Austin — Galveston state Sen. Mayes Middleton defeated U.S. Rep. Chip Roy in the Republican runoff for Texas attorney general, taking roughly 55–56 percent of the vote after coming from behind following the March primary. Middleton, one of the most conservative state legislators and an oil and gas executive, put almost $17 million of his own money into the race. He ran on loyalty to former President Donald Trump, criticized Roy for saying Trump engaged in "clearly impeachable conduct" on Jan. 6, 2021 and for backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' failed 2024 bid, and promoted his record passing hard-right legislation, including limits on which bathrooms transgender people can use, bans on trans athletes competing on teams that align with their gender identity, and proposals to place the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms. Austin — The contest was the first open attorney general race in more than a decade after Attorney General Ken Paxton decided to challenge U.S. Sen. John Cornyn; under Paxton the office became a center of national conservative litigation, and both Middleton and Roy pledged to continue that effort. Roy, a fourth-term Austin congressman, former federal prosecutor and former aide to Paxton, criticized Middleton as inexperienced and benefited from outside GOP donors in the runoff; he outspent Middleton on ads during the runoff even though Middleton spent more over the full cycle. Middleton will face Democratic nominee Nathan Johnson in November; Johnson has said he will restore the agency’s nonpartisan functions such as child support enforcement and consumer protection and work with other Democratic attorneys general on litigation against the Trump administration.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
La course au poste de procureur général du Texas a un impact sur vos droits et votre communauté. La position d'extrême droite de Middleton pourrait affecter les droits des personnes transgenres et le programme des écoles publiques. Si vous êtes au Texas, votre vote en novembre peut façonner ces résultats.
La victoire de Middleton montre le pouvoir de la richesse personnelle et de la loyauté à Trump dans la politique du GOP. Son affrontement avec le démocrate Johnson en novembre testera ces facteurs face aux appels à des fonctions d'agence non partisanes. Surveillez les mises à jour sur cette course. Vaut la peine d'être transféré si vous connaissez quelqu'un au Texas.
Mayes Middleton a bénéficié de près de 17 millions de dollars de financement personnel et de publicités ciblées, ce qui a augmenté sa visibilité et l'a aidé à dépasser Chip Roy lors du second tour républicain pour le poste de procureur général.
Chip Roy, malgré des soutiens et une notoriété antérieure, a perdu le second tour républicain et ne sera donc pas le candidat du parti pour le poste de procureur général du Texas.
Le sénateur du Texas, Middleton, remporte le second tour de la primaire républicaine pour le poste de procureur général de l'État
NTD
Comments