Austin American-Statesman

Texas justice implies Dems will cheat in November

Devine seeking new term on state Supreme Court

- Robert Downen

Texas Supreme Court Justice John Devine is facing new questions about his impartiali­ty after a clip went viral last week in which he implied that Democrats plan to cheat against presumptiv­e Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump in the 2024 election.

“Do you really think the Democrats are going to roll over and let Trump be president again?” Devine asked in a keynote speech at the Texas Tea Party Republican Women’s 2023 Christmas event. “You think they’re just going to go away, all of a sudden find Jesus and (there will) be an honest election? I don’t think so.”

Devine is a former anti-abortionri­ghts activist who claims that churchstat­e separation is a myth and, as a state district judge in Harris County in the 1990s, fought to have a copy of the Ten Commandmen­ts posted in his courtroom. In his successful 2012 campaign for the Texas Supreme Court, he claimed to have been arrested 37 times at anti-abortion protests in the 1980s, and has since been a reliable ally of conservati­ve, Christian voters in the state. Devine narrowly survived a GOP primary challenge last month that centered around his ethics, and now faces state district court Judge Christine Vinh Weems, a Democrat, in the November general election.

Devine acknowledg­ed in his speech that the court could hear more election cases — including those involving Harris County, which Devine accused of trying to “bastardize” election laws when it expanded voting access during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of the county’s protocols were later shot down by the Texas Supreme Court.

“I think those kinds of cases are going to be back to us in this cycle,” he said.

Devine then praised Sen. Paul Bettencour­t, R-Houston, who championed numerous laws that were aimed at Harris County in the wake of the 2020 elections. Last year, the Texas Supreme Court declined to block a law, authored by Bettencour­t, that removed Harris County’s elections administra­tor position.

Bettencour­t, who attended Devine’s speech, returned the praise: “You’re one of the reasons why we do win fights at the Supreme Court,” he told Devine.

Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee blasted Devine’s comments in a statement on Saturday, calling them “shockingly inappropri­ate” and tying them to broader distrust in the judiciary.

“Judges should be honestly evaluating and applying our state’s laws, not giving partisan speeches baselessly accusing members of a different political party of ‘cheating’ in elections,” Menefee said. “It’s shockingly inappropri­ate for a sitting justice to make disparagin­g comments about a party that has been and will continue to be before his court. I hope Justice Devine acts with integrity and recuses himself from Harris County cases moving forward, but given his concession that he views himself as aiding Republican­s in a ‘fight’ against Democrats, I won’t hold my breath.”

Election disputes weren’t the only hot-button issues on which Devine opined that night. Throughout his 40minute speech, he blasted legal challenges to Texas’ abortion laws as a “mockery of God,” and invoked apocalypti­c language when discussing Democrats — saying his judgeship gave him a “front-row seat to the end of the world.”

“Our culture is dying before our very eyes,” he said. “The church seems to be weakened and not know what to do. We have a corrupted government. On a federal level, we’re run by a criminal enterprise. … None of you are going to escape this. And so I would implore you to get closer to the Lord. I would implore you to prepare. I would implore you to bring other people on board.”

Devine did not respond to a request for comment about the comments or the online criticism of them. The backlash comes barely a month after the Tribune reported on another speech he gave last year, in which he again claimed that Democrats had tried to steal elections. In that speech, Devine also blasted his colleagues on the all-Republican Texas Supreme Court as “brainwashe­d” by “Big Law.”

“At times I feel like they would sacrifice the Republic for the sake of the process,” Devine said in that speech. “My concern is that they all bow down to the altar of process rather than to fidelity to the Constituti­on. And when I say that, it’s not meant to be malice towards my colleagues. I think it’s how they were trained — how they were brainwashe­d.”

Devine has recently faced other questions about his ethics. This year, Bloomberg News reported that he had missed more than half of oral arguments before the court this term as he campaigned for reelection.

And in February, the Tribune reported that Devine did not recuse himself in 2022, when the court considered a highprofile sex abuse lawsuit against Southern Baptist leader Paul Pressler and his longtime law partner, Jared Woodfill. Devine, the Tribune found, had worked for Pressler and Woodfill’s law firm for years — and at the same time that the plaintiff in the lawsuit alleged he was molested by Pressler while also working at the firm.

 ?? SARA DIGGINS/ AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? In a speech in December to the Texas Tea Party Republican Women, Texas Supreme Court Justice John Devine, right, said he did not think Democrats would allow for an honest election in their attempt to defeat Donald Trump.
SARA DIGGINS/ AMERICAN-STATESMAN In a speech in December to the Texas Tea Party Republican Women, Texas Supreme Court Justice John Devine, right, said he did not think Democrats would allow for an honest election in their attempt to defeat Donald Trump.

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