The Strangeness of the Paxton Impeachment: Has the Texas House Been Compromised?

The Strangeness of the Paxton Impeachment: Has the Texas House Been Compromised?
Chad Carnahan — provided
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Is the pending impeachment of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton purely political? How influential was House Speaker Dade Phelan?

In 2018, Austin real estate developer Nate Paul, a friend to Paxton, donated $25,000 to the Paxton campaign. Paul later slipped into financial and legal trouble. He was accused of false statements to lenders in order to acquire business loans. 

Paxton is alleged to have used his office to assist Paul beginning in 2018. Since only rumors and insinuations have surfaced, whether he did or did not is uncertain. Paxton has the huge job of managing an office of 700 attorneys litigating up to 30,000 cases a year. Yet this single case involving Nate Paul is repeatedly advanced by anyone who opposes Paxton. 

One of the people opposing Paxton has been House Speaker Dade Phelan. Phelan became the Republican Speaker behind universal support from Democrat House members, and he has repeatedly undermined the Republican agenda in favor of Democrat priorities. 

On May 22nd, House Speaker Dade Phelan was apparently intoxicated and incoherent while at the podium (Video here). On May 23rd, Ken Paxton responded by asking the House General Investigations Committee to remove the obviously impaired speaker for violation of House rules.

Instead, the Committee immediately voted to impeach Paxton. Rapid action in a lethargic House known for delay and indecision was very odd.  Why the rush?   

Under Phelan’s dominating leadership, the 2023 House session has accomplished very little. No school choice. No border security. No cartel pushback. No election integrity. Only belated action on gender modification and woke education. Yet it worked through the weekend to impeach the Attorney General barely 72 hours after Paxton criticized Phelan. Is this a vendetta by the Speaker? 

How did Dade Phelan gain such an iron grip on the Texas House? 

The unproven accusation against Ken Paxton is that he provided favors to Nate Paul for a $25,000 donation. However, a search of public records at transparencytexas.org proves that many Texas House members have accepted large donations directly from Speaker Phelan. Most are much larger than $25,000. So, here’s the obvious question – does that “contribution” buy influence at the right time?     

The chart below reflects campaign donations during the 2022 election cycle.   

Political Donations & Chairmanships from Dade Phelan 2022
Representative District 2022 Contributions from Dade Phelan Committee Chairs from Dade Phelan
Steve Allison 121 $159,900.00
Trent Ashby 9 $0.00 Culture, Recreation, & Tourism
Ernest Bailes 18 $89,604.74
Keith Bell 4 $0.00
Greg Bonnen 24 $0.00 Appropriations
Brad Buckley 54 $87,367.00 Public Education
Benjamin Bumgarner 63 $285,757.00
DeWayne Burns 58 $0.00 Land & Resource Management
Dustin Burrows 83 $37,500.00 Calendars
Angie Chen Button 112 $95,534.00 International Relations & Economic Development
Briscoe Cain 128 $0.00 Agriculture & Livestock
Giovanni Capriglione 98 $22,100.00 Pensions, Investments, Financial Services
David Cook 96 $0.00 (Unopposed)
Drew Darby 72 $0.00 Redistricting
Jay Dean 7 $0.00 (Unopposed)
Mano DeAyala 133 $99,210.00
James Frank 69 $0.00 Human Services
Frederick Frazier 61 $171,950.00
Gary Gates 28 $0.00
Stan Gerdes 17 $55,000.00
Charlies Geren 99 $0.00 Speaker Pro Tem
Craig Coldman 97 $0.00 Energy Resources
Ryan Guillen 31 $112,400.00 Homeland Security
Cody Harris 8 $0.00 Local & Consent Calendars
Cole Hefner 5 $18,999.00
Justin Holland 33 $47,100.00
Lacey Hull 138 $178,503.00
Todd Hunter 32 $0.00 (Unopposed) State Affairs
Jacey Jetton 26 $39,750.00
Kyle Kacal 12 $76,147.00
Ken King 88 $47,700.00 Licensing & Administrative Procedures
Stan Kitzman 85 $0.00
Stephanie Klick 91 $419,826.00 Public Health
John Keumpel 44 $0.00 Higher Education
Stan Lambert 71 $0.00
Brooks Landgraf 81 $28,500.00 Environmental Regulation
Jeff Leach 67 $65,150.00 Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence
Janie Lopez 37 $143,370.00
J.M. Lozano 43 $0.00 Urban Affairs
Joh Lujan 118 $446,650.00
Will Metcalf 16 $0.00 House Administration
Morgan Meyer 108 $145,400.00 Ways & Means
Andrew Murr 53 $52,348.00 General Investigating
Candy Noble 89 $0.00 (Unopposed)
Angelia Orr 13 $0.00
Jared Patterson 106 $0.00 (Unopposed)
Dade Phelan 21
John Raney 14 $31,500.00
Glenn Rogers 60 $305,499.00
Matt Shaheen 66 $47,365.00
Hugh Shine 55 $0.00
Reggie Smith 62 $127,566.00
David Spiller 68 $97,700.00
Lynn Stucky 64 $101,831.00
Carl Tepper 84 $0.00
Kronda Thimesch 65 $17,850.00
Ellen Troxclair $0.00
Gary VanDeaver 1 $54,500.00
Cody Vasut 25 $0.00
Terry Wilson $0.00 Defense & Veteran’s Affairs
Total Received $3,709,576.74

Of the 60 Republicans who voted to impeach Ken Paxton, 46 received either 1) a significant Phelan donation or 2) a committee chairmanship from Phelan. The donations totaled $3,709,677. The committee chairmanships totaled 24. The average donation was over $80,500, and the committee chairmanships, with oversight over the $320 billion Texas budget, are worth much more. Would House members dare to challenge the Speaker who made all this possible?

Of the 23 Republicans who voted against impeachment, only one received a chairmanship. Only five received a Phelan donation. Other than the unopposed candidates, only ten Republicans outside of Phelan’s influence voted for impeachment. 

Dade Phelan’s Texas House talks about corruption in the Attorney General’s office. Wouldn’t it be more important to examine massive donations that appear to be compromising the integrity of the Texas House? At its next meeting, should the Republican Party of Texas consider more than the problem of Phelan’s leadership? What should be done about the willingness of House Republicans to follow him? 



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