The Paxton impeachment sham by The Establishment undermines Texas voters’ will.
Texas Politics: A History of Rancor and Lawfare
Texas politics have long been rancorous, unscrupulous, and, in recent years, marred by bitter lawfare — weaponizing the legal system to circumvent election results.
Consider LBJ’s theft of the 1948 Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate, which his Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer, Robert Caro, confirmed was due to ballot box stuffing in south Texas’ corrupt Jim Wells County. Other examples abound. More recently, Democratic prosecutors in Austin, the seat of ultra-liberal Travis County, have filed baseless criminal charges against a series of Republican elected officials, including then-state Treasurer (and later U.S. Sen.) Kay Bailey Hutchison, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, and even sitting Gov. Rick Perry.
Not all of the attempts to kneecap political opponents involve Democrats attacking Republicans. Some of the nastiest donnybrooks were initiated by “establishment” or “moderate” Republicans against conservatives.
The establishment worried that Paxton, thrice elected as AG, would become the frontrunner to succeed Abbott as governor, decided to double down on its lawfare campaign. Provoked by Paxton’s claim that Texas Speaker Dade Phelan should resign for appearing on the House floor while intoxicated, in May the House voted to impeach Paxton on additional charges of doing favors for a wealthy campaign donor (Austin real estate investor Nate Paul) and terminating four staffers who claimed to be “whistleblowers.”
Under Texas law, the impeachment vote resulted in the immediate suspension of Paxton from his duties as AG, pending the outcome of his trial in the Texas Senate, scheduled to begin on Sept. 5. A two-thirds vote of the Senate — a more conservative body than the Texas House — is needed to convict Paxton. Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, a conservative stalwart who endorsed Paxton in the 2022 primary election, will serve as presiding officer at the impeachment trial. The Texas Republican Party supports Paxton.
The impeachment proceedings reassemble antagonists from previous skirmishes. One of Paxton’s lawyers is Tony Buzbee, who represented Rick Perry in the frivolous charges filed while he was governor. The team advocating for conviction includes Houston lawyers Rusty Hardin (who played a similar role in the futile campaign against Wallace Hall) and Dick DeGuerin (who previously defended Kay Bailey Hutchison and Tom DeLay). DeGuerin also achieved notoriety for representing David Koresh during the Waco standoff.
What will happen at Paxton’s impeachment trial on Sept. 5? In November 2022, the ultimate jury in Texas politics — the voters — marked 4,278,986 ballots for Paxton. Will a cabal of vindictive establishment hacks succeed in overturning the election? Texas is a popular democracy, not a parliamentary system. Executive officials are chosen by the voting public, not the legislature. A strong argument can be made that under Texas law, an elected official cannot be removed from office for misconduct if the predicate offenses antedated an election and were a matter of public record known to the electorate.
The rationale, in the words of the Texas Supreme Court, is that “the public, as the ultimate judge and jury in a democratic society, can choose to forgive the misconduct of an elected official if the public knows about such misconduct prior to the election.” To the dismay of the RINO establishment in Texas, their campaign to besmirch Paxton has not diminished his popular support. The voters selected him despite extensive public airing of various allegations about him. As Americans witnessed during the presidency of Donald Trump, impeachment is the last resort of frustrated political opponents unable to get their way through the democratic political process.
In Texas, as in the nation’s capital, impeachment is just another form of lawfare. Convicting Paxton would bar him from holding public office in the future — precisely the establishment’s goal, contrary to the voters’ mandate. Such a result would be tantamount to a banana republic coup unworthy of the Lone Star State.
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