By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) — The Republican-dominated Texas Senate sitting as an impeachment jury acquitted Attorney General Ken Paxton on corruption charges on Saturday, allowing the conservative firebrand to keep his state office.
Paxton, a Republican, has been dogged by corruption allegations since first taking office in 2014. A two-thirds vote was required to convict and expel him as the state's top law enforcement officer.
Paxton, a Republican and ally of former U.S. President Donald Trump, has been dogged by corruption allegations since first taking office in 2014. He's said he is innocent and that the impeachment trial is a political witchhunt.
Paxton faced 16 articles of impeachment in the Senate trial. Two-thirds of Texas' 31 senators — or, 21 senators — had to vote to convict him on any single article.
Paxton was accused by several former top aides of corruption and abuse of power, mostly in relation to official actions allegedly carried out to protect a wealthy political donor who was under a federal investigation and to cover up an extramarital affair.
The trial exposed rifts in the Texas Republican Party between the social conservatives, who have held sway for the past decade and back Paxton, and the traditional conservatives, who say his actions have brought shame on the party and the state. Paxton was overwhelmingly impeached by the Republican-dominated Texas House in May.
Paxton, who faces a separate state securities fraud trial and is also under investigation by the FBI, has been dogged by corruption allegations since his first election in 2014. Still, he easily defeated traditional conservative candidate George P. Bush in a primary then Democrat Rochelle Garza in his re-election bid in November.
Pax
Read more on investing.com