Texas Attorney General
The Texas Attorney General is the chief legal officer[1] of the State of Texas. The current Attorney General Ken Paxton has served in this position since January 5, 2015.
Attorney General of Texas | |
---|---|
Style | The Honorable |
Term length | Four years, no term limits |
Inaugural holder | Volney E. Howard 1846 |
Formation | Texas Constitution |
Website | oag |
The department has offices at the William P. Clements State Office Building in Downtown Austin.[2][3]
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.
The Attorney General is elected to a four-year term. 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,[4] (there is a historical dispute whether he is the 50th or 51st Attorney General).[5] Ken 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.[6]
Duties and responsibilities
The Attorney General is charged by the state constitution to represent the state in civil litigation[1] and approve public bond issues.[7] 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.[8]
The Office of the Attorney General, Law Enforcement Division employs a staff of sworn commissioned Texas peace officers (state police) that investigate public corruption, violent crime, human trafficking, money laundering, medicaid provider fraud, mortgage fraud, election violations, cybercrime, fugitives (apprehension), investigate other special classes of offenses, and conduct criminal investigations at the request of local prosecutors. In addition, the Law Enforcement Division is the state of Texas liaison to Interpol (International Criminal Police Organization) and the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
The office is also charged with proceedings to secure child support through its Child Support Division.[9]
Officeholders
Party | Attorneys General | |
---|---|---|
Democratic | 44 | |
Republican | 4 | |
Unionist | 2 |
# | Name | Term of Service | Political Party |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Volney Howard | 1846 | Democratic |
2 | John W. Harris | 1846–1849 | Democratic |
3 | Henry Percy Brewster | 1849–1850 | Democratic |
4 | Andrew Jackson Hamilton | 1850 | Democratic |
5 | Ebenezer Allen | 1850–1852 | Democratic |
6 | Thomas J. Jennings | 1852–1856 | Democratic |
7 | James Willie | 1856–1858 | Democratic |
8 | Malcolm D. Graham | 1858–1860 | Democratic |
9 | George M. Flournoy | 1860–1862 | Democratic |
10 | Nathan G. Shelley | 1862–1864 | Democratic |
11 | Benjamin E. Tarver | 1864–1865 | Democratic |
12 | William Alexander | 1865–1866 | Unionist |
13 | William M. Walton | 1866–1867 | Democratic |
14 | Ezekiel B. Turner | 1867–1870 | Unionist |
15 | William Alexander | 1870–1874 | Republican |
16 | George W. Clark | 1874–1876 | Democratic |
17 | Hannibal Boone | 1876–1878 | Democratic |
18 | George McCormick | 1878–1880 | Democratic |
19 | James H. McLeary | 1880–1882 | Democratic |
20 | John D. Templeton | 1882–1886 | Democratic |
21 | Jim Hogg | 1886–1890 | Democratic |
22 | Charles A. Culberson | 1890–1894 | Democratic |
23 | Martin McNulty Crane | 1894–1898 | Democratic |
24 | Thomas Slater Smith | 1898–1901 | Democratic |
25 | Charles K. Bell | 1901–1904 | Democratic |
26 | Robert V. Davidson | 1904–1910 | Democratic |
27 | Jewel P. Lightfoot | 1910–1912 | Democratic |
28 | James D. Walthall | 1912–1913 | Democratic |
29 | B. F. Looney | 1913–1919 | Democratic |
30 | Calvin Maples Cureton | 1919–1921 | Democratic |
31 | Walter Angus Keeling | 1921–1925 | Democratic |
32 | Dan Moody | 1925–1927 | Democratic |
33 | Claude Pollard | 1927–1929 | Democratic |
34 | Robert L. Bobbitt | 1929–1931 | Democratic |
35 | James Allred | 1931–1935 | Democratic |
36 | William McCraw | 1935–1939 | Democratic |
37 | Gerald Mann | 1939–1944 | Democratic |
38 | Grover Sellers | 1944–1947 | Democratic |
39 | Price Daniel | 1947–1953 | Democratic |
40 | John Ben Shepperd | 1953–1957 | Democratic |
41 | Will Wilson | 1957–1963 | Democratic |
42 | Waggoner Carr | 1963–1967 | Democratic |
43 | Crawford Martin | 1967–1972 | Democratic |
44 | John Hill | 1973–1979 | Democratic |
45 | Mark White | 1979–1983 | Democratic |
46 | Jim Mattox | 1983–1991 | Democratic |
47 | Dan Morales | 1991–1999 | Democratic |
48 | John Cornyn | 1999–2002 | Republican |
49 | Greg Abbott | 2002–2015 | Republican |
50 | Ken Paxton | 2015–present | 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 Allred, Price Daniel, Mark White, and Greg Abbott were elected governor. Culberson, Daniel, and John Cornyn were later elected to the United States Senate.[10]
See also
Notes
- First elected Attorney General (AG) of State of Texas; previously elected AG of the Republic of Texas
- Resigned
- Appointed
References
- Texas Constitution Article 4 Section 22.
- "Contacting the Office of the Attorney General." Texas Attorney General. Accessed September 13, 2008.
- "STATE AGENCIES Archived 2008-08-21 at the Wayback Machine." State of Texas State Classification. Accessed September 13, 2008.
- Texas attorney general election, 2014, Ballotpedia.
- http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2014/05/ken-paxton-and-dan-branch-slug-it-out-in-race-for-texas-attorney-general.html/
- Barnett, Marissa (January 2015). "Ken Paxton vows to continue Abbott's federal fights as attorney general". Dallas News. The Dallas Morning News Inc. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
- Texas Constitution Article 3 Section 49.
- Texas Government Code section 402.028.
- Duties & Responsibilities - Office of the Attorney General
- Attorney General from the Handbook of Texas Online
External links
- Texas Attorney General official website
- Texas Attorney General articles at Legal Newsline Legal Journal
- Texas Attorney General articles at ABA Journal
- News and Commentary at FindLaw
- U.S. Supreme Court Opinions - "Cases with title containing: State of Texas" at FindLaw
- State Bar of Texas
- Texas Attorney General Opinions, hosted by the Portal to Texas History.