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RAB910

(3,509 posts)
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 09:45 AM Dec 2020

The rank hypocrisy of the Texas AG's election case

(CNN)Ken Paxton is a lawman being chased by the law. And when the Texas Republican attorney general filed a suit on Tuesday with the US Supreme Court on behalf of his state, he also became an even more rank hypocrite.

Paxton, who has been indicted on securities fraud and accused by top aides of bribery, abuse of office and other potentially criminal offenses -- charges that he has denied -- argued that a handful of battleground states destroyed the integrity of the 2020 election vote totals. He insists the US Constitution was violated by allowing their legislatures to make last-minute changes that ignored federal electoral regulations.

Earlier in the campaign, Paxton played a key role in President Donald Trump's fight against expanding mail-in ballots. Now Paxton's plea to the Court is that Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Georgia must be found to have used the Covid-19 pandemic as an excuse to manipulate outcomes.

If that argument has merit, he ought to have included his home state in the lawsuit.
Texas' Republican Gov. Gregg Abbott extended early voting by a week and expanded the period in which mail-in ballots could be hand-delivered. "Using his emergency authority because of the pandemic," Glenn Smith, a Texas Democratic political consultant, told me, "our governor accomplished exactly what his attorney general is saying other states did, improperly. Nonsense. None of this harmed the presidential election. It helped turnout."


https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/08/opinions/texas-attorney-general-ken-paxton-election-lawsuit-moore/index.html
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The rank hypocrisy of the Texas AG's election case (Original Post) RAB910 Dec 2020 OP
This needs DownriverDem Dec 2020 #1
What's with the other magat states pig-piling on? C_U_L8R Dec 2020 #2
Poorly-written article. Laelth Dec 2020 #3
Oh the hypocrisy! LeftInTX Dec 2020 #9
He wants a pardon. The Wizard Dec 2020 #4
No doubt he's smooching the great, orange derriere with maximum intensity. n/t Laelth Dec 2020 #5
Kick dalton99a Dec 2020 #6
This guy is filthy! Walleye Dec 2020 #7
Juanita Jean- Hi Donald! It's Me, Ken. I Need a Pardon. Gothmog Dec 2020 #8

DownriverDem

(6,231 posts)
1. This needs
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 09:53 AM
Dec 2020

to end now. My SOS Benson has armed protesters in front of her house while she tries to watch a Christmas movie with her 4 year old son. Can you imagine if it were Dems outside a repub's house?

C_U_L8R

(45,020 posts)
2. What's with the other magat states pig-piling on?
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 09:56 AM
Dec 2020

I read the filing. It's a hot mess of crazy and stupid. Do they really think this won't be laughed out if court? It will, won't it?

Laelth

(32,017 posts)
3. Poorly-written article.
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 10:09 AM
Dec 2020

Its author says, Paxton “insists the US Constitution was violated by allowing their legislatures to make last-minute changes that ignored federal electoral regulations.”

No. Paxton says that the executive branches of GA, PA, MI, and WI changed election rules in ways that WERE NOT authorized by the state legislatures and that, thereby, denied 14th Amendment due process protections to the citizens of those states while simultaneously denying the legislature its Constitutional (and unquestioned) right to determine the manner in which a state’s electors are chosen.

The Abbot example is on point. That’s the executive branch changing the rules without authorization from the legislature. I object only to the central argument of the sentence I quoted, above.

-Laelth

dalton99a

(81,570 posts)
6. Kick
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 10:16 AM
Dec 2020
There is, meanwhile, an accumulating body of allegations against Paxton. A letter obtained in October by the Austin American-Statesman and television station KVUE, noted that a number of Paxton's top aides had reported to "the appropriate law enforcement authority" a "potential violation of law" by Paxton. The staffers insisted they had "a good faith belief that the Attorney General is violating federal and/or state law, including prohibitions relating to improper influence, abuse of office, bribery and other potential criminal offenses."

Several of Paxton's former employees filed a whistleblower lawsuit against the attorney general, saying Paxton retaliated against them after they accused him of intervening in legal matters to help his friend, a real estate investor who had made a $25,000 donation to his 2018 campaign, according to the suit. Paxton has denied their allegations.

The investor named by the lawsuit, Nate Paul, said he had also employed a woman based upon a recommendation by Paxton. Although Paul said he was not doing favors for the attorney general, the Texas Tribune and The Dallas Morning News have reported at least two people say Paxton told them he had an extramarital affair with the woman Paul later hired. Paxton insists the allegations are all part of a "political witch hunt" and denies any wrongdoing.

Paxton has already been indicted for felony securities fraud, accused of failing to register with the State Securities Board while selling stock to investors without disclosing he was making a commission. The case has been hung up on questions of venue, and payment and replacement of county prosecutors, and has slogged through appeals that have dragged it out for five years without adjudication.

The indictments did not stop Paxton from winning reelection at the same time his wife was being voted into a seat in the Texas state senate. In one of her earliest acts in public office, Angela Paxton filed a bill to broadly increase her husband's power with legislation allowing him to exempt individuals from state securities law. Surely, it is only coincidental that those are the laws Paxton is accused of violating. The measure appears to have stunk too much even for the Texas legislature and didn't get a committee hearing.

The Texas AG's latest US Supreme Court plea might just be currying favor with Trump in an attempt to get a pardon before Paxton is potentially tried and convicted. Even a bad lawyer like our attorney general is likely to know he has no real case. The electoral fraud argument is considerably weaker than the pleadings his office made to ask the high court to overturn the Obama administration's Affordable Care Act, which it denied.





(Collin County Sheriff's Office)


Gothmog

(145,553 posts)
8. Juanita Jean- Hi Donald! It's Me, Ken. I Need a Pardon.
Wed Dec 9, 2020, 12:04 PM
Dec 2020

Juanita Jean is convinced that Paxton wants a pardon from trump https://juanitajean.com/hi-donald-its-me-ken-i-need-a-pardon/

Oh, this is a cute one.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton just filed all the proper papers with the United States Supreme Court to overturn the 2020 election.

Paxton, an outspoken advocate of President Donald Trump, claims the states “flooded their people with unlawful ballot applications and ballots” and ignored rules for how such ballots need to be counted, according to a press release announcing the litigation.

“Trust in the integrity of our election processes is sacrosanct and binds our citizenry and the States in this Union together,” Paxton said in the statement. “Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin destroyed that trust and compromised the security and integrity of the 2020 election.”


Now what Texas has to do with this, I dunno. But, I known for a damn guaranteed fact what Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas, has to do with it. He needs a pardon, in fact a couple of them and a blank form he can use in the future, and what better way to get Trump’s attention.

Paxton is currently under indictment for stock fraud and is currently being investigated by the FBI for bribery and abuse of office.
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