News for North Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

As Republican Leaders Meet In Dallas, Protesters Rally Outside

Bill Zeeble
/
KERA News
Protesters outside the Dallas Anatole opposing the meeting of the American Legislative Exchange Council.

Some of the nation’s most powerful Republican politicians are in Dallas this week for the annual convention of the American Legislative Exchange Council – known as ALEC. There was action inside and protests outside.

The Dallas meeting is ALEC's 41st annual gathering, and exemplifies a kind of button-down conservatism. That’s reflected in its core values repeated a lot: free markets, limited government, and federalism – another way of saying state’s rights.

ALEC creates legislation it hopes states adopt. It helped with the Stand Your Ground laws that garnered bad publicity after George Zimmerman killed Treyvon Martin and used the law for his defense.  ALEC helped write failed ordinances Farmers Branch passed trying to keep illegal immigrants from renting there.

Texas House Speaker Joe Straus welcomed ALEC attendees at today's luncheon. He’s glad the non-profit no longer pushes immigrant renter rules.

Credit Bill Zeeble / KERA News
/
KERA News
Texas Speaker of the House Joe Straus welcoming members of ALEC at the group's 41st annual meeting in Dallas.

“So I applaud them,” Straus said, after his remarks to the crowd, “for staying more focused on free markets and federalism and maybe leaving some of those other things aside.” 

Outside the Hilton Anatole, hundred of protesters gathered around a giant inflated cartoon banker. ALEC sees itself as deeply rooted in American values. However, former Texas  Agriculture Commissioner  Jim Hightower views the group as un-American.

“The corporate lobbyists bring drafted legislation,” Hightower explained, “that they hand to these legislators to go back and pass in their own state legislature. And so that’s where these laws come from. If you want to know where the sausage is made, there it is, right there, they’re always schmoozin’ and boozin’ together and stiffin’ the people.”

Credit Bill Zeeble / KERA News
/
KERA News
Protesters inflated a giant, cigar-chomping, fat businessman to make fun of ALEC members gathered in the Anatole hotel.

Without ALEC’s pro-business philosophy and employers though, Wendy Lowe, a lobbyist who attended the lunch, said folks like those marching outside might not have jobs that pay for food, shelter, or luxuries.

“There are a lot of small business men in this room,” Lowe said. “Jobs and the economy and making your  rent and paying the electric bill are really important to everyone. That’s what we care about.”

She and others at the ALEC meeting offer no apologies for what they say makes this country great. 

Bill Zeeble has been a full-time reporter at KERA since 1992, covering everything from medicine to the Mavericks and education to environmental issues.