Business Day

Texas Republican­s vote to impeach Trump ally

- Brad Brooks and Maria Caspani

The Texas House of Representa­tives on Saturday voted to impeach attorney-general Ken Paxton, a conservati­ve firebrand and ally of former president Donald Trump who has been accused by his fellow Republican­s of abuse of office.

In historic proceeding­s, the 149-member House voted 12123 to impeach Paxton after hours of debate during which the chamber heard speeches from supporters and opponents of impeachmen­t. Two members were present but not voting while three were absent.

Paxton will be temporaril­y removed from office pending a trial in the Senate, where his wife, Angela Paxton, is a senator. The Texas Senate was in recess until 6pm (SA time) on Sunday, according to its website.

Paxton has denied the accusation­s and denounced the proceeding­s as “illegal, unethical, and profoundly unjust” in a statement on Twitter after Saturday’s vote. “I look forward to a quick resolution in the Texas Senate, where I have full confidence the process will be fair and just,” he said.

In a message on his social media channel Truth Social ahead of the vote, Trump, who is seeking re-election in 2024, vowed to “fight” Texas House Republican­s if Paxton were to be impeached.

The 20 articles of impeachmen­t presented by a Republican-led House committee accuse Paxton of improperly aiding a wealthy political donor, conducting a sham probe against whistle-blowers in his office whom he fired, and covering up his wrongdoing in a federal securities fraud case against him, among other offences.

The proceeding­s laid bare the rift among Texas Republican­s.

Some spoke in support of impeaching the state’s top law enforcemen­t official. “Attorneyge­neral Paxton continuous­ly and blatantly violated laws, rules, policies and procedures,” representa­tive David Spiller said ahead of the vote.

Others vehemently opposed it. John Smithee, a long-serving conservati­ve member of the chamber, said he was not speaking in Paxton’s defence but criticised the process and said there was insufficie­nt evidence.

“There is not [a] word, not one sentence in the testimony before you that would be admissible in any Texas court of law,” Smithee said. “It is hearsay within hearsay within hearsay.”

Paxton has staked out a position on the far right on divisive cultural issues. He has sued the Biden administra­tion nearly 50 times attempting to halt what has he labelled as “unlawful tyrannical policies” on issues including immigratio­n, gun rights and business regulation.

The five-member Texas House general investigat­ing committee voted unanimousl­y on Thursday to recommend that Paxton be impeached and removed from office.

Paxton easily won re-election in 2022 after fending off a Republican primary challenge from George P Bush, a scion of two former presidents.

The committee has heard testimony from its investigat­ors about several years of alleged abuse of office by Paxton, including that he provided friend and donor Nate Paul, a Texas real estate developer, with FBI files related to the bureau’s investigat­ion into Paul.

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