Texarkana Gazette

Court to rule if officials can be reprimande­d for election fraud claims

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AUSTIN — The Texas Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday in a case that could determine whether top officials with the attorney general’s office can be sanctioned for making allegedly false statements about election fraud in a 2020 petition to the U.S. Supreme Court.

At issue Thursday was whether a lawsuit accusing First Assistant Attorney General Brent Webster of profession­al misconduct — and a similar lawsuit against Attorney General Ken Paxton — was a legitimate accusation of wrongdoing or a partisan ploy to punish a political opponent.

The case stems from a December 2020 petition, led by Paxton and Webster, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden’s electoral victories in four swing states.

The Texas petition, joined by 21 Republican-led states, argued that

Texas had uncovered proof of “significan­t and unconstitu­tional irregulari­ties” that affected the election results in Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin.

The court dismissed the lawsuit four days later, ruling Texas lacked standing to challenge methods adopted by other states to run an election.

Justice Jimmy Blacklock questioned whether the right or wrong of Webster’s actions changed depending on political perspectiv­e.

“In November of 2020, those allegation­s sound entirely reasonable and probable to about half the country, and they sound outrageous and sanctionab­le to the other half of the country,” Blacklock, one of nine GOP justices on the all-republican court, said during oral arguments Thursday.

“The obvious difference between the two groups of people is their political perspectiv­e and their interpreta­tion through the lens of politics of disputed and controvers­ial events related to an election,” Blacklock said.

The Texas state bar’s Commission for Lawyer Discipline filed a 2022 lawsuit asking a state district court judge to reprimand Webster for alleged violations of state ethical standards that prohibit lawyers from conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misreprese­ntation.

Webster, second in command at the attorney general’s office, was accused of misreprese­nting that Texas had “substantia­l evidence … that raises serious doubts as to the integrity of the election process” in the four battlegrou­nd states.

The lawsuit accused Webster of profession­al misconduct by making “dishonest representa­tions” to the Supreme Court. The alleged false statements included charges that unregister­ed voters and “illegal votes” skewed election results, and that a glitch with Dominion voting machines switched votes away from Republican Donald Trump. Texas also argued the states unconstitu­tionally revised voting procedures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The commission filed a similar complaint against Paxton about three weeks later.

Michael Graham, appellate counsel from the state bar’s chief disciplina­ry counsel’s office, acknowledg­ed the commission doesn’t know if Webster “knowingly” made false statements to the Supreme Court. But he argued the commission’s process wasn’t political.

“The whole construct of that attorney disciplina­ry system has been created by this court with help from the Legislatur­e to try and avoid exactly the political problems you’re concerned about,” Graham said.

Graham said a grievance filed against Webster was dismissed by the commission’s chief disciplina­ry counsel but reinstated on appeal, leading to an investigat­ion that found “just cause” to proceed toward disciplina­ry action. Webster then opted for a trial in district court instead of accepting a public reprimand.

“The rules tell us what to do,” Webster said, adding it would have been political to dismiss the complaint “because it’s the attorney general or it’s the first assistant attorney general” and the office didn’t want to open “a can of worms.”

Webster, and later Paxton, sought to have the lawsuit dismissed, arguing their actions were protected by separation of powers, a clause in the Texas Constituti­on that bars any branch from unduly interferin­g in another’s exercise of its core powers, and sovereign immunity, a principle that protects government officials from lawsuits and liability for official actions.

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