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Texas Attorney General

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elected government official of the state of Texas

Attorney General of Texas
Seal of the Attorney General
Incumbent
Ken Paxton
since January 5, 2015
Suspended: May 27, 2023 – September 16, 2023
Executive branch of the Government of Texas
StyleThe Honorable
Term lengthFour years, no term limits
Inaugural holderVolney E. Howard
FormationTexas Constitution
Salary$153,750
WebsiteOfficial websiteEdit this at Wikidata

TheTexas attorney general is the chief legal officer[1] of theU.S. state ofTexas. The current officeholder, RepublicanKen Paxton, has served in the position since January 5, 2015.

History

[edit]

The Office of the Attorney General was first established by executive ordinance of theRepublic of Texas government in 1836. The attorneys general of the Republic of Texas and the first four attorneys general under the 1845 state constitution were appointed by the governor. The office was made elective in 1850 by constitutional amendment.

The William P. Clements State Office Building houses some of the Office of the Attorney General.

Attorney generals are elected to four-year terms. In 2013, former Attorney GeneralGreg Abbott announced he would not seek reelection and would run for governor. In November 2014, he was elected as the governor of Texas.Ken Paxton defeated former House Representative Dan Branch in the Republican primary by a 26% margin and was elected easily in the general election as the 50th attorney general of Texas,[2] (there is a historical dispute whether he is the 50th or 51st attorney general).[3] Paxton was sworn in on January 5, 2015, in the Senate Chamber in the Texas Capitol. GovernorRick Perry, Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst, United States Senator Ted Cruz, and Lieutenant Governor-Elect Dan Patrick all participated in the swearing-in ceremony.[4]

Duties and responsibilities

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The attorney general is charged by the state constitution to represent the state incivil litigation[1] and approve public bond issues.[5] There are nearly 2,000 references to the Office of the Attorney General in state laws.

The Office of the Attorney General serves as legal counsel to all boards and agencies of state government, issues legal opinions when requested by the governor, heads of state agencies and other officials and commissions, and defends challenges to state laws and suits against both state agencies and individual employees of the state. These duties include representing the Director of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in appeals from criminal convictions in federal courts.

The Texas Constitution gives the attorney general no general law-enforcement powers; instead it limits the attorney general's authority in criminal cases to that dictated by statute.[1] The Texas Legislature has not given the attorney general broad law-enforcement authority, but permits the attorney general to act in criminal cases at the request of prosecutors.[6]

The Office of the Attorney General, Law Enforcement Division[7] conducts criminal investigations and apprehensions including cases involving cyber-crimes such as child pornography, online solicitation of minors, identity theft, election fraud, locating and apprehending convicted sex offenders who have failed to comply with mandated sex offender registration requirements, and conducting digital forensics investigations. The Office of the Attorney General also operates the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit which investigates criminal fraud byMedicaid providers, abuse and neglect of patients in health care facilities operated by the Medicaid program, and helps local and federal authorities with prosecutions.

Its child support division is responsible for the establishment and enforcement of child support.[7]

Officeholders

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Attorneys general by party affiliation
PartyAttorneys general
Democratic44
Republican4
Union3
Attorneys general in chronological order, showing party affiliation
No.ImageNameTerm of servicePolitical party
1Volney Howard1846Democratic
2John W. Harris1846–1849Democratic
3Henry Percy Brewster1849–1850Democratic
4Andrew Jackson Hamilton1850Democratic
5Ebenezer Allen11850–1852Democratic
6Thomas J. Jennings1852–1856Democratic
7James Willie1856–1858Democratic
8Malcolm D. Graham1858–1860Democratic
9George M. Flournoy1860–1862Democratic
10Nathan G. Shelley1862–1864Democratic
11Benjamin E. Tarver1864–1865Democratic
12William Alexander1865–1866Unionist
13William M. Walton1866–1867Democratic
14Ezekiel B. Turner1867–1870Unionist
15William Alexander1870–1874Republican
16George W. Clark1874–1876Democratic
17Hannibal Boone1876–1878Democratic
18George McCormick1878–1880Democratic
19James H. McLeary1880–1882Democratic
20John D. Templeton1882–1886Democratic
21Jim Hogg1886–1890Democratic
22Charles Allen Culberson1890–1894Democratic
23Martin McNulty Crane1894–1898Democratic
24Thomas Slater Smith1898–1901Democratic
25Charles K. Bell1901–1904Democratic
26Robert V. Davidson1904–1910Democratic
27Jewel P. Lightfoot1910–1912Democratic
28James D. Walthall1912–1913Democratic
29B. F. Looney1913–1919Democratic
30Calvin Maples Cureton1919–1921Democratic
31Walter Angus Keeling1921–1925Democratic
32Dan Moody1925–1927Democratic
33Claude Pollard21927–1929Democratic
34Robert L. Bobbitt31929–1931Democratic
35James V. Allred1931–1935Democratic
36William McCraw1935–1939Democratic
37Gerald Mann1939–1943Democratic
38Grover Sellers1943–1947Democratic
39Price Daniel1947–1953Democratic
40John Ben Shepperd1953–1957Democratic
41Will Wilson1957–1963Democratic
42Waggoner Carr1963–1967Democratic
43Crawford Martin1967–1972Democratic
44John Hill1973–1979Democratic
45Mark White1979–1983Democratic
46Jim Mattox1983–1991Democratic
47Dan Morales1991–1999Democratic
48John Cornyn1999–2002Republican
49Greg Abbott2002–2015Republican
50Ken Paxton
Incumbent
2015–present
Suspended May 27, 2023 – September 16, 2023
Republican
Brent Webster
Acting
May 27, 2023 – May 31, 2023
Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton
Republican
John Scott
Interim
May 31, 2023 – July 14, 2023
Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton
Republican
Angela Colmenero
Interim
July 14, 2023 – September 16, 2023
Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton
Republican

Political prominence

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Many leading political figures in Texas history have served as attorney general, several of them using the office as a jumping-off place to other offices in the state andnational government. Attorneys generalJames S. Hogg,Charles A. Culberson,Dan Moody,James V. Allred,Price Daniel,Mark White, andGreg Abbott were electedgovernor. Culberson, Daniel, andJohn Cornyn were later elected to theUnited States Senate.[8]

Notes

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  1. First elected attorney general (AG) of state of Texas; previously elected AG of theRepublic of Texas
  2. Resigned
  3. Appointed

References

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  1. ^abcTexas Constitution Article 4 Section 22.
  2. ^Texas attorney general election, 2014, Ballotpedia.
  3. ^Jeffers, Gromer Jr. (May 27, 2014)."Dan Branch concedes Republican attorney general's race to Ken Paxton".The Dallas Morning News. Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2014.
  4. ^Barnett, Marissa (January 2015)."Ken Paxton vows to continue Abbott's federal fights as attorney general".The Dallas Morning News. RetrievedOctober 8, 2017.
  5. ^Texas Constitution Article 3 Section 49.
  6. ^Texas Government Code section 402.028.
  7. ^ab"All Divisions | Office of the Attorney General".
  8. ^Attorney General from theHandbook of Texas Online

External links

[edit]
Executive
Legislative
Judicial
Attorneys general of the United States
Federal districts:
Political party affiliations
  • 29Republicans (28 states, 1 territory)
  • 24Democrats (22 states, 1 territory, 1 district)
  • 1New Progressive (1 territory)
  • 2 Unknown (2 territories)
    An asterisk (*) indicates that the officeholder is serving in an acting capacity.
    State abbreviations link to position articles.


Republic of Texas (1836–45)
State of Texas (1846–present)
Statewide political officials ofTexas
U.S. senators
State government
Senate
House
Supreme Court
Court of Criminal Appeals
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