gold rush"
  June 18, 2003

"'This perverse episode'"
  June 16, 2003

"Budget imbalance "
  June 12, 2003

"Psst, kids, there's money in the wind"
  June 10, 2003

"Like a bridge over troubled waters"
  June 5, 2003

"'Weapons of Mass Distortion'"
  June 2, 2003

"Media ownership"
  May 28, 2003

"The question remains: Why?"
  May 28, 2003

"The Texas Legislature"
  May 27, 2003

"Democrats With Cojones"
  May 15, 2003

"Straight from the pit of hell"
  May 14, 2003

"Bush is a liar"
  May 8, 2003

"Plastic flamingos"
  May 6, 2003

"Texas law"
  May 1, 2003

"What WMD 's?"
  April 29, 2003

"Another bad idea from the Republican Party"
  April 24, 2003

"Another big fight"
  April 8, 2003

"This is more than exciting"
  April 3, 2003

"Democracy is the big loser in this war"
  March 27, 2003

"Who's in the money now?"
  March 25, 2003

"War in springtime"
  March 20, 2003

"Bidding on societal change"
  March 18, 2003

"Bribery, blackmail and Bush"
  March 13, 2003

"Right and Wrong"
  March 11, 2003

"Taxes and Texas"
  March 5, 2003

"Spying on the UN and other US antics"
  March 4, 2003

"Axis of evil boomerang"
  February 27, 2003

"Bush has another plan"
  February 25, 2003

"Patriotic or Not?"
  February 20, 2003

"Don't boycott the French!"
  February 18, 2003

"What the hell is going on?"
  February 13, 2003

"Of tax evasion and denials"
  February 11, 2003

"Conservatives in Action"
  February 8, 2003

"Deficit at record high"
  February 5, 2003

"State of the Union"
  January 29, 2003

"Campaign donations and the State of the Union"
  January 28, 2003

"The Evil Q"
  January 23, 2003

"Health Care needs someone to care"
  January 20, 2003

"Appalling silence"
  January 16, 2003

"The Ledge"
  January 15, 2003

"Fine Print"
  January 14, 2003




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