Austin American-Statesman

Far-right PAC aims at Paxton enemies

Focus on those who voted for impeachmen­t

- Bayliss Wagner and Hogan Gore

Rebounding from a scandal tying the political group they supported to an avowed Nazi sympathize­r, two farright West Texas oil billionair­es have pumped millions of dollars into Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s crusade against state House Republican­s who voted to impeach him, the latest campaign finance filings show.

Since the political action committee was quietly created in December, Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority has spent more than $3 million to support previously little-known Paxton loyalists competing in Republican primaries and special elections across the state.

Behind the effort are Tim Dunn, the CEO of oil company CrownQuest and a figure of growing importance to the Christian nationalis­t movement, and Farris Wilks, a Cisco pastor whose family has made billions on fracking. Both have driven efforts to push Texas politics further to the right and away from the “establishm­ent,” pouring millions of dollars into the 2022 Republican primaries as well.

Paxton impeachmen­t defense attorney Mitch Little has been the top recipient of the group’s generosity, with donations from Jan. 1 to Feb. 28 totaling almost $300,000, per the Statesman’s analysis of Texas Ethics Commission reports. Candidates Kyle Biedermann, Andy Hopper, Brent Money, Wes Virdell and David Covey, the Republican challenger of House Speaker Dade Phelan, also have received more than $150,000 each in direct campaign contributi­ons from the PAC this year.

Dunn contribute­d roughly $2.4 million to Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority this year, including $700,000 just after the Feb. 24 filing period last Monday, per Texas Ethics Commission reports. The donations follow a $1.3 million contributi­on from Wilks in January. The donations give teeth to the top attorney’s efforts to weed out every

one of the 60 House Republican­s who sent him to a Senate trial over allegation­s of corruption and bribery in May, an impeachmen­t he survived after the Senate acquitted him. The PAC also supports Paxton’s battles on other fronts, including by giving $50,000 to a PAC to oust several Court of Criminal Appeals judges who angered the AG.

The group continues the work of Defend Texas Liberty, a PAC also funded by Dunn and Wilks that spent heavily to support Paxton throughout the impeachmen­t process. The group went dark after The Texas Tribune reported that its president met for several hours with infamous Holocaust denier, white supremacis­t and avowed Nazi enthusiast Nick Fuentes in October, leading several House Republican­s to disavow the PAC. Dunn did not respond to a request for comment Friday.

Paxton’s billionair­e-backed crusade has been surpassed in fervor and cost only by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s scorched-earth school voucher endorsemen­t revenge tour, which has driven more than $6 million in donations and taken him to dozens of towns across the state in recent weeks. Some of the incumbents under fire from Paxton are simultaneo­usly facing threats from Abbott.

While incumbents have still outraised most of their challenger­s, the newly released spending and contributi­on data showcase the impact a very small group of megawealth­y donors and interest groups can have on state races.

Here’s more on some of the candidates in key races who accepted money from the new PAC.

House District 19: PAC supports Troxclair challenger

Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority has contribute­d $150,000 to the campaign of former state Rep. Kyle Biedermann, who is challengin­g former Austin City Council Member and freshman state Rep. Ellen Troxclair, R-Lakeway. Biedermann was heavily criticized after leaked video remarks last month in which he slammed the House for expelling Rep. Bryan Slaton last year after an investigat­ing committee determined he gave alcohol to a 19-year-old intern and had sex with her.

Thirteen House Republican women signed on to a letter supporting Troxclair in the election after the video, which was posted Feb. 8 and shows Biedermann questionin­g, “Was he convicted? What was his crime?” and making a distinctio­n that the sexual encounter took place at a private residence and not the Capitol.

Troxclair had raised at least $1 million more than Biedermann by Feb. 24, with significant help from Abbott. The governor has given more than $280,000 to the Austin-area candidate for her support of school vouchers, which would allow the state to use public money to fund part or all of a student’s private school education.

Neither Troxclair nor Biedermann responded to the Statesman’s request for comment.

HD 21: PAC props up challenger to Paxton nemesis Phelan

Phelan, R-Beaumont, has been a major target for Paxton and his allies since he led the House in its effort to impeach the state’s top cop. Both former President Donald Trump and Paxton have publicly endorsed Phelan’s challenger, David Covey.

Phelan also has a history with Dunn’s and Wilks’ funding efforts. After the ties between Defend Texas Liberty and neoNazi Fuentes were revealed, the speaker and Texas Democrats called on Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick to return a $3 million contributi­on he had received from Defend Texas Liberty before presiding over Paxton’s impeachmen­t in the Senate.

Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority has been the main backer of Covey, giving more than $400,000 to the oil and gas industry consultant’s campaign, per Transparen­cyUSA. The roughly $800,000 Covey has raised in total, however, pales in comparison to the more than $6 million in campaign contributi­ons Phelan has received.

Neither Phelan nor Covey responded to the Statesman’s request for comment.

HD 65: Paxton defense attorney top recipient of PAC funds

Little, Paxton’s attorney, is challengin­g Dallas-area freshman Rep. Kronda Thimesch, R-Lewisville, who voted to impeach Paxton in May. The attorney was Thimesch’s campaign treasurer until joining Paxton’s legal team in the lead-up to the trial.

In the race against his former boss, Little has collected $295,000 from Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority alone and about $600,000 total, the Statesman found.

But he is still far behind Thimesch, who had raised at least $900,000 by Feb. 24, according to Transparen­cyUSA. Her two top donors were the Texans for Lawsuit Reform PAC, which gave $230,000 in total, and Abbott, who donated more than $110,000, probably in recognitio­n of her pro-voucher stance.

In response to the Statesman’s request for comment on the finance data, Thimesch slammed Little for accepting money from the PAC and highlighte­d her conservati­ve record.

“Mitch is an opportunis­t who opposes Gov. Abbott’s border security efforts and gladly accepts hundreds of thousands of dollars from fake conservati­ves who viciously attack Republican­s, including Governor Abbott and me,” Thimesch wrote in a statement to the Statesman. “Voters are right to distrust Mitch and every other candidate who is bought and paid for by groups that associate with avowed neo-Nazis and Holocaust deniers.”

Little did not respond to the Statesman’s request for comment.

Texans United for a Conservati­ve Majority has spent more than $3 million to support Paxton loyalists competing in Republican primaries and special elections.

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Phelan
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Little
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Thimesch

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