News for North Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Dallas Civil Rights Attorney Lee Merritt Launches Campaign Against GOP Attorney General Ken Paxton

Civil rights attorney Lee Merritt testifies Tuesday during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing to examine issues involving race and policing in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd.
Jonathan Ernst
/
Pool/AFP via Getty Images
Civil rights attorney Lee Merritt testifies Tuesday during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing to examine issues involving race and policing in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd.

Lee Merritt, the nationally known civil rights attorney, is officially running for Texas attorney general as a Democrat.

“Texas Republicans have launched an all-out assault on voter rights and civil liberties,” Merritt said in a statement, adding that incumbent Attorney General Ken Paxton and other GOP leaders are “blatantly attempting to turn back progress in the Lone Star State using the familiar tactics of voter suppression, divisive rhetoric and corporate money.”

“This campaign is a response from the people of Texas,” Merritt said.

He launched his campaign at a Tuesday morning news conference outside the Texas Capitol in Austin, with an emphasis on the voting rights battle that prompted state House Democrats to flee the state Monday.

Merritt said in March that he would run for attorney general but would make a formal announcement at a later date.

Merritt, who lives in the Dallas area, is nationally recognized for his representation of families of Black people killed by police, including serving as co-counsel for George Floyd’s family. Among the Texans he has advocated for are Botham Jean, the Dallas man shot dead by an off-duty cop in his apartment in 2018.

Merritt's campaign announcement will come on the heels of the House Democrats leaving Texas for Washington, D.C., in a bid to deny the quorum for the House to vote on Republicans' priority elections bill. The House is scheduled to convene at 10 a.m. for the first time since Democrats bolted from the state.

In addition to voting rights, Merritt's camapign said it would focus on "fixing Texas' failing power grid, reigning in soaring property taxes, ending mass incarceration and challenging gubernatorial overreach."

Merritt joins Joe Jaworski, a Galveston lawyer and former mayor of the city, in the Democratic primary against Paxton. The incumbent has his own competitive primary, featuring challenges from Land Commissioner George P. Bush and Eva Guzman, a former justice on the Texas Supreme Court.

Paxton’s race has drawn early and intense attention in part due to his legal troubles. He has been under securities fraud indictment since his first months in office in 2015 and more recently, under FBI investigation over claims he abused his office to help a wealthy donor. He has denied wrongdoing in both cases.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2021/07/13/texas-attorney-general-2022-lee-merritt-ken-paxton/.

Patrick Svitek is a reporter for the Texas Tribune. He previously worked for the Houston Chronicle's Austin bureau. He graduated in 2014 from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He originally is from Fort Wayne, Indiana.