Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas TribuneEditor's note: If you'd like an email notice whenever we publish Ross Ramsey's column, click here.
Conversations about how to legislate during a pandemic have animated lawmakers since the new coronavirus reared its head in Texas earlier this year.
Under non-pandemic conditions, he and other state leaders would at least be pretending new political maps could be turned out during the regular session.
In a normal 140-day regular session, the Legislature considers thousands of bills and passes fewer than one in four of them.
As soon as the census is complete and delivered to lawmakers, they have to draw new political maps for the Texas congressional delegation, the Texas Legislature and the State Board of Education.