Texarkana Gazette

Why should taxpayers bail AG Paxton out of this mess?

- Fort Worth Star-Telegram

It sometimes seems that there is no check on Attorney General Ken Paxton’s malfeasanc­e and ineptitude.

So, we were heartened to see House Speaker Dade Phelan declare that Paxton would have to justify to the Legislatur­e why taxpayers should cover a settlement with former Paxton employees who allege the attorney general retaliated against them for reporting bribery allegation­s against him.

In the end, the state is probably going to cough up the $3.3 million. It’s an employment case against the agency, not against Paxton personally. But if it opens the door to some real legislativ­e oversight over Paxton’s tenure, it’ll be worth every penny.

If you can’t keep track of the myriad Paxton scandals, we don’t blame you. In this case, the McKinney Republican fired four top deputies who were part of a group that went to law enforcemen­t with allegation­s of abuse of office. They contended that Paxton acted to help a campaign donor and a woman with whom he was having an affair. Paxton has denied the claims.

It’s understand­able why Paxton’s fellow Republican­s in Austin wouldn’t want to touch that much, especially with a federal investigat­ion reportedly underway. But budget writers and other legislator­s owe it to their constituen­ts to fully vet such a large settlement.

Good governance also demands that lawmakers ask tough questions about so many other problems in Paxton’s tenure. The attorney general’s office is poorly staffed, unfocused and has an extensive morale issue, an Associated Press investigat­ion found last year. Paxton’s incompeten­ce has trickled down to human traffickin­g prosecutio­ns, among other vital tasks, the AP found.

Paxton appeared last Tuesday at a House Appropriat­ions Committee sub-panel hearing on his agency’s budget. And while some lawmakers attempted to probe the whistleblo­wer settlement, the attorney general wouldn’t even personally engage, instead turning to a deputy to answer most questions.

The budget for the AG’s office exceeds $600 million a year, more than half of which goes to the vital task of child support collection and enforcemen­t. So, $3.3 million could hire a handful of good lawyers — if they’d even be willing to work for Paxton.

Let’s not forget, Paxton has tried to bog down this case by asserting that, as an elected official, he is exempt from the state law providing whistleblo­wer protection­s. That’s part of a constant pattern in which Paxton portrays himself as above the law.

If the Legislatur­e won’t check Paxton, perhaps Gov. Greg Abbott will. Abbott showed courage in 2020 when the Paxton bribery allegation­s first surfaced, saying they “raise serious concerns.” He’s been quiet since; you’d think that a former three-term attorney general must be frustrated at the office’s decline.

In an interview with the Editorial Board’s Nicole Russell, Abbott declined to weigh in on the settlement directly, though he noted that Paxton “will have to explain to both the House and Senate why it should be a part of the budget.”

If the time comes, we hope he’ll seriously weigh a lineitem veto of the settlement payment.

In a twisted way, all this works to Paxton’s benefit. Voters understand­ably don’t follow the ins and outs. Hence, he’s been elected statewide three times, despite mounting inadequaci­es and outrages.

When voters shrug, lawmakers need a spur to act. They just got a multimilli­on-dollar bill that should do the trick. They must start demanding answers, scrub the agency and enforce accountabi­lity.

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