For some candidates, the 2012 elections will be decided in court.
redistricting
Texas Counties Object to April 3 Primaries
In papers filed in federal court today, officials who administer the state’s elections said the April 3 primaries — agreed to by the Democratic and Republican parties and ordered by a panel of federal judges — create an impossible situation.
Courting Voter Confusion
The election experts in the room were a beehive of nonverbal communication. Their reaction was on their faces: “Is this a drill? They’re kidding, right?”
Updated: Political Parties Agree to April 3 Primaries
Texas Democrats and Republicans agreed to hold unified primary elections on April 3, avoiding the costs and confusion brought on by litigation over new political maps for congressional and legislative districts.
In Redistricting Fight, a Comfort Zone for Abbott
The attorney general is in the happy position of defending redistricting maps that benefit his allies and punish his foes — all in the name of official state business.
Timing is Everything
When is a filing deadline not a filing deadline? When you don’t have maps.
Splitsville
If you can’t hold congressional and legislative primaries on March 6 — because you don’t have maps in time — what happens next?
Inside Intelligence: Primary Concerns
The state doesn’t have maps for its congressional and legislative districts, throwing the date what was going to be a March 6 primary into question. It seemed like a good time to ask the insiders about this.
Campaign Roundup: The Week’s Political News
When will the elections be held? Sometime next year. The dates for the congressional and legislative elections won’t be certain until maps have been approved. But candidates are filing, and endorsements haven’t stopped.
Attorney General Holder: We Must Uphold Voting Rights Act
The warning from U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder was polite but firm: The U.S. Department of Justice will not stand idly by if it feels Texas intends to halt or reverse gains for minority voting rights.

