Texas has been a
reliably Republican state for over two decades now, producing national figures
like George W. Bush, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry. Recently, the Texas GOP has
gotten national attention for a less savory figure: Attorney General Ken
Paxton, who was impeached by the Texas House earlier this year for egregious
abuse of his powers of office.
That was remarkable
given that the House is controlled by Republicans. Yet as Justin Miller reports at
the Texas Observer, in the trial in the Texas Senate, Paxton was
acquitted on every count. That’s the Republican Party for you—even when some
party members attempt to rid themselves of their worst elements, they are
slapped down by the rest.
As Christopher Hooks explains at Texas
Monthly, Paxton has long been a cat’s-paw for Tim Dunn, a
fervently right-wing oil billionaire who has been funding the state’s
Republicans for years. When the GOP finally took control of the House and the
rest of the state government in 2002 for the first time since the 1870s,
Dunn and his fellow oligarchs assumed that they’d have the run of the state.
But because the
Texas House elects its Speaker with a simple majority vote of both parties, the
remaining Democrats allied with traditional business-minded Republicans to
elect the relative moderate Joe Straus as Speaker of the House. This infuriated
Dunn not only because Straus is not a febrile reactionary, but because he was
the first Jewish Speaker in Texas history. Dunn reportedly told Straus to his face that
only Christians should be in offices of state leadership.
But that wasn’t
Dunn’s only priority. Another was taking care of the Texas Ethics Commission,
which had drawn Dunn’s ire by attempting to impose minimal disclosure
requirements on his enormous political spending. He backed Paxton heavily in
the attorney general race of 2014, which was decisive. Sure enough, Paxton then
cut off legal support for the TEC in its legal battles against Dunn, which put
a stop to the disclosure requests.
In office, Paxton’s
door was unsurprisingly open to about any conservative with a big bank account,
a checkbook, and a functioning pen, which brings us to the impeachment. One was
real estate developer Nate Paul, who not only cut campaign checks but also
employed Paxton’s mistress, and was facing scrutiny from federal law
enforcement. Paxton directed his staff to help Paul fight off the feds. “When
they resisted, Paxton threatened to fire them; after they blew the whistle,
Paxton did fire them,” Hooks writes.
So a critical mass
of House Republicans decided they had had enough of this guy, not least because
his record of achieving anything in office is poor. Paxton’s scandals drag the
party down—he was also charged with securities fraud in 2015, though he’s managed
to drag out the start of the trial for eight years and counting—and he isn’t
even very good at filing tendentious lawsuits to give the Fifth Circuit and
Supreme Court an excuse to legislate by decree. And then in June, after the
impeachment vote, Paul was arrested and charged in
federal court with eight counts of making false statements and reports to
financial companies.
Ken Paxton might be
a corrupt, incompetent doofus. But he is very good at doing what his oligarch
paymasters tell him to do, and then activating the conservative grievance industrial complex by
claiming to be the victim of a conspiracy when facing accountability of any
sort. “This shameful process was curated from the start as an act of political
retribution,” he said in a news
conference just before being impeached. “Let’s restore the power of this great
state to the people, instead of the politicians,” he added, with truly
astounding chutzpah.
It worked.
Today’s Republican
Party simply selects for this kind of person now. This is what their system
produces: toadies and lickspittles for oligarch billionaires, whose bone-deep
corruption actually makes them more appealing to the
billionaire class. As Hooks points out, Paxton is totally dependent on Dunn’s
support, without which he would have fallen years ago.
There are many other
examples of this kind of Republican, but none more relevant than Donald
Trump, who combines the role of corrupt toady and oligarch billionaire into
one person. This was a guy who campaigned on the same kind of hysterical
nonsense as previous Republicans, except even more shamelessly, and in office
was by far the most corrupt president in American history. When he lost, he
claimed to be the victim of a conspiracy, attempted to overthrow the government
to stay in office, and in the process nearly got many Republican members of
Congress lynched if his mob had caught up with them. But when it came to
convicting him for attempting to negate the outcome of the presidential
election, the party blinked and acquitted him in the Senate.
Now, both Texas and
nationwide, Republicans are saddled with comically corrupt and unpopular
leaders who are facing criminal indictments. Trump is facing 91 felony counts in
four different jurisdictions, and may face more. Paxton, it seems, will no
longer be able to delay his securities fraud trial much longer, and may face more charges relating
to the Paul affair.
The political choice
for the foreseeable future is clear: If voters want politicians who flagrantly
abuse their powers of office to benefit themselves and their oligarch enablers,
the Republican Party is the way to go. They just can’t help themselves.
-The American Prospect
Ryan Cooper is the
Prospect’s managing editor, and author of ‘How Are You Going to Pay for That?:
Smart Answers to the Dumbest Question in Politics.’ He was previously a
national correspondent for The Week.
Source URL: https://portside.org/2023-09-19/gop-party-corrupt-oligarchy
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