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Making an Impact

“The Lone Star Project … hammers Republicans whenever it gets a chance, promoting strong local Democratic candidates and even bringing lawsuits.”
(Roll Call, Stuart Rothenberg,
March 12, 2009)


“Anyone who questions whether [The Lone Star Project] can make life difficult for a Republican legislator should talk to former Sen. Kim Brimer.”
(Austin American Statesman, February 17, 2009)


“[The Lone Star Project] is responsible for the aggressive stance the party has taken toward DeLay and other Lone Star State Republicans since the 2004 election.”
(The Washington Post, March 6, 2006)

 

"David Dewhurst has said most Texans don't have much sympathy "for someone who that can't fill out a two page [health insurance] application every six months".

The Democrat-supported Lone Star Project in Washington reported this week that Dewhurst failed to file necessary forms at least six times in recent years.
(San Antonio Expres News,, 4/12/2007)


"The Justice staff memo was obtained by the Lone Star Project ...The story broke the same day the U.S. Supreme Court was considering legal challenges to the plan brought by Democrats and minority groups."
(Houston Chronicle, 12/3/2005)


"The Texas chapter of the NAACP, along with the Lone Star Project, have analyzed the amicus brief filed by the Justice Department and have concluded, justifiably, that the Voting Rights section of the Justice Department is now controlled by partisan political appointees."
(Roll Call - Donna Brazile, 2/28/2006)

 

 

Lone Star Project Fact Sheet:

Texas Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott
Partisanship and Hypocrisy Define Texas Republican Official

Texas Democratic Leaders
Issue Letter Rebutting
Abbott Lawsuit

 

Read the Letter to AG Abbott

In recent days, Texas Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott has grabbed attention by leading the national Republican political legal attack against the new healthcare legislation. Texas observers are not surprised. Abbott’s harsh partisanship, his use of State funds to pursue partisan objectives and his willingness to pursue flawed legal theories are well known to many Texans. Others less familiar with Abbott, however, may want to know more about his background as a Texas public official.

Who is Greg Abbott?
The current Texas Attorney General is a successful politician who has won statewide office four times, serving first as a State Supreme Court Justice and now State Attorney General. Success as a politician and success as a public official, however, are not the same. Greg Abbott’s official actions reveal a partisan, mean-spirited and often hypocritical man who has done considerably more harm than good while in office.

Personal injury lawsuits OK for Abbott, just not other Texans
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According to the El Paso Times, “Abbott's injury happened during a jog through a Houston neighborhood... when a tree limb fell on him. It was one of those freakish accidents. Abbott couldn't sue God, so he took on the homeowners and their insurance company. He won a tax-free settlement exceeding more than $10 million, not including his lawyer's legal fees that were paid separately. (Source: El Paso Times, November 2, 2002) After being paid his enormous settlement, Abbott ran for Attorney General on a platform of tort reform supporting a law that eventually limited noneconomic damages against doctors to $250,000. (Source: Corpus Christi Caller-Times, November 6, 2002)

 

Intimidate minority voters while ignoring Republican voter fraud
  Abbott Headline
The Austin American-Statesman reported, “After a two-year investigation of voter fraud, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has only 26 minor cases of voting irregularities to show for his expenditure from a $1.4 million grant.” (Source: Austin American-Statesman, Texas AG’s wild goose chase, Thursday, May 22, 2008) Abbott used extensive resources to intimidate minority voters, including sending AG investigators to an elderly woman’s house. The investigators peeped into the woman’s bathroom window as she exited the shower. (The Houston Chronicle, September 19, 2006) Meanwhile, Abbott ignored a clear case of voter fraud in a wealthy suburb of Dallas, near George W. Bush’s new home. The Dallas County Criminal District Attorney wrote a memo detailing the illegal behavior including passing out ballots to a line of voters and having more than 100 more ballots than signatures on the voting roster. (Source: Dallas Morning News, May 18, 2008)

 

Ignored institutional child abuse and child sexual assault

  Email Image
Read the Email

Abbott often uses prosecutions of child molesters as campaign props. But when the children housed in the Texas Youth Commission facilities were being sexually molested by state employees, Abbott didn’t care. When a whistleblower at the West Texas TYC school notified Abbott’s office, instead of investigating, Abbott’s office "responded two days later saying his office does not have jurisdiction over the case and would have to receive a request from the local district attorney to get involved." (Source: Associated Press, March 10, 2007) Indictments were not secured until the press broke the story a year later, and Abbott was publicly embarrassed.  Abbott’s office has still failed to win any prosecutions in the case.

 

Launched effort to strike down the Americans With Disabilities Act
In 2004, Abbott argued in court that the section of the ADA that requires, “public entities to provide equal access to buildings and services, is unconstitutional.” (Source: Austin American-Statesman, January 10, 2004) He argued this despite the fact that Abbott, like hundreds of thousands of Texans, benefit from that provision of the ADA every day. Other disabled Texans, however, are not millionaires and public office holders with 24 hour assistance. Once again, Abbott was motivated by partisanship and right-wing ideology rather than public service.   

 

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The Lone Star Project is an activity of the Lone Star Fund.

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