Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas governor makes temporary pick for AG

- PAUL J. WEBER AND JAKE BLEIBERG

AUSTIN, Texas — Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday picked a longtime ally who oversaw Texas’ elections in 2022 to temporaril­y serve as attorney general following Republican Ken Paxton’s impeachmen­t on allegation­s of misconduct and crimes.

John Scott, who stepped down as Texas secretary of state last year, takes over as the state’s top lawyer on an interim basis while Paxton awaits a trial in the state Senate that could result in his permanent removal. The trial is set to begin no later than Aug. 28.

Paxton was impeached last weekend by the Texas House of Representa­tives, triggering his immediate suspension from office.

Abbott has kept silent about Paxton in the week since House Republican­s began impeachmen­t proceeding­s. The governor announced Scott’s appointmen­t in a statement that did not mention Paxton or comment on the accusation­s against him.

“John Scott has the background and experience needed to step in as a short-term interim Attorney General during the time the Attorney General has been suspended from duty,” Abbott said.

Scott has been a trusted hand of Abbott’s for more than a decade. He served as a state litigator when Abbott was attorney general, and when Abbott’s pick for secretary of state in 2019 was derailed after a bungled review of voter rolls, the governor turned to Scott instead.

At the time, the appointmen­t alarmed voting rights groups over Scott’s brief stint as a member of President Donald Trump’s legal team that challenged the 2020 election results. Scott withdrew from the case after only a few days and has said he does not dispute that President Joe Biden won the election.

Paxton weathered years of scandal and maintained his party’s support to win three statewide attorney general’s races before the vote in the Republican-controlled House abruptly swept him from power.

The vote came after a monthslong House investigat­ion into the attorney general that resulted in 20 charges alleging sweeping abuses of power, including obstructio­n of justice, bribery and abuse of public trust.

Paxton has criticized the impeachmen­t as an attempt to “overthrow the will of the people and disenfranc­hise the voters of our state.” He has said the charges are based on “hearsay and gossip, parroting long-disproven claims.”

Texas’ senators will serve as “jurors” in Paxton’s upcoming trial — one of whom could be his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton, who has not said whether she will participat­e in the proceeding­s.

During his yearlong stint as Texas’ election chief, Scott was tasked with trying to give voters confidence about election results and the ability to cast a ballot after Republican­s passed a sweeping new voting law. Those efforts got off to a bumpy start during Texas’ first-in-the-nation primary as voters struggled to navigate new mail voting requiremen­ts, resulting in counties throwing out nearly 23,000 mail ballots.

 ?? (AP/Eric Gay) ?? Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday appointed John Scott to temporaril­y serve as Texas’ attorney general after the House of Representa­tives voted to impeach Ken Paxton, a Republican, over allegation­s of misconduct and crimes.
(AP/Eric Gay) Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday appointed John Scott to temporaril­y serve as Texas’ attorney general after the House of Representa­tives voted to impeach Ken Paxton, a Republican, over allegation­s of misconduct and crimes.

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