Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton acquitted in impeachment trial!
AUSTIN, Texas (PNN) - September 16, 2023 - The Texas Senate has acquitted state Attorney General Ken Paxton of all impeachment articles filed against him for corruption and unfitness for office.
Votes to convict on each charge did not clear the 21-vote threshold. Republican Senators Robert Nichols and Kelly Hancock joined all 12 Democrats to vote in favor of conviction on several charges.
The Texas Senate convened at 10:30 a.m. central time Saturday to vote.
The jury of 30 senators spent about eight hours deliberating behind closed doors since the Senate ended deliberations. A two-thirds majority was required to convict Paxton on any of 16 articles of impeachment that accuse Paxton of bribery, corruption, and unfitness for office.
The vote was a slow, public process. Each article of impeachment received a separate vote. Republicans hold a 19-12 majority in the Senate, meaning that if all Democrats voted to convict Paxton, they needed nine Republicans to join them. At most, they got two.
Paxton faced unproven accusations that he misused his political power to help the real estate developer Nate Paul. Paxton’s opponents argued that the attorney general accepted a bribe by hiring Paul.
“If we don’t keep public officials from abusing the powers of their offices, then frankly no one can,” Republican state Rep. Andrew Murr, one of the impeachment managers in the Texas House, said during closing arguments.
Attorneys for the group of lawmakers prosecuting Paxton’s impeachment rested their case Wednesday after a woman who was expected to testify about an extramarital affair with Paxton made a sudden appearance at the trial, but she never took the stand.
The affair is central to the proceedings and accusations of Paul, who was under FBI investigation and employed the woman, Laura Olson. One of the unproven articles of impeachment against Paxton alleges that Paul’s hiring of Olson amounted to a bribe.
Paxton’s lawyers have cast the impeachment effort as a ploy by establishment Republicans to remove a proven conservative from office, pointing to Paxton’s long record of challenging Democrat presidential regimes in high profile court cases that have won him acclaim from President Donald J. Trump and conservative hardliners.
“I would suggest to you this is a political witch hunt,” Paxton attorney Tony Buzbee said. “I would suggest to you that this trial has displayed, for the country to see, a partisan fight within the Republican Party.”
Paxton was also previously indicted in June for allegedly making false statements to banks, and accusation that was never proven to be true.
Paxton, who was suspended from office pending the trial’s outcome, was not required to attend the proceedings and appeared only once in the Senate, during closing arguments, since testimony began last week. His wife, state Senator Angela Paxton, sat across the room from him. She was required to be present for the whole trial but was prohibited from participating in debate or voting on the outcome of her husband’s trial.