Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Harris County to prevent the implementation of a guaranteed income program, labeling it as 'plainly unconstitutional.' This legal action comes just days before the scheduled commencement of the payments. In response, Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis has publicly addressed the issue. Concurrently, Paxton is facing a separate controversy as the Texas State Bar is allegedly plotting revenge against him, prompting a defense from a national coalition of State Attorneys General.
Editorial: Nothing uplifting about Ken Paxton's latest Harris County lawsuit https://t.co/G5hizEwbDj
Texas State Bar Allegedly Plots Revenge Against AG Ken Paxton — National Coalition of Attorneys General Rallies in His Defense Against Baseless Lawfare via @gatewaypundit https://t.co/95BU5ApDhX
EXCLUSIVE: State AGs File Brief Defending Ken Paxton, Top Deputy After Texas State Bar Allegedly Plots Revenge From @henryrodgersdc https://t.co/O5ggjTHr2L
EXCLUSIVE: State AGs File Brief Defending Ken Paxton, Top Deputy After Texas State Bar Allegedly Plots Revenge Read the amicus brief and more here first for @DailyCaller: https://t.co/2gsouFhzQx
Calling it “plainly unconstitutional,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued Harris County to block a guaranteed income program days before the payments were set to begin. Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis responded on Inside Texas Politics https://t.co/OEwC2FxnMo