The office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton strongly pushed back Friday afternoon on attempts by some Republicans in the Texas House of Representatives to impeach him, saying that the articles of impeachment were so weak that if they were filed in court they would likely be dismissed.
News that the state House had been investigating Paxton was made public on Tuesday â the same day that Paxton called on House Speaker Dade Phelan, who is friendly with the Left, to resign after video emerged allegedly showing himâin a state of apparent debilitating intoxicationâ on the House floor.
Two days later, 20 articles of impeachment were filed against Paxton.
BREAKING: I have obtained over 6 minutes of Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan being either drunk or having mini strokes while presiding over the Texas House of Reps. pic.twitter.com/4SOXmT7SHA
â Greg Price (@greg_price11) May 24, 2023
Impeachment proceedings are set to begin on Saturday.
Paxtonâs shot at Phelan came the same day that news broke that the House Committee on General Investigating was probing Paxtonâs attempt to settle a 2020 lawsuit using an alleged $3.3 million in public money. As part of its investigation, the committee has subpoenaed Paxtonâs office for records.
Four former employees of the attorney generalâs office brought the suit in 2020, claiming they were retaliated against after accusing Paxton of corruption. The state legislature refused to fund the settlement, so the case continues to work its way through the courts.
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Paxton issued a lengthy rebuttal to the articles of impeachment, urging members to reject them due to ânumerous failures,â ranging from not substantiating claims to not understanding his role as attorney general.
For example, on the first article of impeachment â Disregard of Official Duty â Protection of Charitable Organization â Paxtonâs office writes:
The Articles of Impeachment imply that the Attorney General is legally required to âact as [the] public protector of charitable organizations.â He is not. He is required to protect the public from illegal conduct by charitable organizations. Hence why he is constitutionally authorized to investigate those organizations (see Tex. Const. art. IV, § 22). Likewise, section 123.002 of the Texas Property Code provides that the Attorney General is to act âfor the behalf of the interest of the general public of this state.â The Office of the Attorney General initially sued the Mitte Foundation in 2009âbefore General Paxtonâs electionâto protect the publicâs interests.
Paxtonâs office continued by offering strong pushback to the other Articles of Impeachment, including II. Disregard of Official DutyâAbuse of the Opinion Process, III. Disregard of Official DutyâAbuse of the Open Records Process, IV. Disregard of Official DutyâMisuse of Official Information, V. Disregard of Official DutyâEngagement of Cammack, VI. Disregard of Official DutyâTermination of Whistleblowers, VII. Misapplication of Public ResourcesâWhistleblower Investigation and Report, VIII. Disregard of Official DutyâSettlement Agreement Similarly, IX. Constitutional BriberyâPaulâs Employment of Mistress, X. Constitutional BriberyâPaulâs Providing Renovations to Paxton Home, XI. Obstruction of JusticeâAbuse of Judicial Process, XII. Obstruction of JusticeâAbuse of Judicial Process, XIII. False Statements in Official RecordsâState Securities Board Investigation, XIV. False Statements in Official RecordsâPersonal Financial Statements, XV. False Statements in Official RecordsâWhistleblower Response Report, XVI. Counts XVI through XXâConspiracy and Attempted Conspiracy; Misappropriation of Public Resources; Dereliction of Duty; Unfitness for Office; Abuse of Public Trust.
Tim Pearce contributed to this report.Â
