1/ Court documents have begun to shed light on the relationship between Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Nate Paul, the political donor at the center of recent criminal allegations against Paxton. bit.ly/32mY7V5
2/ Little is known about how the two met and how closely they know each other.

But eight senior aides told law enforcement they believed that actions Paxton took at the agency, on Paul’s behalf, violated the law.
3/ A new deposition revealed that Paul testified that he hired a woman recommended to him by the attorney general.

Two sources have told The Texas Tribune that the woman was involved in an extramarital affair with Paxton.
4/4 Those sources, who asked not to be named for fear of retribution, both said Paxton himself told them about the relationship in 2018. bit.ly/32mY7V5

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More from @TexasTribune

2 Nov
Breaking: A federal judge rejected a request by a conservative activist and three Republican candidates to toss out nearly 127,000 votes cast at drive-thru polling sites in Harris County, Texas’ most populous, and largely Democratic, county. bit.ly/2TJNmHI
The ruling by U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, a George W. Bush appointee, follows two earlier decisions by the all-Republican Texas Supreme Court rejecting similar efforts by Republicans challenging the validity of drive-thru voting in the county.
Although Hanen's ruling is still expected to be appealed, it appears to clear the way for counting of the early voting drive-thru ballots on #ElectionDay.
Read 5 tweets
31 Oct
NEW: With the early voting period finished, 9.7 million Texans have cast ballots, crushing previous early voting totals in the state and setting Texas on a course for record turnout in the 2020 election. bit.ly/3kLQMFQ Graph showing that early voting turnout was up in Texas as w
So far, 57.3% of registered voters in Texas have cast ballots, just shy of the total turnout of 59.4% in 2016.

The state has added 1.8 million registered voters since the 2016 election. bit.ly/2HwVVCS
By the time all the #ElectionDay votes and mail-in ballots are counted, Texas will likely hit record-breaking turnout levels this election, surpassing 60% of registered voters for the first time since the early 1990s. bit.ly/2TIv49Y
Read 5 tweets
30 Oct
Queer Eye’s Jonathan Van Ness never got his Texas absentee ballot that he requested.

Here's how he still voted — and how you can too if you’re in a similar situation. bit.ly/3mHNvYv
.@jvn wrote in an Instagram post last week that his absentee ballot never arrived at the location where he was going to be working on Election Day, even though officials told him it was mailed out on Oct. 8. bit.ly/3mHNvYv
.@jvn went to his local elections office, filled out the paperwork to cancel his ballot, and then took the paperwork to an early voting site. bit.ly/3mHNvYv
Read 10 tweets
30 Oct
Breaking: Texas has already surpassed its 2016 total votes cast with one day of early voting and #ElectionDay still to go.

The state has added 1.8 million more registered voters since 2016. bit.ly/2HNJsLD
Through Thursday, 9,009,850 have voted so far this year. That amounts to 53% of registered voters.

In 2016, 8,969,226 Texans cast a ballot in the presidential race, and overall percentage turnout was 59.4%
By the time all the #ElectionDay votes and mail-in ballots are counted, Texas will likely hit record-breaking turnout levels this election, surpassing 60% of registered voters for the first time since the early 1990s.
Read 5 tweets
30 Oct
1/ Texas has seen a head-spinning barrage of voting-related lawsuits in recent months, and the state — particularly Harris County — has become the epicenter of a voting rights battle.

Here is what voters need to know.
2/ In Harris County, Republican leaders and activists have churned out lawsuits, unsubstantiated specters of voter fraud and official state orders in their bid to halt expanded voting access during the pandemic. bit.ly/2J9b7XB
3/ Control of the White House depends on Republican domination of Texas and, in turn, containing a voting surge in Harris County — the nation's third most populous county, which is only solidifying as a Democratic stronghold. bit.ly/3kAegh2
Read 15 tweets
28 Oct
1/ El Paso is currently following two national trends:

1. Voter turnout is on pace to surpass 2016’s numbers.

2. And reported cases of COVID-19 are surging to unprecedented numbers.
bit.ly/3mw2dC1
2/ Coronavirus cases have been rising in the city over the past month as city and county officials have announced increased restrictions to help combat the spread of the novel coronavirus.
bit.ly/2TzOFJ7
3/ Last week a UT-Austin report predicted that the El Paso area could run out of hospital beds within weeks.

Gov. Greg Abbott’s office announced the deployment of medical personnel and equipment to help combat the record-breaking surge of COVID-19 cases.bit.ly/3muP7Vx
Read 7 tweets

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