Archive for the ‘Tea Party’ Category

The Trump-Fox News relationship is coming to a head. Here’s what might be coming next – WICZ

By Brian Stelter, CNN Business

The leaders of Fox News will never say this out loud, but they believe that their media empire is bigger than President Trump.

And they have billions of reasons to think so: Billions of dollars in revenue along with millions of loyal viewers.

Fox employees are confident that the Biden years will be prosperous for the network, and they're not losing sleep over the prospect of "Trump TV," according to numerous sources at the company.

But some observers think they should be concerned. It is possible that the outgoing President could damage the Fox brand and peel away disillusioned viewers if he launches a media company of his own. It is possible that the right-wing media map, long controlled by Fox, is about to become balkanized.

In the days since Fox and the other major networks called the election for President-elect Joe Biden, Trump has been stoking anger at Fox and promoting the much smaller and often more conspiratorial right-wing networks Newsmax and One America News.

Then again, he has also been watching Fox, tweeting quotes from favorable commentators, and seeking counsel from Fox's 9 p.m. host, Sean Hannity.

Here's the best way to interpret what's going on: Trump and Fox patriarch Rupert Murdoch have had a corporate marriage of convenience for five years. Trump is threatening to break up, but Fox has been through plenty of these rough patches before.

The question now is what Trump might do after he leaves office. A Trump-branded streaming service appears more likely than a "Trump TV" cable channel. But almost anything is possible: A radio show hosted by Trump, an expansion of the Trump campaign's current webcasts, or a licensing deal with a company like Newsmax.

What about a "Donald Trump Tonight" talk show on Fox? Is that out of the question?

The answer is no, at least not entirely. There are almost always pieces that could be moved. For example: Hannity's been at Fox for almost 25 years now. Maybe he could retire and let Trump take his place.

But at the moment, Trump is fuming about the network's coverage. So here is a viewers guide to the months ahead.

Trump was a Fox News viewer before he was a Fox News star. He learned a lot about the Republican party's base by watching the network and calling into the morning show "Fox & Friends" while still starring on NBC's "Celebrity Apprentice." He continued to call in to and appear on the network regularly while running for the Republican party's nomination in 2015 and 2016, even as he attacked Fox host Megyn Kelly and lambasted some of the network's commentators.

He has had the same carrot-and-stick approach ever since: Complimenting his Fox supporters -- rewarding them with interviews and Twitter plugs and visits to the White House -- while complaining about Fox's dissenters.

Murdoch used to be vocally critical of Trump's conduct. The media mogul famously wrote on Twitter in the summer of 2015, "When is Donald Trump going to stop embarrassing his friends, let alone the whole country?"

But Murdoch made peace with Trump as the Republican primary field narrowed and Trump won the nomination. He didn't believe Trump would beat Hillary Clinton in the general election, but when Trump did, Murdoch reached what one family friend later called a "detente."

The media marriage was visible for all to see on TV. Fox touted Trump and he touted the network. The Murdochs profited while Trump benefited from Fox's promotion and propaganda.

Earlier this year I wrote a book titled "Hoax: Donald Trump, Fox News, and the Dangerous Distortion of Truth," based on information from confidential sources in and around Fox. I quoted a former "Fox & Friends" producer who said outsiders misunderstood the relationship.

"People think he's calling up 'Fox & Friends' and telling us what to say. Hell no. It's the opposite," the former producer said. "We tell him what to say."

This braggadocious view is backed up by a scroll through Trump's Twitter feed, which shows that he often starts his day by watching the "Friends" and repeating what they said on TV.

Trump's Fox News fixation was a major theme of his presidency. He hired people from Fox, fired people because of Fox, and gave most of his national TV interviews to Fox. Sometimes it was hard to tell where Trump ended and Fox began. But even with this close relationship, he was still prone to sending mean tweets whenever he didn't like something on the network. Fox executives usually just ignored his complaints. They felt that they, not the President, had the power.

It's important to recognize that Fox has a near-monopoly position in right-wing TV. The network's audience is extraordinarily loyal, as was demonstrated in late 2016 and early 2017 when three of Fox's biggest stars -- Megyn Kelly, Bill O'Reilly and Greta van Susteren -- all left in a nine-month period, and the ratings basically stayed the same.

For many in the TV business, the lesson was that, on Fox at least, everyone is replaceable. Does that lesson apply to Trump too?

In some ways he is Fox's biggest star of the past five years. But now his presidential show is ending.

Trump might think that Fox needs his star power, and on the margins it's true that Trump appearances and interviews are right-wing ratings boosters. But the network was No. 1 long before he became a politician.

As sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild wrote in her 2016 book "Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right," about Tea Party supporters in Louisiana, "Fox News stands next to industry, state government, church, and the regular media as an extra pillar of political culture all its own."

"To some," she explained, "Fox is family."

It takes a lot more than a Trump tweet to convince people to abandon family.

Nevertheless, Trump might be trying to dissolve this media marriage.

In line with his past jabs at Fox's news coverage, he wrote on Thursday that "@FoxNews daytime ratings have completely collapsed. Weekend daytime even WORSE."

Fox's daytime ratings are looking somewhat soft this week, but that's not a surprise, since Biden's victory is interpreted as bad news by the Fox base.

The network is also feeling pressure from the far-right, from channels such as Newsmax, which are criticizing Fox for projecting Biden's win in Arizona and calling Biden the president-elect.

Newsmax's ratings have skyrocketed in recent days, but Fox is still heads and shoulders above all of its challengers.

Trump's tweet on Thursday continued: "Very sad to watch this happen, but they forgot what made them successful, what got them there. They forgot the Golden Goose. The biggest difference between the 2016 Election, and 2020, was @FoxNews!"

Trump leveled similar charges against Fox throughout the 2020 campaign.

But his assertion that he was Fox's "Golden Goose" doesn't add up. The network has been growing steadily for years, thanks to a loyal audience that distrusts most of the rest of the national media. Stars like Hannity encourage and worsen this alienation each day by attacking what he calls "fake" news.

Sources inside Fox predicted that Trump would snap back to normal and praise the network's opinion hosts in a day or two. Earlier this week, he posted numerous videos from both Fox and Newsmax's pro-Trump shows.

Axios reported on Thursday that "Trump has told friends he wants to start a digital media company to clobber Fox News."

A subscription streaming service would let him convert rallygoers into paying customers and compete with Fox at the same time.

A Fox insider heaped doubt on that idea, however, by pointing out that Trump is old-fashioned -- he is obsessed with big-screen television, not newfound streaming apps.

When I was working on my book, the Murdoch family friend told me of the relationship between Trump and Fox, "There was something in it for both of them. At the end of the day, business trumps ideology. Business trumps principle."

Whatever he decides to do, the coming months will go a long way toward answering a two-sided question: Does Fox need Trump more, or does Trump need Fox more?

Continued here:
The Trump-Fox News relationship is coming to a head. Here's what might be coming next - WICZ

What will Mike Pence do next after Trump’s election loss? – The Guardian

Across the street from the British embassy, with its red telephone box and Winston Churchill statue, in Washington DC is the residence of the US-vice president. It has its own basketball court, on which Mike Pence reportedly installed a logo from the 1986 film Hoosiers starring Gene Hackman about small-town Indiana sports.

Fortunately, the Washington Post noted a couple of years ago, the logo is removable.

Pence, a former governor of Indiana, and his wife, Karen, will be packing their bags and moving out of the residence in January to make way for Americas first female vice-president, Senator Kamala Harris of California, and her husband Doug Emhoff.

Said to have nurtured ambitions for the presidency since he was 16, Pence must now decide what to do with the rest of his life. Among the 61-year-olds options: a return to his roots in conservative talk radio as a way to remain relevant in his party.

I think he would want to stay involved in Republican politics and probably in a more conventional way than the president, said Michael DAntonio, co-author of The Shadow President: The Truth About Mike Pence. So he could be a broadcaster, and therell be lots of opportunity for that, but he would be nicer than Trump.

When he was on the radio in Indiana, he called himself Rush Limbaugh on decaf. There is a lot of potential in that identity for him.

In a more low-key version of Trumps own ascent-by-celebrity, Pence used his prominence as a conservative radio show host in the 1990s as a springboard to a political career in 2000. He served six terms in the House of Representatives and was an early advocate of the Tea Party movement.

Elected governor of Indiana in 2012, he was widely condemned for a slow response to an HIV outbreak and for signing religious freedom legislation that made it easier for conservatives to refuse service to gay couples. Then he joined forces with Trumps election campaign in 2016 and proved a crucial enabler and apologist for the 45th president.

That continued on Monday when Pence signaled his support for Trumps baseless legal challenges to the 2020 election result, tweeting: Told @VP Team Today, it aint over til its over.. and this AINT over! President @realDonaldTrump has never stopped fighting for us and were gonna Keep Fighting until every LEGAL vote is counted!

But on Tuesday, even as the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, declared: There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration, Pence simply remained silent when asked by reporters, What evidence is there of widespread voter fraud?, Do you think the election was stolen from the president? and Is it time to concede?

It was also reported that Pence and his family would travel to the Florida island of Sanibel on Tuesday for a holiday, in what might be an attempt to distance himself figuratively and literally from Trumps refusal to concede defeat.

The approach has been a hallmark of Pences vice-presidency: at once both unswervingly loyal to Trump and yet also managing to fade into the background at the most politically damaging moments. Pence is head of the White House coronavirus taskforce, but it is Trump who has shouldered the most blame for Americans disastrous pandemic.

DAntonio said: Pence has done well to stay on the right side of Trump without becoming a snarling and profane apostate. Thats pretty impressive in terms of contorting himself into the one shape that may be acceptable to a majority of the voters.

Last weeks election result did not necessarily deal a death blow to Pences hopes of running for the White House in 2024. A victory for Donald Trump would have left Pence or any other Republican with the historically formidable challenge of securing a third consecutive term for the same party.

Instead Trump and Pences resilient haul of more than 70m votes, a higher total than any incumbent president and vice-president in history, was not the wholesale rebuke that Republicans feared. Unless Trump himself runs again, it gives Pence a potential launchpad.

DAntonio continued: He would hold to his beliefs religiously and politically but offer himself as the kinder, gentler version of Trump and, if that were the case, he might actually win a majority of the votes in a national election where Trump never has. He could run with a woman vice-presidential candidate and be very appealing. Im sure that theyre already gaming this out.

In this years election campaign Pences thunder at the vice-presidential debate was stolen by a fly that nestled in his snowy hair. But as a born-again Christian, he once more proved an effective salesman to white evangelical voters turned off by Trumps unholy behaviour. DAntonio added: Its a tremendous asset: thats probably 30m votes right there.

In the electoral college, I think it pretty well aligns with the red portions of the map and he would do better than Trump in Michigan and Wisconsin because those are pretty heavily evangelical states. We definitely have not seen the last of Mike Pence.

There is only one Republican alive who has been part of an incumbent presidential ticket that lost a re-election campaign: Dan Quayle, also from Indiana, and former vice-president under George HW Bush. After defeat in 1992 he wrote three books, founded and sold an insurance business in Indiana, worked in academia and took a lucrative position at a private equity firm.

But old friends of Pence in Indiana hope that he will remain involved in politics. Charles Hiltunen, who was at law school with him in Indianapolis and last saw him about two weeks ago, suggested he could bring his influence to bear on the Senate, where the balance of power depends on two runoff elections in Georgia in January.

Depending on the makeup, thats where Pence could have a role to play as the mediator or trying to get issues going, he said. I think he and Joe Biden have had a great relationship. It would be a good opportunity for him to be a statesman and show some leadership on key issues.

Hiltunen, a principal at the lobbying firm Sextons Creek, also suggested that Pence might go back to conservative radio. Mike would probably be a good spokesperson there if thats what he wanted to do. Its going to be fascinating to me to see what his next chapter is.

One of the biggest questions is whether Pence, once criticised by columnist George Will for his talent for toadyism and appetite for obsequiousness, will continue to defend Trump or decide to cut him loose so that he can pursue his own political aspirations.

Moe Vela, a former senior adviser to Al Gore and Joe Biden, said: He and a whole host of people, including possibly Donald Trump, will be back in 2024. The 70m-plus votes that they received is going to give them oxygen, so I dont think youve seen the last of Mike Pence.

It will be fascinating to see whether he waits to see what Trump is going to do or whether he disregards what Trump is going to do and does his own thing. Is he going to be loyal even post-presidency, or is that loyalty going to end now? I personally think hes going to go out and do his own thing and say, I was so loyal to you. I stood by you. Your times up. Its my turn.

This article was amended on 12 November 2020. An earlier version overlooked Walter Mondale in referring to Dan Quayle as the only person alive who has been part of an incumbent presidential ticket that lost a reelection campaign. Quayle is the only such Republican.

See the article here:
What will Mike Pence do next after Trump's election loss? - The Guardian

Dont expect Trump to go quietly into the night | Letter – lehighvalleylive.com

After losing the election, President Trump unwittingly joined his most hated group (losers), which include one-term presidents. Trump also bears the stigma of being impeached, which makes him the obvious supreme loser in the history of modern one-termers (Herbert Hoover, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush).

If Republicans think Trump will go quietly into the night like normal presidents leaving office, he will do just the opposite. The decibel level of his late night and early morning tweets will exceed that of jungle birds during mating season. Additionally, he will blame anyone and everyone for his loss and continue his virus-spreading public rallies of the remaining faithful, to aerate his deflated ego. Hell create a Trumpian bloc within the GOP that will make the Tea Party look like an actual tea party.

He also will continue to rend the once-proud Republican Party to a nadir where recovering their respectability and soul is impossible, because they abdicated both when defending the indefensible.

This defeat came at a most inopportune time for Trumps age, as his hair management team had his hair plugs just starting to artificially grey at the temples, which happens to actual hair on real presidents near the end of their first term and distinguishes them from executives in other professions. I also think its a near-certainty that the New York state judicial system is waiting to prosecute, convict and jail the entire Trump family.

Ron Pizarie

East Allen Township

View post:
Dont expect Trump to go quietly into the night | Letter - lehighvalleylive.com

Editorial: Cornyn got more votes than Trump in Texas. He can afford to call Trump out. – Houston Chronicle

Several days after his decisive victory, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn tweeted out a TV report noting that his re-election had marked the first time in two decades that a Senate candidate had won more votes than a presidential candidate in Texas.

A Twitter user with a mere 13 followers responded: I didnt vote for Trump, but I voted for you. I know others that could not give their votes to Trump, but cautiously gave votes to you. Represent us. Stop bowing down to Trump, and defend our democracy. PS: The emperor has no clothes!

We couldnt have said it better.

When political leaders make the biggest impacts on their times, more often than not its because two things presented themselves at just the right time: power and opportunity to use it.

Cornyn finds himself standing at just such a juncture, and if he summons the courage and wisdom to use the moment, he could make a lasting contribution to his state and his country.

President Donald Trump continues to lash out at the election results, rallying other voices in the GOP to trash our electoral system. The damage such protestations are doing is profound, ranging from delays in getting the transition process started to more inchoate but lasting harm such as reduced trust in the system by millions of voters.

As weve said before, and others have echoed all weekend, the president has the right to pursue valid legal questions in court.

There is a way to do that, however, without hysterical statements about widespread corruption for which there has yet to be any proof and without Trumps false assertions of triumph despite receiving fewer than the necessary 270 electoral votes and losing the popular vote by 4.2 million votes and counting.

But one necessary ingredient to stop the damage Trump is doing has been sadly lacking. Too few voices among the GOP establishment are willing to say the obvious: Joe Biden and Kamala Harris appear to have won the election. Given that the Trump team has produced no evidence of fraud that, even if proved, would change the outcome of the election, the silence is inexcusable.

Former President George W. Bush of Texas said as much over the weekend. Four senators including Mitt Romney, R-Utah, and Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, have spoken up.

But most others havent. That silence has created an opportunity for Cornyn to be especially effective, should he only break his own silence.

Cornyn just won his fourth term in a 10-point landslide. He beat an extraordinarily well-funded Democrat without relying on anyones coattails.

That puts him among the top 20 most senior members of the Senate. Should he finish his fourth term and win another, hell be among the longest-serving senators in modern Texas history.

While South Carolinas Lindsey Graham appears to be groveling in gratitude to Trump for helping him keep his Senate seat, even parroting baseless claims about corruption, Cornyn isnt beholden to Trump.

For the first time, Cornyn appears to be heading to Washington with something even better than a fat war chest: independence. Its a truly rare commodity in the Capitol, and for Cornyn himself.

Eighteen years ago, Cornyn, a respected attorney general who had championed open government and had hoped to do so in Washington, won his first term after leaning heavily on Bush, who was elected president midway through his second term as governor and was riding high. For the next decade, he served largely in the shadow of the more influential Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and then in fear of the tea party movement that put Ted Cruz, his polar opposite, in the Senate.

After winning his third term in 2014, Cornyn was elevated to majority whip as his party took control and for the next four years served loyally as Majority Leader Mitch McConnells chief deputy. He left the leadership post two years ago and ever since has been preparing to win this last election.

All of that is behind him now. In recommending voters replace Cornyn, this editorial board argued that his innate caution had morphed under Trump into near-total acquiescence. We argued that was reason enough to hire a new senator.

Well, the voters disagreed.

Now he returns to Washington not beholden to Trump, unafraid of the tea party and free to chart his own course as a senior member of the Senate who wont have to stand for re-election for six more years.

What better way to signal that new independence than to speak up on behalf of Texas and America to say to Trump: Its time to concede.

Go here to read the rest:
Editorial: Cornyn got more votes than Trump in Texas. He can afford to call Trump out. - Houston Chronicle

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is back in hot water. Hes escaped before. – The Texas Tribune

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

When news broke last month that top aides to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton had accused him of bribery and abuse of office, many in the Texas political scene were shocked but not surprised.

In a mutiny without precedent, eight of Paxtons most senior aides told law enforcement they believed Paxton broke the law by using the agency to serve the interests of a political donor, Nate Paul. Media reports and documents have now shown four times when Paxton used his office in a way that appeared to benefit the struggling Austin real estate magnate.

Paxtons reaction was anything but cowed: He shot back at the rogue employees, called their allegations false and, just over a month later, has fired four of the whistleblowers. While the nature of the attorney generals relationship with Paul remains unclear, Paul revealed last week in a deposition that he had employed a woman at Paxtons recommendation. Paul said it was not a favor to Paxton. But the woman had been involved in an extramarital affair with Paxton, according to two sources who said they learned of it directly from the attorney general in 2018.

This is not the first time the states top lawyer, who is a co-chair of the Lawyers for Trump coalition, has found himself facing criminal accusations.

Paxton has spent much of his time in public life deflecting accusations of illegal and unethical behavior, causing quiet discomfort among some Republican colleagues and casting a shadow over an office top state officials once held and still revere. This time he has implicated not just himself, but cast into question the work of the sprawling agency, too.

The second-term Republican was indicted for felony securities fraud less than a year after he was sworn in as Texas attorney general, charges that did not keep him from winning reelection in 2018. Beyond those charges which he has dismissed as politically motivated and for which he has yet to stand trial there have been other ethical red flags: a curious reversal of the states official position in a lawsuit involving conservatives in his home county; a bizarre intervention on behalf of a donor in another state; an ethically dubious bill to augment his power, filed by his wife, a state senator; six-figure contributions to his legal defense fund that he insists do not violate Texas anti-bribery laws.

A conservative culture warrior, Paxton has held on politically through it all, with fellow Republicans staying quiet or reserving judgment as he awaits a trial his team has helped delay. In 2018, he avoided a Republican primary challenger, arguably the greatest threat to an incumbent in Texas.

But this time, legal experts and political consultants say, may be different. His usual defenders are staying quiet; even his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton, has not commented on the new allegations. The crimes he is accused of are serious and so are his accusers, who among them have years of service at the agency and conservative bona fides to rival Paxtons own. And the allegations are tied not just to Ken Paxton the individual, but to his work at an agency that has for years been one of the states most effective policy battering rams.

Ive been troubled from the beginning, from his first indictment that hasnt been resolved in five years. I think that is a bad thing for the office, and I wish he wouldve gotten that resolved one way or another earlier, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, a former Texas attorney general, said last month in an interview with Austin TV station KXAN. Cornyn said he would reserve judgment but added, It is pretty dramatic when his senior staff walk out and basically file a complaint against him. Thats really unprecedented.

The attorney generals office was Gov. Greg Abbotts springboard to a national profile and the governors mansion. Cornyn held the office, and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz worked there as solicitor general under Abbott. Its been the states best vehicle for challenging federal policies on immigration and the environment. This week, it was the Texas attorney generals office that asked the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down the Affordable Care Act, a policy feat Republicans in Congress could not achieve.

Now, the leader of that agency is facing fresh allegations, and the states law firm is hemorrhaging senior staff. But Paxton has bounced back before.

Hes got dark clouds over him, theres no question about it, said Bill Miller, a longtime lobbyist and a friend of Paxton but never, ever count him out.

If you look at his career path, and his arc, hes been down and come back up with a vengeance. So dont count him out.

An Air Force brat, Baylor class president and attorney, Paxton was elected to the Texas House in 2002 and has held public office ever since. He ran and lost as the conservative candidate for Texas House speaker, then ascended to the Texas Senate before running for attorney general.

His resume, compared with recent attorneys general, was heavier on politics than law. A graduate of the University of Virginia Law School, Paxton worked in private practice and as in-house counsel for J.C. Penney Co., but he was also focused on private business dealings. Abbott and Cornyn, his predecessors, had both served on the Texas Supreme Court.

But Paxton did have the political support of the Republican partys right flank, and the backing of Tea Party groups in his hometown.

In 2014, as Paxton fought a bitter Republican primary for his first term as attorney general, news began to trickle out that he had violated state securities law. In April 2014, Paxton signed a disciplinary order and paid a $1,000 fine for soliciting investment clients without being registered, as required by law. A spokesperson called it an administrative oversight.

Amid the heated primary campaign, the McKinney Police Association law enforcement in his hometown withdrew its endorsement, saying it is necessary to protect the integrity of the AG Office. His opponent, Dan Branch, made ethics the centerpiece of his campaign, running advertisements that featured investors who said Paxton had misled them.

Amid the allegations, Paxton ran a quiet campaign, leaning on his support from the partys conservative wing. He won in the primary and was elected that fall.

He was already in office in July 2015 when he was indicted on felony securities fraud charges. He is accused of persuading investors to buy stock in a company without revealing that he was making a commission, and of failing to register with the State Securities Board. Conservative groups and a state lawmaker came to support him at his first courtroom appearance, telling media they supported him with prayers as he entered a not guilty plea.

The case has dragged on since, with battles over prosecutor pay and venue that traveled all the way up to the states highest court for criminal matters, sat there for months, and ended up back at the trial court. More than five years after the indictments, Paxton has yet to go to trial.

Although Democrats continue to make major hay of the charges, Paxton maintained enough support from conservatives to stay in office. Supporters compared his case to that of former Gov. Rick Perry, whose team spun the former governors indictment for abuse of power as a political hit job, and whose case was eventually dismissed.

With the securities fraud accusations, conservatives didnt necessarily think Paxton was blameless but he looked sloppy more than anything else, conservative political consultant Luke Macias said.

The past accusations were more like Democrats trying to impeach Trump, Macias said. This time is different, he said: The allegations are more serious, and theyre coming from attorneys respected on the right for their legal abilities and their conservative credentials.

A federal court dismissed a similar securities fraud charge against Paxton in March 2017, boosting Paxtons argument that the state case was more political than criminal. And Paxton has expertly played on tactics that worked for President Donald Trump, calling the case a witch hunt and dismissing his detractors as political adversaries. (Liberals abused our courts to attack Ken Paxton, one ad declared.) He remained a strong fundraiser.

Paxton, a competitor for the title of Texas top culture warrior, has positioned himself close to Trump, becoming the first state attorney general to support his executive order banning travel from several Muslim-majority nations. Their litigation agendas have often aligned on major cases like Texas effort to overturn the Affordable Care Act. And in public appearances, Paxton likes to tell stories about the president, like the time Trump called while Paxton was in the shower.

The securities fraud charges were at the center of Democrat Justin Nelsons 2018 bid to unseat Paxton, but the controversy wasnt enough to overcome Republican dominance in Texas. Armed with Trumps endorsement and with hundreds of thousands of dollars from Abbotts campaign Paxton narrowly won a second term, and cheered on his wife as she was elected to the state Senate from a seat anchored in Collin County.

In February 2019, as one of the first bills the freshman senator filed, Angela Paxton proposed a new law that would have greatly expanded the power of her husbands agency, including giving him power to exempt individuals from state securities law, which he is accused of violating. She characterized the bill, which did not pass and was never heard in committee, as a consumer protection measure.

The pending criminal charges have not been the only cloud over his head during his time leading the states law firm.

Ethics watchdogs have long been skeptical of Ken Paxtons legal defense fund, through which he has accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars from family friends. State law bars elected officials from taking gifts from anyone subject to their authority, but Paxton has said the gifts are an exception.

In 2013, he plucked another attorneys $1,000 Montblanc pen from a bin at a Collin County courthouse, returning it when the other attorney realized it was lost. The incident, which a Paxton spokesperson at the time called a simple mistake, made a prominent appearance in ad campaigns against him.

And his political and personal beliefs have more than once guided the states official legal position, more, critics say, than the law itself as when the agency declined to defend a state law about end-of-life care, and refused to represent a state agency that was challenged for reprimanding a judge who refused to perform wedding ceremonies for same-sex couples.

The Texas State Bar was ordered to investigate when Paxton told county clerks two days after the U.S. Supreme Court made same-sex marriage legal nationwide that they could opt out of issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. He was never publicly sanctioned.

In 2018, after conservative activists in Paxtons home county personally urged him to reverse the agencys position in a lawsuit, the attorney generals offices brief was pulled from the case without explanation.

This spring, Paxton appeared to wield the power of his office on behalf of a political donor who was advised not to go to his Colorado vacation home while it was under local coronavirus restrictions, the Associated Press reported.

In late October of 2018, as Paxton fought that rough reelection battle, he received a $25,000 donation from Nate Paul, a prominent real estate investor who has made headlines in recent years for a spate of bankruptcies and lawsuits from creditors and who is now at the center of the allegations against Paxton.

Paul and Paxton are friends, but the full scope of their relationship has remained murky.

Paul revealed in a deposition last week that he employed a woman at Paxtons recommendation, though Paul said hiring her was not a favor to Paxton. The woman had an extramarital affair with Paxton, according to two people who said Paxton told them about the affair in 2018. Paul said in the deposition he did not know the nature of their relationship.

Now, legal documents and media reports have shown four instances when Paxton used the power of his role as attorney general to step into legal matters involving Paul.

One was an unusual intervention into a case involving a charity, the Roy F. and Joann Cole Mitte Foundation, at odds with Paul in a legal dispute over some jointly owned investments.

At least three other instances of Paxton serving Paul also raised concerns for top agency brass. Paxton became personally interested in an open records dispute over what documents could be released to an attorney who worked for the same law firm as Pauls lawyer, The Dallas Morning News first reported. And a legal opinion from Paxtons office which he rushed subordinates to issue helped Paul avoid foreclosures on properties in Austin, Plano and San Antonio, the Austin American-Statesman first reported.

But it wasnt until another intervention, in September, that aides went to federal authorities. Paxton personally tapped Brandon Cammack, a 34-year-old Houston defense attorney, to vet a claim made by Paul that there had been wrongdoing by federal and state authorities when they raided his home and office in 2019.

An investigation by the agency, according to an internal email from the senior aides, had already shown Pauls complaint lacked any good-faith factual basis. But Paxton personally called Cammack who legal experts say was unqualified for the bizarre and challenging role and signed off on a $300 hourly rate for him to investigate Pauls claims.

Mark Penley, deputy attorney general for criminal justice, ultimately stepped in to quash the subpoenas Cammack obtained for targets of Pauls complaint. He was one of the whistleblowers who signed on to a letter alleging wrongdoing by Paxton.

Seven of the aides made the report to law enforcement on a Wednesday, Sept. 30. On Thursday they notified the agencys human resources department and texted Paxton himself. That Friday, Jeff Mateer Paxtons top aide for years abruptly resigned, and Paxton put Penley on leave. The news came via a text from the agencys human resources director, who made it clear the instruction had come from the top.

Ive been directed by General Paxton to let you know that he is placing you on paid investigative leave effective immediately, Greg Simpson, the human resources director, wrote.

When the story broke in a local newspaper that weekend, Paxtons office pointed the finger back at the whistleblowers. He dismissed several of his most senior deputies as rogue employees and their allegations as false. And the agencys press team went so far as to suggest that the whistleblowers themselves would be investigated.

Making false claims is a very serious matter, a statement from the office warned.

Top Texas Republicans including Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick have called the allegations concerning. U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, a Republican who won reelection in a tight race this fall and Paxtons former top aide, has already called on his former boss to resign.

The Attorney General deserves his days in court, but the people of Texas deserve a fully functioning AGs office, Roy said.

Federal authorities have declined to say whether they are investigating Paxton, and the Texas Rangers said they referred complaints against Paxton to the FBI. But legal experts say its all but certain federal authorities are vetting the accusations against Paxton.

It would be highly unusual for federal authorities not to investigate, given the seriousness of the allegations and the presumed credibility of the accusers, said Edward Loya, a Dallas attorney and former prosecutor for the U.S. Department of Justice who handled public corruption investigations.

That is a serious claim made by law enforcement professionals who, we expect, understand the gravity of such an accusation, Loya said. He added that its unlikely any major developments would become public about the investigation for several months.

Meanwhile, the last of the eight whistleblowers, Ryan Bangert, resigned last month. Two others had already resigned, and Paxton had put one on leave and fired four others actions that are presumed to be retaliation under the Texas Whistleblower Act, and could open up the state to massive damages in lawsuits, employment attorneys say.

Ian Prior, a political spokesperson for Paxton, said the personnel decisions were not retaliation but were instead reactions to unspecified policy violations, and, in one case, insubordination.

Now, Paxton sits at the head of an agency that is hemorrhaging senior staff even as its workload a slew of election-related lawsuits, thousands of child support cases, an argument at the U.S. Supreme Court remains heavy and urgent.

In addition to the eight whistleblowers, Paxton has lost Ben Williams, who had worked with the attorney general since his days in the Legislature and ran Paxtons campaign for House speaker and state Senate. Williams resigned just days after the allegations were made public. Katherine Cary, the agencys chief of staff, was already set to retire this fall. Marc Rylander, a longtime Paxton ally and the agencys former communications director, left in September. And Simpson, who headed the agencys human resources department during the debacle, retired at the end of October.

At a senior staff meeting last month, before the whistleblowers had left or been fired, Darren McCarty, a former senior aide, asked Paxton whether the agency would stop bashing them in statements to the media. There was no response.

In an Oct. 16 letter to the Legislature, Paxton insisted that the agency was forging ahead full bore a characterization some current and former agency staff members consider far rosier than the truth.

Some attorneys in litigation-heavy divisions of the agency fear his reputation will hurt their credibility in court.

Any action taken by the AGs office under General Paxton is suspect, said Shane Phelps, who was a senior deputy at the agency under former attorneys general Cornyn and Dan Morales. The agency has to keep litigating its thousands of cases, on everything from child support to the death penalty, but now judges will be on the lookout for any indication that its being handled irregularly, in any way that is coming from the top and for all the wrong reasons.

It has damaged the credibility and the ability of the AGs office to further the interest of the state of Texas in court, Phelps said, and given all sorts of ammunition for anybody opposing the AGs office in court to start talking about these things.

Something needs to happen, Phelps said. It sounds like hes getting pretty brazen.

And politically, Paxton is beginning to look like a man without a country. George P. Bush, Texas land commissioner, is exploring a run for the attorney general job, an aide said last month. The political allies who stuck by Paxton through the securities fraud allegations have largely gone quiet.

Of course, its possible Paxton will have left office by the time that race takes place. But a spokesperson said the attorney general is absolutely planning on running again.

Paxton, Prior said, is looking forward to winning a third term and is never going to stop fighting for the people of Texas.

Miller said Paxton is under pressure, but hes not afraid.

If you count this guy out, youve made a mistake, he said.

Shannon Najmabadi contributed reporting.

Disclosure: Bill Miller has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

See the original post:
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is back in hot water. Hes escaped before. - The Texas Tribune