I agree 100%Vol Texan wrote: ↑Sun Sep 25, 2022 9:54 amI might get some flack on here for this, but I WANT Texas to appeal this. (Full disclosure, I hope Texas loses, but I still want Texas to appeal).
Here's my reasoning: According to the AG's website, the Texas Attorney General is responsible for"<snip> Defending the State of Texas and its duly enacted laws by providing legal representation to the State...<snip>. I don't want a situation where he picks and/or chooses which Texas laws he defends. Rather, I want him to defend all of them.
This AG might like or dislike a certain law with the same preferences as I do, but that's not important. The next one may not, and I still want that next AG to defend my preferred with the same vigor, irrespective of whether he/she likes that particular law or not. Liking a law isn't in the job description. Defending it is.
So yes, AG Paxton should defend our law. I hope he loses, but I hope he defends it.
As I understand the process, when an agency is sued, the AG assigns a team of lawyers to handle the case. The agency has their own lawyers that work with the team to make sure the legal team understands the specifics of how the agency works in that area. The agency and the AG team make the decisions together on appealing or settling or dropping the case. When McCraw announced he was appealing, he was saying that his legal team working with the AG team had filed the notice to appeal. While I truly thought Paxton would appeal since he has the duty to defend the law that you pointed out, I would bet DPS was the agency that wanted the appeal because McCraw doesn't like the ruling and wants the law to stay on the books. I think (but am not sure) that all of the litigants are still tied to the case unless the court specifically releases them.As for the DPS filing the appeal? I don't know how the legal mechanisms work in the courts, but I'd just as soon they keep their political opinions out of it. Perhaps it's necessary for them to file the appeal for the AG to do his job (I truly have no idea, just thinking out loud here). If that's the case, then OK, but if AG Paxton can defend the law irrespective of what they do, then I would prefer they keep their opinions to themselves. I see DPS' job as enforcement of the laws, not using their biases to drive whether laws should or should not be in place.
And while I don't like or trust McCraw, it is possible he took the lead on the appeal just to provide political cover for Abbott and Paxton.