One of Their Own: Texas Republicans Consider Ousting Ken Paxton

One of Their Own: Texas Republicans Consider Ousting Ken Paxton



Texas Republicans may oust Ken‌ Paxton, one of their own

Editor’s⁣ note (September ⁢16th): The Texas Senate chose not ⁢to oust Ken Paxton after all. He was acquitted and keeps his state office.

As everyone in the capitol chambers bowed their heads in prayer‍ before opening statements, Ken⁢ Paxton looked straight ahead. It⁢ is a rare court⁢ that Texas’s ⁣attorney-general seeks justice before. After being impeached by⁢ the state’s House of Representatives in May for bribery, lying and dereliction of duty, Mr Paxton is now on trial before its‍ Senate, with the lieutenant governor⁣ presiding as judge ‍and the lawmakers as ⁣jurors. ​His wife, a ‌senator who in 2016 dubbed herself “a pistol-packin’ mama” whose “husband sues Obama”, is barred from voting, but sits among her ⁣peers ‍who​ will determine his fate.

On ‌September 5th ‍the ⁣senators rejected all 16 motions filed by Mr Paxton’s lawyers to dismiss the trial. If that ​is any indication​ of how they plan to vote on impeachment, Republicans in the country’s biggest‍ conservative state seem poised to oust one of⁤ their own. An elected official has not been ejected in Texas‍ in nearly ​50 years⁤ (when a judge stole​ funds earmarked for groceries for the poor), and certainly not since the state’s legislature⁤ and ​governorship ​came⁢ under⁤ Republican control in 2003. “If you’re a one-party state,” ⁢says‌ Jason Sabo, an Austin‍ lobbyist, “eventually the arc⁣ of ​the firing squad comes full circle.”

2023-09-14 06:55:18
Original from www.economist.com
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