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Ryan J. Rusak

Texas AG Paxton steps in it on 2020 election, employee lawsuit. Had enough yet, GOP?

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The saga of Ken Paxton: Our Opinion coverage

Our Editorial Board has closely followed the saga of Attorney General Ken Paxton. Read our coverage to catch up on the issues in his impeachment, and check out our analysis as the trial unfolds.

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Ken Paxton has demonstrated, once again, that he’s a ticking time bomb for Texas Republicans.

The attorney general was in El Paso last week to announce a lawsuit against the Biden administration over border security. A woman in the crowd asked him about standing up to the “overthrow” of President Donald Trump in last year’s election. She used the term twice, to which Paxton said: “I agree with you.”

Not a good look for an official who brought an absurd lawsuit in which Texas tried to intervene in other states’ election laws on Trump’s behalf.

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected that idea without a hearing. Paxton suffered another legal blow last week, as a state appellate court declared that, despite the attorney general’s protestations, he is not above the law.

Paxton argued that as an elected official, whistleblower protections for his employees don’t apply to him. It was a lame attempt to dismiss a suit brought by four former employees who alleged that the AG illegally tried to help a campaign donor with legal issues.

Paxton survives on his reputation as a righteous conservative. Republican voters have propelled him to two terms. But what’s conservative about an elected official trying to stand above the law? What’s conservative about endorsing an unfounded conspiracy theory about the 2020 election? What’s conservative about arguing that states should be able to meddle in one another’s elections?

Let’s not forget, too, that the whistleblower allegations were no “deep state” coup attempt. Several of those who accused him of wrongdoing were hand-picked loyalists, known as solid conservatives themselves.

Paxton came the closest of any state GOP officeholder to losing in 2018, despite facing an unknown Democratic opponent. Other Republicans sense weakness, and the AG has three significant primary challengers so far.

Each would pursue a similar conservative agenda: suing the Biden administration, defending religious liberty, pursuing election fraud cases. Each would probably be stronger than Paxton in next year’s general election.

Unseating an incumbent, even one with obvious blemishes, is hard. But as last week proved, GOP voters should ask themselves: Why, exactly, is Ken Paxton worth all this trouble?

Editor’s note: This column originally appeared in our opinion newsletter, Worth Discussion. It’s delivered every Wednesday with a fresh take on the news and a roundup of our best editorials, columns and other opinion content. Sign up here.

This story was originally published October 28, 2021 at 5:04 AM.

Ryan J. Rusak
Opinion Contributor,
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Ryan J. Rusak is opinion editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He grew up in Benbrook and is a TCU graduate. He spent more than 15 years as a political journalist, overseeing coverage of four presidential elections and several sessions of the Texas Legislature. He writes about Fort Worth/Tarrant County politics and government, along with Texas and national politics, education, social and cultural issues, and occasionally sports, music and pop culture. Rusak, who lives in east Fort Worth, was recently named Star Opinion Writer of the Year for 2024 by Texas Managing Editors, a news industry group.
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The saga of Ken Paxton: Our Opinion coverage

Our Editorial Board has closely followed the saga of Attorney General Ken Paxton. Read our coverage to catch up on the issues in his impeachment, and check out our analysis as the trial unfolds.