Column: In Texas, Ken Paxton's impeachment shows how bipartisanship can make a comeback
LA TimesI’m not one who likes to pooh-pooh gainful employment, but I would really hate to work in tourism and hospitality in Texas right now. That’s when more than 50 Democrats in the state Legislature actually fled Texas to prevent a quorum that would have let Republicans pass restrictive voting laws. So the impeachment trial, which began Tuesday, doesn’t reflect some kind of consensus from the Texas electorate that Paxton had crossed a line. Opinion Granderson: Texas keeps trying to make slavery sound less slaveryish Here’s an idea for lawmakers who fear critical race theory and don’t want to be plagued with white guilt: Teach about heroic white abolitionists as well as white enslavers. Given that the Republican governor will most likely be the one selecting Paxton’s replacement, should he be removed, it’s unlikely progressives in the state will be celebrating the new person.