Texas Attorney General

{{Short description|Elected government official of the state of Texas}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2023}}

{{Infobox official post

| post = Attorney General

| body = Texas

| insignia = Seal of Texas Attorney General.svg

| image = Ken Paxton 2024 (cropped).jpg

| incumbent = Ken Paxton

| incumbentsince = January 5, 2015
{{small|Suspended: May 27, 2023 – September 16, 2023}}

| acting =

| style = The Honorable

| termlength = Four years, no term limits

| formation = Texas Constitution

| inaugural = Volney E. Howard

| website = {{Official website}}

| salary = $153,750

}}

The Texas attorney general is the chief legal officer[http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/CN/htm/CN.4.htm#4.22 Texas Constitution Article 4 Section 22]. of the U.S. state of Texas. The current officeholder, Republican Ken Paxton, has served in the position since January 5, 2015.

History

The Office of the Attorney General was first established by executive ordinance of the Republic 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.

File:ClementsWilliamStateOfficeBuilding.JPG

Attorney generals are elected to four-year terms. In 2013, former Attorney General Greg 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,[http://ballotpedia.org/Texas_attorney_general_election,_2014 Texas attorney general election, 2014], Ballotpedia. (there is a historical dispute whether he is the 50th or 51st attorney general).{{cite web|last=Jeffers |first=Gromer Jr. |date=May 27, 2014 |url=http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2014/05/ken-paxton-and-dan-branch-slug-it-out-in-race-for-texas-attorney-general.html/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140907064929/http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2014/05/ken-paxton-and-dan-branch-slug-it-out-in-race-for-texas-attorney-general.html/| archive-date = September 7, 2014| title = Dan Branch concedes Republican attorney general's race to Ken Paxton. |website=The Dallas Morning News}} Paxton was sworn in on January 5, 2015, in the Senate Chamber in the Texas Capitol. Governor Rick Perry, Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst, United States Senator Ted Cruz, and Lieutenant Governor-Elect Dan Patrick all participated in the swearing-in ceremony.{{cite news|url=https://www.dallasnews.com/news/local-politics/2015/01/05/ken-paxton-vows-to-continue-abbotts-federal-fights-as-attorney-general|title=Ken Paxton vows to continue Abbott's federal fights as attorney general|last=Barnett|first=Marissa|date=January 2015|work=The Dallas Morning News |access-date=October 8, 2017}}

Duties and responsibilities

The attorney general is charged by the state constitution to represent the state in civil litigation and approve public bond issues.[http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/CN/htm/CN.3.htm#3.49 Texas Constitution Article 3 Section 49]. 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. 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.[http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/GV/htm/GV.402.htm#402.028 Texas Government Code section 402.028].

The Office of the Attorney General, Law Enforcement Division{{cite web | url=https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/divisions | title=All Divisions | Office of the Attorney General}} 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 by Medicaid 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.

Officeholders

class=wikitable style="float:right;margin:0 0 0.5em 1em; text-align:right;"

|+ Attorneys general by party affiliation

! scope="col"| Party

! scope="col"| Attorneys general

{{party shading/Democratic}}

! scope="row"| Democratic

| 44

{{party shading/Republican}}

! scope="row"| Republican

| 4

{{party shading/Unionist}}

! scope="row"| Union

| 3

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"

|+ Attorneys general in chronological order, showing party affiliation

! scope="col"| {{abbr|No.|Number}}

! scope="col"| Image

! scope="col"| Name

! scope="col"| Term of service

! scope="col"| Political party

1

|60px

! scope="row"| Volney Howard

|1846

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

2

|

! scope="row"| John W. Harris

|1846–1849

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

3

|

! scope="row"| Henry Percy Brewster

|1849–1850

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

4

|60px

! scope="row"| Andrew Jackson Hamilton

|1850

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

5

|

! scope="row"| Ebenezer Allen1

|1850–1852

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

6

|

! scope="row"| Thomas J. Jennings

|1852–1856

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

7

|60px

! scope="row"| James Willie

|1856–1858

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

8

|

! scope="row"| Malcolm D. Graham

|1858–1860

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

9

|

! scope="row"| George M. Flournoy

|1860–1862

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

10

|

! scope="row"| Nathan G. Shelley

|1862–1864

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

11

|

! scope="row"| Benjamin E. Tarver

|1864–1865

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

12

|

! scope="row"| William Alexander

|1865–1866

|{{Party shading/Unionist}}| Unionist

13

|60px

! scope="row"| William M. Walton

|1866–1867

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

14

|

! scope="row"| Ezekiel B. Turner

|1867–1870

|{{Party shading/Unionist}}| Unionist

15

|

! scope="row"| William Alexander

|1870–1874

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

16

|

! scope="row"| George W. Clark

|1874–1876

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

17

|

! scope="row"| Hannibal Boone

|1876–1878

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

18

|

! scope="row"| George McCormick

|1878–1880

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

19

|

! scope="row"| James H. McLeary

|1880–1882

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

20

|

! scope="row"| John D. Templeton

|1882–1886

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

21

|60px

! scope="row"| Jim Hogg

|1886–1890

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

22

|60px

! scope="row"| Charles Allen Culberson

|1890–1894

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

23

|60px

! scope="row"| Martin McNulty Crane

|1894–1898

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

24

|

! scope="row"| Thomas Slater Smith

|1898–1901

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

25

|60px

! scope="row"| Charles K. Bell

|1901–1904

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

26

|60px

! scope="row"| Robert V. Davidson

|1904–1910

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

27

|

! scope="row"| Jewel P. Lightfoot

|1910–1912

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

28

|

! scope="row"| James D. Walthall

|1912–1913

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

29

|60px

! scope="row"| B. F. Looney

|1913–1919

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

30

|

! scope="row"| Calvin Maples Cureton

|1919–1921

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

31

|

! scope="row"| Walter Angus Keeling

|1921–1925

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

32

|60px

! scope="row"| Dan Moody

|1925–1927

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

33

|

! scope="row"| Claude Pollard2

|1927–1929

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

34

|

! scope="row"| Robert L. Bobbitt3

|1929–1931

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

35

|60px

! scope="row"| James V. Allred

|1931–1935

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

36

|

! scope="row"| William McCraw

|1935–1939

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

37

|60px

! scope="row"| Gerald Mann

|1939–1943

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

38

|

! scope="row"| Grover Sellers

|1943–1947

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

39

|60px

! scope="row"| Price Daniel

|1947–1953

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

40

|

! scope="row"| John Ben Shepperd

|1953–1957

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

41

|60px

! scope="row"| Will Wilson

|1957–1963

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

42

|60px

! scope="row"| Waggoner Carr

|1963–1967

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

43

|

! scope="row"| Crawford Martin

|1967–1972

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

44

|

! scope="row"| John Hill

|1973–1979

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

45

|60px

! scope="row"| Mark White

|1979–1983

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

46

|60px

! scope="row"| Jim Mattox

|1983–1991

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

47

|

! scope="row"| Dan Morales

|1991–1999

|{{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

48

|60px

! scope="row"| John Cornyn

|1999–2002

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

49

|60px

! scope="row"| Greg Abbott

|2002–2015

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

50

|60px

! scope="row"| Ken Paxton
Incumbent

|2015–present
{{small|Suspended May 27, 2023 – September 16, 2023}}

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

|

! scope="row"|Brent Webster
Acting

| May 27, 2023 – May 31, 2023
{{small|Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton}}

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

|

! scope="row"|John Scott
Interim

| May 31, 2023 – July 14, 2023
{{small|Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton}}

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

|

! scope="row"|Angela Colmenero
Interim

| July 14, 2023 – September 16, 2023
{{small|Served during the suspension of Ken Paxton}}

|{{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

Political prominence

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 and national government. Attorneys general James S. Hogg, Charles A. Culberson, Dan Moody, James V. Allred, Price Daniel, Mark White, and Greg Abbott were elected governor. Culberson, Daniel, and John Cornyn were later elected to the United States Senate.{{Handbook of Texas|id=mba03|name=Attorney General}}

Notes

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

References

{{Reflist}}