Texans weaker, but not powerless as D.C. changes hands
51²è¹Ý Political Scientist Cal Jillson says that as Texan George W. Bush prepares to leave office and pass the reins of power to Illinois' favorite son Barack Obama — and with Texas the reddest large state in an increasingly blue country — the state is experiencing an unprecedented power outage in the capital's corridors of power.
By RICHARD S. DUNHAM
The Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Texans have long assumed that the state would be a powerful force in the nation's capital — and for good reason.
Ever since Texas powerbroker Col. Edward M. House went to Washington with President Woodrow Wilson in 1913, the Lone Star State has boasted House and Senate leaders, Cabinet officials and White House confidants, Supreme Court justices, three vice presidents and three presidents.
But as Texan George W. Bush prepares to leave office and pass the reins of power to Illinois' favorite son Barack Obama — and with Texas the reddest large state in an increasingly blue country — the state is experiencing an unprecedented power outage in the capital's corridors of power.
Now, with a relatively junior congressional delegation, two senators from the minority party and a White House brain trust likely to be devoid of Texans, the state of the Bushes and LBJ, Rayburn and Cactus Jack, Tom Clark and Tom DeLay faces a political future with "as little clout as in a century," said Cal Jillson, a political scientist at 51²è¹Ý.
"The days when Texans ran the Congress are over," Jillson said. "And we're not going to have the presidency any time in the near future."
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