Santa Fe New Mexican

State senator could vote in husband’s trial

Woman faces ‘conflict of interest’, not required to recuse self from case

- By Jim Vertuno and Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, Texas — On the way to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton becoming a rising figure in the GOP, his wife, Angela, used to entertain crowds with a guitar and a song.

“I’m a pistol-packin’ mama, and my husband sues Obama,” she sang at campaign events and Republican clubs in Texas.

When it came time for the high school teacher and guidance counselor to launch her own political career, a $2 million loan from her husband propelled Angela Paxton to a narrow victory for a state Senate seat in the booming Dallas suburbs. Once elected, she filed bills to expand his office’s powers, and approved budgets over his state agency and salary.

Now, Sen. Paxton is a key figure in the next phase of Ken Paxton’s historic impeachmen­t: as a “juror” in a Senate trial that could put her husband back in office or banish him permanentl­y.

It’s a role that raises an ethical cloud over the Senate proceeding. State law compels all senators to attend, but is silent on whether she must participat­e.

“If it were a trial in the justice system, she would be completely required to [step aside],” said Kenneth Williams, professor of criminal procedure at the South Texas College of Law in Houston. “It’s a clear conflict of interest.”

The trial is to start no later than Aug. 28, and it promises to be quite personal for Angela Paxton. The 20 articles of impeachmen­t brought against Ken Paxton include sweeping charges of abuse of office and unethical behavior. They include a bribery charge related to an extramarit­al affair with an aide to a state senator. Another suggested Angela Paxton was involved in the installati­on of $20,000 countertop­s at their home, paid for by a political donor.

Angela Paxton hasn’t said if she’ll recuse herself from the trial. She declined comment when approached by The Associated Press outside the Senate chamber on Monday.

State Rep. Andrew Murr, who led the impeachmen­t investigat­ion in the state House, declined to say if he thinks Angela Paxton should step aside. The Senate gets to set the rules, he said.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick tightly controls the Senate and its 19-12 Republican majority. He suggested to a Dallas television state before last week’s House impeachmen­t vote Angela Paxton will participat­e in the trial.

“I will be presiding over that case and the senators — all 31 senators — will have a vote,” Patrick told WFAA-TV. “We’ll set the rules for that trial as we go forward and we’ll see how that develops.”

Asked Tuesday whether Sen. Paxton would participat­e in the trial, Patrick declined comment, saying he could not take questions about the impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

The state constituti­on requires a two-thirds vote of the chamber to convict. But there is little historic precedent in drafting impeachmen­t trial rules, and nothing with a similar spousal conflict, Williams said.

In nearly 200 years of Texas history, Ken Paxton is just the third official to be impeached and the first statewide official impeached since Gov. James “Pa” Ferguson in 1917.

There’s no legal mechanism to force Angela Paxton out of the trial like there would be a criminal trial, Williams said.

“It’s up to her ethical standards and compass, basically,” Williams said.

The trial comes not only after Paxton was overwhelmi­ng reelected in November, but so was his wife, who cruised to a second term backed by wide support among conservati­ve activists. They included Jonathan Saenz, president and attorney of Texas Values, who has worked closely with the senator on legislatio­n, including a bill she carried this year that banned sexual content in public school libraries.

He said Sen. Paxton “has earned the right to decide what she thinks is best in this situation.”

“Senator Paxton is certainly in the highest category of elected officials in how she treats people and her position. I have high confidence in her moral compass in coming down on the side of what she thinks is best,” Saenz said.

 ?? ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Texas Republican state Sen. Angela Paxton, wife of impeached state Attorney General Ken Paxton, sits in the Senate chamber Monday at the Texas Capitol in Austin, Texas.
ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas Republican state Sen. Angela Paxton, wife of impeached state Attorney General Ken Paxton, sits in the Senate chamber Monday at the Texas Capitol in Austin, Texas.
 ?? ?? Ken Paxton
Ken Paxton

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